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Hamas drifting away from Iran

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Hamas drifting away from longtime patron Iran

By Karin Laub and Brian Murphy, Associated Press, February 9, 2012

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip—Hamas appears to be drifting away from its longtime patron Iran -- part of a shift that began with last year's Arab Spring and accelerated over Tehran's backing of the pariah regime in Syria.

The movement's top leader in exile, Khaled Mashaal, wants Hamas to be part of the broader Islamist political rise triggered by the popular uprisings sweeping across the Arab world. For this, Hamas needs new friends like the wealthy Gulf states that are at odds with Iran.

For now, Hamas won't cut ties with Iran or close its headquarters-in-exile in the Syrian capital of Damascus, officials in the movement said.

However, relations have become increasingly strained.

Hamas has reduced its presence in Iran-allied Damascus in response to Syrian President Bashar Assad's brutal crackdown on a popular uprising against him. Hamas also rejected Iran's demand that the group publicly side with Assad, standing firm even when Tehran delayed the monthly support payments Hamas needs to govern the Gaza Strip, according to a senior Hamas official who insisted on anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss internal deliberations.

At the same time, Hamas is increasingly relying on political and financial support from the Gulf, particularly tiny Qatar, which also has close ties to the West.

This week, Qatar brokered a breakthrough unity deal between Mashaal and his longtime rival, internationally backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. After five years of separate Palestinian governments in the West Bank and Gaza, Abbas is now to head an interim unity government and lead the Palestinians to elections.

Qatar promised to help in case the international community will withdraw support for a transition government that -- though headed by Abbas -- would also be supported from the outside by Hamas.

The movement is still widely shunned in the West and is considered a terrorist group by the United States and Europe -- a legacy of the years in which it regularly claimed suicide bombings and other attacks on civilians in Israel.

"Of course, the safety net is there," Ahmed Yousef, a Gaza-based Hamas intellectual and Mashaal confidant, said of Qatar's pledges of support. "The financial support will be there. ... They will be generous to help the Palestinians, to rebuild Gaza and cover the shortage. If there is a financial problem, they will help."

Even as Qatar was mediating the unity deal, the Hamas prime minister of Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh, was leading his own tour through wealthy Gulf states Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait. His tone was far more CEO than anti-Israel firebrand as he met Gulf rulers and investment groups about pumping money into struggling Gaza.

Palestinian officials who have been briefed on the Doha unity talks said Qatar asked Haniyeh to skip the next stop on his journey, a visit to Tehran. Gulf countries have moved aggressively to undercut Iranian influence as the region is reshaped by the Arab uprisings.

However, Haniyeh will likely be in Tehran on Friday, Hamas officials said.

It was not immediately clear whether his decision to go ahead was shaped by a desire not to snub the Iranians so brazenly or is part of a brewing internal conflict within Hamas. Some of the Hamas leaders in Gaza, who stand to lose influence in a power-sharing arrangement, have criticized the Doha deal.

Still, Haniyeh's meetings with Iran's leaders -- Assad's most enthusiastic supporters -- can prove politically embarrassing to Hamas. Readers commenting on a Hamas website this week overwhelmingly urged Haniyeh not to visit Iran because of Tehran's backing for Assad.

Before the Arab Spring, Hamas had few friends in the Arab world and relied on Iranian largesse and Syrian hospitality. According to some estimates, Iran paid several hundred million dollars a year to Hamas, crucial for keeping blockaded Gaza afloat. Damascus hosted Mashaal and his decision-making political bureau which was unwanted elsewhere.

But Hamas' parent movement, the pan-Arab Muslim Brotherhood, scored election victories after uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia last year, and is becoming influential elsewhere in the region.

"The Arab Spring awakenings had a pivotal effect on Hamas' world view," said Fawaz Gerges, director of the Middle East Center at the London School of Economics. "The rise of the Islamists to power has really given Hamas a strategic depth."

However, the widened support comes with demands that the Islamists moderate and not embarrass Brotherhood branches abroad as they seek to reach out to the broadest possible audience and gain political legitimacy through elections.

Gulf countries have moved aggressively to gain new leverage and to try to undercut Iranian influence.

"Hamas is moving into the Arab orbit," said Salman Shaikh, director of The Brookings Doha Center in Qatar. "This is one of the significant achievements of the Arab Spring and a reflection of how Gulf power has grown."

It seems unlikely Hamas will meet international demands to forswear violence -- but an alliance with Gulf states could nudge the group in that direction.

