How Netanyahu's Hamas policy came back to haunt him and Israel - Action News
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How Netanyahu's Hamas policy came back to haunt him and Israel

In the wake of Hamas's deadly rampage of October 7, some Israelis are remembering Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's previous attempts to "keep Hamas alive" as a counterweight to more moderate Palestinian groups.

The Israeli leader and Hamas are deadly enemies and allies in opposing a 2-state solution

People crouch in the street and cover their heads with their arms.
Israelis take cover as a siren warns of incoming rockets fired from the Gaza Strip during the funeral of the Israeli man Sagiv Ben Svi, killed by Hamas militants while attending a music festival, at a cemetery in Holon, central Israel, on Oct. 26, 2023. (Petros Giannakouris/Associated Press)

Israelis don't agree on much, especially lately, but pollingshowsthey mostly agreethatPrime MinisterBenjamin "Bibi" Netanyahuis to blame for leavingIsrael unprepared for Hamas's onslaught on October 7.

The accusations aimed at Netanyahu go beyond merely failing to foresee or prevent the Hamas attack of October 7, however. Many accuse him of deliberately empowering the groupfor decades as part of a strategy to sabotage a two-state solution based on the principle of land for peace.

"There's been a lot of criticism of Netanyahu in Israel for instating a policy for many years of strengthening Hamas and keeping Gaza on the brink while weakening the Palestinian Authority," said Mairav Zonszein of the International Crisis Group. "And we've seen that happening very clearly on the ground."

"(Hamas and Netanyahu) are mutually reinforcing, in the sense that they provide each other with a way to continue to use force and rejectionism as opposed to making sacrifices and compromises in order to reach some kind of resolution," Zonszein told CBC News from Tel Aviv.

'Keep Hamas alive and kicking'

This symbiotic relationship between Netanyahu and Hamas has been remarked on for years, by both friends and enemies, hawks and doves.

Yuval Diskin, former head ofIsrael's Shin Bet security service, told the daily newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth in 2013 that"if we look at it over the years, one of the main people contributing to Hamas's strengthening has been Bibi Netanyahu, since his first term as prime minister."

In August 2019, former prime minister Ehud Barak told Israeli Army Radio that Netanyahu's "strategy is to keep Hamas alive and kicking even at the price of abandoning the citizens [of the south] in order to weaken the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah."

The logic underlying this strategy, Baraksaid, is that "it's easier with Hamas to explain to Israelis that there is no one to sit with and no one to talk to."

Netanyahu's critics say that Hamaswith its bloodthirsty rhetoric, open antisemitismand stated intention never to share the land played into the hands of a prime minister who also wanted to be able to tell western governmentsthat Israel has "no partner" for peace.

Supporting Hamas rule in Gaza, those critics say, allowed Netanyahu to confine the Palestinian Authority to the West Bank and weaken it, dividing the Palestinians into two mutually antagonistic blocs.

Hamasputs its finger on the scales

Netanyahufirst came to power in the1996 election that followedthe assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin by an Israeli extremist opposed to the Oslo Accords.

Early polls showed Rabin's successor Shimon Peres comfortably ahead.

Determined to sabotage Oslo, Hamas embarked on a ruthless suicide bombing campaign that helped Netanyahu pull ahead of Peresand win the election on May 29, 1996.

Today, some of the same extremists who called for Rabin's death hold power in Netanyahu's government.

A youthful Ben Gvir shows off a Cadillac hood ornament he claimed to have taken from PM Yitzhak Rabin shortly before the Israeli peacemaker was assassinated. Convicted of terrorism charges, Ben Gvir is today Israel's minister of national security.
A youthful Ben Gvir shows off a Cadillac hood ornament he claimed to have taken from Yitzhak Rabin's car shortly before the Israeli peacemaker was assassinated. Convicted of terrorism charges, Ben Gvir is today Israel's minister of national security. (Screengrab YouTube)

Just two weeks before Rabin's assassination, a young settler extremist posed for the cameras with a Cadillac hood ornament he said he had stolen from Rabin's car."Just like we got to this emblem," he said, "we could get to Rabin."

