Iran has completely cut off its financial aid to the Palestinian militant group Hamas

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IRAN CEASES FINANCIAL AID TO HAMAS IN GAZA, OFFICIAL CLAIMS
BY JACK MOORE ON 7/28/15 AT 1:23 PM
img.jpg

Palestinian members of al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of the Hamas movement, take part in a military parade marking the 27th anniversary of Hamas' founding, in Gaza City December 14, 2014.REUTERS / MOHAMMED SALEM


Iran has completely cut off its financial aid to the Palestinian militant group Hamas, a senior Hamas official claimed on Monday, according to Israeli mediareports.

Since a rapprochement between the two last year after a rift emerged three years earlier over the Palestinian group's refusal to support Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime, Tehran has been a financial backer of Hamas, who have controlled the Gaza Strip since elections in 2006, and their military operations.

Iran's elite Revolutionary Guard has transferred millions of dollars to the Palestinian group's military wing, the Izz al-Din al-Qassam brigades, within the last year to finance Gaza's tunnel network and replenish rocket caches used against Israel during last summer's conflict, according to Western officials. However, Hamas's politburo chief Moussa Abu Marzouk, who is believed to currently reside in exile in Egypt, has now claimed that Iran's financial backing has dried up.

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"All assistance has stopped—both civilian aid to the Gaza Strip and military assistance to Hamas," he was quoted as saying in an interview with Al Jazeera by a number of Israeli media outlets. "[Iran] greatly helped the resistance in Palestine; without this assistance it will be hard for us to cope."

"The relations between Hamas and Iran are not advancing in a direction in which the organisation (Hamas) is interested and aren't improving to the degree the organization wants in order to help the Palestinian issue," the official added.

The alleged termination of funds to Hamas contradicts recent comments by Iran's political elite following the landmark nuclear deal, agreed earlier this month with six world powers in Vienna. Last week, Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araqchi confirmed that the Shiite country would continue to arm its allies in the Middle East, which include Lebanese Shiite militant group Hezbollah and another Palestinian militant group, Islamic Jihad.

"We have told them [the P5+1 world powers] in the negotiations that we will supply arms to anyone and anywhere necessary and will import weapons from anywhere we want and we have clarified this during the negotiations," he told Iranian state TV.

While Marzouk said that Hamas was still attempting to better ties with Iran, the decreased funding from the Islamic Republic comes during warming relations between Hamas, a Sunni Muslim group, and the Sunni powerhouse Saudi Arabia.

Last week, the Hamas leadership outside of the Gaza Strip, living in exile in countries such as Qatar and Turkey, visited Saudi Arabia for the first time in three years to discuss relations. The group's top political leaders held a meeting with King Salman in Mecca, in an attempt by the royal leader to pull the Sunni militant group away from Tehran's sphere of influence. Marzouk was one of the members of the Hamas delegation which travelled to Riyadh.

Ron Gilran, vice-president at the Tel Aviv-based geopolitical consultancy The Levantine Group, says that the cut in Iranian funding for Hamas is likely to be caused by the Palestinian group's recent rapprochement with Saudi Arabia, and "less linked" with the Iranian nuclear deal.

"This [rapprochement] has been going on for the last two to three months, it's a new policy of King Salman, getting close to elements in the region in order to block Iran's influence," he says. "However, I wouldn't say that there are no ties anymore. It's a game between two powers in the region for influence. I would view such comments as part of this rather than anything definitive."

A Hamas representative declined to comment.
 
Has Iran cut off Hamas? Is Hamas turning to Saudi Arabia?
By Juan Cole | Jul. 29, 2015 |
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By Juan Cole | (Informed Comment) | – –

Newsweek is reporting that Iran has cut off funding to Hamas in Gaza, citing Israeli journalism and Hamas sources.

Iran’s relationship with the Hamas party-militia in the Gaza Strip has been an roller-coaster ride in the past three years.

