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Analysis : Middle
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Mahmoud Abbas and the degeneration of the Palestinian national
movement
Part One
By Jean Shaoul and Chris Marsden
16 February 2005
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The following is the first of a two-part series. The concluding
part will be posted tomorrow, February 17.
The cease fire announced by Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas at the Egyptian resort
of Sharm el Sheik comes just weeks after Abbas was elected to
office. It demonstrates the degree to which his ascendancy has
been bound up with the ruling Fatah factions and the Palestinian
Authoritys abandonment of any opposition to the demands
of Washington and Tel Aviv.
The cease fire has been billed as the start to implementing
President George W Bushs Road Map and the eventual
establishment of a Palestinian state. But there was no agreement
on when talks would start on the final status of any
Palestinian state, much less the thorny issues of East Jerusalem
and the right of return for the Palestinian refugees.
Sharon, under pressure from the White House, agreed to end
all military action, transfer security control of the West Bank
and Gaza to the Palestinian Authority, release 900 prisoners held
in Israeli jails over the next three months, and implement other
confidence building measures. But US Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice has said that Washington would not pressure
Israel to make further concessions until after the disengagement
plan to withdraw settlers from Gaza and four outposts in
the West Bank was completed. Most importantly any further moves
will be dependent on Abbas suppressing all armed resistance to
Israel, reining in the militant Islamic groups and centralising
the various security services under his control. Rice even said
that Washington would appoint a former US general to supervise
the reform of the Palestinian security forces.
Abbas has already made strenuous efforts to appease Israel.
Since coming to power on January 9, he has sought to persuade
Hamas, Islamic Jihad and the al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade to
end their campaign of bombings against Israel. He has offered
Hamas the prospect of sharing political power by agreeing to hold
parliamentary elections in July that, given its success in the
recent local elections in the West Bank and Gaza, should give
Hamas political representation in the Palestinian Legislative
Council. At the same time he has deployed over 8,000 police to
Gaza in order to prevent rocket attacks on Israeli targets, and
arrest suicide bombers.
Although Abbas has sought to cultivate Washingtons support
by carrying through measures against his own people that the Palestine
Liberation Organisations (PLO) long-time leader Yasser Arafat
balked at, his present course nevertheless expresses the degeneration
of the Palestinian nationalist movement as a wholea degeneration
rooted in the bourgeois character of the PLO itself.
The fundamental perspective of the PLO for the establishment
of a Palestinian state has always been based on reaching an agreement
with imperialism. This goal has been pursued through two methodsnegotiations
and the armed struggle. While appearing to be opposed, they have
always been essentially complementary. The final aim of the armed
struggle has always been a negotiated settlement with imperialism,
never the independent mobilisation of the working class and peasant
masses. In other words, the acceptance by Abbas and the PLO leadership
of a ceasefire, and its imposition, do not contradict the logic
of the armed struggle, but arise organically from it.
The PLO was the most radical of national movements and established
a mass popular base amongst broad sections of the Palestinian
people due to its determined advocacy of armed struggle against
Israel. But in essence its leadership represented the Palestinian
bourgeoisie and its interests and not those of the masses, as
it professed. National bourgeois organisations, however radical,
are organically incapable of consistently leading an independent
struggle against imperialism along a progressive and democratic
route because their interests are, in the final analysis diametrically
opposed to those of the working class and peasantry.
Whereas the Palestinian working class and peasantry saw the
establishment of a national entity from the standpoint of reclaiming
the land stolen since 1948 and ending oppression by imperialism
and Zionism, the essential aim of the Palestinian bourgeoisie
in its conflict with Israel is to establish its own class rulewhich
centres on its right to exploit the working class. As such its
opposition to imperialism is always conditional and partial. Its
aim is not to end imperialist domination, but to establish its
own relations with the major imperialist powers that dominate
the global economic order. At all times it seeks to oppose any
independent political action by the working class that would threaten
the basis of capitalist rule. Hence, even in its most radical
period, the PLO insisted that it be recognised as the sole
legitimate representative of the Palestinian people and
that its perspective for establishing a Palestinian state on the
basis of capitalist property relations go unchallenged.
On this basis it was never possible to resolve the problems
of national oppression and social exploitation. Not one of the
states in the Middle East, even where the national revolutionary
movements have been able to throw off colonial rule and had access
to oil, was able to end the domination of the transnational banks
and corporations or alleviate the dreadful social conditions of
the working class and the rural poor. They have instead exchanged
their colonial rulers or puppet kings for corrupt local bourgeois
cliques. In this the PLO is proving to be no exception.
The oppression of the Palestinian people is not just the result
of Israels military strength but the treachery of the Arab
bourgeoisie. As a direct result of their strategy of working through
the various Arab regimes to achieve a Palestinian state, Arafat
and the PLO were never able to achieve any independence from them
or their imperialist backers.
Arafats reliance on the Stalinist regime in the Soviet
Union for backing was no more successful. For a period the contest
between Moscow and Washington for hegemony over the Middle East
provided various Arab bourgeois regimes with some bargaining power.
