The
EU’s new Palestine dilemma
February 2006
Last week’s spectacular victory for the fledgling
political wing of Hamas (the Islamic Resistance Movement) in the Palestinian
parliamentary elections has left a confused European Union with a dilemma.
The elections were the most stunning example in
recent times of democratic power in action in the Arab world. Despite garnering
42.9% of the popular vote, the result was less a Hamas victory and more a
defeat for Fatah, whose control of the Palestinian Authority (PA) has been rife
with corruption and cronyism.
Hamas, however, is the Palestinian organisation
least compatible with the EU’s position on the Middle East conflict. This has
left it with the awkward question of whether it can walk the walk and not just
talk the talk when it comes to democracy in the region.
The militant group, on the EU's list of
‘terrorist organisations’, is responsible for most suicide bombings against
Israeli military and civilian targets and its founding charter does not
recognise Israel's right to exist.
The Hamas victory has elicited a range of
reactions in Europe, ranging from quiet caution to strident condemnation.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said her country was unwilling to continue
funding the PA, unless Hamas renounced its policy of armed resistance and
recognised Israel.
Merkel’s position mirrored closely that of the
United States and, to a lesser extent, Israel itself. The Quartet (US, EU, UN
and Russia) had the additional demand that the Hamas-dominated PA stick to the
'road map' to peace.
The Council of Ministers struck a more
ambiguous note. “The Council expects the newly elected [Palestinian Legislative
Council] to support the formation of a government committed to a peaceful and
negotiated solution of the conflict with Israel,” it said in a statement.
The PA faces an imminent financial crisis and
needs some €83 million next week in order to pay its 137,000 employees. Hamas
has urged international donors not to suspend their funding of the PA. If the
EU follows through on unofficial threats to cut off the €500m-a-year financial
lifeline it gives the Palestinians, this would not only exacerbate the
humanitarian crisis in the occupied territories, it is also likely to harden a
softening Hamas position and lose the EU valuable leverage.
Hamas, which has held to a ceasefire for the
past 11 months, has indicated its intention to work within the traditionally
pluralistic Palestinian political landscape by setting up a coalition
government under the tutelage of incumbent Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.
Since its victory, Hamas has expressed a
willingness to commit itself to a long-term truce, if Israel agreed to cede
Palestinian land it occupied in 1967. “We can accept to establish our
independent state on the area occupied [in] 1967,” Mahmoud al-Zahar, a top
Hamas official and one of its last surviving founders, told CNN.
Still, disquiet abounds. “Europe has legitimate
concerns about Hamas, but for these to be credible it needs to have equally
legitimate concerns about Israel’s agenda,” said Mouin Rabbani, a Middle East analyst
at the Brussels/Washington-based think-tank the International Crisis Group.
Striking parallels between Hamas and the
policies of Israel’s hardline Likud party have been drawn, notably regarding
Israel’s controversial policy of ‘targeted assassinations’. “Murdering a
Palestinian politician by a long-range attack that is bound also to kill
innocent civilians is morally and legally no better than a suicide bomb on a
bus,” wrote Jonathan Steele, a columnist with the Guardian.
The Islamic Resistance Movement's ideological
rejection of Israel has also been a cause for concern. “For decades, Israel
refused even to recognise the existence of the Palestinian people,” Steele
added. The governing Likud party’s Central Committee still rejects the notion
of a Palestinian state and adopted a resolution on the subject in 2002.
A poll released on Monday showed that
three-quarters of Palestinians wanted Hamas to drop its call for the
destruction of Israel. Faced with the demands of Palestinian pluralism and
international realpolitik, Hamas is likely to continue to moderate its position
as it works with coalition partners.
“The EU needs to understand [that] it makes
little sense to make demands upon Hamas, unless [it is] also prepared to offer
serious and meaningful concessions in return,” Rabbani noted.
Europe should engage the Palestinians and
Israelis positively and even-handedly. With no imminent prospect of statehood
for the Palestinians to look forward to and faced with territorial closures and
economic misery, the EU ought to provide the Palestinians with more carrots and
resist the temptation to bring out the sticks.
This article appeared in the 2-8 February 2006
edition of The European Voice. ©2006
The Economist Newspaper Limited.
ã2006 K. Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website
is the copyright of Khaled Diab.