Hamas Essays

  • The History of the Terrorist Group Hamas

    1171 Words  | 3 Pages

    East has brought the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to the attention of the world. These terrorist groups use murder, bombs, threats, and other violent acts to get their way politically. Hamas, the organization that has replaced Fatah as the representative of the Palestinians, is a leading sponsor of terrorism. The Hamas are the leading reason there is not peace in the middle east as they strongly embrace terrorism. This group was created in 1978 and continues to expand its power today. It began as

  • The Islamic Resistance Movement: Hamas

    1017 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Islamic Resistance Movement or better recognized by its Arabic acronym “Hamas” is well known for its terrorist attacks on the country of Israel. Hamas is the largest of several anti-Israel Palestinian Islamist militant groups. Hamas grew under a Muslim movement in the 1920s and continued to grow until they became registered as on official terrorist organization in 1978. They claim their main goal is the “social welfare agency that catered especially to the Palestinian refugees in the Gaza Strip

  • HAMAS: A Conventional Terrorist Group?

    1483 Words  | 3 Pages

    HAMAS, an Arabic acronym meaning “Islamic Resistance Movement”, is the name of the socio-political organization currently in power over the Gaza Strip. For decades Jews & Muslims and Israelis & Palestinians, often one in the same, have fought for control over the region. Each have killed thousands of the other, destroyed infrastructures and used underhanded tactics to gain an advantage. Nations such as Japan, the European Union, the United States and (of course) Israel classify the group as terrorists

  • Israeli News of the Gaza Strip

    748 Words  | 2 Pages

    Soon after Hamas won the 2006 parliamentary elections, Israel imposed an increasingly harsh blockade on Gaza to put pressure on Hamas. The blockade imprisoned 1.8 million innocent Palestinians leading many of them to live below poverty levels due to limited food, medical supplies, and essential goods. The siege of the Gaza Strip made getting news coverage a near impossibility for foreign news media. In order to receive a press card to Gaza, journalists needed to undergo a security check and sign

  • Fatah Research Paper

    544 Words  | 2 Pages

    Fatah thinks that they deserve their own home and there goal is to finally get a Palestinian State but they are also willing to negotiate. They have even led to peace-talks resolving the two-state issue. Fatah has major political rivals like Hamas, who won a decisive majority in the Palestinian Parliament. This organization was created with the long-term goal of wresting Palestine from the control of Israel by waging low intensity guerrilla warfare. Fatah has played a very important role in the

  • The Hidden Agenda of the News Media

    1321 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Hidden Agenda of the News Media People use many different sources in order to gain knowledge about current events. In America, historically, mass media and television have been the most dominant sources for information. Over the last decade, internet-based news sites and talk-radio shows have emerged as viable alternatives to the traditional media. While, obviously, the latest forms of news media are very different from their “elder” counterparts regarding the conveyance of the information

  • The Conflict Between Israel And Palestine And The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

    3046 Words  | 7 Pages

    One of these players who continues to halt the peace process, is a militant fundamentalist Islamic organization called Hamas. Hamas has intensified extreme opposition and bloodshed in the region, with the aim of destroying the state of Israel. However, few people know that starting in the mid 1970s, Israel secretly supported an organization that would later emerge as Hamas, even though both groups had competing future visions for the nation. Why did it choose to do this when it had so much at

  • Essay On Islamic Jihad

    1384 Words  | 3 Pages

    Ian Garrett Gonzales 4B Palestinian Islamic Jihad Israel is being attacked! The people of Palestine and Israel, may have heard about, witnessed, or even been a part of those attacks, but few know who the real culprits are and what they’re about. Rockets falling from the sky, suicide bombings, and violence seem to happen daily in the region. While they know it is the responsibility of a deadly group, they may not know their faces. They may not know that they walk the streets with them and plan

  • War and Massacre, by Thomas Nagel

    881 Words  | 2 Pages

    offensive against Palestinian militants in Gaza on Wednesday, killing the military commander, Ahmed Al-Jabari of Hamas in an air strike. This strike on a car carrying the commander stemmed the beginning to what is known by the Israeli’s as operation “Pillar of Defense”. Following this “surgical” assassination, the Israeli air force struck over 20 underground rocket launch sites belonging to Hamas (governing terrorist organization in Gaza) and the Islamic Jihad. According to Palestinian sources these strikes

  • The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism by Pape, Bloom, and Horowitz

    1414 Words  | 3 Pages

    “Terrorism involves the use of violence by an organization other than a national government to cause intimidation or fear among a target audience;” at least, this is how Pape (2003) defines terrorism in his article “The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism” (343). The goal of this article by Pape is to discuss suicide terrorism and how it “follows a strategic logic, one specifically designed to coerce modern liberal democracies to make significant territorial concessions” (343). Similar to Pape,

