Hamas Leader Hints of 'Indirect' Talks With U.S.

Published November 23rd, 2018 - 11:00 GMT
Fighters from the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of the Palestinian Hamas movement, take part in a military show. (AFP)
Fighters from the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of the Palestinian Hamas movement, take part in a military show. (AFP)

Leading Hamas member Mousa Abu Marzook on Thursday spoke to Anadolu Agency about recent developments pertaining to the Israel-Palestine file.

According to Abu Marzook, Ismail Haniyeh, head of Hamas’s influential political bureau, is preparing to go on an international tour to promote the Palestinian national cause overseas.

"Arab and Muslim countries, along with some other states, have expressed readiness to receive Haniyeh and an accompanying delegation," he said.

Commenting on the group’s recent talks with Egyptian officials aimed at implementing earlier agreements between Hamas and rival faction Fatah, Abu Marzook clarified that the talks in Cairo had yielded “humanitarian understandings rather than signed agreements”.

The talks, he said, were aimed at “ending blockaded Gaza’s humanitarian crisis… without making any political concessions”.

Abu Marzook also noted that European efforts were now underway -- led by Norway -- aimed at de-escalating the situation in Gaza and easing its dire humanitarian situation.

He went on to commend Egypt and Qatar, along with UN peace envoy Nikolay Mladenov, for their recent mediation efforts.

On Wednesday, a Hamas delegation led by group deputy leader Saleh al-Arouri arrived in Cairo for more talks.

Notably, the U.S. administration recently offered a $5-million reward for information leading to al-Arouri’s capture.

Commenting on the move, Abu Marzook said the bounty “will not restrict al-Arouri's movements or otherwise affect him, especially given that he doesn’t keep funds in U.S. banks or their affiliates”.

“Our talks with Egypt, meanwhile, have borne fruit,” he added. “They have led to the opening of commercial crossings and allowed fuel shipments into Gaza, enabling us to produce badly-needed electricity."

Fresh funds recently allowed into the strip, he said, "will directly reach 50,000 poor families in Gaza and create job opportunities for thousands of young people”.

Abu Marzook also dismissed recent media reports that a 300-meter buffer zone would be set up between Gaza and Israel.

“Hamas has not -- and will not -- accept this,” he said.

He also denied recent reports that the German authorities were mediating indirect talks between his group and Israel for the release of Israeli soldiers captured by Hamas in 2014.

 

‘Reconciliation’

Regarding the stumbling “reconciliation process” with rival faction Fatah, Abu Marzook said the latter was refusing to hold meetings with Hamas officials.

“We’ve only seen progress in terms of the Egypt-brokered truce with Israel,” he said, referring to a cessation-of-hostilities deal hammered out early last week.

He went on to voice hope that Fatah would “abandon its preconditions, stop punishing Gaza, and implement the terms of past reconciliation agreements”.

"We don’t want to bypass the [Fatah-led] Palestinian Authority (PA), but its current isolation -- and its continued rejection of any practical solutions to the crisis in Gaza -- is only aggravating the situation,” Abu Marzook said.

Hamas, he added, wants “a national partnership” with Fatah with a view to establishing “a national unity government with defined objectives and able to hold elections”.

He described Fatah’s preconditions for reconciliation as “obstacles”, saying the Ramallah-based faction was insisting on “controlling security [inside the Gaza Strip] and deciding the fate of the armed resistance”.

Abu Marzook also pointed out that last week’s botched Israel ground incursion -- during which an Israeli officer was killed inside Gaza -- had seen Israeli forces enter the strip through a border crossing controlled by the PA.

“The PA’s control of border crossings and the absence of our [Hamas] security forces… has negatively affected Gaza’s security situation,” he said.

Regarding Hamas’s ties with Cairo, Abu Marzook said that relations had picked up noticeably after Egypt opened the Rafah border crossing (linking Gaza to Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula) on a semi-permanent basis for the first time since the Israeli blockade was imposed in 2006.

 

Deal of Century

Commenting on a backchannel U.S. peace plan known as the “Deal of the Century” (details of which have yet to be made public), Abu Marzook hinted that “indirect” communication was now underway between Hamas and the U.S. administration.

Hamas’s inclusion on Washington’s list of alleged “terrorist groups” bars U.S. officials from speaking directly to the resistance group, which has governed the Gaza Strip since 2007.

Abu Marzook also stressed Hamas’s continued commitment to the right of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes in historical Palestine, from which they were driven in 1948 to make way for the new state of Israel.

“We will never drop our longstanding demand for the refugees’ right to return,” he said, going on to voice alarm over what he described as "strange attacks by the Arab regimes on the rights of Palestinian refugees”.

He also dismissed reports that the so-called Deal of the Century would yield a truncated Palestinian state in the Gaza Strip.

“If we wanted that, we would have accepted earlier proposals supported by certain foreign capitals,” he said.

“But our goal is the liberation Palestine -- in its entirety -- which we want to see unified, not divided,” Abu Marzouk concluded.

 This article has been adapted from its original source.

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