
	
	
	
	by Robert Fisk
	7 June 2011
	from 
	Independent Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	
	Hamas leader Ismail Hanniyeh, 
	right, shakes hands 
	
	with senior Fatah official 
	Nabil Shaath during their meeting in Gaza in May
 
	
	Secret meetings between Palestinian 
	intermediaries, Egyptian intelligence officials, the Turkish foreign 
	minister, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Hamas leader Khaled 
	Meshaal - the latter requiring a covert journey to Damascus with a detour 
	round the rebellious city of Deraa - brought about the Palestinian unity 
	which has so disturbed both Israelis and the American government. 
	
	 
	
	Fatah and Hamas ended four years of conflict in 
	May with an agreement that is crucial to the Palestinian demand for a state.
	
	A series of detailed letters, accepted by all sides, of which The 
	Independent has copies, show just how complex the negotiations were; Hamas 
	also sought - and received - the support of Syrian President Bachar 
	al-Assad, the country’s vice president Farouk al-Sharaa and its foreign 
	minister, Walid Moallem. 
	
	 
	
	Among the results was an agreement by Meshaal to 
	end Hamas rocket attacks on Israel from Gaza - since resistance would be the 
	right only of the state - and agreement that a future Palestinian state be 
	based on Israel’s 1967 borders.
	
		
		“Without the goodwill of all sides, the help 
		of the Egyptians and the acceptance of the Syrians - and the desire of 
		the Palestinians to unite after the start of 
		
		the Arab Spring, we could 
		not have done this,” one of the principal intermediaries, 75-year old Munib Masri, told me.
	
	
	It was Masri who helped to set up a ‘Palestinian 
	Forum’ of independents after the Fatah-dominated Palestinian Authority and 
	Hamas originally split after Hamas won an extraordinary election victory in 
	2006. 
	
		
		“I thought the divisions that had opened up 
		could be a catastrophe and we went for four years back and forth between 
		the various parties,” Masri said. 
		 
		
		“Abu Mazen (Mahmoud Abbas) asked me several 
		times to mediate. We opened meetings in the West Bank. We had people 
		from Gaza. Everyone participated. We had a lot of capability.”
	
	
	In three years, members of the Palestinian Forum 
	made more than 12 trips to Damascus, Cairo, Gaza and Europe and a lot of 
	initiatives were rejected. 
	
	 
	
	Masri and his colleagues dealt directly with 
	Hamas’ Prime Minister Hanniyeh in Gaza. 
	
	 
	
	They took up the so-called ‘prisoner swap 
	initiative’ of Marwan Barghouti, a senior Fatah leader in an Israeli jail; 
	then in the winds of the revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt, the youth of 
	Palestine on 15 March demanded unity and an end to the rivalry of Fatah and 
	Hamas. 
	
	 
	
	Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu had 
	always refused to talk to Abbas on the grounds that the Palestinians were 
	not united. On the 16th, he made a speech saying that he was “thinking of 
	going to Gaza”. 
	
	 
	
	Masri, who was present, stood on a chair and 
	clapped.
	
		
		“I thought Hamas would answer in a positive 
		way,” he recalls. “But in the first two or three days after Abbas’ 
		speech, it gave a rather negative response. He had wanted an immediate 
		election and no dialogue. Hamas did not appreciate this.” 
	
	
	Abbas went off to Paris and Moscow - to sulk, in 
	the eyes of some of his associates. 
	 
	
	But the Forum did not give up.
	
		
		“We wrote a document - we said we would go 
		to see the Egyptians, to congratulate them upon their revolution. So we 
		had two meetings with the Egyptian head of intelligence, Khaled Orabi - 
		Orabi’s father was an army general at the time of King Farouk - and we 
		met Mohamed Ibrahim, an officer in the intelligence department.” 
		
	
	
	Ibrahim’s father had won renown in the 1973 war 
	when he captured the highest ranking Israeli officer in Sinai. The 
	delegation also met Ibrahim’s deputies, Nadr Aser and Yassir Azawi.
	
	Seven people from each part of Palestine were to represent the team in 
	Cairo. These are the names which will be in future Palestinian history 
	books. 
	
