Arafat's Trojan Horse
May 26, 2004
By Erick Stakelbeck
On Saturday, via video from his compound in Ramallah,
Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat told the
Arab League Summit in Tunisia that he was committed to
what he called “the peace of the brave” with Israel and
expressed optimism in the “Road Map” peace plan.
One would hope that
at this stage, in the midst of a second Arafat-backed intifada, even
the most die-hard of his traditional supporters—European diplomats, State
Department Arabists and Middle Eastern despots—would have trouble taking
such comments seriously.
Indeed, Arafat’s
rhetoric in Tunisia was a harsh departure from remarks he made as recently
as May 15, when he closed a televised speech by urging Palestinians to “find
whatever strength you have to terrorize your enemy.”
It’s no accident
that Arafat’s incitement to “terrorize” Israel coincided with a meeting
between Secretary of State Colin Powell and Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed
Qureia in Jordan or that it preceded a similar session between Qureia and
National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice held last Monday in Berlin.
In Arafat’s
megalomaniacal mind, the peace process—which, over the years, he has done
everything in his power to sabotage—cannot be discussed without his
duplicitous participation. Hence, last Saturday’s incendiary comments, which
Powell deemed as further proof that the Palestinian people need to “wrest
control” from Arafat immediately.
One problem with
this scenario is that there is currently no viable, democratic alternative
to Arafat, certainly not among the Palestinians’ ever-popular terrorist
factions. The fact that murderous thugs like Hamas are considered saviors by
a large percentage of Palestinians is a tribute to the depraved culture that
Arafat has helped shape in Gaza and the
West Bank.
Take the events of
May 11, when Hamas and Islamic Jihad practically fell over themselves in
claiming responsibility for the death of six Israeli soldiers killed by a
roadside bomb in Gaza.
To make matters
worse, both groups claimed to be in possession of some of the dead soldiers’
body parts, a particularly gruesome boast given that the bombing occurred on
the same day that footage of the beheading of American businessman Nicholas
Berg was released on the Internet.
In the end, the Gaza
bombing—which spearheaded a week of clashes that saw 32 Palestinians and 13
Israelis killed—only left the Palestinians drifting further from both
statehood and free elections. Such are the consequences of Arafat’s refusal
to reign in the Palestinians’ terrorist elements.
Earlier this month,
for instance, the Palestinian Authority released Hamas funds that had been
frozen since last August. The money, which was transferred into Hamas bank
accounts in Gaza, belongs to 12 charities affiliated with Hamas' so-called
political wing. Whether it will actually reach its supposed target—needy
Palestinians in the Gaza Strip—or be used to fund further suicide attacks
remains to be seen (although history argues for the latter).
But collusion
between the PA and terrorist organizations is nothing new. In April, Arafat
was prepared to include Hamas and Islamic Jihad in a unified Palestinian
leadership structure that would have functioned alongside the PA. While the
two groups ultimately rejected the proposal, both have worked closely with
Arafat’s Fatah movement in recent weeks to track down and kill Palestinians
suspected of collaborating with the Israeli Army.
Despite these links,
Arafat continues to wonder aloud why the United States and Israel refuse to
include him in any discussions regarding the peace process. Indeed,
President Bush’s recent comment that the establishment of a Palestinian
state by the year 2005 (as laid out in the “Road Map”) appeared unrealistic
due to continued Palestinian terrorism drew an indignant response from
Arafat, who said it was “realistic and more.”
Arafat’s retort came
shortly after the murders of a pregnant Israeli woman and her four children
by Palestinian terrorists in Gaza on May 2 (in which gunmen emptied bullets
into the pregnant mother’s stomach at close range) and a foiled May 9
suicide attack in Tel Aviv by a purported Palestinian “hermaphrodite” (a
natural progression, I suppose, since men, women and children have already
been used as suicide bombers).
Of course, these
acts were met with deafening silence by Arafat, who encourages and funds
further terror while paying lip service to the “Road Map.”
He has already
issued a harsh rebuke, though, of recent Israeli Army operations in Gaza,
calling them a “planned massacre.” Ironically enough, the Israelis are in
Gaza
to neutralize weapons-smuggling tunnels and wanted terrorists that Arafat
himself could have dealt with long ago.
Such a move,
however, would have given terrorists like Arafat and Hamas leader Khaled
Mashaal (who, last Monday, publicly rejected a cease-fire with Israel) less
leverage in the eyes of the always-sympathetic “international community,”
which has, predictably, lambasted the Israeli action in Gaza as “state
terror.”
It’s a self-serving
game that Arafat plays well—so well that the Palestinian people seem assured
of remaining just as he wants them: stateless.
Erick Stakelbeck
is Senior Writer at the Investigative Project, a Washington, D.C.-based
counter-terrorism research institute.
|