Today, that young man, Itamar Ben Gvir, is 45 years old andhas eight Israeli criminal convictions including convictions for supporting a terrorist organization and incitement to racism.Once he was rejected by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) for his extremist views. Now, Israel's police mustanswer to himas Benjamin Netanyahu's minister of national security.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israel's National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir smile before Netanyahu's statement in the Knesset, Israel's parliament in Jerusalem, Tuesday, May 23, 2023.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israel's National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir smile before Netanyahu delivers a statement in the Knesset in Jerusalem on May 23, 2023. (Ohad Zwigenberg/The Associated Press)

Many analysts believe one of the main goals of the Hamasattack on Israel was to derail the normalization talks underway between Israel and Saudi Arabia, which would have left the Palestinians on the sidelines.

In a remarkablespeech last week in Houston,Saudi Prince Turki bin Faisal unleashed on Hamasfor its atrocities and obstructionism.But he also had words for Israel.

"I condemn Hamas for further undermining the Palestinian Authority, as Israel has been doing," saidthe former Saudi intelligence chief and ambassador to the U.S."I condemn Hamas for sabotaging the attempt of Saudi Arabia to reach a peaceful resolution to the plight of the Palestinian people.

"I condemn Israel for funnelling Qatari money to Hamas."

Prince Turki was referring to moneythat the Qatar royal family has been sending to Gaza foryears, to the tune of about a billion U.S. dollars.

'Hamas is an asset'

Netanyahu's hawkish defence minister Avigdor Liberman was the first to reportin 2020 that Bibi had dispatched Mossadchief Yossi Cohen and the IDF'sofficer in charge of Gaza, Herzi Halevi,to Doha to "beg" the Qataris to continue to send money to Hamas.

"Both Egypt and Qatar are angry with Hamas and planned to cut ties with them. Suddenly Netanyahu appears as the defender of Hamas," the right-wing leadercomplained.

A year later, Netanyahu was furtherembarrassed when photos of suitcases full of cashgoing to Hamas became public. Libermanfinallyresigned in protest over Netanyahu'sHamas policywhich, he said, marked "the first time Israel is funding terrorism against itself."

Netanyahu's education minister Naftali Bennett also denounced the payments, and also quit.

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The Palestinian Authority's Ahmed Majdalani accused the Qatari envoy of carrying money to Hamas "like a gangster."

"The PLO did not agree to the deal facilitating the money to Hamas that way," he said.

After both Bennett and Liberman fell out with Netanyahu, he was defeated by a new government that stopped the cash deliveries to Hamas.

But that government lasted just 18 months. Then Netanyahu returned to power with new, more extreme partners who backed the policy of fostering Hamas to prevent a negotiated peace settlement.

Netanyahu's current finance minister, West Bank settler Belazel Smotrich, explained the approachto Israel's Knesset channel in 2015: "Hamas is an asset, and (Palestinian Authority leader) Abu Mazen (Mahmoud Abbas) is a burden."

Paying Hamas to weaken Oslo

On March 12, 2019, Netanyahu defended the Hamas payments to his Likud Party caucus on the grounds that they weakened the pro-Oslo Palestinian Authority, according to the Jerusalem Post:

"Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu defended Israel's regular allowing of Qatari funds to be transferred into Gaza, saying it is part of a broader strategy to keep Hamas and the Palestinian Authority separate, a source in Monday's Likud faction meeting said," the Post reported.

"The prime minister also said that'whoever is against a Palestinian state should be for' transferring the funds to Gaza, because maintaining a separation between the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank and Hamas in Gaza helps prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state."

A man at a counter receives a handful of cash.
A Palestinian Hamas government employee waits to receives 60 per cent of their long-overdue salary while others wait in the queue in Gaza City on Nov. 9, 2018. Gaza's Hamas rulers received $15 million from Qatar to help pay the salaries of the territory's civil servants. (Adel Hana/The Associated Press)

Netanyahu insisted that neither the money nor the construction material given to Hamas would be diverted to military purposes. But today, the IDFfinds itselfshowing how Hamas has done exactly that bydiverting and converting civilian funds and materials to warlike purposes.

The military tried to warn him at the time, former IDF chief of staff Gadi Eisenkot told the Ma'ariv newspaper. He said Netanyahu acted "in total opposition to the national assessment of the National Security Council, which determined that there was a need to disconnect from the Palestinians and establish two states."

"We Gaza border residents are paying the price for the lack of policy and the arrogance in facing terror," saidLabor Party Knesset member Haim Jelin in 2019.

Those words would prove to be terribly prescient four years later.

