|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Middle
East
US plot to overthrow elected Palestinian government exposed
Part One
By Jean Shaoul
8 March 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The United States plotted the armed overthrow of the Hamas
government elected by the Palestinian people in January 2006,
according to The Gaza Bombshell, an article based
on leaked documents and interviews with key players in the Bush
administration that was published in the latest edition of the
US magazine Vanity Fair.
Vanity Fair called the affair Iran Contra 2.0,
a reference to the Reagan administrations funding of the
Nicaraguan Contras by covertly selling arms to Iran in contravention
of official policy. This latest plot was prepared not by some
middle-ranking spies and military personnel, but by the State
Department with approval from the very top of the political establishment,
including President George W. Bush. It was implemented by Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice and Deputy National Security Advisor
Elliott Abrams, who has a long history in plotting coups and illegal
activities on behalf of US imperialism.
The plan was being prepared and implemented at the same time
as Bush publicly professed that the last great ambition of his
presidency was to broker a deal that would create a viable Palestinian
state, bring peace to the region and further his freedom
agenda of engineering the election of pro-US regimes throughout
the Middle East.
The intention was that Muhammad Dahlan, Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbass national security advisor and a Fatah strongman,
would facilitate the downfall of Hamas with forces armed by the
US. Dahlan, who has worked closely with the FBI and CIA since
the 1990s, was publicly described by Bush as a good solid
leader and privately called our man.
But the plan back fired. Instead of removing Hamas, its effect
was to provoke a tragic and ongoing factional struggle between
Fatah and Hamas that brought Palestine to the point of civil war
and a pre-emptive coup in Gaza by Hamas to forestall the coup
planned by Fatah last June. The result was yet another foreign
policy debacle for Bush.
While some of this was known at the time, the full extent of
Washingtons skulduggery was not. The article by award winning
British journalist David Rose, who also writes for the Observer,
provides documentary evidence of the conspiracy, setting out the
nuts and bolts of the plans. It also provides a revealing insight
into what passes as policy making within the Bush administration,
its modus operandi and the tense relations and divisions
within the neo-conservative circle surrounding Bush.
The coup plan is hatched
The Gaza Bombshell explains how, after the death
of Yasser Arafat in November 2004, the White House insisted upon
early elections under the guise of giving the Palestinians
the chance to choose new leaders who were not compromised
by terror. This was intended to forestall growing support
for Hamas. Dahlan and Abbas repeatedly told Bush that the elections
should be delayed until Fatah was ready. But Bush and his advisors
would not listen.
Hamas came to power in January 2006 as a result of widespread
disaffection with Fatah over its readiness to agree a rotten deal
with Bush and its own endemic corruption. An offshoot of the Muslim
Brotherhood, Hamas does not represent a progressive alternative
to Fatah but articulates the interests of sections of the Arab
bourgeoisie and petty bourgeoisie.
When democracy resulted in the wrong party winning, the Bush
administration was taken by surprise. Condoleezza Rice told reporters.
I dont know anyone who wasnt caught off guard
by Hamass strong showing. According to Vanity Fairs
sources, a Department of Defence official said, Everyone
blamed everyone else. We sat there in the Pentagon and said, Who
the f*** recommended this?
The White House rejected any idea of working with Hamas, even
though leading Israelis including Ephraim Halevy, a former head
of Mossad, supported such an approach. A senior State Department
official said, The administration spoke with one voice:
We have to squeeze these guys. With Hamass election
victory, the freedom agenda was dead.
First, the US ensured that the Quartet, made up of the US,
the United Nations, the European Union and Russia, terminated
aid to the Hamas government, depriving it of most of its budget
and the means of paying salaries. Second, Israel closed its borders
with Gaza and severely restricted the Palestinians freedom
of movement. These measures were designed to turn the Palestinians
against Hamas. Israel arrested 64 Hamas officials, including half
of its elected legislators, most of whom are still in detention
today, making Hamass parliamentary majority inoperable.
Washington was furious when Hamas began holding talks with
Abbas in an attempt to form a unity government. In
October 2006, Rice went to see Abbas. According to officials present
at their private meeting, she told in him in no uncertain terms
that the US expected him to dissolve the government of Prime Minister
Ismail Haniyeh as soon as possible and hold fresh elections.
