Reuters.com

Hamas, Abbas rivalry spurs Palestinian arms race
http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2006-06-08T161024Z_01_L0888135_RTRUKOC_0_US-MIDEAST-FORCES.xml&archived=False

Thu Jun 8, 2006

By Adam Entous and Haitham Tamimi

RAMALLAH, West Bank (Reuters) - Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's forces
and their Hamas rivals are expanding their arsenals as a power struggle
intensifies, increasing the risk that a showdown could turn bloody.

New weapons and equipment can be seen on the streets of Gaza and the West
Bank, and black market gun and ammunition prices have soared despite pledges
by both sides to prevent civil war.

"These kinds of preparations have the ability to spin out of control and
could produce exactly what they're trying to prevent," said Mouin Rabbani,
senior Middle East analyst for the International Crisis Group.

Tension has grown since Abbas threatened to call a referendum on a manifesto
for statehood that implicitly recognizes Israel if the Hamas-led government
persists in rejecting it. Rival forces have clashed sporadically in Gaza.

Western powers want to ensure that Abbas emerges victorious in any power
struggle with Hamas, which is formally committed to destroying Israel rather
than creating a state alongside it.

U.S. HELP

With U.S. encouragement, Israel has agreed to let Egypt and Jordan supply
Abbas's presidential guard with small arms and ammunition.

After meeting Jordan's King Abdullah in Amman on Thursday, Israeli Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert said in his first public comments that he backed Jordan
providing "equipment and training to presidential Palestinian security
forces".

Western security officials in the Gaza Strip said members of
one of Abbas's elite bodyguard units had shown them that they were now
carrying anti-tank rockets concealed in backpacks.

In the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah, where Abbas has his
headquarters, the guard recently acquired four brand new U.S.-made armored
vehicles worth an estimated $100,000 each.

Spain has promised four-wheel-drive vehicles.

"It is no secret that (Abbas) is arming himself for a confrontation with his
rivals," said a veteran of Israel's Shin Bet security service, which helped
CIA-led efforts in the 1990s to bolster then-president Yasser Arafat's
forces against Hamas.

Palestinian security sources say Hamas is also buying weapons and training
fighters in the West Bank, where Fatah forces have long been dominant.
The government is under a Western financial embargo aimed at forcing Hamas
to recognize Israel and renounce violence.

But Hamas has been able to smuggle weapons and tens of millions of dollars
and euros through the Egyptian border with Gaza, Israeli intelligence
sources said.

PRICE RISES

In Gaza, where it has enough guns, Hamas has been buying up bullets,
Palestinian security sources said.

Arms dealers and an Israeli military source said black market
bullets were now selling for $1 each -- a steep price in areas where up to
half the people live on less than $2 per day.

In the West Bank, Hamas has been buying M-16 rifles. Dealers said heavy
demand and a lack of supply have sent prices soaring to as much as $13,000
each, up from $5,400 a year ago.

At the border with Gaza, Israeli forces say militants have acquired hundreds
of anti-tank missiles.

Recruitment has also increased.

In a deal to try to calm tension in Gaza, the government agreed to pull a
new 3,000-strong militia loyal to Hamas from the streets, but the force will
remain in limited locations.

Militants from Abbas's Fatah movement, trounced by Hamas in January
elections, deployed a new force of 2,500 men in the West Bank city of Jenin
last weekend. They plan to put another 1,000-member force on the streets of
Ramallah.

"We have received information from high levels that we have to get united,
we have to organize ourselves," said a senior militant from Fatah's al-Aqsa
Martyrs Brigades.

Fatah is distributing weapons to some local offices to help protect
officials and property, sources in the group said.

One Palestinian security consultant, Yaser Dajani, saw the build-up on both
sides as merely "like flexing your muscles".

But Mustafa Barghouthi, an independent Palestinian lawmaker,
was more concerned. "It is not only delicate, it is also dangerous. People
are not only worried, they're angry. They are angry at this polarization."

(Additional reporting by Wael al-Ahmed in Jenin, Nidal al-Mughrabi in Gaza,
Wafa Amr and Mohammed Assadi in Ramallah, Dan Williams in Jerusalem)

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