[ This is informational ]
Even knowing that retaliation was certain, Hamas seemed to end the cease-fire in part because of its longstanding discipline and consistency. For years it has preached to Palestinians the rejectionist credo that Fatah negotiated with Israel and got nowhere; Hamas’s way of armed force, it argued year in and year out, was the only way.
And so it appears that Hamas turned its logic against its own cease-fire: Hamas’s supreme leader, Khaled Meshal, said on Saturday that the truce had yielded few results. If there were no specific benefits — like freed prisoners or an end to Israeli blockages on Gaza — then the option, again, was a return to violence. It may also have calculated that the rockets into Israel — 60 in one day — would restore its status among Palestinians as the champion of “resistance” against the Zionist enemy, whose soldiers and settlers are no longer in Gaza within reach of Hamas’s military wing.
A major question remains whether Hamas expected the shock-and-awe Israeli offensive that has left Gaza reeling.
The outcome, for the moment, is far from clear because neither side has yet deployed the full arsenal available to it.
Some in Gaza believe Hamas wants Israeli soldiers to enter the Gaza Strip, because it has had 18 months to smuggle weapons in through tunnels from the Sinai since it seized control of the territory from Fatah. For the last several years, after Israel’s pullout from Gaza in 2005 and its erection of a barrier around the West Bank, it has been harder to strike at Israelis.
Israel, though, is aware of the risks and will not reflexively mount a large-scale military return to Gaza.
As Israeli tanks rumbled on the outskirts of Gaza and explosions and machine-gun fire echoed through the night late on Monday, it is too early to gauge the effect the renewed violence is having on Palestinian opinion. The key issue is whether Palestinians will blame Israel for raining fire down upon them, as Hamas hopes. Or blame Hamas for provoking it, as Fatah, Israel and its Western allies hope.
(full article online)
Hamas Credo Led It to End Cease-Fire