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Analysis : Middle
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Factional warfare breaks out in Palestinian Authority
By Chris Marsden
23 July 2004
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The Palestinian Authority is wracked by factional conflict
that has led to attacks on government buildings and a number of
armed confrontations and shootings.
It has assumed the form of an opposition to the nepotism and
corruption of the clique around Palestinian Authority (PA) President
Yasser Arafat. But the banner of anti-corruption barely conceals
a power struggle between disparate layers within the PA leadership.
In part this has been brought to the fore by efforts to manoeuvre
for positions of influence prior to the expected withdrawal of
Israeli troops and 7,500 settlers from the Gaza Strip in 2005.
But longer-lasting conflicts are involved over control of the
West Bank as well as Gaza, and over Palestinian policy towards
Israel and the proposals backed by the United States for the creation
of a truncated Palestinian entity.
The conflict has centred on attempts to undermine Arafats
control of the PAs police and security apparatus, on which
his power ultimately rests. It burst into the open on Friday July
16, when Arafats chief police commander in Gaza, Ghazi Jabali,
was kidnapped, as well as four French aid workers, by members
of the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade, which is affiliated to Arafats
own Fatah organisation. The kidnapping was ostensibly a protest
against corruption within the PA by a group of militants, but
was immediately seized on by Arafats rival for power, PA
Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei, who tendered his resignation the following
day complaining of unprecedented chaos.
His captors made Jabali read a videotaped statement admitting
to crime, including embezzling millions in government money and
sexually assaulting women.
Arafat was forced to declare a state of emergency. But his
subsequent response to the kidnapping only added fuel to the fire.
He first successfully negotiated for Jabilas release and
then dismissed him. But he then appointed his nephew and chief
of military intelligence, Moussa Arafat, as head of general security
in both Gaza and the West Bank.
Moussa Arafat is hugely unpopular and is viewed as brutal and
corrupt. His appointment only inflamed the situation in Gaza,
prompting two public demonstrations against corruption within
the PA. Members of Al Aqsa attacked the headquarters of the Palestinian
security forces under Moussa Arafats command and burned
it to the ground. The brigade also threatened to distribute leaflets
listing the names of corrupt officials if reforms werent
forthcoming. Gun battles left more than a dozen wounded in the
southern Gaza town of Rafah.
For their part, Hamas and Islamic Jihad, the Islamic fundamentalist
opposition to Fatah in Gaza, sent a letter demanding that Arafat
implement political and security reforms, including broadening
the government to include non-Arafat groups.
Arafat was forced to concede some ground, returning Moussa
Arafat to a lesser post and reinstating Abdel-Razek al-Majaideh
to the position. But he made clear he would go no further.
On Tuesday, July 20, Qurei finally bowed to Arafats demands
that he remain as prime minister. But he insisted that his was
only a caretaker government and that he would resign
unless Arafat ceded control over security services.
Al Aqsa dismissed Arafats re-appointment of Majaida as
another attempt to fool people and a way of
circumventing reforms and change on the part of the national administration.
That same day, gunmen wounded Arafat opponent and former Palestinian
cabinet minister Nabil Amr, in an attack on his home in Ramallah.
Amr had just given a television interview in which he criticised
Arafat. Qurei condemned the shooting as a cowardly attack.
The very next day, the Palestinian Legislative Council approved
a resolution by 43 votes to 4 saying that the cabinet had failed
to fulfil its responsibility to control the domestic situation
and improve the security of its people and urging the acceptance
of Qureis resignation.
The speaker of the legislative council, Rawhi Fattuh, called
for the creation of a national unity government that included
the entire Palestinian political spectrum.
The various factions involved in the struggle hold significant
differences between them, but are united in feeling excluded from
power by Arafats ageing clique.
The most open political opponent of Arafats secular nationalist
leadership is the Islamic fundamentalist group Hamas, which is
determined to secure its control of Gaza as an alternative power
base to Arafats West Bank stronghold and to secure a place
in government.
Other opponents, such as Qurei and his predecessor, Mahmoud
Abbas, or Abu Mazen, who quit in 2003, represent a more fractious
and disunited layer within the Palestinian bourgeoisie. However,
they all view Arafats domination of the PA as a block on
their own ambitionsand a liability in securing an agreement
with Washington guaranteeing limited autonomy over Gaza and parts
of the West Bank and thereby securing their continuing ability
to exploit the Palestinian working class.
