http://www.timesofisrael.com/united-by-a-common-threat-israel-egypt-and-hamas-all-fear-iran-and-its-islamic-jihad-proxy-in-gaza/
United by a common threat: Israel, Egypt and Hamas all fear Iran and its 
Islamic Jihad proxy in Gaza

Some analysts believe that the bedrock of the recent ceasefire between Israel 
and Hamas is a shared fear of Iranian influence
By Mitch Ginsburg November 25, 2012, 11:05 pm Updated: November 25, 2012, 9:51 
pm





 
Members of the Iranian proxy group Islamic Jihad praying in Gaza on the 17th 
anniversary of the death of the group's founder, Fathi Shikaki (Photo credit: 
Abed Rahim Khatib/ Flash 90)
On Thursday, during the early hours of the ceasefire, the Hamas political chief 
in Gaza Ismail Haniyeh thanked Iran “especially” for its assistance in the 
battle with Israel. The IDF, throughout the eight days of Operation Pillar of 
Defense, embedded the following line in each of its emails: “The Gaza Strip has 
been turned into a front line base for Iran, forcing Israeli citizens to live 
under unbearable circumstances.”

Yet the Hamas-Iran link, ever since the eruption of violence in Syria almost 
two years ago, has actually been under considerable strain. And, according to 
several experts, it was precisely the issue of Iran and the mutual concern over 
the growing strength of its proxy in Gaza – Palestinian Islamic Jihad – that 
allowed Israel, Egypt and Hamas to reach a ceasefire agreement.

“Iran is using Islamic Jihad to try and take over Gaza,” said Eitan Meyr, a 
former assistant to the Advisor for Counter-Terrorism in the Prime Minister’s 
Office and a fellow at the Institute for Counter-Terrorism in Herzliya. “Hamas 
is more afraid of them than of us.”

Meyr argued that Israel and Egypt, and to a certain extent Hamas, share a 
common interest in denying Iran a sizable foothold in Gaza. “We are not friends 
but we do have a mutual interest – denying the presence of an Iranian proxy on 
our [southern] doorstep.”

In some ways, Islamic Jihad, operating under Iran, is reminiscent of Hamas 
under the Palestinian Authority. Soon after the signing of the Oslo Accords in 
1993, Ibrahim Makadmeh, a senior Hamas figure, argued in two separate books 
that attacking the PA with force would bring ruin on Hamas; attacking Israel, 
however, violating the Oslo Accords and in that way baiting Israel into 
attacking the PA, would weaken the PA and deliver the seat of government to 
Hamas like low-hanging fruit, Shlomi Eldar reported in “Getting to Know Hamas.”

Currently, Hamas is still very capable of reining in Islamic Jihad. But a 
full-fledged Israeli invasion of Gaza would have weakened the organization, 
loosened its grip on power and ushered in an era of at best reduced 
governmental control, in which terror groups like Islamic Jihad thrive.

For years the cooperation between the Sunni Hamas organization and the 
Shiite-led Islamic Republic of Iran adhered to the adage of me and my cousin 
against the stranger; me and my brother against my cousin. In other words, 
despite religious and cultural differences – a nearly 1,400-year-old 
Sunni-Shiite feud that has always been dominated by the Sunni majority – the 
shared desire to eliminate the state of Israel was sufficient grounds for 
cooperation.

 
Palestinian Hamas leader Ismail Haniyah meeting with Kuwait’s Emir Sheikh Sabah 
al-Ahmad al-Sabah (Photo credit: Mohammed Al-Ostaz/ Flash 90)

This formula has been jostled by the turbulence of the Arab Spring. The rise of 
Islamist regimes, such as the one in Egypt, has translated into a greater 
shared hostility for Israel on the one hand, but an increase in the importance 
of religion and ethnicity in the region alongside a dwindling emphasis on 
national interests, as seen in Iraq, Lebanon and especially Syria.

The battle there, which began in March 2011 and has pitted mostly Sunni Syrians 
against the Allawite, pro-Iran regime of Bashar Assad, has dealt the Hamas-Iran 
alliance its most serious blow. In January, the political chief of Hamas, 
Khaled Mashaal, ended his 11-year sojourn in Damascus, closing the 
organization’s headquarters there and relocating to the resolutely anti-Iran 
and US-friendly desert kingdom of Qatar, which is said to be bankrolling the 
uprising against Assad. “Their flight from Syria made Iran very, very angry,” 
said Bassem Eid, a Palestinian human rights activist and commentator on Middle 
East affairs. “For Iran, it was nothing less a coup.”

Over the past three months, he said, the regime in Syria has been steadily 
bombing the Palestinian al-Yarmouk refugee camp outside Damascus and anti-Syria 
demonstrations in Gaza have become more common.

“Hamas and Iran are not friends,” said Arie “Leybo” Livne, the former commander 
of the southern sector for the Shin Bet internal security service and a 
research fellow at the ICT Herzliya.

Speaking of the alliance between the parties, he said, “Once you take Damascus 
out of the Iran-Syria-Hamas axis, there is no more axis.”

The Assad regime was furious with Mashaal and Hamas for leaving Damascus, 
accusing the Hamas chief of having sold out “resistance for power.”

In October, in perhaps the most concrete sign of Hamas’s allegiances in the 
battle for supremacy raging through the region, the Emir of Qatar, Sheik Hamad 
bin Khalifa al-Thani, a stark opponent of Iran’s, became the first head of 
state to visit Hamas-ruled Gaza, breaking five years of diplomatic isolation 
and pledging some $400 million in aid.

This signaled a palpable shift in Hamas’ alliance with Iran, which will, 
talking points aside, surely be tested during the coming year – as Iran’s bid 
for a nuclear weapon comes to a head.

The United States and its European partners will require, at the very least, 
robust behind the scenes backing from the Sunni states, including Egypt and the 
oil-rich nations of Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

In this Hamas is trapped between its two clashing identities. On the one hand, 
according to an Israel Radio interview with Kadima MK and former deputy 
director of the Shin Bet Israel Hasson, Hamas views itself, after shirking the 
rule of the Palestinian Authority in Gaza, as the bellwether of the Arab Spring 
— the first Arab entity to shake off corrupt, semi-secular control for a 
devout, Islamist government in the mold of Turkey and Egypt. In other words, a 
legitimate mainstream Sunni regime.

On the other hand, according to Livne, Hamas’s credibility within Gaza is also 
very much linked to its ability to retain supremacy as the chief agent of 
“resistance” to Israel.

Livne described the two major players in the region as Egypt and Iran, both 
vying for supremacy in the Middle East. “In the end, the war for control of the 
region is between them,” he said. And Hamas – linked by ideology and religion 
to the Muslim Brotherhood of Egypt – “does not want to be the marionette of 
Iran.”

Related Topics
  a.. Egypt-Hamas relations 
  b.. Palestinian Islamic Jihad 
  c.. Ismail Haniyeh


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