by Caroline Glick
On Monday afternoon, the Palestinians destroyed officially whatever was left of the concept of a peace process with Israel.
When  PA Chairman and Fatah leader Mahmoud Abbas signed a deal with Hamas  terror-master Khaled Mashaal in Doha, Qatar, the notion that there is a  significant segment of Palestinian society that is not committed to the  destruction of Israel was finally and truly sunk.
But  before the ink on the agreement had a chance to dry, the peace  processors were already spewing bromides whose sole purpose was to deny  this inarguable conclusion. Both the Obama administration and the EU  claimed that the agreement is an internal Palestinian issue. The EU  actually welcomed the deal.
As Foreign Policy  Commissioner Catherine Ashton's spokesman put it, "The EU has  consistently called for intra-Palestinian reconciliation behind  President Mahmoud Abbas as an important element for the unity of a  future Palestinian state and for reaching a two-state solution."
The Israeli Left was quick to blame the agreement on Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu.
In  an apparent bid to inject a bit of reality into the delusional  discourse, Netanyahu condemned the pact. As he put it, "If Abbas moves  to implement what was signed today in Doha, he will abandon the path of  peace and join forces with the enemies of peace."
Netanyahu  added a personal appeal to his supposed partner in peace saying,  "President Abbas, you can't have it both ways. It's either a pact with  Hamas or peace with Israel. It's one or the other."
Netanyahu's  statement was a nice start. But it didn't go nearly far enough. In  speaking as he did, Netanyahu obscured the fact that Abbas already made  his choice. He has cast his lot and that of Fatah with Hamas. In so  doing Abbas once more exposed the dirty secret that everyone knows but  no one likes to discuss: Fatah and Hamas share the same strategic goal  of destroying Israel. Fatah is not a moderate force that accepts a  peaceful resolution of the Palestinian conflict with Israel. It is a  terrorist organization and a political warfare organization. Fatah's  strategic goal remains what it has been since it was founded in 1959:  The obliteration of the Jewish state.
In truth,  Monday's agreement is nothing new. Fatah and Hamas have worked together  since at least 1994. In November 1994, Hamas and Fatah signed an  agreement in Cairo. The agreement set out each side's sphere of  responsibility. Fatah would negotiate with Israel and Hamas would attack  Israel.
That Cairo agreement was but the first  in a line of agreements between the two groups. Each new agreement in  turn reflected both their shared goal of destroying Israel and their  changing tactical preferences.
In 2000, for  instance, when Fatah returned to active terrorism against Israel, Fatah  and Hamas set up joint terror cells they called the Popular Resistance  Committees.
In 2007, they signed their first  unity government deal after Hamas defeated Fatah in the 2006 legislative  elections. That deal not only set the terms for cooperation in the PA.  It paved the way for Hamas's inclusion in the PLO. Since the PLO rather  than the PA or Fatah is the signatory to the agreements with Israel, the  2007 agreement signaled Fatah's willingness to abrogate its treaties  with Israel.
After Hamas ousted Fatah personnel  from Gaza in June 2007, the unity deal was left unimplemented. But even  as their gunmen shot at one another on the streets, Fatah and Hamas  remained strategic allies. Fatah continued to finance Hamas and provide  political support for its continued missile and terror war against  Israel.
Last May, Abbas signed another unity  deal with Hamas. Like the 2007 deal, the pact set the conditions for  Hamas's integration into the PLO and so placed the Palestinians on  course for canceling all the agreements that the PLO has signed with  Israel since 1993. In the months that passed since, the sides have been  diligently working out the means of enacting their unity deal. Those  contacts brought about another agreement signed in Cairo in December.  That pact laid out the steps for integrating Hamas and Islamic Jihad  into the PLO. The first step involved setting up a temporary PLO  leadership. This step was implemented last month. The transitional  leadership is now organizing new elections to the PLO's legislative  body, which in turn will appoint the executive.
December's  agreement also set out the basis for the interim unity government  agreement that was signed on Monday. The sole charge of the transitional  PA government is to organize elections for the PA's legislature and its  chairmanship.
SO MONDAY'S agreement doesn't  represent a break with past Fatah behavior, but a continuation of it.  The notable aspect of Monday's agreement is that it shows just how  drastically the balance of power has tilted towards Hamas and away from  Fatah since 1994.
Since Monday, the usual crowd  of peace processors has come up with a number of arguments to deny the  significance of the latest Hamas-Fatah rapprochement. One of their  favorite claims is that the deal with Fatah is proof that Hamas is  becoming more moderate.
For instance, Shlomo  Brom, an inveterate peace processor from the Institute of National  Security Studies, told JTA, "Hamas is moving away from Syria and Iran,  and to a certain degree from Hezbollah, and is repositioning itself in  line with the popular movements behind the Arab Spring and the  democratization process, particularly in Egypt and Tunisia. A renewed  push for reconciliation with Fatah should be seen as part of this  reorientation."
To make this claim, Brom had to  ignore the fact that "the popular movements behind the Arab Spring" are  jihadist movements from the Muslim Brotherhood.