The youth revolutions of 2011 created hard choices for Hamas. As the Syrian protests devolved into civil war between a Shiite-dominated, secular Baathist regime and a mostly Sunni Arab rebellion in which the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood played a prominent role, Hamas’ relations with Damascus were strained. The organization’s natural allies were the Muslim fundamentalists among the Syrian rebels, but it had long depended in part on Syrian government support. (Hamas is an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood, but it is autonomous and has no reporting line to the Egyptian branch).

Likewise, Iran’s backing for Hamas was an embarrassment as of 2012 because it was also supporting the al-Assad regime.

When Muhammad Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood came to power in Egypt in summer of 2012, Hamas switched to seeking patronage and support from Morsi, and is alleged to have abandoned Iran. Aligning with Egyptian and Syrian like-minded Muslim Brothers made for ideological consistency.

Saudi Arabia doesn’t trust the Muslim Brotherhood and sees it as a sneaky authoritarian cult with radical ambitions. For Hamas to hook up with it was intolerable to the Saudis.

But then in summer of 2013, disaster struck for the fundamentalists. Morsi was overthrown. Hamas had to go back on bended knee to Tehran for patronage, even though Iran was backing the enemies of the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood, the Syrian regime.

After the US concluded a deal with Iran over the latter’s uranium enrichment program a month ago, a new realignment seemed to take place. The Saudis redoubled their attempt to overthrow the Houthis in Yemen, whom they see as Iran-backed (Iran probably has sent them a couple of million dollars, but the Houthis are mostly indigenous Yemenis.)

Two weeks ago, Khalid Mashaal, the head of the Hamas political bureau, was summoned to Riyadh. It had been years since Hamas was allowed into Riyadh, much less into the palace. There were rumors that Saudi Arabia was determined to wean Hamas off its Iran alliance as a way of closing ranks within the Sunni Arab forces.

Ma’an News Agency reported on July 19:

“Hamas leader Dr Salah al-Bardawil confirmed that the crisis between Hamas and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has seen a major relaxation in the wake of the visit of Khalid Mish’al, head of the Hamas Political Bureau, to Riyadh. Al-Bardawil told Ma’an that the visit by a Hamas delegation, led by Khalid Mish’al, to Saudi Arabia was successful and achieved its objectives. It is considered a major relaxation in relations between Hamas and Riyadh. The Hamas delegation was received by King Salman, custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, Crown Prince Muhammad Bin-Nayif, Deputy Crown Prince Muhammad Bin-Salman, and other Saudi officials.

Relations between Hamas and Saudi Arabia had been sour for years. This is the first visit of its kind to be made by a Hamas delegation to the Kingdom since 2012. Al-Bardawil said: “When relations are broken and then a meeting is held with the king, this signals a clear shift in the relationship and detente with Saudi Arabia.”

He said that “the delegation, which included Mish’al and Musa Abu-Marzuq, Salih al-Aruri, and Muhammad Nazzal, members of the Political Bureau, had a high-level reception. The visit was fruitful. We felt that there is Saudi willingness to support the Palestinian cause. This cuts off the tongue of Netanyahu, prime minister of the occupation, who claims in his speeches that there is a Saudi-Egyptian-UAE coalition in the region to deprive the Palestinians of Arab support.” He added: “Due to the mixed Arab reality, efforts for the Palestinian cause have been shelved and some major states, which are supposed to lead the Arab nation, have been neutralized. This visit aims at returning the Arab effort to its correct place and supporting Palestine.” He added: “Saudi Arabia is a big country and has resources and political influence, which qualify it to be a large supporter of the Palestinian cause on the political, moral, and material levels.”

He said that the Saudi detente means giving freedom to popular Saudi establishments to provide humanitarian assistance to the Palestinians, especially in the Gaza Strip. He confirmed that Saudi Arabia released a number of Hamas personalities during the visit. They had been detained for several months “in the wake of a misunderstanding” in Saudi Arabia. They are estimated to be four persons.

