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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>
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