(Rema Hammami,
a contributing editor of Middle East Report, teaches anthropology
at Birzeit University. Jamil Hilal is a Palestinian sociologist
and writer living in the West Bank.)
Taking cover from Israeli fire, Ramallah. (Laurent Guerin)
More
than eight months have passed, and over 500 lives have been lost,
since the second intifada broke out in September 2000, but few,
if any, of the uprising's original goals have been achieved. Instead,
the iconic enemy of Palestinian nationalism, Ariel Sharon, was elected
Israeli premier at the head of a "national unity" government
with Foreign Minister Shimon Peres providing a "dovish"
public relations cover. Two Arab summits held since October did
little more than promise financial support for the intifada, with
little of it actually materializing. US elections brought to power
a new administration apparently as obsessed with the unfinished
business of the Gulf war as it is averse to reprising Bill Clinton's
role in the "peace process." Finally, the long-awaited
UN Security Council vote for an international peacekeeping or protection
force for the Palestinians was scuttled by a US veto on March 28.
The Bush administration seconds Sharon's rhetoric pledging no negotiations
before the "violence" stops. Even the most hopeful analysts
only suggest that the US has yet to formulate a clear policy toward
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Meanwhile, settlements continue
to expand and in a recent poll, 72 percent of the Israeli public
supported even greater use of armed force to put down the uprising.(1)
The second intifada has taken place within a conjuncture of forces
that are profoundly inimical to the achievement of its fundamental
aim of ending Israel's occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza
Strip.(2) The external forces would present a formidable challenge
to any anti-colonial movement. But the internal conditions of Palestinian
politics are also deeply unfavorable to the uprising's ability to
reap transformative, as opposed to incremental, gains. The intifada
has provided the context for a widening internal debate on the limitations
of the present leadership, as well as on the need for democratic
reform. But the continued absence of independent political movements
capable of mobilizing a challenge based on these issues, added to
the constraints imposed by the current crisis, means that a democratic
transition is unlikely either during the intifada or in its immediate
aftermath. Nevertheless, the Palestinian Authority (PA) is clearly
at a crossroads, caught between its inability to wrest concrete
political gains from the intifada and unrelenting economic, diplomatic
and military pressure to "end" the uprising. This has
led to a situation where the PA's continued existence is now up
for debate.
Strapped for Cash
Over the last few years, donor money, tax receipts and customs and
VAT payments (once they were finally put in unified national accounts)
have covered the PA's general operating costs. Significantly, customs
and VAT revenue, which are controlled by Israel, made up almost
two thirds of the PA's formal working budget. Since last autumn,
Israel has refused to transfer these VAT payments, at the same time
that donor emergency aid has actively bypassed the PA and been funneled
through international agencies like UNWRA and UNDP. Other crucial
sources of revenue -- statist or state-linked business concerns
in the "private sector" (e.g., the Jericho casino) and
control of major commodity flows like gasoline, cement and gravel
-- are also now in disarray. Income from these sources had covered
the costs of some of the security services, maintained the upper
levels of the bureaucracy and helped to retain the loyalty of other
constituencies inside and outside the West Bank and Gaza. With the
disappearance of Israeli good will and the decline of Israeli and
foreign tourism, income from these sources has eroded. The leadership's
decision to go along with the intifada represents a weakening of
the economic elite within the PA that was implicated in these commercial
concerns; many of them were considered most amenable to compromise
at Camp David II. Only an estimated $15 million of the $1 billion
in Arab aid promised at the October 2000 summit has arrived. The
gap suggests that the Arab regimes, while anxious to deflect internal
criticism by pledging monetary support to the intifada, have also
been using money as a means to pressure the PA into returning to
the Oslo process.(3)
In March 2001, UN Special Representative to the Middle East Terje
Larsson held a press conference in which he warned that the PA was
"on the verge of imminent collapse." Larsson's warning,
though exaggerated, seems to have made the international "shepherds"
realize that too much financial pressure on the PA might backfire:
the PA could become either too radicalized or too weakened to return
to negotiations. The European Community stepped in with a $15 million
monthly "loan" to the PA to offset Israel's withholding
of VAT payments. In March, the second Arab summit pledged an additional
monthly soft loan of $30 million over a period of six months, also
to help cover civil service salaries. While the PA is still financially
strapped, it has enough revenue to ensure -- for a short time --
the basic survival of its formal institutions.