	 
	
	From the West Bank, came,
	
		
			
				- 
				
				Dr Hanna Nasser (head of Bir Zeit 
				University and of the Palestinian central election committee)
				 
				- 
				
				Dr Mamdouh Aker (the head of the 
				human rights society)
 
				- 
				
				Mahdi Abdul-Hadi (chairman of a 
				political society in Jerusalem)
 
				- 
				
				Hanni Masri (a political analyst)
				 
				- 
				
				Iyad Masrouji (businessman in 
				pharmacuticals)
 
				- 
				
				Hazem Quasmeh (runs an NGO) 
				
 
				- 
				
				Munib Masri himself
 
			
		
	
	
	The Gaza ‘side’ were represented by
	
		
			
				- 
				
				Eyad Sarraj (who in the event could 
				not go to Cairo because he was ill)
 
				- 
				
				Maamoun Abu Shahla (member of the 
				board of Palestine Bank)
 
				- 
				
				Faysal Shawa (businessman and 
				landowner)
 
				- 
				
				Mohsen Abu Ramadan (writer)
				 
				- 
				
				Rajah Sourani (head of Arab human 
				rights, who did not go to Cairo)
 
				- 
				
				‘Abu Hassan’ (Islamic Jihad member 
				who was sent by Sarraj)
 
				- 
				
				Sharhabil Al-Zaim (a Gaza lawyer)
				 
			
		
		 
		
		“These men spent time with the top brass of 
		the Egyptian ‘mukhabarat’ intelligence service,” Masri recalls. 
		
		 
		
		“We met them on 10 April but we sent a 
		document before we arrived in Cairo. This is what made it important. In 
		Gaza, there were two different ‘sides’. 
		 
		
		So we talked about the micro-situation, 
		about Gazans in the ‘jail’ of Gaza, we talked about human rights, the 
		Egyptian blockade, about dignity. Shawa was saying ‘we feel we do not 
		have dignity - and we feel it’s your fault.’ 
		
		 
		
		Nadr Asr of the 
		intelligence department said: 
		
			
			‘We’re going to change all that.’
		
		
		“At 7.0 pm, we came back and saw Khaled Orabi again.
		 
		
		I told him: 
		
			
			‘Look, I need these things from 
		you. Do you like the new initiative, a package that’s a win-win 
		situation for everyone? Is the Palestinian file still ‘warm’ in Cairo? 
		He said ‘It’s a bit long - but we like it. Can you pressure both Fatah 
		and Hamas, to bring them in? But we will work with you. Go and see Fatah 
		and Hamas - and treat this as confidential.’ 
		
		
		We agreed, and went to see Amr Moussa (now a 
		post-revolution Egyptian presidential candidate) at the Arab League. He 
		was at first very cautious - but the next day, Amr Moussa’s team was 
		very positive. 
		 
		
		We said: 
		
			
			‘Give it a chance - we said that 
		the Arab League was created for Palestine, that the Arab League has a 
		big role in Jerusalem’.”
		
	
	
	The delegation went to see Nabil al-Arabi at the 
	Egyptian foreign ministry. 
	
		
		“Al-Arabi said: 
		
			
			‘Can I bring in the foreign 
		minister of Turkey, who happens to be in Egypt?’ 
		
		
		So we all talked about 
		the initiative together. We noticed the close relationship between the 
		foreign ministry and the intelligence ministry. 
		 
		
		That’s how I found out that ‘new’ Egypt had 
		a lot of confidence - they were talking in front of Turkey; they wanted to talk in front of Turkey. So we agreed we would all 
		talk together and then I returned with the others to Amman at 9.0 pm.”
	
	
	The team went to the West Bank to report - “we 
	were happy, we never had this feeling before” - and tell Azzam Ahmed 
	(Fatah’s head of reconciliation) that they intended to support Mahmoud 
	Abbas’s initiative over Gaza.
	
		
		“We had seven big meetings in Palestine to 
		put all the groups there and the independents in the picture. Abbas had 
		already given us a presidential decree. I spoke to Khaled Meshaal (head 
		of Hamas, living in Damascus) by phone. 
		
		 
		
		He said: 
		
			
			‘Does Abu Mazzen (Abbas) 
		agree to this?’ 
		
		
		I said that wasn’t the point. I went to 
		Damascus next day with Hanna Nasser, Mahdi Abdul Hadi and Hanni Masri. 
		Because of all the trouble in Syria, we had to make a detour around 
		Deraa. I had a good rapport with Meshaal. He said he had read our 
		document - and that it was worth looking at.”
	
	
	It was a sign of the mutual distrust between 
	Hamas and Abbas that they both seemed intent on knowing the other’s reaction 
	to the initiative before making up their own minds. 
	
		
		“Meshaal said to me: 
		
			
			‘What did Abu Mazzen (Abbas) 
		say?’ 
		
		
		I laughed and replied: 
		
			
			‘You always ask me this - but what do you want?'
		