Abbas, like Yasser Arafat before him, found himself being asked
to sign off on a civil war. Unlike Arafat, Abbas agreed, albeit
reluctantly, to take action within two weeks.
When there was no action, Rice sent Jake Walles, the US consul
general in Jerusalem, to present Abbas with an ultimatum. A talking
points document prepared for him by the State Department
and authenticated as genuine by US and Palestinian officials,
stated:
We need to understand your plans regarding a new [Palestinian
Authority] government. You told Secretary Rice you would be prepared
to move ahead within two to four weeks of your meeting. We believe
that the time has come for you to move forward quickly and decisively.
Hamas should be given a clear choice, with a clear deadline:
... they either accept a new government that meets the Quartet
principles, or they reject it. The consequences of Hamas
decision should also be clear: If Hamas does not agree within
the prescribed time, you should make clear your intention to declare
a state of emergency and form an emergency government explicitly
committed to that platform.
Since no one doubted that such an ultimatum would lead to fighting
on the streets, the document said that the US was already working
to strengthen Fatahs security forces: If you act along
these lines, we will support you both materially and politically,
we will be there to support you. Abbas should be encouraged
to strengthen [his] team to include credible
figures of strong standing in the international community.
This was a reference to Muhammad Dahlan.
In the long term, Abbas and the handful of Palestinian millionaire
and even billionaire families whose interests he represented were
entirely dependent upon Washington and had no choice but to comply.
But he was still reluctant to initiate a fratricidal conflict
and did not dissolve the Hamas government. So the US instead worked
to provoke a civil war, which it thought Hamas would lose, by
boosting military support for Fatah. Abbas was sidelined in favour
of direct talks with Dahlan.
Dahlan had been Yasser Arafats security chief in Gaza,
which he had run as his own personal fiefdom. He headed up the
Preventive Security Service, an outfit of thugs, whose trademark
was kidnappings and torture. It was an occupation that had made
him a very rich man.
Roses article cites a State Department official as saying
that David Welch, assistant Secretary of State, who was in charge
of Middle East policy, didnt fundamentally care about
Fatah. He cared about results, and [he supported] whatever son
of a bitch you had to support. Dahlan was the son of a bitch we
happened to know best. He was a can-do kind of person. Dahlan
was our guy.
This apparently alarmed Avi Dichter, Israels internal-security
minister and the former head of its Shin Bet security service.
When he heard senior American officials refer to Dahlan as our
guy: I thought to myself, the president of the United
States is making a strange judgment here.
Bushs schemes fell afoul of his administrations
previous polices. While Fatahs forces were numerically superior,
most of its strength had been destroyed by the US-backed Israeli
invasion of the West Bank in 2002, aimed at destroying Arafats
political and security infrastructure. Furthermore, without the
economic support from the EU, there was no money to pay Fatah
security forces, with the result that Fatah could neither control
Gazas streets Hamass power base nor
protect its own personnel.
Dahlan tried to convey an impression of strength. He initiated
a series of kidnappings accompanied by torture. Fighting broke
out between Fatah and Hamas. Atrocities were committed on both
sides. Soon dozens were dying each month.
The US security coordinator for the Palestinians, Lieutenant
General Keith Dayton, met with Dahlan. He said that US would supply
weapons and training. Dahlan should take responsibility for all
the Palestinian forces as national security advisor and the number
of separate forces would be reduced. This would include disbanding
Dahlans own Preventive Security Service, widely known to
be perpetrating kidnapping and torture.
When Dahlan ridiculed the idea, saying, The only institution
now protecting Fatah and the Palestinian Authority in Gaza is
the one you want removed, Dayton replied, We want
to help you. What do you need?
The project was hugely controversial even within the administration.
Some agreed with the general approach, but thought Dahlan was
soiled goods and wanted nothing to do with him. Others disagreed
about the type of weaponry and the cost. Israel itself was worried
that arms destined for Fatah would end up in Hamass hands
and was reluctant to cooperate. It stipulated that only light
weaponry would be acceptable.
The $86.4 million financial support package promised by Dayton,
with the ostensible purpose, according to a US document published
by Reuters, of paying to dismantle the infrastructure of
terrorism and establish law and order in the West Bank and Gaza,
never materialised.
