<p>After a ceasefire with Israel, Hamas has claimed "victory" but the Palestinian Islamist group's success lies more in marginalising its political rival Fatah than in battle, analysts say.</p>.<p>The return of calm to the Hamas-run enclave of Gaza, after 11 days of Israeli air strikes on the coastal strip -- and rocket fire sent in the other direction - was celebrated Friday by large crowds waving Palestinian flags.</p>.<p>"This is the euphoria of victory," senior Hamas figure Khalil al-Hayya told jubilant Palestinians in the densely populated enclave after the Egypt-brokered truce.</p>.<p><strong>Read more: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/second-edit/israel-palestine-us-fell-short-on-intent-diplomacy-988606.html" target="_blank">Israel-Palestine: US fell short on intent, diplomacy </a></strong></p>.<p>Hamas began a barrage of heavy rocket fire from Gaza towards Israel on May 10, in response to repeated clashes between Palestinians and Israeli security forces inside annexed east Jerusalem's Al-Aqsa mosque compound.</p>.<p>In total, Hamas and Islamic Jihad launched more than 4,300 projectiles, according to Israel -- an intensity of fire seen as unprecedented, even if most rockets were intercepted by its Iron Dome defence system or fell short.</p>.<p>A major factor in Hamas' own claim to victory lies in "being seen as defending Palestinian rights, especially in relation to Jerusalem -- and (in) facing down Israel", Hugh Lovatt, a policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>Jamal al-Fadi, a professor of political science in Gaza, said Hamas feels victorious "because it was able to strike deep inside Israel... (and) Israel could not prevent it".</p>.<p>Fadi also said the militants had proved their ability to build up a substantial arsenal, despite the Gaza Strip having been under blockade for 14 years.</p>.<p>On the other side, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared Israel's intense bombardment of Gaza by air strikes and mortar fire as an "exceptional success" that had killed "more than 200 terrorists".</p>.<p>The Jewish state can "point to its degradation of Hamas military capabilities", Lovatt said.</p>.<p>But one area where Hamas can claim a clear victory is in further sidelining Fatah, which runs the Palestinian Authority from Ramallah in the occupied West Bank.</p>.<p>Hamas and Fatah, a secular organisation led by president Mahmud Abbas, have been at loggerheads since the last Palestinian elections, before a partial reconciliation in recent months.</p>.<p>Held in 2006, those polls were won by Hamas, which pushed Fatah out of Gaza the following year, in what came close to a Palestinian civil war.</p>.<p>Elections were due on May 22, but 86-year-old Abbas abruptly postponed them earlier this month, alienating Hamas afresh.</p>.<p>Hamas saw elections as way "to relieve itself from the burden of governance by eventually bringing back the PA" to poverty-stricken Gaza, Lovatt told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>"The prospect of... a government of national unity which Hamas would (have) supported or been a member of could have allowed for more progress," he added.</p>.<p>"But because the path for political engagement was closed, they had to reconfigure their calculations."</p>.<p>Hamas uses cycles of violence as attempts to extract "concessions" from Israel over Gaza, including relaxations of import curbs and increased export permits for residents.</p>.<p>For Hamas, periodic bouts of violence are its main competitive advantage" against Fatah, said Hussein Ibish, a Middle East expert.</p>.<p>"They claim to be the defenders of Palestine... in contrast to a supine PA government," he added.</p>.<p>Fadi said, "Abbas has become powerless... His political performance is no longer acceptable to the public."</p>.<p>His tenure began in 2009 -- the same year as Netanyahu began his 12 successive years as Israel's premier.</p>.<p>Netanyahu's governments have expanded settlements -- seen as illegal by much of the international community -- and the US has recognised Jerusalem as the Jewish state's capital.</p>.<p>According to Fadi, it remains to be seen if Hamas, branded a "terrorist organisation" by the US and the European Union, is able to manage the post-conflict period, notably the challenge of reconstructing Gaza.</p>.<p>Lovatt describes the ceasefire with Israel as "very fragile".</p>.<p>"There is no reason to believe it's going to be any more sustainable than the past ones -- so it's just a question of when... the next war" erupts, he said.</p>