The Gulf leaders intensified pressure this week on Iran-ally Assad, by pulling their ambassadors and ordering out Syrian envoys from Kuwait to Oman. Last month, Qatar urged for an Arab military force to intervene to halt 11 months of bloodshed in Syria.

Yousef, the Mashaal confidant, said in an interview on Thursday that Hamas wants to be on good terms with everyone, including Iran and Syria, but his comments suggested a new confidence vis-a-vis the old patrons.

"We are not going to support anybody (just) because he is giving us shelter or safe haven," Yousef said, when asked about Iranian pressure on Hamas to publicly back the Assad regime. "If he is not happy with us, we can leave. We can find another save haven."

He also suggested the Iranians need Hamas more than the other way around. "They (the Iranians) are capitalizing on this image that they are helping the Palestinians," he said. "This is giving the Iranians some credibility in the way they think about their leadership in the region."

He did not say how Hamas would act if forced to choose between Iran and the Gulf. However, the Arab Spring-inspired paradigm shift he described -- Hamas seeking to share power with former political rivals and embracing pluralism -- would make Iran an unattractive choice in the long run.

Khaled Hroub, a Hamas expert at Cambridge University, said he believes Hamas won't leave the Iranian-Syrian orbit for good unless other Gulf countries, particularly regional powerhouse Saudi Arabia, pledge their support.

"They want to go beyond Qatar .. and hear from the Saudis, even if indirectly," Hroub said of Hamas. "This is a golden opportunity (for the Saudis). Syria is going down, you can break the whole Syrian-Iranian axis, maybe forever, and the Iranian influence on the (Levant), yet the Saudis are turning their backs," Hroub said.
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Murphy reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Associated Press writer Mohammed Daraghmeh in Ramallah, West Bank, contributed reporting.

Hamas drifting away from longtime patron Iran - Boston.com
 
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When will Americans realize that Hamas is not an extension of the Iranian government? They may have contacts, otherwise called 'friendly relations' when between countries.
Why can't you accept that the relation between Hamas and Iran is similar to the relation between Israel and say UK? You seem to assume that except in your 'free' world(which definitely does not include Palestine), everyone takes orders from someone else and that only this 'free' world is capable of collective and independent decision making.
 
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This is a positive development. Let's not mix up the Israel-Palestine issue with the Israel-Iran issue. The Palestinians may end up getting a better deal, over time.

With no guardianship for the Palestinians, Iran may feel more inclined to normalize relations with Israel.
 
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When will Americans realize that Hamas is not an extension of the Iranian government? They may have contacts, otherwise called 'friendly relations' when between countries.
Why can't you accept that the relation between Hamas and Iran is similar to the relation between Israel and say UK? You seem to assume that except in your 'free' world(which definitely does not include Palestine), everyone takes orders from someone else and that only this 'free' world is capable of collective and independent decision making.

Mr. rubyjackass, Sir,

Did you read this part of the above thread opening post?:

"Before the Arab Spring, Hamas had few friends in the Arab world and relied on Iranian largesse and Syrian hospitality. According to some estimates, Iran paid several hundred million dollars a year to Hamas, crucial for keeping blockaded Gaza afloat. Damascus hosted Mashaal and his decision-making political bureau which was unwanted elsewhere."

---------- Post added at 11:35 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:32 PM ----------

With no guardianship for the Palestinians, Iran may feel more inclined to normalize relations with Israel.

This is a real pipe-dream! The Iranian theocrats are opposed to Israel for Islamic-ideology and anti-Western ideological reasons. The Palestinian national cause is tangential. The Iranian theocrats see Israel as a western Satanic cancer in the Muslim world.
 
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@Rig Vedic: There is no Israel-Iran issue if there is no Israel-Palestine issue.

Iran already wants the normal relations with Israel. Which is where the Iranian president makes an anti-Israeli remark once in a year and then Iran goes about with its normal life.

Please don't buy into the usual BS of Iran's 'backing' for Hamas. Then you will keep getting 'surprised' by news like this. Let me surprise you a little more. India also 'backs' Hamas. India does not recognise Hamas as a terrorist organization. Whenever India talks about having good relations with Palestinians, it includes Hamas.

While Hamas scaling down from Syria is perfectly normal, just like India scaled down its diplomatic staff and issued advisories to its citizens to stay out of Syria. For you this is a 'positive development', because these guys will 'prove' that Hamas is coming out of 'Iran's orbit'(By a well known theorem of American foreign affairs, Syria is Iran's bi-tch. Hamas is Syria's bi-tch. And therefore Hamas is Iran's bi-tch.). Wait for more 'surprises and positive developments'. It looks like Syria is turning more violent.
 
