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    30 Kommentare

    1. magcargoman on

      And they are going to enforce this how exactly? It’s not like a majority of the West Bank would vote for Hamas if given the option…(/s)

    2. NoTeslaForMe on

      That’s pretty much up to the IDF and Hamas, isn’t it? The PA isn’t going to fight Hamas for it….

    3. WalkNorth6130 on

      Says the person whom Hamas kicked out of Gaza, backed by popular vote, and whom the Palestinians themselves don’t trust a bit.

    4. Abbas needs to put his money where his mouth is. His party knows full well how dangerous and illegitimate Hamas is. But they’ve so far done nothing to help actually fight Hamas or even help the civilians in Gaza.

      Every Arab country has frankly failed to act despite offering platitudes, especially Egypt and Jordan. But Fatah are the only ones (that aren’t fighting) that have made a claim of legal control over Gaza. So where the fuck has Abbas been for the past two years? It seems he only just finally woke up like a month ago.

    5. Patiently_Lurking on

      He said a lot of things that sound good but that he and his faction have taken no action to actually effectuate. He said that Hamas would have no role in a post war Gaza. Okay, show the ground work that you have put in for this to actually happen. That is like the Democratic Party saying the Republicans will lose full control of Ohio next election. No, I they have no ground game there to actually do anything about it.

      He said that a new Palestinian state would give up its arms and not be an armed state. Again, show me the ground game for this. If the PA were capable of disarming all of military factions within their territory, why haven’t they done it?

    6. Old-Zookeepergame429 on

      What about the palestinians that voted on Hamas? Is the president just going to ignore the will of the people that put Hamas in power? 🙃

    7. StudentLeading1177 on

      I m not sure even who will govern that territory anyway.

      Let s give it back to Brits/s?

    8. Gaius_Octavius_ on

      Too bad the Palestinian people disagree.

      When given the choice between Hamas and the PA, they picked Hamas.

    9. Jestersfriend on

      How are they gonna stop Hamas? That’s what I want to know. Simply telling them to fuck off hasn’t worked so well.

    10. I would like to know what could save gaza ?
      – No one is going to support them like they did with Ukraine.
      – The reconnaissance is nothing but just words.
      – Israel will never becoming a pariah state.
      – Nethanyanou has one goal, is to raze the whole gaza.
      – No meaningful opposition inside the country.

      Really, I got hope from the beginning that Ukraine will stand down, but gaza ? They are doomed.
      I like to know what are the little light if any.

    11. This is hilarious. It’s kind of like North Korea saying „*South Korea will have no role in governing a united Korea*“.

      Fatah are rubbing their hands in anticipation of seizing control of Gaza.

    12. Palestine can have democratic governance, or it can have governance that excludes Hamas. It can’t have both.

      [Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research – Public Opinion Poll No (95) – 6 May 2025](https://www.pcpsr.org/en/node/997)

      > **Support for Palestinian factions:** support for Hamas declines by 4-points while support for Fatah remains unchanged. The decline in support for Hamas came from the West Bank. Support for Fatah is higher in the Gaza Strip than in the West Bank and support for Hamas is also higher in the Gaza Strip than in the West Bank. In both areas, support for Hamas is higher than the support for Fatah.

      > * When asked which political party or movement they support, the largest percentage (32%) said they prefer Hamas, followed by Fatah (21%), 12% selected third parties, and 34% said they do not support any of them or do not know. Seven months ago, 36% said they support Hamas and 21% said they support Fatah. These results mean that support for Hamas over the past seven months has decreased by 4 percentage points, while support for Fatah has remained unchanged during the same period. Support for Hamas today stands at 29% in the West Bank (compared to 37% seven months ago) and for Fatah at 18% (compared to 18% seven months ago). In the Gaza Strip, support for Hamas stands at 37% (compared to 35% seven months ago) and support for Fatah at 25% (compared to 26% seven months ago).

      > * But if new legislative elections were held today with the participation of all political forces that participated in the 2006 elections, 62% say they will participate in them, and among the participants in the elections 43% say they will vote for Hamas, 28% for Fatah, 8% for third parties, and 19% have not yet decided. Compared to the results we obtained seven months ago, the current results among voters actually participating in the elections indicate a decrease of 2 percentage points for Hamas and a rise of one percentage point for Fatah. In the Gaza Strip, vote for Hamas among voters participating in the elections stands at 49% (compared to 42% seven months ago), and vote for Fatah among voters participating in the elections stands at 30% (compared to 33% seven months ago). In the West Bank, vote for Hamas stands at 38% (compared to 48% seven months ago) and Fatah among voters participating in elections stands at 27% (compared to 23% seven months ago).

      > * 40% (compared to 43% seven months ago) believe that Hamas is the most deserving of representing and leading the Palestinian people today while 19% (compared to 19% seven months ago) believe that Fatah led by president Abbas is the most deserving. More than a third, (35%) compared to 32% seven months ago, believe both are unworthy of representation and leadership.

      The only way the PA can actually deliver on this promise is if they continue to deny the Palestinian people elections, and continue to rely on IDF support to suppress Hamas through military force.

    13. Outrageous_Space8083 on

      I hate to be that guy, but at the rate things are going there won’t be a post war Gaza.

    14. Maelstrom52 on

      Wait, are you telling me that the Palestinian Authority, who already tried to overthrow Hamas after they won the election in 2005, doesn’t want Hamas in charge of Gaza? Who could have seen that coming? /s

    15. So much for democracy, do the people not get to choose at the polls?

      The people have voted for Hamas before, they’re still popular so the people might vote for them again.

    16. DidItForTheJokes on

      Doesn’t matter the name of the party that rules Gaza and hopefully Palestine one day. The important part is what they stand for. Building a thriving state inside agreed upon borders with Israel or for the extinction of Israel for the “right to return”

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