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Qatar, Iran try to sway Hamas

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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – The courtship of Hamas between rivals Iran and Qatar has been one of the Middle East’s intriguing subplots of the Arab Spring. The bloodshed in Gaza has now sharpened their competition for influence with the Palestinian militant group and the direction it takes in the future.

Qatar has sought to use its vast wealth to win over Hamas with investments and humanitarian aid and encouraging Arab partners to do the same – part of the hyper-rich U.S. allied nation’s broader campaign to bring under its wing Islamist movements that have risen to power in the region the past two years. Qatar’s influence with Hamas could edge it away from armed action toward diplomacy.

Iran, meanwhile, is invigorating its longtime role as the builder of the rocket arsenal for Hamas’ military wing.

For Hamas, there are benefits in both directions – and it’s happy to play both sides. During a celebration rally in Gaza City after an Egyptian-mediated cease-fire came into place ending fighting between Israel and Hamas, Gazans wildly waved flags of Qatar, along with those of Egypt and Turkey, in gratitude for those countries’ diplomatic support.

At the same time, Hamas’ leader-in-exile Khaled Mashaal, who is based out of Qatar, gave a very public thanks to Iran for standing by Gaza with crucial military assistance. Fighters in Gaza also hailed the new reach of their arsenal, with Iranian-designed Fajr-5 rattling Israel by reaching the outskirts of Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.

Visiting the Syrian capital Damascus on Friday, Iran’s parliament speaker Ali Larijani, who is close to the country’s supreme leader, promised leaders of Palestinian militant groups that his country would continue to boost “the resistance’s capabilities in confronting the Zionist arrogance and aggression,” according to Palestinian official Khaled Abdul-Hamid, who attended the meeting.

The reminder of Hamas’ reliance on Iran for weapons could help smooth a relationship that has been running through a rough patch because of the civil war in Syria, Iran’s top ally.

Embarrassed by the Syrian regime’s crackdown on a mainly Sunni Muslim uprising, Hamas leaders based in Damascus for years broke with Syria and left for Qatar and Egypt. Though Iran continued to send weapons to Hamas, the break undermined the “Axis of Resistance” grouping Syria, Hezbollah and Hamas that Iran has assembled in the Arab world.

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