He said that Saudi Arabia would play a role in supporting reconciliation through putting pressure on the Palestinian parties “to become softer on the question of Palestinian partnership in the other part of the homeland. This will certainly help resolve the problem of civil servants and their salaries.”

BBC Monitoring translated on July 23,

“In privately-owned pro-Fatah Al-Quds newspaper, Rasim Ubaydat commented on a recent visit by Khalid Mish’al of Hamas to Riyadh, by saying that Hamas, the Palestinian wing of the Muslim Brotherhood, preferred the Saudi axis in the region to that of Tehran. “Hamas ended the argument within it by finally remaining in the Saudi-Qatari-Turkish- Muslim Brotherhood axis. It had to finally diverge from the Tehran-Damascus-southern Suburb in Beirut [reference to Hizballah]. One of the main objective of its delegation’s visit to Saudi Arabia that was headed by its politburo chief Khalid Mish’al was to prevent a new return to the Iranian axis,” he said.

In another Palestinian paper, in Hamas-run Gaza-based Filastin newspaper, Abdallah al-Aqqad pointed out that the visit could also be a prelude to Saudi efforts to end a rift between Hamas in Gaza and the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank, ensuring that Riyadh is a main player in the region. “Saudi Arabia is making efforts to end the split. It might thus soon send an invitation to President Mahmud Abbas [to come to Riyadh],” he said.

An Arabic newspaper, al-Watan, has translated a story from Maariv in the Israeli press. It alleges that Saudi Arabia is desperate to create a Sunni bloc to counter the Shiite one Iran had generally picked up.

Is Saudi Arabia on the verge of picking up Hamas as a client? It is entirely possible.
 
IRAN CEASES FINANCIAL AID TO HAMAS IN GAZA, OFFICIAL CLAIMS
BY JACK MOORE ON 7/28/15 AT 1:23 PM
img.jpg

Palestinian members of al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of the Hamas movement, take part in a military parade marking the 27th anniversary of Hamas' founding, in Gaza City December 14, 2014.REUTERS / MOHAMMED SALEM


Iran has completely cut off its financial aid to the Palestinian militant group Hamas, a senior Hamas official claimed on Monday, according to Israeli mediareports.

Since a rapprochement between the two last year after a rift emerged three years earlier over the Palestinian group's refusal to support Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime, Tehran has been a financial backer of Hamas, who have controlled the Gaza Strip since elections in 2006, and their military operations.

Iran's elite Revolutionary Guard has transferred millions of dollars to the Palestinian group's military wing, the Izz al-Din al-Qassam brigades, within the last year to finance Gaza's tunnel network and replenish rocket caches used against Israel during last summer's conflict, according to Western officials. However, Hamas's politburo chief Moussa Abu Marzouk, who is believed to currently reside in exile in Egypt, has now claimed that Iran's financial backing has dried up.

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"All assistance has stopped—both civilian aid to the Gaza Strip and military assistance to Hamas," he was quoted as saying in an interview with Al Jazeera by a number of Israeli media outlets. "[Iran] greatly helped the resistance in Palestine; without this assistance it will be hard for us to cope."

"The relations between Hamas and Iran are not advancing in a direction in which the organisation (Hamas) is interested and aren't improving to the degree the organization wants in order to help the Palestinian issue," the official added.

The alleged termination of funds to Hamas contradicts recent comments by Iran's political elite following the landmark nuclear deal, agreed earlier this month with six world powers in Vienna. Last week, Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araqchi confirmed that the Shiite country would continue to arm its allies in the Middle East, which include Lebanese Shiite militant group Hezbollah and another Palestinian militant group, Islamic Jihad.

"We have told them [the P5+1 world powers] in the negotiations that we will supply arms to anyone and anywhere necessary and will import weapons from anywhere we want and we have clarified this during the negotiations," he told Iranian state TV.

While Marzouk said that Hamas was still attempting to better ties with Iran, the decreased funding from the Islamic Republic comes during warming relations between Hamas, a Sunni Muslim group, and the Sunni powerhouse Saudi Arabia.

