The political outcomes of the Gaza war are yet to be entirely decided with
any degree of certainty. However, the obvious political repositioning which was
reported as soon as Israel declared its unilateral ceasefire promised that
Israel�s deadly bombs would shape a new political reality in the region.
In the aftermath, Hamas can confidently claim that its once
indisputably �radical� political position is no longer viewed as too extreme.
�Hamas� is no longer a menacing word, even amongst the Western public, and
tireless Israeli attempts to correlate Hamas and Islamic Jihadists� agendas no
longer suffice.
The Israeli war against Gaza has indeed proven that Hamas
cannot be obliterated by bombs and decimated by missiles. This is the same
conclusion that the US and other countries reached in regards to the PLO in the
mid 1970s. Of course, that realization didn�t prevent Israel from trying on
many occasions to destroy the PLO, in Jordan (throughout the late 1960s),
getting involved in the Lebanese civil war (1976), and then occupying south
Lebanon (1978), and then the entire country (1982). Even upon the departure of
PLO factions from Lebanon, Israel followed its leadership to Tunisia and other
countries, assassinating the least accommodating members, thus setting the
stage for political �dialogue� with the �more acceptable peace partners.�
The history of the Arab-Israeli conflict has taught us that
political �engagement� often follows wars; the military outcome of these wars
often determines the course of political action that ensues afterward. For
example, a war, like that of 1967 (the astounding defeat of the Arabs)
strengthened the notion that a military solution is the primary option to
achieve �peace� and �security.� Of course, this logic is erroneous when it is
applied to popular struggles. Conventional armies can be isolated and defeated.
Popular struggles cannot, and attempts to do so often yield unintended and
contradictory results. Israel�s
victory (thanks in part to US and European military, financial and logistical
support) drove Israel
into the abyss of complete arrogance. Arabs responded in kind in 1973, and were
close to a decisive victory when the US, once again came to the rescue,
providing Israel
with the largest transport of arms recorded since WWII.
Still, the 1973 war created new realities that even Israel could
not deny.
Then, Egyptian president Anwar Sadat earned prestige (as a
statesman) following the war, as US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
(Israel�s most dedicated friend of all time) conditioned any American engagement
of Egypt on the latter�s departure from the Soviet�s camp. To win American
acceptance, Sadat�s language and perception on the conflict began to shift,
while a �peace process� fragmented the conflict, from its previous totality,
into a localized version, which eventually saw the exit of Egypt from the
Arab-Israeli conflict altogether.
The PLO, dominated by its largest faction, Fatah, found
itself in a precarious position. It�s political stocks were rising, true, but
its liberation rhetoric was expected to shift in favor of a more �pragmatic�
and �moderate� approach. Kissinger was keen on ensuring that the �maximalist�
Arab agenda, including that of the PLO would be transferred into a minimalist
one. That was the price of recognition and political legitimacy. Not only
Sadat, but the PLO, like Hamas today, was asked to moderate its expectations,
but the real buzzword then was accepting UN Resolution 242. The price of
legitimacy of the Palestinian struggle remains unchanged, but the new era
yielded new demands and conditions. Neither then, nor today, was Israel ever
asked to reciprocate.
The more the PLO of the 1970s met conditions, the more
Yasser Arafat rose to prominence. In June 1974, Fatah-led PLO revised and
approved a political program that adopted a �phased� political strategy which
agreed to establishing a Palestinian state �over every part of Palestinian
territory that is liberated,� as opposed to Fatah�s own previous commitment to
a �democratic state on all (of) Palestine.�
The phased strategy split the somewhat unified PLO between �moderate� and
�rejectionist� fronts, but allowed for political gains, such as the Arab
designation of the PLO, in Rabat
as �the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people.� More, Arafat
was invited to speak at the UN General Assembly, where the PLO received the
status of an �observer.� In his speech on November 13, 1974, Arafat uttered his most
famous statement: �Today I have come bearing an olive branch and a
freedom-fighter�s gun. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand.�
Let historians argue over whether Arafat was tricked by a
peace ploy, which saw the softening of the PLO�s position, while the Israeli
position continued to harden unchecked. The fact is, however, the seeds of
Palestinian division were planted during these years and Palestinians were
compartmentalized �moderates, extremists, maximalists, minimalists,
pragmatists, rejectionists and so on. However, the political gains of the PLO
of those years were made irrelevant, and were later used exclusively for
personal gains, starting in 1974, passing through Oslo, the subsequent �peace
process,� and finally reaching today�s dead end.
World media are now reporting that European countries are in
direct contact with Hamas leaders, although officials are insisting that this
contact is independent and not linked to larger government initiatives. More,
several US
congressmen visited Gaza,
again with similar disclaimers. US Senator John Kerry, who led the US delegation,
claimed that the US
position regarding Hamas has not changed, and repeated the conditions that
Hamas must meet before any engagement is possible.
One has to be wary of the history that rendered the once
influential PLO, the trivial organization that it is today. History often
repeats itself, true, but it doesn�t have to if one remembers such historical
lessons. Peace is not a �process� � at least not in the Kissinger sense � and
true dialogue and positive engagement require no stipulations and conditions.
Hamas is now in the same precarious position that the PLO was in earlier years.
Its future decisions shall influence the coming stage of this conflict, thus
the fate of the Palestinian people in inconceivable ways.
Ramzy Baroud is an author and
editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been published in many
newspapers and journals worldwide. His latest book is The
Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People�s
Struggle (Pluto Press, London).