		
		We met with Meshaal’s colleagues, Abu Marzouk, 
		Izzat Rishiq and Abu Abdu Rahman. 
		 
		
		We reviewed the document for six and a half 
		hours. The only thing we didn’t get from Meshaal was that the government 
		has to be by agreement. We told him the government has to be of 
		national unity - on the agreement that we would be able to carry out 
		elections and lift the embargo on Gaza and reconstruct Gaza, that we 
		have to abide by international law, by the UN Charter and UN 
		resolutions. 
		 
		
		He asked for three or four days. He agreed 
		that resistance must only be ‘in the national interest of the country’ - 
		it would have to be ‘aqlaqi’ - ethical. There would be no more rocket 
		attacks on civilians. In other words, no more rocket attacks from Gaza.”
	
	
	Meshaal told Masri and his friends that he had 
	seen President Bashar Assad of Syria, his vice president Sharaa and Syrian 
	foreign minister Moallem. 
	
		
		“He said he wanted their support - but in 
		the end it was the word of the Palestinian people. We were very happy - 
		we said ‘there is a small breakthrough’. 
		 
		
		Meshaal said: 
		
			
			‘We won’t let you down.’ 
		
		
		We 
		said we would communicate all this to Fatah and the independents on the 
		West Bank and to the Egyptians.
		 
		
		In the West Bank, Fatah called it the ‘Hamas 
		initiative’ - but we said no, it is from everybody. After two days, 
		Meshaal said he had spoken to Egyptian intelligence and they like what 
		we have offered.”
	
	
	The talks had been successful. Meshaal was 
	persuaded to send two of his top men to Cairo. 
	
	 
	
	Masri’s team hoped that Abbas would do the same. 
	Four men - two from each side - travelled to Egypt on 22 April. A year 
	earlier, when there was a familiar impasse between the two sides in Egypt, 
	the Mubarak regime tried to place further obstacles between them. Meshaal 
	had fruitlessly met with Omar Sulieman - Mubarak’s intelligence factotum and 
	Israel’s best friend in the Arab world - in Mecca. 
	
	 
	
	Sulieman effectively 
	worked for the Israelis. Now all had changed utterly.
	
	On the day Abbas and Meshaal went to Cairo, everyone went except the two 
	rival prime ministers, Fayad and Hanniyeh. Hamas agreed that over the past 
	four years, the Israelis had seized more of Jerusalem and built many more 
	settlements in the occupied West Bank. 
	
	 
	
	Meshaal was angry when he thought he would not 
	be allowed to speak from the podium with the others - in the event, he was - 
	and Hamas agreed on the 1967 border, effectively acknowledging Israel’s 
	existence, and to the reference to the ‘resistance’; and to give Abbas more 
	time for negotiation.
	
	If Hamas was in the government, it would have to recognize the State of 
	Israel. 
	
	 
	
	But if they were not, they would not recognize anything. 
	
		
		“It’s not fair to say ‘Hamas must do the 
		following’, Masri says. 
		 
		
		“The resistance must also be reciprocal. But 
		as long as they are not in the Palestinian government, Hamas are just a 
		political party and can say anything they want. So America should be 
		prepared to see Hamas agreeing on the formation of the government. That 
		government will abide by UN resolutions - and international law. It’s 
		got to be mutual. Both sides realized they might miss the boat of the 
		Arab spring.
		 
		
		It wasn’t me who did this - it was a 
		compilation of many efforts. If it was not for Egypt and the willingness 
		of the two Palestinian groups, this would not have happened.” 
		
	
	
	In the aftermath of the agreement, Hamas and 
	Abbas’ loyalists agreed to stop arresting members of each side.
	
	The secret story of Palestinian unity is now revealed. Israeli prime 
	minister Netanyahu’s reaction to the news - having originally refused to 
	negotiate with Palestinians because they were divided - was to say that he 
	would not talk to Abbas if Hamas came into the Palestinian government.
	
	
	 
	
	President Obama virtually dismissed the 
	Palestinian unity initiative. But 1967 borders means that Hamas is accepting 
	Israel and the ‘resistance’ initiative means an end to Gaza rockets on 
	Israel. International law and UN resolutions mean peace can be completed and 
	a Palestinian state brought into being. That, at least, is the opinion of 
	both Palestinian sides. 
	
	 
	
	The world will wait to see if Israel will reject 
	it all again.
 