Haim Jelin is a resident of Kibbutz Be'eri. The small community was devastated by Hamas on October 7. Roughly130of its residents were murdered, while others were taken into captivity in Gaza.

Catch-22 for two-state solution

Mustafa Barghouti, a physician and member of the PLO Central Council, was a key figure in talks between Hamas and Fatah that sought to unify the Palestinians in a single blocthat could negotiate a two-state peace.

"Each time we moved toward unity, Netanyahu would launch a campaign claiming that (Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud) Abbas is cooperating with terrorists," Barghouti told CBC News from Ramallah in the West Bank.

"But each time Netanyahu was asked, 'Why don't you negotiate with Abbas,' he would say, 'I can't negotiate with a Palestinian Authority that doesn't represent all Palestinians.' And so he would use Hamas and this division to justify his absolute objection to any negotiated peace agreement."

Palestinians mourn a child killed in the Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip during his funeral at a UN-run school in Deir al Balah, Gaza Strip, Friday, Oct. 27, 2023.
Palestinians mourn a child killed in the Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip during his funeral at a UN-run school in Deir al Balah, Gaza Strip, on Oct. 27, 2023. (Ali Mahmoud/Associated Press)

Barghoutisaid the current warhas ended U.S. and Israeli hopes of Israel normalizing relationswith neighbouring countries without first resolving the Palestinian issue.

"One of the main results of what has happened is to show that normalization between Israel and some Arab countries does not solve the problem," he said. "It re-established the Palestinian issue as the central issue in this whole knot."

"Most of the world thought that it could sideline this issue," said Zonszein. "Certainly the U.S. thought that. But now it's clear that it is the key to stability in the region as a whole."

Biden: U.S. wants two states

On Wednesday, U.S. President Joe Biden warned Israel to stop attacks by Israeli settlers a key part of Netanyahu's coalition on Palestinian civilians. Attacks have spiked this year.

"They're attacking Palestinians in places that they're entitled to be, and it has to stop," Biden said."They have to be held accountable."

Biden also spoke aboutwhat the U.S. wants to see after the war.

"When this crisis is over, there has to be a vision of what comes next," he said."And in our view, it has to be a two-state solution."

Neither Hamas nor Netanyahu share that vision.

As Netanyahu has pointed out, Hamas does not recognize Israel's right to exist and lays claim to all of the land "from the river to the sea."

And just twelve days before the Hamas massacres in southern Israel, Netanyahu addressed the UN General Assembly, holding a map of what he called "The New Middle East"that showed all of the West Bank and Gaza, as well as East Jerusalem and the Syrian Golan Heights, as parts of an enlarged Israel, with no Palestinian state in sight.

Damage likely to be lasting

There is a widespread feeling in Israelthat Netanyahu's career is finally ending. A trial on serious corruption charges looms in his future.

"He's finished. It's over," said Barghouti. "The problem is that the alternatives are nodifferent from him when it comes to any Palestinian issue. They differ with him on other matters, but when it comes to Palestinians, I don't see any peace camp in Israel."

Hamas and Netanyahumay both prove harder to eliminate than their enemies hope. But even if theyleave the scene, the damage to the two-state solution is not easily undone and the current war likely will make things worse, saidZonszein.

"I'm concerned that the fear and the trauma and shock of what happened is only going to make Israelis more scared of Palestinians, and Palestinians more scared of Israelis," she said."And you see a lot of Israelis who are arming themselves now with personal firearms because they don't trust that the army and police will be there for them."

A protester carries a green flag in front of a backdrop of burning tires.
A Palestinian protester with a Hamas headband carries a Hamas flag behind burning tires during clashes following a demonstration in solidarity with the Gaza Strip in the West Bank city of Ramallah on Oct. 27, 2023. (Nasser Nasser/Associated Press)

Nor will Gazans be easily reconciled to the restoration of a corrupt Palestinian Authority, especially oneseen to be riding back to power on an Israeli tank.

"It's already lost most of its legitimacy and credibility on the street in the West Bank," said Zonszein."There haven't been elections in 16 years and they don't have the ability to govern even the West Bank, so why would anyone think they have the ability to govern Gaza?"

Barghouti agreed the current Palestinian Authority and its leadership are at a dead end.

"No Palestinian leader will ever have legitimacy without free, democratic elections, and that is true whether he governs Gaza or not," he said.

"But in my opinion, Israel is not interested in a Palestinian government of Gaza."