Middle East & Africa | Slouching towards Damascus

Hamas ponders whether to cosy up to Syria’s brutal despot

Bashar al-Assad’s regime has murdered a lot of Sunnis, but an alliance might be convenient, some say

The Palestinian Hamas movement's leader Ismail Haniyeh speaks at a public rally during his visit to the southern Lebanese city of Saida, on June 26, 2022. (Photo by MAHMOUD ZAYYAT / AFP) (Photo by MAHMOUD ZAYYAT/AFP via Getty Images)
|Jerusalem

As Syria’s bloodstained regime seeks to return to the Arab fold after a decade of civil war that isolated it from most of its counterparts in the region, Hamas, the Palestinians’ Islamist movement, is arguing bitterly with itself. One faction wants to re-engage with President Bashar al-Assad and re-establish Hamas’s former main external base in Damascus, Syria’s capital. The other faction, mindful of Mr Assad’s brutal suppression of Hamas’s local allies during the civil war, wants to keep on steering clear of his regime. This reflects Hamas’s perennial attitude towards Israel. Should it stick to its long-standing official aim of expunging the Jewish state from the region, or explore some form of coexistence, perhaps under a truce of negotiable length?

This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Slouching towards Damascus”

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