Gaza’s anti-Hamas protests mean different things to different players
Anti-Hamas
protest in Beit Lahiya. Credit: Flash90
By James M.
Dorsey
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The United
Arab Emirates is betting that recent anti-Hamas protests in Gazan towns, supported by
influential tribes and clans, will strengthen Abu Dhabi-based Mohammed Dahlan’s
chances of playing a prominent role in the territory’s post-war administration.
Protesters
suggested they focussed their demands on Hamas because the group was the one party they were most likely
to influence.
“We want to
stop the killing and displacement, no matter the price. We can’t stop Israel
from killing us, but we can press Hamas to give concessions,” said Mohammed Abu
Saker, a father of three.
"We are not against the resistance. We are against war. Enough wars, we
are tired,” another protester said.
Some
protesters took issue with Israeli portrayals of the protests as an uprising
against Hamas rather than against everyone, including Hamas, Israel, the West
Bank-based, internationally recognised Palestine Authority, the Arabs, and the
international community.
“Everyone
failed us,” a third protester said.
“People are
angry at the whole world… We want Hamas to resolve this situation, return the
hostages, and end this whole thing,” said yet another.
Israeli
Defence Minister Israel Katz encourages anti-Hamas protesters
Israeli
officials, including Defence Minister Israel Katz, encouraged Gazans to sustain the
protests because
expelling Hamas from Gaza was the only way Israel would end the war.
“You should…demand
the removal of Hamas from Gaza and the immediate release of all Israeli
hostages. This is the only way to stop the war,” Mr. Katz said.
The protests
erupted as efforts to revive the Gaza ceasefire talks stalled.
US Middle
East envoy Steve Witkoff suggested Israel would be free to attack Gaza as long as the group refuses to accept
his latest ceasefire proposal unconditionally.
The recent
protests have reinforced Messrs. Witkoff and Netanyahu’s belief that increased
pressure will force Hamas to concede.
Ehud Yaari
Well-connected
veteran Israeli journalist Ehud Yaari asserted this week that “in Gaza, Hamas is broken. The two top echelons of their
military command were decapitated. They have only two of their senior
commanders still alive. They are no longer a cohesive military organisation.
They have lost their huge arsenal of rockets, anti-tank missiles, and they lost
70, 80 per cent of their tunnels,” Mr Yaari said.
Amid
deep-seated differences among Hamas leaders in Gaza, Qatar, and Turkey over
issues of succession, policy, and the fate of the remaining Hamas-held
hostages, Mr Yaari said the “shots were being called for now” by Nizar
Awadallah, a long-standing member of the group’s Political Bureau. “He objected
to the October 7 attack, he objected to the close alliance of Hamas with Iran,
and many other issues,” Mr. Yaari said.
Mr. Yaari
said the protests and recent anti-Hamas social media postings were in part
sparked by an increasing number of Hamas figures, including the commander of
the Gaza Brigade, the group’s largest military unit, suggesting that the
October 7 attack was a blunder.
“People
speak their mind saying Hamas is responsible for our tragedy,” Mr. Yaari said.
If Mr.
Yaari’s assessment is correct, Israel likely designed its renewed attack on
Gaza as much to destroy Hamas in retaliation for the October 7, 2023, attack
that killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, as to prevent Hamas or
elements of the group projecting themselves, much like Yasser Arafat’s
Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) did in the 1980s, as potential
negotiating partners.
Since
resuming hostilities earlier this month, Israel has reported killing more Hamas
military commanders and civilian officials.
Even so,
Israeli intelligence reports that Hamas has some 20,000 young, inexperienced
recruits in addition to Islamic Jihad’s 10,000 Jihad combatants who have access to weapons and explosives.
Hamas has
been able to fire missiles at Israeli cities on several occasions since Israel
resumed its assault.
Similarly,
Hamas fielded scores of fighters dressed in crisp fatigues and armed
with automatic weapons moving across Gaza in seemingly well-maintained pick-up
trucks mounted with machine guns during the ceasefire’s first-phase prisoner
exchanges.
The group
displayed a degree of command and control and an ability to stage major events
and maintain public security despite Israel’s body blows.