<p>After a ceasefire with Israel, Hamas has claimed "victory" but the Palestinian Islamist group's success lies more in marginalising its political rival Fatah than in battle, analysts say.</p>.<p>The return of calm to the Hamas-run enclave of Gaza, after 11 days of Israeli air strikes on the coastal strip -- and rocket fire sent in the other direction - was celebrated Friday by large crowds waving Palestinian flags.</p>.<p>"This is the euphoria of victory," senior Hamas figure Khalil al-Hayya told jubilant Palestinians in the densely populated enclave after the Egypt-brokered truce.</p>.<p><strong>Read more: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/second-edit/israel-palestine-us-fell-short-on-intent-diplomacy-988606.html" target="_blank">Israel-Palestine: US fell short on intent, diplomacy </a></strong></p>.<p>Hamas began a barrage of heavy rocket fire from Gaza towards Israel on May 10, in response to repeated clashes between Palestinians and Israeli security forces inside annexed east Jerusalem's Al-Aqsa mosque compound.</p>.<p>In total, Hamas and Islamic Jihad launched more than 4,300 projectiles, according to Israel -- an intensity of fire seen as unprecedented, even if most rockets were intercepted by its Iron Dome defence system or fell short.</p>.<p>A major factor in Hamas' own claim to victory lies in "being seen as defending Palestinian rights, especially in relation to Jerusalem -- and (in) facing down Israel", Hugh Lovatt, a policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>Jamal al-Fadi, a professor of political science in Gaza, said Hamas feels victorious "because it was able to strike deep inside Israel... (and) Israel could not prevent it".</p>.<p>Fadi also said the militants had proved their ability to build up a substantial arsenal, despite the Gaza Strip having been under blockade for 14 years.</p>.<p>On the other side, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared Israel's intense bombardment of Gaza by air strikes and mortar fire as an "exceptional success" that had killed "more than 200 terrorists".</p>.<p>The Jewish state can "point to its degradation of Hamas military capabilities", Lovatt said.</p>.<p>But one area where Hamas can claim a clear victory is in further sidelining Fatah, which runs the Palestinian Authority from Ramallah in the occupied West Bank.</p>.<p>Hamas and Fatah, a secular organisation led by president Mahmud Abbas, have been at loggerheads since the last Palestinian elections, before a partial reconciliation in recent months.</p>.<p>Held in 2006, those polls were won by Hamas, which pushed Fatah out of Gaza the following year, in what came close to a Palestinian civil war.</p>.<p>Elections were due on May 22, but 86-year-old Abbas abruptly postponed them earlier this month, alienating Hamas afresh.</p>.<p>Hamas saw elections as way "to relieve itself from the burden of governance by eventually bringing back the PA" to poverty-stricken Gaza, Lovatt told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>"The prospect of... a government of national unity which Hamas would (have) supported or been a member of could have allowed for more progress," he added.</p>.<p>"But because the path for political engagement was closed, they had to reconfigure their calculations."</p>.<p>Hamas uses cycles of violence as attempts to extract "concessions" from Israel over Gaza, including relaxations of import curbs and increased export permits for residents.</p>.<p>For Hamas, periodic bouts of violence are its main competitive advantage" against Fatah, said Hussein Ibish, a Middle East expert.</p>.<p>"They claim to be the defenders of Palestine... in contrast to a supine PA government," he added.</p>.<p>Fadi said, "Abbas has become powerless... His political performance is no longer acceptable to the public."</p>.<p>His tenure began in 2009 -- the same year as Netanyahu began his 12 successive years as Israel's premier.</p>.<p>Netanyahu's governments have expanded settlements -- seen as illegal by much of the international community -- and the US has recognised Jerusalem as the Jewish state's capital.</p>.<p>According to Fadi, it remains to be seen if Hamas, branded a "terrorist organisation" by the US and the European Union, is able to manage the post-conflict period, notably the challenge of reconstructing Gaza.</p>.<p>Lovatt describes the ceasefire with Israel as "very fragile".</p>.<p>"There is no reason to believe it's going to be any more sustainable than the past ones -- so it's just a question of when... the next war" erupts, he said.</p>