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H.D.S. Greeenway: Radicalization, despair in the Mideast

ONCE AGAIN American policy in the Middle East lies in shambles. It can be argued, as Rashid Khalidi, a Palestinian scholar at Columbia University, has, that the current crisis in Gaza began with the response by Israel, the United States, Europe, et. al., to the elections for the Legislative Council of the Palestinian Authority in January 2006 -- the election that brought Hamas to power. The Bush administration pushed for the election, over considerable Israeli doubts, in the American belief, at times naive, that democracy cures all ills. Once the Palestinian people had spoken, however, Israel and the West didn't like what the people said. The Hamas victory"quickly moved from a crippling financial siege of the PA [Palestinian Authority], with the aim of bringing down the government, to an escalation of Israeli assassinations of Palestinian militants, and to artillery and air attacks in Gaza," Khalidi writes in his book"The Iron Cage, The Story of the Palestinian Struggle for Statehood." Almost as quickly Gazans moved to confrontation with Israel, which brought down even more destruction on their heads. Hamas was as surprised by its victory as was the rest of the world."We wanted, expected, to win about 30 percent of the vote, enough to have an influence in the Palestinian government," a Hamas official told me."We didn't realized just how fed up people were with the corruption of Fatah." Might things have turned out differently had Israel and the West not attempted to strangle the infant Hamas government in the cradle? Would Hamas have become more responsible if it had been allowed to govern without its funds frozen? In any case, the attempt to bring down the newly elected Hamas government failed, and America's dedication to democracy ended up looking like rank hypocrisy. Also, the American effort to arm and train Fatah so that it would defeat Hamas militarily has failed -- at least in Gaza. It succeeded only in making Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and his Fatah movement look like American and Israeli collaborators in the eyes of many Palestinians. How would things have turned out differently if Gazans had stuck to their cease-fire, refrained from rocketing Israel, and moved quickly to unite Hamas and Fatah factions in the interest of good governance? After all, Hamas was elected to clean up corruption and serve the people, not make war on Israel. If Palestinians had consolidated after Israel's withdrawal from Gaza, had an Israeli soldier not been kidnapped, would the tragedy of Gaza have been averted? The failure of Palestinians to unite -- the quarrels between factions and families -- hindered their national movement since before the birth of Israel, especially in comparison with the more disciplined Zionists. There were times when David Ben-Gurion thought the struggle between his labor movement and Menachem Begin's right wing faction"might even lead to civil war," according to historian Tom Segev...
Read entire article at Boston Globe