  • The Nature of Terrorism

    1793 Words  | 4 Pages

    Given the growing global threats of terrorism, it is significant that an understanding of the history, nature and mechanism-premises under which terror operates is obtained. This is significant as it would shape the perspective of policy makers when addressing issues of this nature. Terrorism, as it is understood is the action of none-state weak actors, individual or groups, who for some reasons feels suppressed, marginalized and, or denied what they may view as the basic human right. All terrorism

  • The Conflict Between Palestine and Israel

    953 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Question of Palestine and Israel For decades, the people of Palestine and Israel have had conflict with each other. The cause of the conflict was due to religion, territory, and borders (infoplease.com). The conflict began when Israel officially became a state in 1948. Within the same year, political issues of Jewish immigration to Palestine turned into a problem during World War I (White, 200). The issue had gotten worse when the British became heavily involved and decided to negotiate with

  • The Rights Of Women In The Palestinian Territories

    2312 Words  | 5 Pages

    Group 6: Danielle Podlaski Maeve O’Connor Gina Powers Spencer Potrocky Ben Oakland Women in The Palestinian Territories: It is hard for many Americans to imagine that other countries are still fighting for equality for women. Other countries face discrimination against women, and women do not have many of the rights that Americans were born with. The Palestinian territories are an example of those countries. In this research paper, we will explore the history of the Palestinian territories.

  • Motivations for a Terrorsit Organization

    2122 Words  | 5 Pages

    key. To better illustrate this point, this essay will elaborate on terrorist groups such as the PKK and the LTTE who are not motivated by religion, rather, they are motivated by nationalism and compare them to groups to groups like al-Qaeda, and Hamas who use religion to justify their means. Finally, to better support the paper’s argument, this essay will use evidence and references from journal articles written by terrorists experts like: Robert Pape, Bruce Hoffman, and Mia Bloom. Naturally

  • Terrorism: Will We Ever Be Able to Defeat It?

    1119 Words  | 3 Pages

    Terrorism: Will We Ever Be Able to Defeat It? Terrorism is not necessarily a new phenomenon and it will never be removed from society. Terrorism has been defined as a application of violence or threatened violence intended to panic society, to weaken or overthrow incumbents, or to bring political change. There will continue to be minority or oppressed (or perceived oppressed) people or groups will continue to believe that terrorism is the only solution to their problems. (1) (2) (3) Early precedents

  • The Islam-Judaism Clash of Civilizations

    2537 Words  | 6 Pages

    New York: Simon & Shuster Inc., 1997. Kaplan, Mordecai M. Judaism as a Civilization. New York: Schocken Books, 1934. Stoessinger, John George. Why Nations Go to War, 8th Edition. San Diego, CA: Thomson Wadsworth 2001. The Avalon Project: Hamas Covenant 1988. Yale. Web. 19 Mar. 2015 .

  • Essay On Al Shabaab

    1241 Words  | 3 Pages

    Somalia's: Al Shabaab Terrorist Organization Montrice Riles DSC4012 Dr. Elizabeth Buchholz "We know that dictators are quick to choose aggression, while free nations strive to resolve differences in peace. We know that oppressive goverments support terror, while free governments fight the terrorists in their midst. We know that free peoples embrace progress and life, instead of becoming the recruits for murderous ideologies." George W. Bush, (Speech to UN General Assembly, September 21, 2004)

  • The Cult of The Suicide Bomber an Article by Robert Fisk

    984 Words  | 2 Pages

    Robert Fisks’ article “The cult of the suicide bomber” , published in 2008, addresses the rise and a cult like glorification of suicide bombers in the Middle East. Fisk posits that this increase is, in part, due to the US and their coalition forces declaration of a ‘war on terror’. Fisk offers a unique perspective on the life of a man, Khaled, conditioned to be a suicide bomber. The article touches on the social influences, culture and family, that encourages self-liquidation as an extreme method

  • Power Relations in Society

    1150 Words  | 3 Pages

    Though the origins of the phrase are unknown, women around the world have been saying, “the personal is the political and the political is personal” for the past few decades. It is still applicable today when analyzing social movements and the structure of power in society. This phrase does not mean that a woman’s every action is considered to be political and that every personal decision made is political. Instead, the theory could be explained, in terms of overall feminism, by saying personal problems

  • Essay On Suicide Terrorism

    1341 Words  | 3 Pages

    The biggest challenge that the United States faces, according to the members within the United States National Security establishment, is terrorism. While suicide terrorism is not the only form of terrorism the United States has been faced with, it has recently been growing into the more common type of terrorism in this age. There are several theories that are associated with suicide terrorism, such as those of Robert Pape and David Horowitz, and it is interesting to analyze and compare the theories