Congress dragged its feet, finally blocking payment in January
2007. The House Subcommittee on the Middle East and South Asia
feared that military aid to the Palestinians would end up being
used against Israel, a forecast that ultimately proved to be correct.
Congress finally approved a reduced, $59 million package for non-lethal
aid in April 2007.
Covert funds
According to the Vanity Fair article, the coterie around
Bush were simultaneously scouting around for an alternative, covert
means of getting funds and weapons to Dahlan. Congresss
reluctance to provide funding meant that you had to look
for different pots, different sources of money, said a Pentagon
official.
A State Department official added, Those in charge of
implementing the policy were saying, Do whatever it takes.
We have to be in a position for Fatah to defeat Hamas militarily,
and only Muhammad Dahlan has the guile and the muscle to do this.
The expectation was that this was where it would end upwith
a military showdown.
There were, this official said, two parallel programsthe
overt one, which the administration took to Congress, and
a covert one, not only to buy arms but to pay the salaries of
security personnel.
The covert plan, according to State Department officials, consisted
of Rice phoning and meeting up with the leaders of four Arab nationsEgypt,
Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. She wanted
them to provide Fatah with military training, pledge funds to
buy weapons for its forces and pay money into accounts controlled
by President Abbas.
As David Rose explained, the scheme was similar to the Iran-contra
scandal where the Reagan administration sold arms to Iran, an
enemy of the US, and used the proceeds to fund the Contra rebels
in Nicaragua in violation of a congressional ban. Some of the
money for the Contras, like that for Fatah, was provided by Arab
allies as a result of US lobbying, while the arms were channelled
through Israel.
Supplying arms to Dahlan and Fatah was not illegal, because
Congress had never explicitly outlawed it. But It was close
to the margins, a former intelligence official with experience
in covert programs told Rose.
By late December 2006, four Egyptian trucks crossed an Israeli-controlled
border point into Gaza and handed over their contents to Fatah.
These included 2,000 Egyptian-made automatic rifles, 20,000 ammunition
clips, and two million bullets. When news of the shipment leaked,
Benjamin Ben-Eliezer, an Israeli cabinet member, said on Israeli
radio that the guns and ammunition would give Abbas the
ability to cope with those organizations which are trying to ruin
everything meaning Hamas.
As Avi Dichter pointed out, since Israel had to approve all
weapons shipments, it was unlikely to want Washington to send
high-tech weaponry into Gaza in case it was used against Israel.
A State Department official is quoted as saying, One things
for sure, we werent talking about heavy weapons. It was
small arms, light machine guns, ammunition.
Rose believes that it could even have been Elliott Abrams himself
who held back from sending in heavy weaponry, to avoid breaking
the law for a second time in the same way. In 1991, Abrams had
been convicted and fined for unlawfully withholding information
from Congress during Iran Contra affair but was later pardoned
by the first President Bush.
One of his associates says Abrams, who refused an interview
for the Vanity Fair article, was torn over the policybetween
the disdain he felt for Dahlan and his overriding loyalty to the
Bush administration. David Wurmser, Vice President Dick Cheneys
former adviser, admitted that Abrams was not the only one: There
were severe fissures among neoconservatives over this. We were
ripping each other to pieces.
Rice herself was in for a shock. When she went to the Middle
East in January 2007, her Arab allies stonewalled and refused
to cough up. This was not simply because they had differences
with Washington. Rather, as one official told Rose, The
Arabs felt the US was not serious. They knew that if the Americans
were serious they would put their own money where their mouth
was. They didnt have faith in Americas ability to
raise a real force. There was no follow-through. Paying was different
than pledging, and there was no plan.
This official believed that Rices trip with the begging
bowl raised a few payments of $30 millionmostly,
as other sources agree, from the United Arab Emirates. Dahlan
himself says the total was only $20 million, and confirms that
the Arabs made many more pledges than they ever paid.
To be continued
See Also:
Israel mounts bloody offensive against
Gaza
[3 March 2008]
Abbas attempts a political
coup on behalf of Washington
[18 December 2006]
Fatah steps up provocations
against Hamas-led Palestinian Authority
[11 September 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |