'Israel infiltrated Hamas leadership'
BY KHALED ABU TOAMEH
03/02/2010 01:27
www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=167624
Group probing whether Israel also got into Damascus security services.
The mysterious death of Mahmoud al-Mabhouh in Dubai last month has prompted
Hamas to launch an internal investigation to determine whether Israel has
managed to infiltrate the highest echelons of the Islamist movement, a
senior Hamas official in the Gaza Strip revealed on Tuesday.
"The assassination of someone as senior as Mabhouh has rung an alarm bell in
Hamas," the official told The Jerusalem Post. "Only a few people in the
Hamas leadership knew about Mabhouh's secret activities and movements."
The official said that many Hamas officials in the Gaza Strip and Syria were
convinced that the Mossad has infiltrated the movement's top ranks.
"Obviously, the assassination of Mabhouh is a huge security blunder for
Hamas, because it shows that the Israeli agents are sitting among our
leaders in Damascus."
The Hamas official said Hamas was also looking into the possibility that
Israel has infiltrated the Syrian security services, which are responsible
for the safety of the leaders of all the radical Palestinian groups based in
Damascus, including Hamas.
"We don't rule out the possibility that the Israelis or some other security
agency that works with them have recruited a senior Syrian intelligence
officer who feeds them with details about the movements and whereabouts of
representatives of Hamas and other groups, particularly Hizbullah," he said.
Meanwhile, Hamas appears to be divided over the question of whether it
should attack Israeli and Jewish targets around the world to avenge the
killing of its top operative.
Some Hamas officials warned that "exporting" the fight against Israel to the
international arena would jeopardize the movement's efforts to seek
recognition by the West.
A Hamas representative in the West Bank urged his movement to abide by its
long-standing policy of refraining from attacking Israeli and Jewish targets
outside the Palestinian territories and Israel.
He predicted that despite the threats, Hamas would not "change the rules of
the game" by carrying out terrorist attacks abroad.
Hamas's "foreign minister," Osama Hamdan, hinted that his movement has no
intention to launch terrorist attacks on Israelis and Jews around the world.
"Hamas won't be dragged to the square where the Israelis want to take us,"
he said. "Hamas makes its decisions in a balanced manner and in accordance
with the interests of the Palestinian people."
Hamdan, who is Hamas's representative in Lebanon, said his movement does not
make hasty decisions based on "emotional" considerations.
Shortly after blaming Israel for the killing of Mabhouh, a number of senior
Hamas officials, including Mahmoud Zahar, declared that their movement would
seek revenge outside Israel and the Palestinian territories. Hamas's armed
wing, Izzadin Kassam, issued a similar threat.
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