But this was always limited by the dictates of the Stalinist bureaucracys
unprincipled manoeuvres with the imperialist powers and its own
efforts to prevent social revolution at all costs. In the end
it was the collapse of the Soviet Union due to Stalinisms
efforts to restore capitalism under Gorbachev and Yeltsin that
finally forced Arafat to seek a deal with US imperialism. And
it was Abbas who was at his side during those crucial negotiations.
Who is Mahmoud Abbas?
Abbass rise to power is due to the fact that he most
consistently expresses the interests of the Palestinian bourgeoisie.
He was born in 1935 in Safed, now in northern Israel, to a very
prosperous merchant family. When the 1948 Arab-Israeli war broke
out after the United Nations voted to establish a Zionist state
on part of Palestine, then ruled under a UN Mandate by Britain,
his family was one of the 750,000 who fled or were driven out
of Palestine. His privileged social position enabled him to study
law at Damascus University and then obtain a permit to work in
the Qatar civil service before setting up his own business that
was to make his fortune.
There were at the time thousands of Palestinian professionals
working in the Gulf and he soon came into contact with Arafats
Palestine National Liberation Movement or Al Fatah, which was
to become the core of the PLO. Al Fatah represented the most radical
wing of the Palestinian bourgeois national movement. Its professed
aim, the reclamation of the land seized by Israel and the creation
of a democratic and secular Palestine, was to be achieved by armed
struggle and attracted a popular base among the working class
and the peasantry. But it always opposed a socialist perspective
in favour of a capitalist Palestinian state. It was this class
orientation that enabled Fatah to draw in the support of the more
privileged layers, such as Abbas.
Abbas became an important fundraiser for Fatah and was responsible
for establishing relations with the Arab regimes. He built up
a network of powerful contacts that included Arab leaders and
heads of intelligence services. He was able to do this because
the PLO accepted the legitimacy of the Arab regimes and agreed
to separate the Palestinian cause from the struggle of the Arab
masses against the dictatorships and the semi-feudal dynasties
that ruled over them.
Although Abbas went on to manage the PLOs finances, he
was on the right wing of Fatah and was not a member of the PLOs
inner circle, then led by Arafat, Abu Iyad and Abu Jihad. He had
a stormy relationship with Arafat and there were long periods
when the two men refused to speak to each other. He distanced
himself from the PLOs terrorist activities and remained
in Syria after Jordans King Hussein savagely suppressed
the Palestinians in what is known as Black September, 1970, expelling
the PLO from Jordan and forcing them into Lebanon.
Abbas was one of the first PLO officials to recognise Israel
and support the establishment of a mini-Palestinian state alongside
Israelthe so-called two-state solution. In the late 1970s,
he was instrumental in forging links between the Palestinians
and the Israeli peace groups. From 1980, he headed the PLOs
department for national and international relations.
He and Ahmed Qurei, the Palestinian prime minister, became
close to Arafat only in 1988. That year Abbas was elected to the
PLO executive. His rise to prominence was in part facilitated
by Israel, which had a policy of targeting the PLOs radical
leaders. Israeli security forces assassinated both Abu Iyad and
Abu Jihad in 1988, thus setting the stage for the transfer of
power to Fatahs right wing represented by Abbas and Qurei.
More fundamentally, Abbas was the beneficiary of two major
political shifts that were to drive the PLO into the arms of Washington.
Firstly, the turn by the Stalinist bureaucracy to dismantle
the Soviet Union and align its foreign policy with the US meant
that the PLO lost what little room for manoeuvre between the imperialist
powers it once had. The collapse of the USSR left the US with
an unprecedented opportunity to establish its global hegemony.
In the context of the Middle East, this enabled George Bush senior
to launch the Gulf war against Iraq in 1991. The PLO, having supported
Saddam Hussein in a final attempt to secure a base from which
to oppose both Israel and the US, was left completely isolated.
Secondly, the intifada, a spontaneous uprising of Palestinian
workers and youth against Israeli occupation, broke out in December
1987 and was to last for the next four years. It not only shook
the Israeli state and Washington, but also the Palestinian bourgeoisiewhich
feared that the revolutionary movement of the masses would escalate
out of control in Palestine and elsewhere in the oil rich Middle
East. The Palestinian capitalists in exile, whose interests Abbas
reflected, saw this as a major threat to their own economic and
social aspirations.
Confronted with militant youth and workers at home, the Palestinian
bourgeoisie concluded that it needed the backing of US imperialism
if it was ever to establish its own rule. It was these factors
that led the newly reconstituted PLO leadership to renounce its
armed struggle on the White House lawn. It marked the end of the
PLOs grand illusion that it could resolve the Palestinian
question without a settlement of the fundamental class questions
in the Middle East.
These developments enabled the US to dictate the terms of the
PLOs capitulation to Israel and the future form of any Palestinian
state. It was Abbas who, after playing a key role in both the
1991 Madrid conference and the secret talks in Oslo, went on to
sign the ill-fated 1993 Oslo Accords with Israel on behalf of
the PLO, as the first stage towards an independent Palestinian
state.
To be continued
See Also:
Sharon government continues land grab
in East Jerusalem, West Bank and Gaza
[11 February 2005]
Palestinian election: a travesty
of democracy
[12 January 2005]
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