Mr. Witkoff’s
initial proposal to break the impasse in the ceasefire talks would have seen Hamas
release several of the 59 hostages it still holds in exchange for Palestinians
incarcerated in Israel, the lifting of the Israeli clampdown on humanitarian
aid entering Gaza, and renewed second-phase ceasefire negotiations to end the
war and ensure Israel’s withdrawal from the Strip.
Mr. Witkoff
subsequently suggested that Mr. Trump would call for calm in Gaza and Israel’s
return to negotiations if Hamas released Edan Alexander, the sole remaining
living US citizen held captive by the group.
Qatar urged
Hamas to accept the US envoy’s latest proposal, arguing it meant Mr. Trump
would pressure Israel to halt hostilities and negotiate a renewed ceasefire.
Hamas has
insisted that any deal that would lead to the release of all remaining hostages
would need to involve guarantees that Israel does not restart the war once the
group has freed all its captives.
Hamas
suggested a United Nations Security Council resolution could anchor the guarantees.
The resolution would impose sanctions on any violator and be irreversible, given
that Russia and China would likely veto any attempt to annul it.
Israel and
the United States rejected Hamas’s suggestion.
Waiting in
the wings to return to Gaza when the war ends is Mr. Dahlan, the 64-year-old scion
of a smaller Gaza clan and former Al-Fatah security official in Gaza, who is
well regarded in Washington and Jerusalem and has close ties to UAE President Mohammed
bin Zayed.
Mr. Dahlan
was forced into exile after Hamas ousted Al-Fatah, the backbone of 89-year-old President
Mahmoud Abbas’s Palestine Authority, from Gaza in 2007.
Al-Fatah
subsequently expelled Mr. Dahlan. A Ramallah court convicted him on corruption
charges in 2014 in absentia.
Earlier this
month, Mr. Abbas paved the way for Mr. Dahlan’s return by announcing an amnesty
for expelled members of his Al-Fatah party.
Mr. Abbas
announced the amnesty at an Arab summit in Cairo that adopted an Egyptian
proposal countering Mr Trump’s plan to move Gaza’s 2.3 million Palestinians out
of Gaza and turn the territory into a high-end beachfront real estate
development.
The gesture was
partly directed at Mr. Bin Zayed who was conspicuously absent. A
deputy prime minister represented the UAE at the summit.
Like the
United States, the UAE has long advocated sweeping reforms of Mr. Abbas’s
widely discredited, corrupt, and dysfunctional Authority.
Mr. Dahlan’s
more humble origins, international network, and UAE support position him as an
alternative to Hamas and the Palestine Authority, who perform poorly in Gazan
opinion polls, even if the Emirates is the Arab state most empathetic to Israel’s
hard line.
“The tribes openly
announced their participation in the protests, meaning that anger is mounting and
could explode in Hamas’ face. Hamas knows its powerful opponents on the ground
are the tribes’ dignitaries and members,” said Al-Arab, a London-based
newspaper believed to enjoy Emirati funding.
Critics argue
that Mr. Bin Zayed’s backing of Mr. Dahlan and quest for influence in Gaza is
rooted in his virulent opposition to Islamist forces, such as Hamas and the
Muslim Brotherhood.
The critics
said it was one reason why the UAE is willing to engage with Israel in ways in
which other Arab states, including those with diplomatic relations with the
Jewish state, are not.
The UAE
raised eyebrows when it invited proponents of Mr. Trump’s Gaza resettlement
plan, including Israeli parliament
speaker Amir Ohana, to a Ramadan breaking-of-the-fast iftar
in Tel Aviv.
UAE
ambassador Mohamed al-Khaja hosted the iftar a month after his Washington
counterpart, Yousef al-Otaiba, said he saw “no alternative” to the Trump proposition.
Pro-Israeli
media reported this week that the first group of Palestinians would soon move to Indonesia.
The reports,
denied by Indonesia, which does not have diplomatic relations with Israel,
appeared to be an Israeli attempt to create the impression that other
Muslim-majority states may endorse Gazan resettlement plans.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an
Adjunct Senior Fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam
School of International Studies, and the author of the syndicated column and
podcast, The Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey.
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