Goals of Hamas
The following are the goals of Hamas as described in the Charter of Hamas, a link to which has been provided below. Each bulletpoint references the Article of the Charter where these views are discussed:
Description of Hamas
Hamas is a Palestinian Sunni Islamic or Islamist political party that governs the Gaza Strip and the largest and most influential Palestinian militant movement along with the more moderate Fatah party and has a military wing called the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades. Hamas is viewed by most Western analysts as an obstacle to the Arab-Israeli peace process and the goal of a two-state solution. As a result, Western nations, including the United States, have tried to embolden the Fatah-led Palestinian Authority while isolating Hamas, which has historically kept strong ties to Iran.
Hamas was founded by Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, a Palestinian spiritual leader who became an activist in the local branch of the Muslim Brotherhood after dedicating his early life to Islamic scholarship in Cairo. Beginning in the late 1960s, Yassin preached and performed charitable work in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, both of which were seized by Israeli forces following the 1967 Six-Day War. In 1973, he established al-Mujamma' al-Islami (the Islamic Center) to coordinate the Brotherhood's political activities in Gaza.
Hamas' primary base of popular support is in the Gaza Strip, where it has maintained de facto control since its 2006, when it surprised many observers by winning the majority of seats in the Palestinian parliament. Hamas ousted the remnants of Fatah from Gaza by force in early 2007, and the new Hamas-led government was summarily dismissed by PA president and Fatah chief Mahmoud Abbas. The result of the bloodshed was a de facto geographic division of Palestinian-held territory, with Hamas holding sway in Gaza and Fatah maintaining the internationally recognized Palestinian Authority government in the West Bank town of Ramallah.
Hamas' control over the area was established after the Hamas party won the Palestinian legislative elections in January 2006,[4] and ousted Fatah officials during the Battle of Gaza in 2007.[5] Fatah, Hamas' political and military rival, controls the West Bank.[6] Both regimes - the Palestinian National Authority and the Hamas administration - regard themselves as the sole legitimate Palestinian government.
Hamas' central goal is the eradication of Israel and its Jewish population and the creation of a unitary Arab Islamic Apartheid Palestinian State.
presumeably to have power :)
The goals are precisely as wide as football goals. They are football goals.
The goals which can not meet are destructive goals or you can say that goals which are incomplete.
GA stands for goals against. GF stands for goals for.
In team standings, 'goals for' stands for the number of goals the team has scored and 'goals against' stands for the number of goals the team has allowed its opponents to score.
You would have tentative goals before final goals because tentative goals give you a view what you can realistically achieve. Once you have tentative goals, you are able to refine, and rework them in order to come up with your final goals.
What are two bits goals in the outsiders.
Yes there is a distint difference in goals and objectives. Goals are broad objectives are narrow. Goals are general intentions; objectives are precise. Goals are intangible; objectives are tangible. Goals are abstract; objectives are concrete. Goals can't be validated as is; objectives can be validated
Personal goals should be set first because your financial goals will be based on them.
what the different between goals and idividual goals
103 goals and messi 135 goals
GF and GA are team stats meaning "Goals For" and "Goals Against"GF is the total amount goals scoredGA is the total amount of goals the other team scored.
Quite simply the timing of desired results for the goals.