DAMASCUS, Nov 4 (Reuters) - A senior
Hamas official said on Thursday next week's talks on security cooperation with rivals
Fatah could narrow Palestinian divisions but suggested that reconciliation was some way off.
Hamas and Fatah fought a civil war in 2007 that left a deep schism between the Palestinian factions, with the Islamist Hamas taking control over
Gaza and President
Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah extending its influence in the
West Bank with U.S. support.
The two sides are due to hold talks next week on control of Palestinian security forces, the main sticking point which has held up Egyptian-led efforts to end their rift.
Izzat al-Rishq, a senior Hamas politburo member, said the Nov. 9 talks in the Syrian capital would cover the very sensitive security file and look at restructuring and rebuilding of security apparatus.
Hamas has accused Fatah of coordinating with Israeli forces against it in the West Bank, and Rishq said that any agreement depended on Fatah rejecting Israeli pressure.
The success of the upcoming negotiations between us and the brothers in Fatah hinges on whether there would be an independent national Palestinian will away from Israeli ... conditions, he said in an interview.
TALKS WITH ISRAEL FUTILE
Two years of Egyptian mediation have so far failed to end the dispute between Hamas, which is also supported by Iran, and the more secular Fatah.
Hamas has been reluctant to sign a proposed Egyptian accord because the group considered it biased toward Fatah and could result in Fatah maintaining control over the official Palestinian security apparatus.
Rishq said Hamas wanted the establishment of a high security committee which will supervise security policies in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, and follow up on the restructuring and the rebuilding of the security apparatus.
We hope that the next stage is a stage to open the door to ending the division and to sign a reconciliation agreement, he added.
But reconciliation needed further efforts to reach an agreement on a national political programme, including a joint position on talks with Israel -- which Hamas opposes.
These negotiations have divided the Palestinian people. We said from the start they are futile and lead to nowhere, said Rishq, who lives in exile in Syria along with Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal and other senior members of the group.
Direct talks between Israel and Abbas's
Palestinian Authority broke down when a 10-month partial Israeli freeze on
settlement building in the West Bank expired in September.
(Reporting by Khaled Yacoub Oweis and additional reporting by Dominic Evans)