The attack launched by Hamas against Israel on 7 October cannot be the beginning of another full-scale conflict between Israel and Palestinians. It must be the start of a war on terrorism. Many commentators compared Hamas’ surprise onslaught with 9/11 in the United States or the Bataclan attack in Paris on 13 November 2015, so similar to this weekend’s rave party massacre in the Negev desert. Hamas is a Palestinian Sunni-Islamic fundamentalist militant group designated as a terrorist organisation by the EU and the US, whose aim is to put an end to Israel. Hamas has been the de facto ruler of the Gaza Strip since 2007. For the last 15 years, Gaza has been under a land, sea and air blockade from Israel. Unemployment levels in the strip are amongst the highest in the world, with 62% of the population requiring food assistance, according to the UN. A decades-long back and forth of violent conflict, steeped in centuries of dispute, finally led to boiling point. But how did Hamas take control of the region? Its rise happened in part due to the weakness of traditional organisations representing the Palestinian people, buoyed by recent events such as Israeli military raids in the Palestinian city of Jenin, strikes in both Israel and Palestine, and the raid of the Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem by Israeli soldiers. In this situation, Hamas has grown stronger, and its rival Palestinian force – the Fatah of Mahmoud Abbas – has lost all credibility. |