Since  December, all of Hamas's leaders have made public statements  underscoring that the movement's goal remains the destruction of Israel  and that its chosen means of attaining that goal is terrorism and war.
Hamas's  leaders have also been clear that they view their current rapprochement  with Fatah as a means to overwhelm and defeat Fatah. As the Jerusalem  Center for Public Affairs' senior researcher Jonathan Halevi showed in  recent studies of this week's deal and the December agreement, Hamas's  goal in entering the PLO is to abrogate the PLO's treaties with Israel.  Its goal in joining a unity government with Fatah is to organize  elections. Hamas is expected to win both the PA's presidential and  legislative elections in a landslide.
Another  argument that the Left is making is that since Monday's deal made Abbas  the PA prime minister as well as its president, the agreement is proof  that he is strong and therefore, it's terrific. As Haaretz  editorialized on Wednesday, Netanyahu is irresponsible and destructive  because, "Instead of welcoming the bolstered status of a leader who  signed the Oslo Accords and reined in terror in the West Bank, Netanyahu  opted to present the deal as a capitulation by the PA to a terrorist  organization."
This argument ignores the  inconvenient fact that Abbas had no choice other than to take on the  title of prime minister because Hamas forced him to fire Prime Minister  Salam Fayyad. Both the US and the EU view Fayyad as a moderate and the  only way to avoid a backlash from firing him was for Abbas to replace  Fayyad with himself.
A THIRD argument that has  received substantial attention is that the agreement is nothing more  than a survival pact between two weakened leaders. Mashaal, it is  argued, was weakened by his forced departure from Damascus. He made the  deal to strengthen his position vis-à-vis Hamas's leaders in Gaza.
While  it may be true that Mashaal's stature has taken a hit in comparison to  Hamas terror master Ismail Haniyeh in Gaza, the shift in power between  the two arch-terrorists is immaterial.
With  their Muslim Brothers taking power in Egypt, both men are far more  powerful today than they ever were before. Moreover, Mashaal's  transitional power-sharing agreement with Abbas is remarkably similar to  the deal the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood wrought with Egypt's military  junta in the lead-up to the recent elections.
Unlike  Hamas, Fatah has certainly been weakened by recent events in Egypt. As  Mashaal's Egyptian patrons take power, Abbas's chief patron Hosni  Mubarak is on trial and dying under house arrest.
What  is notable about the claims that the agreement is nothing more than a  deal between two weak leaders is that they presuppose that it is  perfectly understandable that Abbas would turn to Hamas in his moment of  weakness in the hopes of strengthening his position.
From Haaretz's  perspective, Abbas is outsmarting Hamas by signing an agreement with  Mashaal. According to this line of thinking, Abbas is riding Hamas to  increase his power. Since Haaretz is convinced that Abbas is  interested in peace, the paper's editorialists are certain that once he  gains strength he will renege on his agreement with Hamas. That is, Haaretz thinks the deal is terrific because Abbas is a liar.
The  problem is that it isn't terrific that Abbas is a liar. Because what  that means is that he can't be trusted to keep his word. Just as Haaretz  seems to think he won't keep his word with Hamas, so, Israel has every  reason to believe that he won't keep its word with it. And indeed, he  has a proven track record of lying to Israel. In 1996, he signed an  informal "peace deal" with then-deputy foreign minister Yossi Beilin.  The Beilin-Abu Mazen agreement was the basis of Ehud Barak's peace offer  to Yasser Arafat in 2000. When Arafat rejected Barak's offer, Abbas  denied he had ever signed the agreement with Beilin.
In  2008, Abbas negotiated with Ehud Olmert, giving the premier the  impression that he was interested in peace. But after Olmert offered him  unprecedented Israeli concessions, not only did Abbas reject the offer,  he announced that he does not recognize Israel's right to exist.
The  most troubling aspect of Abbas's decision to turn to Hamas in his  moment of weakness is what it says about the relative balance of  regional forces. Twenty years ago, when Arafat was weakened and isolated  due to Israel's defeat of the Palestinian uprising, and Arafat's  decision to support Saddam Hussein against the US in the Gulf War, the  PLO chieftain decided that the only way to rebuild his strength was to  gain recognition from the US. And 20 years ago, Arafat knew that the  road to Washington went through Jerusalem. So he agreed to enter into  peace talks with Israel.
It is a testament to  the weakened state of the US in the region that in his hour of distress,  Abbas opted to turn to Hamas. Not only does this signify that  Washington is no longer considered a serious power broker. It indicates  that for weakened leaders, peace with Israel is a far less attractive  option than peace with jihadists.
Like Abbas,  Arafat was a liar. The consequence of Arafat's move towards Washington  was a two-decade-long phony peace process that left Israel in a  strategic position far weaker than that it enjoyed in 1992.
The consequences of Abbas's move towards Hamas will in all likelihood be far worse.
Originally published in The Jerusalem Post.
                             Caroline Glick
Source: http://www.carolineglick.com/e/2012/02/the-fatah-hamas-peace-process.php
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.

 
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