Real Clear Politics
 
June 29, 2010 
Hamas, Exposed
By _Richard Cohen_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/?author=Richard+Cohen&id=14737) 

Copyright 2010, Washington Post Writers Group
 
It's a pity that _Israel_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/israel/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
 
, while substantially loosening its grip  on Gaza, will continue to enforce 
a blockade when, with just a little  imagination, it could insist on a deal 
with the activists once again steaming  its way: You can proceed to Gaza 
if, once you get there, you demand that Hamas  cease the persecution of women, 
institute freedom of religion, halt the  continuing rocketing of Israel, 
release an Israeli hostage, ban torture and  rescind an official charter that 
could have made soothing bedtime reading for  Adolf Hitler. This may take 
some time. 
In fact, these demands would never be met. Gaza is a mean and brutal place  
with a totalitarian government steeped in a cult of violence and death. 
This  hardly means that the government does not have a measure of popular 
support and  did not, as some of the activists naively point out, come to power 
by democratic  means. So did the Nazis. 
 
The term Islamic fascism gets thrown around a lot. I initially recoiled 
from  it because I prefer to reserve fascism for fascists. The term is too 
loosely  employed -- New York City cops were called fascists by _Vietnam_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/vietnam/?utm_source=rcw&utm_mediu
m=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink) 
-era peace demonstrators -- but Paul  Berman, in his new book "The Flight 
of the Intellectuals," makes a solid case  that it can, with justice, be 
applied to Hamas. 
Berman traces Hamas' intellectual pedigree to _Egypt_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/egypt/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campai
gn=rcwautolink) 's Muslim Brotherhood, whose founder,  Hassan al-Banna, 
greatly admired Hitler, and to Haj Amin al-Husseini, the Grand  Mufti of 
Jerusalem who spent much of World War II in Germany cozying up to  Hitler, 
organizing a Muslim SS unit and, on occasion, remonstrating with the  Nazis for 
not 
killing enough Jews. (See also Robert S. Wistrich's recent book,  "A Lethal 
Obsession.") It's appalling not only that Husseini was granted  sanctuary 
in Arab countries after the war, but that he continues to be revered  as a 
Palestinian patriot. 
The successor to both Banna and Husseini was Sayyid Qutb (1906-66), an  
Egyptian intellectual of uncontested importance whose influence can be found in 
 the writing of the Hamas charter. Qutb was an indefatigable author (more 
than 20  books, some written while in an Egyptian prison where he was 
tortured), but the  article that should interest the pro-Hamas activists the 
most 
is called "Our  Struggle with the Jews." It is a shocking and repellent work 
of anti-Semitism  that, among other things, says the "Jews will be satisfied 
only with the  destruction" of Islam. Qutb cites that hoary anti-Semitic 
forgery "The Protocols  of the Elders of Zion" for substantiation -- 
suggesting that his status as an  intellectual is somewhat due to heroic grade 
inflation. 
The extremely useful term "useful idiots" was originally coined to describe 
 Soviet sympathizers in Western countries. But there is no reason it cannot 
be  applied to so-called activists who wish to break the blockade, which is 
an  increasingly untenable exercise that Israel, bit by bit, is loosening. 
That's a  good thing. But if Israel is expected to release its grip on Gaza, 
it's entitled  to a bit of reciprocity -- at the very least the release of 
the hostage Gilad  Shalit, who was not captured in Gaza but was abducted on 
the Israel side of the  border. He has been held for four years now and has 
never once been visited by  an outsider. How about maybe one ship in the 
approaching flotilla just for  him? 
Now is the time, I suppose, to say that Israel is not exactly perfect 
either.  It continues to overreact, uses too much force and has often trampled 
on 
the  rights of Palestinians. Still, Israel is Thomas Jefferson's idea of 
heaven  compared to Gaza, which could serve as a seaside Club Med for 
Jew-haters. One  country is consonant with the Enlightenment; the other is a 
dark 
place of  religious intolerance where the firmest principles of anti-Semitism 
-- not  anti-Zionism or pro-Palestinianism -- are embedded in the Hamas 
charter. 
The irony is that Israel is often called a colonialist power. In some 
sense,  the charge is true. But the ones with the true colonialist mentality 
are 
those  who think that Arabs cannot be held to Western standards of decency. 
So, for  this reason, Hamas is apparently forgiven for its treatment of 
women, its  anti-Semitism, its hostility to all other religions, its fervid 
embrace of a  dark (non-Muslim) medievalism and its absolute insistence that 
Israel has no  right to exist. Maybe the blockade ought to end -- but so, too, 
should anyone's  dreamy idea of Hamas. It's not just a threat to Israel. 
It's a threat to the  eventual _Palestine_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/palestine/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautol
ink) .
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