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Mr. rubyjackass, Sir,

Did you read this part of the above thread opening post?:

"Before the Arab Spring, Hamas had few friends in the Arab world and relied on Iranian largesse and Syrian hospitality. According to some estimates, Iran paid several hundred million dollars a year to Hamas, crucial for keeping blockaded Gaza afloat. Damascus hosted Mashaal and his decision-making political bureau which was unwanted elsewhere."

---------- Post added at 11:35 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:32 PM ----------



This is a real pipe-dream! The Iranian theocrats are opposed to Israel for Islamic-ideology and anti-Western ideological reasons. The Palestinian national cause is tangential. The Iranian theocrats see Israel as a western Satanic cancer in the Muslim world.


Let me list all the countries which, at various points in time, hosted the Palestinian groups which USA and/or Israel listed as terrorist organizations.
1) Tunisia
2) Egypt
3) Jordan
4) Lebanon
5) and as you point out Syria.
All these countries hosted the headquarters of the most leading Palestinian nationalist(terrorist) organizations of that time.
Sure Iran might have paid to keep Gaza afloat. But does that mean Iran expects Hamas to fight for it? Did Hamas give a back seat to its own cause in favor of whatever Iran wants?

FYI, Damascus hosted Palestinian groups even before the current Iranian regime came to power. Back then you could not call Syrian government as Iranian lackey.
 
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^^^ There are problems with your interpretation.

Meshal was sitting in Damascus, which is an Iranian ally. Iran was using Hamas as a way to legitimize its role in West Asia. Now, Meshal will be sitting in Qatar, which is the most pro-American Arab Sheikhdom in the Gulf.

And Indian diplomats do not meet Meshal, but they do talk with Abbas.
 
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This is a real pipe-dream! The Iranian theocrats are opposed to Israel for Islamic-ideology and anti-Western ideological reasons. The Palestinian national cause is tangential. The Iranian theocrats see Israel as a western Satanic cancer in the Muslim world.

There is a spectrum of opinion in Iran. There have been Presidents like Khatami, who was quite moderate.
 
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Iran warns Hamas against compromise with Israel

By KHALED ABU TOAMEH02/12/2012

Iran's Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, Sunday voiced his country's full support for Hamas in its fight against Israel and said that Tehran considers the Palestinian issue as an "Islamic cause."

Khamenei's remarks came during a meeting with Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh, who is currently on an official visit to Iran.

The meeting between Khamenei and Haniyeh was the first of its kind since the Hamas prime minister assumed office after his movement won the January 2006 parliamentary election.

"Iran will always be supportive of the Palestinian cause and the Islamic resistance in Palestine," the Tehran-based Mehr News Agency quoted Khamenei as saying.

Khamenei added that the "recent victories in Palestine were partially responsible for the Islamic awakening in the region" - a reference to the rise of Islamists to power in a number of Arab countries, including Tunisia and Egypt.

"Undoubtedly, the accumulating sentiments of the region's peoples toward the cause of the Gaza Strip led to the sudden eruption of the volcano in the region," The Iranian leader told Haniyeh.

He also warned against attempts by unnamed parties to "undermine" Hamas, but did not elaborate.

"We have no doubt about your resistance and that of many of your brothers, and the people only have this expectation of you," Khamenei added.

Haniyeh, for his part, thanked the Iranian leadership for its "ongoing" support for Hamas and the Palestinian cause.

Haniyeh, who was invited to Iran to participate in celebrations marking the 33rd anniversary of the Islamic Revolution, underlined the three strategies of his government: "liberating Palestine from the sea to the river, abiding by the resistance and affirming the Islamic character of the Palestinian cause."

Haniyeh's visit to Iran came amid deepening divisions within Hamas over last week's Qatari-sponsored reconciliation agreement between the movement and Fatah.

Some Hamas officials also expressed dissatisfaction with Haniyeh's visit to Tehran, noting that it came at a time when other Hamas leaders were trying to distance themselves from Iran and Syria.

Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal has come under sharp criticism for signing the Qatari-sponsored reconciliation deal that calls for naming Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas as prime minister of a new Palestinian unity government.

Over the weekend, Mahmoud Zahar, a top Hamas official in the Gaza Strip, came out publicly against Mashaal and said the reconciliation pact was a "mistake."

But while Zahar and most of the Hamas leaders in the Gaza Strip have expressed opposition to the deal under the pretext that it includes far-reaching concessions to Abbas and Fatah, representatives of the movement in the West Bank praised the agreement.