Limitations of PA Leadership
Israeli
soldier takes aim at a youth in Hebron. (Laurent Guerin)
But perhaps
more significant than the budgetary crisis is the unabated criticism
of the PA's shortcomings as government. Public sentiment against
the Authority's ineptness and corruption has intensified, as most
PA institutions have proven poorly equipped to respond to public
needs during a national emergency. Civil defense measures from the
police and security forces remain rare; instead, local municipalities
carry most of the burden of dealing with physical destruction from
Israeli military attacks. The PA also has remained largely absent
in other areas. The PLO's Palestine Red Crescent Society, along
with NGOs like the Union of Palestinian Medical Relief Committees,
have been more active in emergency medical services than the Ministry
of Health. Given its financial crisis, the PA also has been unable
to address the public's mounting economic losses. In December 2000,
the Ministry of Labor offered a one-time payment of 600 NIS ($150)
to workers who had lost their jobs in Israel -- and then this money
dried up. A recent survey conducted by the Birzeit University Development
Studies Program found that 81 percent of Palestinians who received
cash or in-kind support during the intifada have received it from
a non-PA source -- either UNRWA or the alms (zakat) committees linked
to religious institutions. In bearing the brunt of Israel's economic
and military war, the populace has largely been left to fend for
itself.
But popular criticism of the PA has focused equally on its inability
-- or unwillingness -- to provide a clear overarching strategy for
the uprising. The same Birzeit survey found that 43 percent of respondents
thought there was a need to replace the PA with a new government.
(Yasser Arafat retains a higher personal approval rating -- 47 percent
-- than any leader from the secular or Islamic oppositions.) Active
resistance to the Israeli occupation appears only fitfully guided
by the National and Islamic Forces (NIF), the coalition of political
movements that are ostensibly leading the intifada, but which have
offered little direction or vision of their own. A common refrain
since October is that "there is no leadership." Israel's
declared war against the uprising has thrown the limitations of
the PA's rule into stark relief.
By bombing the "installations" of PA security forces and
assassinating individual Hamas and Fatah activists, former prime
minister Ehud Barak and now Sharon have sent a message to the Israeli
public that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) remain in control. But
these counterinsurgency tactics also seem directed at reinforcing
a sense among Palestinians of the IDF's almost supernatural powers
of surveillance, as well as the PA's impotence. This conscious projection
of Israel's all-engulfing power (and thus the PA's and the population's
total dependence on it) contrasts sharply with the behavior of Israeli
governments -- especially Labor governments -- since 1993. Oslo's
pretense that the two sides were equal "partners for peace"
demanded that the PA leadership be awarded the requisite veneer
of autonomy. Now the pretense is gone. Instead the clear message
is that Israel controls the majority of Palestinian public funds,
controls Palestinian workers' access to their most crucial labor
market and determines whether the Palestinian government, including
its legislative council, can meet or not. The segmentation of Palestinian
territory, including the Gaza Strip, into dozens of blockaded areas
has made the practice of self-government by the PA virtually impossible.
For the first five months of the intifada, Yasser Arafat was unable
to "visit" the West Bank at all. Once in the West Bank,
he was similarly obstructed from "visiting" the Gaza Strip.
The Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) has met only twice since
October; the first attempted meeting was called off because most
of its members could not reach Gaza. Israel allowed the PLC meeting
in March to go ahead, in hopes that Arafat would "denounce
violence," but did not allow PLC member Marwan Barghouthi (head
of the vilified tanzim in the West Bank) to attend. Ironically,
this has effectively centered even more decision-making power in
Arafat's hands. The nominal institutions of collective decision-making,
weak in the past, now seem almost defunct.
Strategies of Rule
At the March PLC meeting, Arafat, for the first time since the creation
of the PA, spoke of the need for internal political and institutional
reform, affirmed his commitment to the rule of law and raised the
issue of corruption. He asserted that preparations were underway
to hold long-awaited elections for local governments, chambers of
commerce and mass organizations. In the world press, Arafat's statements
about reform went unnoticed, as Israel and the US focused solely
on his failure to call on Palestinians "to end the violence."
Within the PA and among Palestinian political parties and the population
at large, Arafat's call for reform was seen as a response to internal
discontent -- though not necessarily a harbinger of things to come.
Funeral
in Beit Ur, West Bank. (Laurent Guerin)
Clearly, fault
lines have emerged in the strategy of rule that the leadership developed
during the Oslo process. Two aspects of that strategy have particular
relevance in understanding the choices that lay ahead. First, PA
rule was not exercised through internally coherent government institutions
empowered with specific functions within a framework of law. Rather,
PA rule was largely accomplished outside of the new institutions
of government and at their expense. Formal government institutions
served as symbols of "statehood on the way" and as mechanisms
of patronage, primarily through government employment for returning
PLO exiles and crucial local constituencies. Simultaneously, the
strategy of rule included the integration of structures and figures
from the PLO (as representatives of the national liberation movement)
into the highest levels of PA executive decision-making. Whereas
the fundamental structures of the government were left inchoate
and disempowered, its uppermost executive was conflated with the
leadership of the national liberation movement. This conflation
of the PLO and the PA, at the expense of democratically elected
government representatives, is exemplified by the structure known
as the "Palestinian leadership" (al-qiyada al-filastiniyya).