	
	 
	
	
	Profile - Munib Masri
	
		
			- 
			
			The Masri family have been in the 
			Palestinian resistance all their lives. As a small boy Munib Rashid 
			Masri, from a respected family of Palestinian merchants, was 
			demonstrating against British rule in Palestine and plans for the 
			creation of Israel.
 
 
			- 
			
			Three of his children fought with 
			Arafat's PLO in southern Lebanon during the 1982 Israeli invasion. 
			"All our family believe it is our job to bring Palestine back," he 
			says. "I gave all my life to Palestine."
 
 
			- 
			
			He was introduced to Yasser Arafat in 
			1963 by the PLO leader's deputy, Abu Jihad - Khalil al-Wazzir, later 
			murdered by the Israelis in Tunis - and helped to smuggle money and 
			passports to the guerrillas, but got on well with King Hussain of 
			Jordan.
 
 
			- 
			
			With Arafat's permission, he briefly 
			became Jordan's unpaid Minister of Public Works after the collapse 
			of Palestinian forces in Black September in 1970; he rebuilt one of 
			the largest Palestinian refugee camps in Jordan when the fighting 
			ended. Much later, he would three times refuse to be Arafat's prime 
			minister.
 
 
			- 
			
			After the Oslo accords were signed in 
			1993, Masri encouraged 15 Palestinian business people - he was one 
			of them - to set up a $200m company called Padico.
 
 
			- 
			
			The investment company is now valued at 
			$1.5bn, running telecoms, tourism and a stock market, responsible 
			for the wellbeing of 27 per cent of the Palestinian economy - and 
			450,000 Palestinians.
 
		
	
	
	 
	
	
	Q & A - The events 
	that led to the historic handshake
 
	
		
		Q: How did the split come about? 
		
		 
		
		The rift between Fatah and Hamas, known 
		among Palestinians as "Wakseh", meaning ruin or humiliation, emerged 
		when Hamas won a sweeping majority in the 2006 elections. Hamas ran on a 
		change-and- reform ticket and had garnered broad support through its 
		social programs. 
		 
		
		Anger with corruption within Fatah, and 
		frustration with President Mahmoud Abbas's lack of progress on the peace 
		process helped propel them to victory. The election result stunned US 
		and Israeli officials, who had repeatedly said they would not work with 
		a Palestinian Authority which included Hamas, and led to sanctions and a 
		Western-led boycott. 
		 
		
		Security forces, still under Fatah's 
		control, refused to take orders from the government and the US continued 
		to fund Fatah. In 2007, the two sides briefly formed a unity government 
		but it collapsed as masked gunmen took to the streets of Gaza. A state 
		of emergency was announced and President Abbas dismissed Hamas's Ismail 
		Hanniyeh as Prime Minister, swearing in a new emergency cabinet in the 
		West Bank. 
		 
		
		Hamas seized control of Gaza, while Fatah 
		held on to the West Bank, leaving a de facto split as both sides traded 
		accusations about the legality of each other's rule.
		
		
		
		Q: What was the impact of the rift on the peace process? 
		
		 
		
		The split between Hamas and Fatah 
		effectively stalled the peace process, with Israel refusing to negotiate 
		with a divided Palestinian leadership, which was forced to focus on 
		putting its own house in order. However, with both sides reunited the 
		prospect for peace is not necessarily more positive. 
		 
		
		The "Palestinian Papers", diplomatic cables 
		leaked to Al Jazeera in January, showed Mr Abbas had offered 
		far-reaching concessions during talks with Ehud Olmert's government, but 
		to no avail. It is unlikely concessions so favorable to Israel will 
		make it to the negotiating room again if Hamas has a seat at the table.
		 
		
		Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, 
		who had used the rift as a reason not to negotiate, now says he will not 
		speak to Mr Abbas if Hamas is included in the Palestinian government.
		
		
		
		Q: What were the details of the agreement? 
		 
		
		In Gaza, dozens took to the streets to 
		celebrate the Egyptian-brokered pact, signed on 4 May, which brought an 
		end to four years of bitter rivalry. Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal said he 
		was ready to "pay any price" to reconcile the factions. 
		 
		
		The deal envisaged a caretaker government 
		with the task of preparing for parliamentary and presidential elections. 
		
		
		 
		
		Egypt has set up a committee to oversee the deal, but the unity 
		government has a rocky road ahead, with potential pitfalls over how to 
		integrate Hamas's military wing into the security services. 
		 
		
		For years, Egypt sponsored reconciliatory 
		talks in Cairo - but to no avail. It was the renewed vigor of the Arab 
		Spring that finally led to the historic handshake.