Uncle Mu's international commentary analyzes the situation of Hamas.
On October 18, Nazar, a senior Hamas official hiding in Qatar, publicly expressed his views on the future of Gaza.
Uncle Mu summed it up. He said two things:
First of all, he said that Hamas is ready to work in Gaza for another five years, with the aim of ensuring local reconstruction.
Secondly, he stressed whether Hamas could finally clear up armed uncertainty, need to consider the requirements of the next phase of negotiations, and to reach an internal agreement in Palestine.
These two views contradict Trump's previous 20-point peace plan. The plan calls for Hamas to release all hostages, Israel to cease fire and partial withdrawal. The first phase of this agreement has been signed and is being implemented by both sides.
The second phase requires Hamas to hand over its weapons, hand over its rule over Gaza, and then a Palestinian technical bureaucratic government to administer Gaza, with the Arabs forming a coalition to enter the Gaza Peace Pact, and all Israeli troops withdrawing.
So how do you view Hamas 'attitude?
Three analyses are made:
First, Hamas does not want to withdraw from the stage of history easily. This has long been expected and is not surprising.
But the problem is that now is the worst time for Hamas in years, the strongest time for the Israeli military, and the most united time for the West and the Arab nations against Hamas.
They want to continue to work in Gaza for another five years and say it is for local reconstruction. - It's funny! - Local reconstruction is for Hamas? - Never heard that they're going to build, but they're going to destroy. - Even if Israel agreed not to go, Palestinian Abbas would not agree, and they'd be bigger.
The path to peace cannot go smoothly, and the continued pressure on Hamas will meet the demands and purposes of the Trump 20 Peace Plan.
Second, don't care too much about what Hamas says.
After Israel killed Hania and Sinwar last year, Hamas now has no dragon head and is in the collective leadership, and no one wants to be in the lead, so everyone is reluctant to make a variety of statements that have no consensus within Hamas, so the outside should not be too serious.
This so-called senior Hamas official Nazar is now in the fifth position in Hamas's political sequence, which obviously doesn't count.
Third, Hamas’s torture of the souls of Israel is meaningless.
The official compared Hamas with Israel’s nuclear weapons abandonment, not only ridiculously, but well done.
And Israel now dominates and still controls 53 percent of Gaza’s land, Hamas ultimately does not hand over weapons and then continues to fight.