Arafat also faces dissent from sections of the Al Aqsa Martyrs
Brigade. Rumoured to be led by the 42-year-old former security
chief Mohammed Dahlan, these are younger layers of Fatah who feel
excluded from power by Arafats ageing coterie of supporters
and family members. Though they are advocates of a more militant
struggle against Israeli occupation, the desire to push the old
guard aside is a more decisive element in their campaign against
corruption and nepotism. They also feel threatened by the growing
influence of Hamas and Islamic Jihad, as a result of an ostensibly
more militant stance that has tapped into widespread disaffection
with the PAs failure to secure social improvements or to
establish a state through negotiations and accommodation with
Israel and the imperialist powers.
Israel welcomes any development of a movement directed against
Arafat, from whatever source, because they view him as the only
figure capable of maintaining the unity of the PA and preventing
its collapse. If Hamas comes to prominence, this provides Tel
Aviv with an excuse for further military repression. But they
clearly hope that Arafat will be deposed by the forces within
the PA who are more ready to negotiate a filthy compromise. Israels
Deputy Defence Minister Zeev Boim told Israeli radio that he hoped
these developments will finally move Arafat to the sidelines,
and so finally we will be able to talk to serious and responsible
forces.
For its part, Washington seized on the fighting to reiterate
its demand that Arafat step aside. Secretary of State Colin Powell
told the media: We believe the correct path forward involves
Mr. Arafat yielding power, real executive power to a prime minister,
for that prime minister to do what is needed for the Palestinian
community. And when that happens, then we can get moving on a
road map [to peace].
Washingtons demands were also echoed by the United Nations,
with UN Secretary General Kofi Annan insisting that Arafat should
really take the time to listen to the prime minister and other
members of his leadership.
Arafat bears ultimate political responsibility for the emergence
of factional infighting because of the failure of his nationalist
perspective of establishing a secular Palestinian state through
a combination of armed struggle and negotiations with Israel.
Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Arafat concluded that
it was no longer possible to continue opposing the now unchallenged
dictates of the US in the Middle East. He signed up to the 1993
Oslo peace accords with Israel, in return for a promise of the
creation of a truncated Palestinian state on the West Bank and
Gaza.
Instead, the ensuing decade saw an escalation by Israel in
the construction of Zionist settlements in the Occupied Territories
and the continued erosion of Palestinian living standards, which,
following the provocative visit by current Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon in September 2000 to the Temple Mount site of the
Al Aqsa mosque surrounded by hundreds of soldiers, culminated
in a second Intifada.
However, none of Arafats opponents represent a genuine
alternative to his failed perspective. Qurei, because he does
not face exclusion, exile and possibly assassination by Israel
and the US, is even more ready to collaborate with Washington
and Tel Aviv. Al Aqsa only advocates a renewal of Fatahs
failed perspective of armed struggle, but does not fundamentally
differ from the old guard in its pro-capitalist class position.
Hamas suicide attacks and its welfare program have won support
from an increasingly desperate Palestinian population. But, as
demonstrated in Iran and elsewhere, its goal of establishing an
Islamic state in Palestine would only constitute an alternative
form of exploitation of the working class by a different section
of the bourgeoisie. They have long been viewed by Tel Aviv as
a useful tool for the destabilisation of the PA, and its suicide
attacks have provided justification for repeated attacks and incursions
by Israel. And, as evidenced in its plan to seize control of Gaza,
Hamas has always been prepared to reach an accommodation with
Israel provided that its own power base is secured.
The ongoing collapse of the PA cannot be prevented by extending
any support to Arafat. He could only play the role of a Bonaparte
holding the various factions of the Palestinian national movement
together under conditions in which his promise of a democratic
homeland in the Occupied Territories had not been so thoroughly
refuted.
The Palestinian working class must instead break from the political
influence of all factions of the Palestinian bourgeoisie and strike
out on a new road of struggle. The liberation of the Palestinian
people requires a united offensive of the entire Arab working
class, in unity with their Israeli brothers and sisters, in a
secular and socialist movement against capitalist exploitation
and imperialist domination and for the creation of the United
Socialist States of the Middle East.
See Also:
Israel: Labour Party to prop up Sharon
[20 July 2004]
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