For the past six years this structure has been the highest decision-making
body in the PA. It combines the ministerial council, members of
the PLO Executive Committee, the speakers of the PLC and the Palestine
National Council and some of Arafat's advisers. Such arrangements
suggest that, given the deep uncertainties of Oslo, Arafat is unwilling
to make the transition away from the national liberation movement
to "autonomy government" before full-fledged statehood.
He has often justified limiting the PLC's powers by reference to
the higher and more encompassing power of the PLO, as the representative
of all Palestinians, not just Palestinians in the West Bank and
the Gaza Strip, whom the institutions of the PA represent.
With this strategy and the strength of the state party, Fatah, the
leadership was able to survive the early challenge of Hamas to its
power. The overall system has been able to deflect (less influential)
nationalist and reformist challenges due to its medusa-like power
structure and the leadership's continued ability to project nationalist
legitimacy in the conflict with Israel. Their popular support declining,
most PLO factions have become more dependent on the leadership since
the early 1990s. As such, these factions have benefited from the
representation of the PLO in the PA's executive. In this position,
PLO factions could remain a "loyal opposition" able to
criticize the Oslo process (and even the PA) as long as they did
so within the boundaries of the political field delineated by the
leadership. Until recently -- as proven by the fate of Hamas and
Islamic Jihad at various times during the 1990s -- it was armed
struggle that lay outside the acceptable parameters of opposition
to Oslo or the PA's policies.
This strategy of rule enabled the leadership to deal with the main
challenge of the indefinite interim period which followed the 1994
Declaration of Principles: how to enter a state formation process
under the control and auspices of the colonial power, while retaining
the mantle of the national liberation movement. To meet this challenge,
the leadership needed to keep its contending political constituencies
committed to (or at least not actively resisting) a deeply flawed
diplomatic process. But consent, if not commitment, to the "peace
process" could only be sustained if there was enough hope that
Oslo would lead to the realization of full Palestinian national
rights. Against all odds, the leadership kept this hope alive in
the last few years by claiming that the concessions of the interim
period would be recompensed by iron resolve during final status
talks. The breakdown of the Oslo process at Camp David was the almost
inevitable end game.
Reform or Liberation?
The end game which produced the intifada (with the help of Sharon's
visit to al-Aqsa) also exposed the tension within the PA's identity:
it is simultaneously a ruling -- though not sovereign -- government
and the institutional heir to the national liberation movement.
The longer the intifada continues without reaping diplomatic gains,
the stronger the voices calling for full national liberation become,
at the expense of "governance." The emerging debates about
the "internal situation" reflect the PA's dual identity.
In line with Arafat's PLC address, there are forces that focus mainly
on "reform" of the PA, advocating new elections for the
PLC and local councils, and the development of the rule of law.
They tend to call for an emergency government to address the particular
needs of the intifada. At the opposite extreme, there are calls
for the dissolution of the PA as a government, its replacement by
the PLO and a return to armed struggle as the means to liberate
Palestine.
Talk of reform has been around for a while, but now it is much more
vocal. Many of the same groups and individuals who had attempted
to develop "third way" democratic parties over the past
few years (mostly figures from the left factions or NGOs, and secular
independents) are currently the main purveyors of reform talk.(4)
In some cases, earlier attempts have now crystallized into a joint
political platform with strong reform content. But such initiatives
have yet to finalize a political program or, more crucially, an
organizational structure. The public rallies known as "popular
conferences," held in some West Bank towns in March and April
by a coalition of nationalist factions, repeatedly sounded the theme
of the need for internal reform: new elections, the rule of law,
separation of powers and combating corruption. But most speakers
did not develop these demands in any programmatic way, nor could
they draw links between their stated support for continuation of
the uprising and the need for government reform. None of these factions
have a large, organized mass base, or a clear strategy for effecting
reforms.
Fatah and the Opposition
The calls for reform emanating from within Fatah are perhaps more
significant. Fatah, like most nationalist movements, brings together
a wide and contradictory array of social forces. It encompasses
dominant elements of the bureaucratic leadership as well as the
new statist economic elite, local economic elites, top military
brass and members of the security forces. Most important are its
mass organizations, including its Shabiba youth wing, its women's
committee and the regular party organization or tanzim.(5) These
mass structures tie "the street" to the leadership. But
while the top political leaders of Fatah tend to be returnees from
exile, the mass organizations, both in membership and leadership,
tend to be from the "inside." While in Gaza the mass organizations
were largely absorbed into PA civilian and security structures,
in the West Bank they remained relatively distinct from the PA.
