Politics & Policy

Hamas Terror Master

The deadly legacy of Ahmad Yassin.

–Hamas leader Ahmad Yassin–along with four other terrorists–was blown to smithereens by a missile fired from an Israeli helicopter gunship on Monday. Now they’re mad over at Hamas HQ. They may even be angry enough to send a suicide bomber into an Israeli city to kill innocent people.

Yassin was considered Irsrael’s bin Laden, routinely calling the Palestinian terrorism shots. Another Hamas leader, English-speaking media favorite Abdel Aziz Rantisi, declared to the thousands of Gazan Arabs who poured into the streets when the death of Yassin became known: “War is henceforth open with these murderers, these criminals and these terrorists.”

Of course, that’s not really news. Hamas unambiguously declared war on the Jews through its covenant, published in 1988: “Israel will exist and will continue to exist until Islam will obliterate it, just as it obliterated others before it” (Preamble).

How? “There is no solution for the Palestinian problem except by Jihad” (Article 13).

However, as the covenant makes clear, it is not just Israel that is a problem for Hamas: “Israel, Judaism and Jews challenge Islam and the Muslim people. ‘May the cowards never sleep’” (Article 28).

The Hamas Covenant also quotes a tradition recorded in an authoritative Islamic text: “The Day of Judgment will not come about until Muslims fight the Jews and kill them. Then, the Jews will hide behind rocks and trees, and the rocks and trees will cry out: ‘O Muslim, there is a Jew hiding behind me, come and kill him’” (Article 7).

Rantisi said similar things just last year, after he himself survived an Israeli targeted strike: “By G-d we will not leave one Jew alive in Palestine” (Al-Jazeera satellite television, June 10, 2003). Using loudspeakers at the gatherings in Gaza this week, Hamas rabble-rousers chanted: “Sheikh Ahmad Yassin rest in peace. They will never enjoy rest. We will send death to every house, every city, every street in Israel!”

But that’s not all that different from the chants prior to Yassin’s elimination.

Hamas–with Yassin at its head–was responsible for the deaths of 377 Israelis in at least 425 terrorist attacks over the past three-and-a-half years of the Palestinian Authority’s war against Israel. Among the most devastating attacks Hamas has claimed responsibility for were the Park Hotel Passover Massacre in Netanya (March 27, 2002; 29 killed, including six married couples); a suicide bombing of the no. 2 bus coming from the Western Wall (Aug. 19, 2003; 23 killed, including three children and two babies); a suicide bombing at the Dolphinarium discotheque in Tel Aviv (June 1, 2001; 22 killed, mostly teens); a suicide bombing of Sbarro’s in Jerusalem (Aug. 9, 2001; 15 killed, including five members of the same family–three children and their parents); a suicide bombing of the Matza restaurant in Haifa (March 31, 2002; 15 killed, including two fathers each with his two children); and the list goes on.

“Every house, every city, every street” in Israel has already been affected in some way–many irreversibly so.

But that’s not all. The last attack for which Yassin could be held responsible, the one that galvanized the Israeli cabinet to undertake a deep military offensive against Hamas, could have led to the deaths of hundreds.

Two suicide bombers infiltrated the Ashdod port on March 14 and detonated themselves, killing ten people. However, according to officials in the Environment Ministry, of the Port Authority, and the defense establishment, the entire area, for several miles in every direction, could have ended up engulfed by a “dirty bomb” cloud had the terrorists succeeded in getting closer than they did to the hundreds of tons of bromide, fuel, and ammonia stored in tanks at the port.

Was that attack–designed to kill hundreds, at least–preemptive revenge for the death of Ahmed Yassin one week later? Finance Minister Binyamin Netanyahu calls such things as the threats of “revenge” for the Yassin assassination “reversal of causality.” It is a common feature of Arab propaganda efforts on every front in our bitter conflict.

Another feature of Palestinian-extremist PR is lionizing men such as Yassin, no matter how bloody and craven they are. The Palestinian Authority–that body that is supposed to fight terrorism and negotiate peace with Israel, remember?–declared three days of mourning for the slain Hamas leader.

More disturbing, however, is that Arab citizens of Israel also declared a day of mourning for Ahmad Yassin. Political parties with representatives in Israel’s parliament–the pan-Arab Balad and the communist Hadash parties–held mourning rallies in Arab towns on Monday night.

In the wake of the Yassin assassination, there have been increased stabbing, stoning, shelling, and shooting attacks, security forces are on high alert, and Hezbollah terrorists in Lebanon–calling themselves the Martyr Yassin Brigades–have shelled IDF positions along the northern border. However, all of that is, sadly, not terribly unusual in this neighborhood. In fact, it bears noting that Hezbollah did not attempt to shell Israeli civilian centers, something clearly in its capabilities. Might that be because Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah is now concerned for his personal safety? Perhaps.

One thing is certain. PLO leader Yasser Arafat’s people are tightening security around their boss in Ramallah.

Nissan Ratzlav-Katz is opinion editor of www.IsraelNationalNews.com.

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