חאמאס פירער זאגט אז זיי גייען זיך נישט אנטוואפענען
Senior Hamas leader Khaled Meshal has publicly rejected any proposal that would require the group to disarm or accept foreign governance in Gaza, directly challenging demands from the United States and Israel. Speaking at the Al Jazeera Forum on Middle East politics in Doha, Meshal framed Hamas’ continued armed control as a matter of Palestinian sovereignty rather than militancy.
“Palestinians govern themselves. Gaza belongs to its people and Palestine belongs to its people,” Meshal said, adding that Hamas would not accept “any foreign rule.” His remarks come amid growing international pressure to remove Hamas from power in Gaza following years of conflict, terrorist attacks against Israel, and the devastation of repeated wars.
Meshal’s statement underscores Hamas’ refusal to engage with diplomatic frameworks that seek to demilitarize Gaza as a prerequisite for reconstruction, peace talks, or international involvement. While Western and regional actors have argued that disarmament is essential for long-term stability and civilian protection, Hamas continues to present its weapons as non-negotiable tools of “resistance.”
By rejecting both disarmament and external administration, Hamas is signaling that it intends to retain absolute control over Gaza’s political and military future, regardless of international consequences. The position effectively rules out pathways that would allow moderate Palestinian governance, regional security guarantees, or normalization efforts tied to Gaza’s reconstruction.
Meshal’s comments reinforce longstanding concerns that Hamas prioritizes ideological control and armed confrontation over economic recovery and civilian welfare. As calls grow louder for post-war accountability and alternative governance structures in Gaza, Hamas’ leadership has made clear it sees compromise not as diplomacy, but as surrender.