Even Washington's think-tank knows that whan Abbas did to appoint a new PM is 
against the Palestinean Basic Laws dan thus not legal. It is odd that they are 
calling this a Hamas coup, because they (Hamas) are the legal government.

AAL


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Hamas's Coup and the Challenges Ahead for Fatah

By Mohammad Yaghi and Ben Fishman
June 19, 2007
Washington Institute for Near East Policy
http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/templateC05.php?CID=2624

Hamas's victory in Gaza last week was a military coup of Fatah's security 
forces -- not a Palestinian civil war involving the majority of each faction's 
supporters. Fatah's armed forces collapsed in the face of a long-planned, 
well-executed campaign targeting the headquarters and leadership of the 
faction's security organizations. The coup and the grisly violence that 
accompanied it reveal much about Hamas's politics and long-term objectives as a 
movement. 
The triumph occurred largely due to the weakness of Fatah's leadership, which 
failed to mobilize the faction's superior numbers to stave off the assaults or 
organize any kind of counteroffensive. When formulating policy responses to the 
Hamas victory, the United States and its partners must recognize that no level 
of support for Fatah will enable the organization to defeat Hamas in the 
political arena if it does not undertake long-overdue reforms, including the 
overhaul of its inept leadership. The new emergency government headed by 
economist Salam Fayad is technocratic rather than political, so reforming Fatah 
will not be among its many missions. Such reform will instead have to be 
pursued in parallel with whatever steps are taken to bolster the new cabinet. 

Fatah's Leadership Void

Fighting against a larger force, Hamas recognized that Fatah's primary 
vulnerability stemmed from rivalries among its leaders and their serial 
inability to take decisive action. Using a divide-and-conquer strategy, Hamas 
targeted the most threatening members of Fatah's Gaza leadership and their 
families while apparently cutting deals with Fatah figures keen to cooperate 
with Hamas. In essence, Hamas won the battle for Gaza by driving Fatah's most 
significant figureheads into exile in Ramallah a month before taking control of 
the streets. 

In mid-May, for example, Hamas forces entered the home of Rashid Abu Shbak and 
killed several of his bodyguards. Shbak is a longtime deputy and enforcer of 
Fatah strongman Muhammad Dahlan and former director-general of the interior 
ministry. Although he had already fled to Ramallah when the attack occurred, 
the signal to him and Dahlan (recovering from medical treatment in Cairo at the 
time) was clear: they would be targeted for assassination if they returned to 
Gaza. Similarly, Hamas surrounded and shelled the homes of Preventive Security 
director Samir Mashrawi and Fatah spokesman Maher Mukdad, in addition to 
burning the homes of two Fatah representatives on the Palestinian Legislative 
Council. 

Even as it carried out these attacks, Hamas publicly explained that its 
grievances were not with Fatah as a whole, but specifically with Fatah's 
Preventive Security Organization, presidential guard, and general intelligence 
personnel, all of which it labeled collaborators with Israel. This distinction 
paid off when Ahmed Hilis, a long-time Fatah rival of Dahlan's in Gaza, 
declared on al-Jazeera that Fatah and Hamas were not fighting each other. 
Instead, he claimed, groups within each movement were responsible for the 
violence. Previously, Hilis had organized an April conference for thousands of 
his supporters during which he criticized the motivations of "some groups" 
within Fatah and announced his opposition to joining the clashes with Hamas. 
His faction thus avoided being targeted by Hamas during the Gaza takeover. 

Hilis represents an important perspective among those Fatah leaders who 
continue to favor cooperation with Hamas over confrontation. Other such leaders 
include Dahlan rival Jibril Rajoub, whose brother is a Hamas legislator, and 
Marwan Barghouti, who helped orchestrate the February 2007 Mecca accord and 
subsequent unity government from prison and has remained quiet in the face of 
Hamas's victory. 

Those Fatah leaders who had been driven from Gaza before Hamas's takeover, 
along with their allies in the West Bank, responded to the assault with silence 
and paralysis. Just one day before Hamas overran his compound in Gaza and 
defaced his office, even President Mahmoud Abbas declared in a press conference 
with the Dutch foreign minister that he did "not blame one party" for the 
fighting. Both Abbas -- commander-in-chief of the Palestinian armed forces -- 
and other top Fatah security officials abandoned their roles as leaders while 
Hamas was surrounding their troops. Numerous press reports from Gaza have 
quoted local Fatah commanders and soldiers pleading for orders, some admitting 
that they could not reach their superiors for instructions because of 
turned-off cell phones. And even when Abbas finally acted to dissolve the 
government and declare a state of emergency, he chose an aide to read his 
decree rather than addressing the public directly. 

It is impossible to say whether Fatah could have staved off total defeat had 
Abbas or his deputies taken a more vocal and active leadership role once Hamas 
made clear its intentions. But there is no doubt that the leadership void left 
Fatah without a chance. Abbas, for his part, did not issue any meaningful 
instructions to the police -- who were not engaged in most of the fighting -- 
to defend the other security organizations. Nor did he provide orders to the 
thousands of Fatah members in Gaza or demand that the leaders hiding in 
Ramallah return and rally their troops. Without such decisive moves, Fatah 
ensured its own collapse. 