Significantly, the leadership of the mass organizations is dominated
by the younger generation of mid-level cadre, who came of age during
the first intifada, and acquired their current positions through
democratic party elections over the past five years. This same leadership
has been the driving force of the current uprising in the West Bank.(6)
As far back as the 1997 Fatah Regional Conference in Beit Sahour,
the weaknesses of the Oslo process as the strategic means to liberate
Palestine were beginning to take their toll. That conference ended
with movement leaders calling for a possible return to "armed
struggle," in an attempt to hold the movement together, particularly
in the face of opposition from Hamas. Following Camp David and Sharon's
fateful visit to the Haram al-Sharif, the internal tensions finally
exploded and what has become known as the tanzim took to the streets.
Fatah sees itself as continuing the legacy of resistance -- including
armed struggle -- that had dominated the history of the PLO. But
since Fatah is also the "ruling party," it does not see
itself in opposition to the PA but as a necessary complement to
the PA's role in negotiations. At an April 2001 roundtable in Ramallah,
Marwan Barghouthi was explicit on this point: the formation of the
PA is a historic achievement that needs to be protected. While asserting
that "the intifada also poses a criticism of the internal situation
[PA rule]," he added that reform of the government is currently
impossible.
Other elements in Fatah reject Barghouthi's moderation. The unknown
group responsible for the January 2001 assassination of Hisham Mekki,
the Palestine Broadcasting Authority chief known for his corruption,
is widely assumed to be affiliated with Fatah. Clearly the movement's
call for preservation of the PA, while also undertaking armed resistance,
creates new pressures that cannot be controlled. The recent participation
of Force 17, and other security organs, in armed activities against
Israel suggests that the state military apparatus finds it hard
to remain a bystander while relative ingénues take over its
legacy of armed struggle. The Fatah movement's role as the vanguard
of the intifada, in conjunction with its move onto the military
terrain, sets in motion a rebalancing of power within the ruling
elite -- not outside it.
At the other end of the spectrum are the voices calling for a full-fledged
return to a national liberation movement and the dissolution of
the PA. These have come from two sources: Islamists and left PLO
factions. Hamas and Islamic Jihad -- having been the main victims
of PA rule and now being major beneficiaries of the uprising --
have a clear interest in such a revision of national strategy. On
the left, there are those who view the intifada as an opportunity
to bury the Oslo accords -- which they have always rejected -- and
return to the framework of the PLO, where they might regain some
of their lost influence. Beyond these political debates, the fate
of the PA hangs in the balance of the war of nerves between the
Israeli and Palestinian leaderships.
War of Nerves
One of Barak's main strategies vis-á-vis the intifada was
to prevent the PA from reverting to its liberationist roots, either
in the form of the old PLO or in a new reconstructed form. This
clearly had to do with the exigencies of his electoral campaign,
but also reflected his commitment to Oslo as the framework through
which Israel could safeguard its interests. Hence, despite the early
signs of Arafat's "reversion" -- releasing Hamas and Islamic
Jihad prisoners, and allowing the creation of the NIF, made up of
PLO and Islamist factions -- Barak's use of repression was interspersed
with invitations to negotiate.
By contrast, Sharon has mounted an international campaign to demonize
the PA as a "terrorist entity," and continually presents
Arafat as an obstacle to security and peace. The current Likud discourse
is like an artifact from another age. After Oslo, the word "terrorist"
had been reserved for Hamas and Islamic Jihad. Now it refers to
any form of Palestinian resistance to occupation, and includes the
Fatah tanzim and Force 17, Arafat's presidential guard. Sharon states
that there can be no negotiations before Arafat has arrested (or
rearrested) this broad panoply of "terrorists" and reinstituted
security cooperation with Israel. But should talks resume, Sharon
is offering nothing more than a long-term interim agreement that
would keep most of the West Bank under Israeli control, retain all
the settlements and defer negotiations on Jerusalem and refugees.
It is obviously impossible for Arafat to agree to this, raising
the question of Sharon's intentions. Some argue that he seeks to
permanently destroy the PA, burying Oslo and ending Arafat's career.
