Monday, December 10, 2012

























MORSI' CRISIS HAS BECOME A HAMAS CRISIS.

Two interesting articles that do not directly address my discussion here, but they do indicate the issues that lead up to my theory.

Here is the question!

Has Hamas tied it's future to a sinking ship in Morsi..... again?????

I say again because of the history of Hamas' linkage to Assad in Syria and we all see how that relationship turned out.

Hamas has turned their backs on Iran and Syria, as if there ever really was a relationship there between Sunni Hamas and Shia Iran / Syria.

The old "Big Brother" the Muslim Brotherhood became the new Big Brother after the rise of Morsi in Egypt.

Now, as if the new found worry of  the Morsi crisis is not enough for Hamas, they must now look at a promised "unification" with Fatah, something they still loath the idea of having to do, based upon the guidance from the MB and Morsi.

The safe bet is the so called "unification" will die a quick death if Morsi is tossed from power in Egypt; something that is totally up to the Egyptian Military.

Abbas has the upper hand after his UN move and a Hamas that suddenly decides to pull away, again, from Fatah and the PA will find itself on the short side of the Palestinian people.

Yes the so called "victory" of the conflict with Israel three weeks ago has provided them with some standing, but that was quickly countered by Abbas UN maneuver.

So, what is Hamas to do?

What is the future of the "unification" if Morsi falls from grace, a distinct possibility.

Assad may be gone before Morsi, and that will bring Iran's hand reaching back out to Hamas faster than it already is.

If there is anyone that would love to see Hamas fall out of the Sunni orbit of the MB, it's Iran.

I know... I know... everyone talks about Iran's " reaching out" to Egypt and Morsi, but that's the equivalent of a female Black widow inviting a male onto her web!!!


http://blogs.jpost.com/content/hamas-rejects-validity-un-resolution-palestinian-state-2


http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2012/12/20121210235329634676.html