Hamas Motives

The extent of the planning required for Hamas's systematic operations last week 
indicate that the group was preparing for such an assault even before it became 
clear that the Mecca accord would not succeed. For example, exploding the 
tunnel under the Preventive Security headquarters in Khan Yunis alone took 
weeks of preparation. 

It appears that Hamas initiated the ultimate round of fighting to achieve three 
related objectives, articulated by political bureau head Khaled Mashal in a 
June 15 press conference in Damascus: (1) force Abbas to implement the terms of 
the Mecca accord, which stipulated that Hamas be integrated into the security 
forces and, more significantly, into the official organs of the Palestine 
Liberation Organization (PLO); (2) preemptively defeat Fatah's forces in Gaza 
before they could be strengthened from the outside -- a source of increasing 
concern for Hamas after the presidential guard began to receive training and 
supplies from the United States; and (3) reestablish internal security within 
Gaza. 

Whether or not it was a realistic calculation, Hamas appears to have operated 
under the assumption that Fatah's defeat would force Abbas and his allies to 
concede Hamas's major points of contestation during unity discussions. Hamas 
has already reached out to Arab states to endorse its position on integrating 
the security services and restructuring the PLO. A June 16 meeting of Arab 
foreign ministers signaled that the Arab League would scrupulously avoid any 
kind of partisan role, however, instead offering to form a fact-finding 
committee to investigate the violence in Gaza. 

Mashal's conciliatory press conference on June 15 emphasized that Hamas does 
not seek total control of the Palestinian Authority (PA), but rather a true 
unity government according to its interpretation of the Mecca accord. The group 
has rejected the legitimacy of the emergency government headed by Fayad, 
insisting that the West Bank and Gaza be governed together. To indicate its 
good faith, Hamas issued a public pardon to all Fatah security forces in Gaza 
and released several of Fatah's remaining leaders captured during the violence. 

The question for Hamas, however, is whether it acted too quickly and 
presumptuously. The group is now accountable to the people of Gaza and must 
figure out a way to feed the 1.4 million residents whose main source of 
assistance was suspended during the violence. As conditions rapidly worsen, 
blaming the West, Israel, or Abbas will not satisfy the hundreds of thousands 
of Palestinians whose means of subsistence and political identity as part of a 
future Palestinian state are now in question. 

The Fatah Response

Not surprisingly, Fatah forces retaliated against Hamas leaders and 
institutions in the West Bank, arresting activists, closing educational and 
cultural centers, and evicting elected officials from their offices. In Nablus, 
Fatah replaced the elected Hamas municipal council with its own newly appointed 
members and dismissed Hamas appointments to PA ministries. Such actions were 
taken out of both revenge and a genuine fear that Hamas may have a military 
apparatus capable of transferring the Gaza violence to the West Bank. 

In all these cases, Fatah acted in the same extralegal manner Abbas did when he 
declared a state of emergency and appointed a new government of technocrats 
that, in practice, can operate only in the West Bank. Although Abbas may have 
felt he had no choice but to appoint the emergency government and invalidate 
the previously amended Basic Law, he must now take a series of steps to prove 
he is acting legitimately and out of a sense of responsibility to the 
Palestinian public. Fatah has one last chance to cling to authority in the West 
Bank; if it fails in the coming months, it risks losing control of the PLO and, 
consequently, its leadership of the Palestinians. 

In addition to marshaling the expected economic assistance from the West to 
improve living conditions in the West Bank, Abbas must initiate an internal 
process of serious reforms to restore Fatah's credibility. Donor assistance or 
U.S. promises of what lies on the "political horizon" may help Fatah in the 
short term, but they cannot substitute for the badly needed reforms the faction 
must undergo if it is to regain legitimacy in the eyes of the populace. This 
means that the paralyzing rivalries among its leadership must be suspended; 
internal elections must take place (serious preparation for a party conference 
-- which has not taken place in eighteen years -- would be a good start); and 
grassroots activists and professionals must begin to take advantage of renewed 
international assistance by providing medical care, food, and educational 
services to their constituents. Fatah must also rein in its own militants and 
restore some measure of credibility to a long-broken judicial system. 

Only if Fatah can work simultaneously on the political, security, and social 
levels will it prove itself capable of restoring its lost credibility and 
competing with Hamas politically. Without significant efforts on all these 
fronts, financial and diplomatic gestures toward Abbas are doomed to repeat the 
mistakes of the 1990s, when donor assistance only cultivated corruption and the 
problems that plague Fatah today. 

There should be no illusions that such reform will be easy. Yet there is a 
dedicated group of young leaders within Fatah who are committed to the 
principles of internal democracy and hungry for the opportunity to restore 
legitimacy to a movement still governed by an older generation that was never 
connected to the Palestinian populace. Hopefully, the defeat in Gaza will shock 
Fatah into recognizing that it must adapt in order to overcome Hamas. The 
younger generation of Fatah leaders will need assistance from the West, 
however. Western diplomats would be wise to meet with these leaders directly 
and support their activities instead of relying on Abbas's office to perform 
the task of reform that it has avoided for the past two-and-a-half years. 

Mohammad Yaghi is a Lafer international fellow with The Washington Institute 
and a columnist for the Palestinian daily al-Ayyam. Ben Fishman is researcher 
and special assistant to Ambassador Dennis Ross at the Institute. 

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