Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Hamas Incites Protests in Egypt


Hamas is up to no good, as always. While they are busy with the continuation of their missile attacks into Israel, and now that they have taken over the border crossings from Gaza into Egypt, they are looking for the political pressure in Egypt to increase via protests so that the Egyptians will not confront them at the border.
Hamas is trying to get the world to help them out of this whole Gaza mess they got themselves into and as usual, the world will more than likely get wagged by the despicable Hamas tail.
On the other end of the scene, it's my contention that Hamas wants to see a renewal of oil/fuel shipments into Gaza so that Hamas can claim a huge victory over Israel - and it's my further contention that this is all being coordinated by the Iranians. My view is the Iranians and setting the table for a nasty confrontation with Israel using Hamas and Hezbollah in the upcoming months, and that in order to set that table, they are setting Israel up so they will NOT meet the confrontation. I wouldn't doubt if the Syrians are part of this as well and that the future confrontation will occur on the Lebanese border with Israel as the Syrians approach the Golan Heights.
Israel needs to keep the blockades up until the missiles stop. If they pull out of the blockade before that, they are in serious trouble.

Here's the full story of Hamas meddling in Egypt.


DEBKAfile: Hamas incites Egyptian opposition for street protests, is set to impose reconciliation on Palestinian Authority

The Palestinian fundamentalist group ruling the Gaza Strip has plans for building on its successes in seizing control of the Egyptian border and forcing Israel to deliver a million tons of fuel and 300,000 tons of cooking gas under unrelenting missile attack.
Hamas agitators are inciting Egyptian opposition parties, led by their parent Muslim Brotherhood, to stage a mass anti-government protest this coming weekend.
Furthermore, DEBKAfile’s Gulf sources report, Hamas leaders backed by Saudi Arabia, are pushing for an Arab summit, to be called an “Emergency Conference for Gaza” to take place in the Sinai town of Sharm al-Sheikh.
Their plan is for Saudi King Abdullah and Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak to jointly force Palestinian Authority chairman Mahmoud Abbas to stand alongside Hamas’ Damascus-based Khaled Meshaal and Ismail Haniya and patch up their quarrel for the sake of Palestinian unity.
This summit would empower Hamas to dictate a limited de facto ceasefire, to force the IDF to agree to holding its fire in return for the suspension of the Palestinian missile offensive. The arms smuggling tunnels would be excluded from the truce deal and continue to build up the Hamas war arsenal with arms, fighting strength and cash unmolested.
Senior Israeli military officers object to such ceasefire terms because Hamas and its allies would be free to resume their missile assaults at will and gear up undisturbed for escalated aggression.

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