A Hamas official in the Ramallah said that Zahar's criticism of Mashaal "reflected only his personal opinion."

The official, who asked not to be identified, lashed out at Haniyeh for visiting Iran "at this very sensitive period."

The official expressed concern that the Iranians, in return for financial and military aid, would ask Hamas to support Syrian President Bashar Assad.

"Mashaal left Syria because he refused to come out in support of Assad, who is butchering dozens of his people very day," the Hamas official told The Jerusalem Post. "But now here is Haniyeh visiting Iran, which is helping Assad and supplying him with weapons and security experts to suppress the popular uprising in his country. The timing of the visit is very bad and could harm Hamas's interests in the region."

Iran warns Hamas against comprom... JPost - Iranian Threat - News
 
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I think this shows that Hamas is allied with the Muslim brotherhood and supports strong Islamist influence in the region, whereas the Iranian government, despite its Islamic Revolution roots, supports secular governments in the region because it fears the influence of Salafist ideology.

rubyjackass is correct in pointing out that neither Syria nor Hamas are Iranian puppets. The only relationship that could be construed as puppetry is that of Syria and Hezbollah, but even there I'd suggest that Hezbollah is a pro-Syria group rather than a Syrian puppet.
 
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... The Iranian theocrats are opposed to Israel for Islamic-ideology and ... see Israel as a western Satanic cancer in the Muslim world.
That appears to be a statement that should come from someone who has at least a doctorate in Islamic ideology, whatever that means. This humble student sees no discrepancy between that State's existence and an Islamic viewpoint seeing it as something unwelcome. It could simply be eschatological predestination and therefore as welcome as its absence.
 
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Iran urges Hamas to continue fight against Israel

Originally published: February 12, 2012 7:22 AM
Updated: February 12, 2012 10:05 AM
By The Associated Press BY NASSER KARIMI (Associated Press)

TEHRAN, Iran - (AP) -- Iran's leaders urged the Hamas prime minister of Gaza to continue the Islamic militant group's resistance against Israel and promised support, state TV reported on Sunday.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told Hamas' Ismail Haniyeh that Iran would always stand by the Palestinian "resistance" against Israel and warned him against "compromisers." President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for his part said it was Iran's "duty" to stand by the Palestinians.

The hardline remarks come as Iran watches with concern attempts by Hamas to move closer to wealthy Gulf Arab states. Widened support for Hamas in the Arab world may come with demands that the Islamist movements moderate and not embarrass its new patrons.

Israel and Iran consider each other archenemies. Israel has not ruled out a strike against Iran's nuclear program, which it says is aimed at developing weapons technology. Iran denies this and says the program is for peaceful purposes.
Khamenei, who has final say on all state matters, was quoted as telling Haniyeh that people expect Palestinian resistance to continue.

"People do not expect anything except endurance from Palestine's resistance," Khamenei was quoted as saying. He said the movement "should be watchful about influence of compromising elements ... since the outbreak of sickness is gradual."

Khamenei said the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat lost his popularity because he distanced himself from resistance. "Resistance attracts people, and it is a big resource that should be protected," he said.

The Supreme Leader said Iran would always "stand by the people of Palestine and the resistance movement."
Khamenei on Feb. 3 affirmed that Iran had provided support to Hamas -- a well-known policy, but one that Iranian leaders rarely state explicitly.

Haniyeh, for his part, was quoted as saying that Iran was a "strategic reserve" for the Palestinians, and that Hamas would continue a strategy consisting of the "liberation of all the Palestinian lands, the pursuit of resistance and the rejection of peace talks."
Haniyeh also met Ahmadinejad on Sunday. The president was quoted as saying that support for Palestine was a task for all Muslims. "As its duty, the Iranian nation has stood next to the oppressed nation of Palestine."

The remarks come as Hamas' top leader in exile, Khaled Mashaal, leads what appears to have been a political shift.

He has pursued reconciliation with his Western-backed rival, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, a longtime proponent of negotiations with Israel, and has argued that non-violent protests are an important tool in resisting Israeli occupation.

Haniyeh arrived in Iran on Friday for a three-day visit. The visit was seen an attempt by the Palestinian militant movement to avoid snubbing Iran, the group's longtime patron, even as it cultivates ties with the wealthy Gulf.

Some in Hamas want to be part of the broader Islamist political rise triggered by last year's Arab Spring uprisings. For this, Hamas needs new friends among Gulf states at odds with Iran.

But others in the movement may wish to maintain the relationship with Tehran, which helped Hamas when it had few friends in the Arab world.

Iran urges Hamas to continue fight against Israel
 
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