Hamas will be more decisive than any other actor -- including the United States -- in determining whether it is isolated or not. The militant movement must now decide whether it will govern responsibly or remain mired in violence.
Some of those who criticized the United States and the European Union for imposing sanctions against the Palestinian Authority upon Hamas's ascent to power last year are now criticizing the lifting of those same sanctions in the West Bank, claiming that the international community is embarking on a "feed West Bank, starve Gaza" approach at the very time that it should be giving Hamas incentives.
The problem, however, is not the lack of incentives, but political resolve on the side of Hamas. To appease Hamas now would be wrong and counterproductive. First, it would be wrong given what Hamas has just done. It staged nothing less than a coup last week. Hamas gunmen ransacked many Palestinian institutions in Gaza, took over crossing points, seized Palestine television, fired into hospitals, summarily executed some of their rivals and even pushed some people out of windows.
Their actions led the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, to form a new government;
Second, it would be counterproductive because it would undercut moderates. Why would Fatah support a two-state solution and incur domestic Palestinian wrath if a group that perpetrates terror attacks and received aid from
Third, Hamas knows that the whole idea of "starving
Fourth, Hamas has been given no shortage of incentives up till now, all to no avail.
Hamas knows that if it enforced a cease-fire in Gaza,
Now that Hamas controls
Hamas leaders are secure in the knowledge that no one is likely to wrest
But there is also the fact that Hamas is dependent on
That choice is up to Hamas, not Washington.
The Washington Institute for Near East Policy
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