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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=93TT2518>
<title>
Feb. 15, 1993: Hamas and the Heartland
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Feb. 15, 1993 The Chemistry of Love
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
MIDDLE EAST, Page 37
Hamas and the Heartland
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Are terrorists being directed from the U.S.? Israel levels
overblown charges that they are--to put the heat on
Washington
</p>
<p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by Lisa Beyer/Jerusalem and
Ann Blackman/Washington
</p>
<p> The U.S. as a refuge for Muslim terrorists? Americans
were startled last week when Israel followed up the arrest of
two Arab Americans in the occupied territories by suggesting
that Hamas, the militant Muslim group that has been mounting
armed attacks in Israel and the occupied territories, had moved
its command center to the U.S. While the relationship between
Washington and Jerusalem is almost never as chummy as the two
governments make it out to be, they try not to point fingers and
quarrel in public. But this time the diplomatic niceties slipped
away in the middle of an emotional dispute about the 415
Palestinians Israel declared to be fundamentalist leaders and
deported to Lebanon. Washington has leaned hard on Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin to take all or some of them back. Israel
responded by implying that the U.S. was complicit in Hamas'
terrorism.
</p>
<p> About 3 million citizens and resident aliens of Arab
origin live in the U.S., and their cultural associations and
fund raising for Islamic causes are not secret. Many
Palestinians in the territories depend on remittances from
relatives in the U.S. for personal and institutional needs. Some
of the donors are politically active and anti-Israel as well.
But no one before had suggested that they directed the attacks
claimed by fundamentalist groups that have resulted in the death
of eight Israeli soldiers in the past two months.
</p>
<p> Rather than come right out with it, the Israelis hinted at
and leaked their charge after Mohammad Jarad and Mohammad
Salah, two naturalized Americans, were arrested as Hamas
organizers in the occupied territories. Ehud Yaari, an Arab
affairs commentator for the state-run Israel Television, said
a shaken Hamas leadership had selected the U.S. as a safe haven
and moved its "nerve center" there from the occupied
territories. The Hamas militant underground, he said, consisted
of four regional commands now directed from the U.S.
headquarters.
</p>
<p> The government press office in Jerusalem released a
diagram of how officials depicted the structure of Hamas: at the
top is the "U.S. leadership," from which its tentacles extend
into the West Bank and Gaza Strip as well as several Arab
states and Iran. Two Israeli newspapers reproduced the chart,
and all the dailies shouted the news of the arrests from their
front page.
</p>
<p> Though Jarad and Salah are being held without charge and
have had no access to attorneys, Israeli authorities say their
guilt is clear from their "confessions" and the documents they
had with them. The Israelis say the two men met with Hamas
leaders in Virginia and London before they arrived in Israel in
mid-January. Then they contacted Hamas activists in the
territories, passing out money and "specific instructions to
carry out terrorist operations." The Israelis claim that they
found minutes of those meetings and $100,000 in cash in Salah's
room at the Y.M.C.A. in East Jerusalem. As a result of this
investigation, Israelis say, 40 more Hamas members have been
arrested. The point they emphasize is that Jarad and Salah
arrived not only with money but also with directives, indicating
a commanding role for Hamas leaders in the U.S.
</p>
<p> Both of the arrested men are from the Chicago area, and
their friends and families say they went to Jerusalem to visit
relatives. "We've never been involved with politics," says
Jarad's wife Amal. Her husband, she says, works 11 hours a day,
six days a week "in front of the public" at the Holy Land Bakery
and Grocery on Chicago's North Side. Salah is a used-car
salesman.
</p>
<p> The FBI has confirmed that Hamas raises small amounts of
money from Arab communities in California, Texas and other parts
of the country. But agents have found no evidence that Hamas
military activities are commanded or directed from the U.S. A
State Department spokesman says that while Hamas has American
sympathizers, "we have no evidence to prove that Hamas terrorist
operations are working out of the U.S."
</p>
<p> One well-informed expert is Vincent Cannistraro, head of
counterterrorism at the CIA during the Bush Administration.
"Command and control of Hamas," he says, "is not coming from the
U.S. There are not more than 10 or 15 members here, and there
is no operational nerve center here." He believes that the
headquarters is in Iran and that most of the funding comes from
Arab states in the Middle East. Bruce Hoffman, the Rand Corp.'s
terrorism expert, says, "I'd look to Tehran or Damascus as the
control center." As to financing, Hoffman adds, "My suspicion
is that the money Hamas is getting from Iran, and perhaps Syria
as well, dwarfs anything they are raising in the U.S."
</p>
<p> Hamas is actually a homegrown movement, born in the Gaza
Strip a few years ago as an answer to Israel's occupation and
the perceived ineptitude of the Palestine Liberation
Organization. Israel treated the movement with benign neglect
until it turned violent in 1991. Then the government began
deporting its leaders, and that sent others running for the
border.
</p>
<p> While playing up the story of the arrested Americans to
the hilt, Israeli officials are now throttling back on the
larger charges of a U.S. command base for Hamas. "I'm not trying
to tell you this is a fixed organization with headquarters in
the States," said Uri Dromi, head of the government press
office. "But this is proof of the first seeds of some attempt
to centralize the organization and run it from one place." Said
a senior Israeli security official: "I don't think Hamas is run
only from the U.S., but the U.S. is part of the command of this
organization."
</p>
<p> Israeli officials may have publicized the theory about
Hamas' ties in the U.S. and the arrests of the Americans in
order to deflect attention from the fracas over the deported
Palestinians. The U.S.--and most of the world--thought the
move was a blunder, putting Israel on the defensive. "We've had
to conduct an uphill struggle to make our case understandable,"
says Dromi. "The more facts that expose the nature and magnitude
of this threat, the better Israel's case."
</p>
<p> In making that case, Jerusalem apparently sought to turn
some of the heat on Washington for allegedly harboring
terrorists. About 10,000 Palestinians in the territories hold
U.S. passports. In the past three years, Israel has arrested
more than 30 of them, but as a rule has played down their
American connection. Israeli security officials also informed
their political bosses last year, well before the deportations,
that money was flowing from U.S. donors to Hamas, but it was not
useful to make such information public then. Last week it was,
as part of an attempt to protect Jerusalem's interests by
blaming the U.S. for not doing enough to safeguard Israel's
security.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>