By Ami Isseroff. 
  
 The announcements and rumors concerning  the cease fire between Israel  and Hamas  continue unabated. The latest one is an announcement by Egypt  that all  Palestinian factions have agreed to the terms of the cease  fire. This is not the quixotic and  eccentric effort of Jimmy Carter, but rather the down to earth  and supposedly informed diplomatic program of Egypt.  They are native Middle East players, and should  know better. 
Nobody should understand the dangers of legitimizing Hamas better than Egypt. Hamas is an offshoot of the Muslim brotherhood, which has  been aiming to overthrow the Egyptian regime since its foundation. The Muslim  Brotherhood tried to assassinated Egyptian President Gamal Abdul Nasser and succeeded in murdering President  Anwar Sadat. In the Middle  East, nothing is every quite as it seems to be. If the  Egyptians are trying to negotiate a deal that will establish a regime that is  dedicating to overthrowing their own Egyptian government, there ought to be a  rational reason, but there might not be, or it might not be a good one. Very  likely, the Egyptians are making the usual miscalculation that they can contain  radicalism by channeling it and exporting it abroad, in the same way that the  Saudis and other Gulf regimes are glad to finance Salafist Jihadi movements as long  as they don't shoot up their own neighborhood. It is very likely that this is  part of the "big tent Islam & Arabism" of the Saudis" who have been trying  to bring Hamas into the fold since that organization  came to power in the Palestinian Authority. From the Arab/Muslim point of view,  it makes a certain sort of sense, even if, as outside observers, we can see that  it is going to fail. It is a way to try to compete with, and contain, the most  radical elements in the Muslim-Arab world, represented by Al-Qaeda and by the  Mullahs of Iran. The Saudis and Egyptians are unable to understand that attempts  to ride the tiger of Islamist radicalism will always end with the rider inside  and the smile on the face of the tiger. 
Do not be quick to despise this  shortsighted strategy, since apparently the same rationale prompts the British  to allow Muslim radicals to preach Jihad in Britain, as long as they are only going to blow  up people in Israel or  elsewhere, and not in the London underground.
The reasons why this  deal has to be bad for Israel should be clear. They are  summed up by Efraim Karsh and honed by Avi Dichter. It is  a no-brainer. Hamas is out to destroy  Israel and has never denied that that  remains its goal. Negotiating with Hamas while they have not renounced their goal and do not  intend to do so, gives legitimacy to this genocidal organization. They  were intended to be "peace partners" or a part of the Oslo process. They are a  cancerous growth that came to power when the Oslo process started going very wrong, and the  Israeli and US governments, as well as the Arab world and the Palestinians  themselves, lost control. Hamas is the vehicle that  Iran is using to subvert the  Oslo process and frustrate US policy in the Middle  East. 
Khaled Meshaal, the real leader of Hamas,  was quite frank in announcing that the truce with  Israel was just a tactic, and that Hamas would never make peace with Israel.  It is also clear that that proposed terms represent huge concessions by  Israel in return for absolutely  nothing. Israel will agree to  open the the borders to Gaza to unlimited smuggling.  Israel will  hundreds of jailed Palestinians, including murderers. Hamas will be granted legitimacy. What will  Israel will get in return? Hamas will give up kidnapped soldier Gilad Shalit. The rocket attacks  on the Western Negev will continue, but Hamas will piously announce that they cannot control the  other factions. Inevitably, Hamas or another group  will kidnap more Israeli soldiers or civilians, since the last kidnapping proved  to be such a good deal. There is nothing real in this deal for  Israel. At best, it postpones the  inevitable day of judgment, when Israel will have  to do whatever unpleasant things must be done to get rid of regimes such as that  of Hamas. Since any truce will allow Hamas to get stronger, the truce will also put a higher  price tag on the elimination of the Hamas  "government." 
The only mysteries about the whole procedure are the  mysterious silences of the United  States and Israel. Non-recognition of Hamas is a US policy. Egypt is a client state of the  United  States. The Mubarrak  government gets huge amounts of US aid. Yet the US is silent as the Egyptians pursue a diplomatic  course that is disastrous for US policy. Likewise, for unknown  reasons, the Israeli government goes along with the charade, and does not  announce that there will not be any deal of any kind unless the Hamas meets the stated conditions. One suspects that that  someone is looking for an "easy" solution to the unpleasant problem of Gilad Shalit's captivity and the  even more unpleasant problem of Qassam missiles in the  Western Negev. That would be  unfortunate.
Ehud Olmert's government made many  mistakes, but until now, they had gotten one thing right. This point has been  missed in the torrent of deadly criticism. The Second Lebanon  War was a terrible failure of tactics and judgment.  Strategically, it was absolutely correct, because it signaled that  Israel would not be open to blackmail  deals based on kidnapping, just as the fierce response to the kidnapping of  Shalit had done. The dramatic and publicized failure  of the Second Lebanon war, was not nearly as big a  failure in strategy as the disastrous "deal" made to obtain the release of Elhanan Tannenbaum, and all the  deals that preceded it, each of which invited further kidnapping.
It is  understandable if, having gauged the winds of political sentiment, the  beleaguered Olmert government decided that after all,  discretion is the better part of valor, and that political survival dictated  that it had to obtain an end to the firing of the Qassam rockets and the return of Gilad Shalit, even if the means of  doing so were strategically disastrous. The failure would not be a failure of  the Olmert government alone, but rather a failure of  nerve of the Israeli people. There are, after all, a lot of Israelis who are  calling for negotiations with Hamas as the "sensible"  course. It is hard to ignore the suffering of people in Sderot and other  communities, and the terrible agony of the Shalit  family. 
In the end, it is our decision. We all know that it is wrong to  give in to terror, and that negotiating with criminals is never good policy. We  all love Gilad Shalit and  are concerned for his safety, but we must be more concerned for the safety of  the hundreds of potential kidnap victims who would be endangered by dealing with  the Hamas devil for reasons of political expediency,  and even before that, we have to consider the future of the entire Zionist  effort in Israel, which would be mortally threatened by the establishment and  legitimation of an Iranian puppet regime in Gaza.  
Ami Isseroff. 
 Original content is Copyright by the  author 2008. 
  
 
 
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