Given the constraints of international and coalition pressure, Sharon
is more likely using the threat of the PA's destruction to push
Arafat back into a more amenable position. Arafat's tactical response
seems to be to send all possible signals -- to the US, the Europeans
and the Arab world -- that he is prepared to let the entire edifice
of the PA collapse, and revert if necessary to some form of armed
resistance. Arguably, if all else fails, Arafat retains and probably
strengthens his legitimacy by reinstating himself as leader of a
liberation movement.
Most likely, an exit from the current impasse will be found before
this stage is reached. The joint Jordanian-Egyptian proposal currently
on the table offers an "honorable exit" based on the Sharm
el-Sheikh ceasefire deal brokered by Clinton in late October 2000.
It stipulates the withdrawal of Israeli forces from PA-controlled
civilian areas, the lifting of internal sieges and the transfer
of VAT payments owed to the PA. In return, the PA would crack down
on armed resistance and gradually reenter security cooperation with
Israel. Negotiations would then resume on final status issues while
outstanding interim agreements by Israel would be implemented. Most
crucially for the Palestinian leadership, the package includes a
full settlement freeze -- which the PA could present as the achievement
of the uprising.
Arafat reluctantly has agreed to the Jordanian-Egyptian proposal,
but Sharon has not. But growing European and UN support and favorable
comments from the left wing of Labour and the US indicate that the
proposal may evolve into a face-saving device for both parties.
If the Jordanian-Egyptian proposal does become an exit from the
current war, it is likely that reform of government will once again
become the salient Palestinian political debate. But since Fatah
is the only strong force to have emerged through the intifada, a
new balance of power within the current system rather than the system's
radical overhaul will probably be the main outcome of the debate.
There are wider debts to be paid. The immense costs of lost lives,
homes and livelihoods cannot be completely ignored. The leadership
probably hopes that show trials of a few corrupt PA officials and
a resumption of work in Israel's labor market after months of impoverishment
will suffice. What is certain is that this intifada will leave a
collective memory of government failure in the face of mass hardship.
Whether the intifada will also lead to a point beyond Israel's enduring
occupation of Palestinian land has yet to be seen.
Endnotes
1) Ha'aretz, April 4, 2001. In other findings: 79 percent of those
surveyed agreed with Sharon's policy of no negotiations before the
end of violence and 53 percent believed the purpose of the intifada
was simply to cause harm to Israel.
2) For an overview of the backdrop to the uprising see Rema Hammami
and Salim Tamari, "Anatomy of Another Rebellion," Middle
East Report 217 (Winter 2000).
3) Even these mostly Saudi donations are stuck in the accounts of
the Islamic Development Bank, as the Saudis and others are locked
in negotiations with the PA about "development plans"
and a "transparent mechanism" for the funds' distribution.
Other Gulf aid tended to wind up in the hands of Hamas, which has
rebuilt its welfare institutions and, thereby, its popular support.
4) In particular, figures formerly in the left factions (the PFLP,
the DFLP, Fida', the PPP and so on) can be found at the forefront
of initiatives to create new parties or movements. These figures
are motivated by alienation from entrenched factional leaderships
(such as those in the PA executive) and the search for political
relevance.
5) See Graham Usher, "Fatah's Tanzim: Origins and Politics,"
Middle East Report 217 (Winter 2000).
6) Many individual members of the Fatah cadres that had been absorbed
into the PA in Gaza are now working under the rubric of what are
called the Popular Resistance Committees, not in any official PA
capacity.
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Story>>
Militant
Islam is under global scrutiny for clues to conditions that foster
its rise, and to strategies for reversing that growth. But the key
is not in Islamic doctrine, US foreign policy or formal ties to various
nations, as many analysts have asserted. It lies at the community
level, with clan and local leaders. Full
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Kurdish
parties have become kingmakers in Baghdad , and they know it. As
no federal government can work without them, they are pulling every
available political lever to expand the territory and resources they
control, trying to build the foundation of an independent Kurdish state.
But even more than territory, they need security. If everyone acts
quickly and wisely, that understanding could help resolve one of the
Iraq war’s thorniest issues. Full
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The
debate over the war in Iraq follows a yellowing script: The minute
someone suggests that the US move to withdraw its troops, war supporters
cry “Havoc!”
True to form, when no less a figure than Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki stated he wants a timeline for a US pullout, John McCain
summoned the specter of dire consequences. “I’ve always
said we’ll come home with honor and with victory and not through
a set timetable,” McCain said. In his major foreign policy speech
on July 15, Barack Obama affirmed his support for a withdrawal timetable,
adding that the US must “get out as carefully as we were careless
getting in.” Obama’s position is the correct one, but he,
like many other war critics, has done too little to counter the refrain
that withdrawal is simply
“cutting and running,” a recipe for disaster. Full
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