Last week, the Hamas leadership outside of the Gaza Strip, living in exile in countries such as Qatar and Turkey, visited Saudi Arabia for the first time in three years to discuss relations. The group's top political leaders held a meeting with King Salman in Mecca, in an attempt by the royal leader to pull the Sunni militant group away from Tehran's sphere of influence. Marzouk was one of the members of the Hamas delegation which travelled to Riyadh.

Ron Gilran, vice-president at the Tel Aviv-based geopolitical consultancy The Levantine Group, says that the cut in Iranian funding for Hamas is likely to be caused by the Palestinian group's recent rapprochement with Saudi Arabia, and "less linked" with the Iranian nuclear deal.

"This [rapprochement] has been going on for the last two to three months, it's a new policy of King Salman, getting close to elements in the region in order to block Iran's influence," he says. "However, I wouldn't say that there are no ties anymore. It's a game between two powers in the region for influence. I would view such comments as part of this rather than anything definitive."

A Hamas representative declined to comment.

Iran has nothing to gain anymore from helping Hamas, Hamas are now operating to a new agenda, what that is I'm not sure, but it's getting sinister....Hamas are now even terrorising sections of the Palestinian peoples.

They, the people need to do coup on Hamas and replace them with someone else.
 
Like Rumsfeld said...we don't know what we don't know...and when we have a clueless CINC...you can double that bet.
And deltex1 proves that he does not know what he does not know. :lol:
I don't know about the Iran / Hamas connection. I do know that Obabble is clueless...that fact is revealed NO every day.
NO PROBLEM.most republican Confuses 'Hamas' With 'Hummus :badgrin::badgrin:


Obama confuses the mullahs with rational normal people:eusa_doh:
 
Ben Carson notes "you can't keep funding hummus, once it finds a place on your plate you'll be serving it at birthdays, and Thanksgiving. And you'll run out of space in your pyramid to store the stuff. I will do my best to stab the hummus and fail, but I want full credit for trying to stab it."

"Dammit Jim, I'm a neurosurgeon, not a smart person!"
 
With 1.2 billion Sunni Muslim Neanderthals vs about 200 million Shiite Nincompoops the outcome is that the Shiite will be hitting the fan very soon. Grab your popcorn and watch the animals kill each other for the next 30 years.
 
With 1.2 billion Sunni Muslim Neanderthals vs about 200 million Shiite Nincompoops the outcome is that the Shiite will be hitting the fan very soon. Grab your popcorn and watch the animals kill each other for the next 30 years.
animals?
we arent talk about jewish
 
No, we aren't. We're talking about Muslims, based on their behavior.

No insult to animals of course.
 
In Hamas’s embrace of Sunni Saudi Arabia, a slap to Iran
Gaza-based group may try to downplay its rapprochement with Riyadh, but Tehran remains deeply offended
BY ELHANAN MILLER July 21, 2015, 3:31 pm

Palestinian Authority President Mahmud Abbas with Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad al-Thani and Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal in Doha on August 21, 2014. (photo credit: AFP PHOTO/ PPO / THAER GHANEM)

more
In Hamas’s embrace of Sunni Saudi Arabia, a slap to Iran
 
In Hamas’s embrace of Sunni Saudi Arabia, a slap to Iran
Gaza-based group may try to downplay its rapprochement with Riyadh, but Tehran remains deeply offended
BY ELHANAN MILLER July 21, 2015, 3:31 pm

Palestinian Authority President Mahmud Abbas with Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad al-Thani and Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal in Doha on August 21, 2014. (photo credit: AFP PHOTO/ PPO / THAER GHANEM)

more
In Hamas’s embrace of Sunni Saudi Arabia, a slap to Iran
The Saudis aren't going to provide them money. They are too connect to the US and they view Iran as a bigger enemy to them then Israel.
 
Hamas = Muslim Brotherhood = Islamist terrorist animal (according to Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and several Arab nations)
 

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