Israel captured West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza in the 1967 war.
Those territories are considered Palestinians who want to establish a state. But for the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has long opposed such prospect, arguing that it would endanger his country’s security, he asking Hamas stop terrifying if not, he doesn't want to stop the war.
Hayyah told AP. Hamas wanted to or would join Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) to form a unified govt for Gaza and the West Bank. Hamas refrained from joining the PLO, an umbrella grouping of Palestinian factions that signed peace agreements with it in the 1990s.
Barghouti said Hamas indicated as far back as 2007, when it led a Palestinian national unity govt, it's willing to accept a Palestinian state along 1967 borders. Hamas, added, has been in favor of joining PLO, but such a move wouldn’t automatically amount to recognition of Israel or Oslo Accords that PLO signed with it in the 1990s.
Hamas has not issued an official statement outlining concessions, officials have touted and it's unclear if statements made by its officials abroad reflect the thinking of its military wing on the ground in Gaza.