Israeli-Palestinian Conflict - Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO)
The Palestine
Liberation Organization (PLO) (Arabic: Munazzamat al-Tahrir al-Filastiniyyah
منظمة التحرير الفلسطينية ) is a political and paramilitary organization
of Palestinian Arabs dedicated to the establishment of an independent
Palestinian state in the area historically known as Palestine. In 1969,
Yasser Arafat became the Chairman of the PLO Executive Committee and
remained so until his death in 2004. He was succeeded by Mahmoud Abbas
(also known as Abu Mazen.)
Overview
Founded in 1964, the PLO has a nominal legislative body, the Palestinian
National Council (PNC), but most actual political power and decisions
are controlled by the PLO Executive Committee, made up of 15 people
elected by the PNC. The PLO incorporates a range of generally secular
ideologies of different Palestinian movements committed to the struggle
for Palestinian independence and liberation, hence the name of the
organization. In 1974, the PNC approved the Ten Point Program formulated
by Fatah's leaders which calls for the establishment of a national
authority over any piece of liberated Palestinian land, and to actively
pursue the establishment of a secular democratic binational state in
Israel/Palestine under which all citizens will enjoy equal status and
rights regardless of race, sex, or religion. The Ten Point Program was
considered the first attempt by PLO at a peaceful resolution, though the
ultimate goal was "completing the liberation of all Palestinian
territory, and as a step along the road to comprehensive Arab unity".[1]
The Palestine Liberation Organization is considered the legitimate
representative of the Palestinian people and holds a permanent observer
seat in the UN General Assembly.
History
The PLO was established by Arab states in the early 1960s as a client
body with its own army - the Palestine Liberation Army. The aim was the
'liberation' of all the territory of Mandate Palestine - in spite of the
existing de facto borders the Arab states remained unreconciled with
Israel's creation and the proposed partition of Palestine in 1948. At
the time there were no significant organisations claiming to represent
the whole Palestinian people and the official ideology of the PLO was
'Arab nationalism' - the belief that the Arabs as a whole consisted of
one nation and should be in one state.
However, the catastrophic defeat of the Arab states in the Six Day War
of 1967 destroyed the credibility of the states that sought to be
patrons of the Palestinian people and the way was opened for the
radicals, led by Yasser Arafat, who advocated guerilla warfare and who
successfully sought to make the PLO a fully independent organisation
under the control of the fedayeen organisations.
In the 1970s the PLO, was an umbrella group of eight organizations
headquartered in Damascus and Beirut, all devoted to what they called
armed resistance to either Zionism or Israeli occupation, using methods
which included attacks on civilians and guerrilla warfare against
Israel. The PLO includes Fatah, the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine (PFLP) the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP),
the Palestine Liberation Front (PLF), the Arab Liberation Front (ALF),
the Popular Struggle Front (PSF) as well as other minor groups. It has
at times contained other groups which have since left the organization
for various reasons, such as:
* The radical group Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine -
General Command (PFLP-GC) splinter group within the PFLP, left in 1974
in protest of the Ten Point Program.
The PLO, led by Yasser Arafat until his death in 2004, has since become
the generally accepted organization of the Palestinian people and its
desire to have a nation of its own.
Timeline
The PLO was founded on 2 June 1964. The first executive committee was
formed on 9 August, with Ahmad Shuqeiri as its leader.
At the Palestinian National Congress in Cairo on February 3, 1969 Arafat
was appointed PLO leader.
In 1974, three radical members of one of the PLO's groups took over an
elementary school in the Israeli town of Ma'alot and massacred 21
children with hand grenades and machine guns.
The PLO in Lebanon and the Lebanese Civil War
In the mid-1970s, Arafat and his Fatah movement found themselves in a
tenuous position politically. The PLO's Rejection Front opposed Arafat's
growing calls for diplomacy from the mid-1970s, perhaps best symbolized
by his support for a UN Security Council resolution proposed in 1976
calling for a two-state settlement on the pre-1967 borders and his Ten
Points Program, which was denounced by the Rejection Front (and vetoed
by the United States). The population in the Occupied Territories, for
their part, saw Arafat as their only hope for a favorable resolution to
the conflict, especially in the aftermath of the Camp David Accords,
which Palestinians had seen as a blow to their aspirations to
self-determination; on the other hand, Israeli leaders, who had their
own designs for the Occupied Territories, resented Arafat's popularity
and increasing diplomatic credibility. Meanwhile, Palestinian terrorist
Abu Nidal, a sworn enemy of the PLO since 1974, assassinated the PLO's
diplomatic envoy to the European Economic Community, which in the Venice
Declaration of 1980 had called for the Palestinian right of
self-determination to be recognized by Israel. The sponsors of the
assassination were never conclusively identified, but it was at any rate
clear that Arafat's diplomatic machinations were not universally
welcomed.
In the Lebanese Civil War the PLO first fought against the Maronites,
then against Israel, then, finally, against the Syrian supported Amal
militia. From 1985 to 1988 Amal besieged Palestinian refugee camps in
Lebanon to drive out supporters of Arafat. Many thousands of
Palestinians died of fire and starvation. After the Amal siege ended
there was a great deal of intra-Palestinian fighting in the camps. (see
War of the Camps)
Opposition to Arafat was notably fierce not only among radical Arab
groups but among many on the Israeli right as well, including Menachem
Begin, who had stated on more than one occasion that even if the PLO
accepted UN Security Council resolution 242 and recognized Israel's
right to exist, he would never negotiate with the organization (Smith,
op. cit., p. 357). This contradicted the official United States position
that it would negotiate with the PLO if the PLO accepted resolution 242
and recognized Israel, which the PLO had thus far been unwilling to do.
Other Arab voices had recently called for a diplomatic resolution to the
hostilities in accord with the international consensus, including
Egyptian leader Anwar Sadat on his visit to Washington in August 1981
and Crown Prince Fahd of Saudi Arabia in his 7 August peace proposal;
together with Arafat's diplomatic maneuvers, these developments made
Israel's argument that it had "no partner for peace" seem increasingly
problematic. Thus, in the eyes of Israeli hard-liners, "the Palestinians
posed a greater challenge to Israel as a peacemaking organization than
as a military one" (Smith, op. cit., 376).
First Intifada
Palestinian Authority
Al-Aqsa Intifada
United Nations
The United Nations General Assembly granted the PLO observer status on
November 22, 1974. On July 7, 1998, this status was extended to allow
participation in General Assembly debates, though not in voting.
On January 12, 1976 the UN Security Council voted 11-1 with 3 absentions
to allow the Palestinian Liberation Organization to participate in a
Security Council debate without voting rights, a privilege usually
restricted to UN member states.
Tunis & Algeria
In 1982, the PLO relocated to Tunis after it was driven out of Lebanon
by Israel during Israel's six-month invasion of Lebanon.
In 1988, the Palestine National Council adopted in Algiers a resolution
calling for the implementation of applicable United Nations resolutions,
which were explained to include Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338
and General Assembly Resolution 181. Some Palestinians recognized
Israel's right to exist within pre-1967 borders, with the understanding
that they would be allowed to set up their own state in the West Bank
and Gaza, and the United States accepted this resolution, along with
statements and clarifications a month later by Arafat in Geneva to
constitute acceptance of 242 and Israel's right to exist by the PLO. A
significant minority within the PLO at this time still held the view
that a future Palestinian state would include the territory of Jordan,
which had also been part of the territory administered under the British
Mandate for Palestine.
Oslo Accords
In 1993, the PLO secretly negotiated the Oslo Accords with Israel. The
accords were signed on 20 August 1993. There was a subsequent public
ceremony in Washington D.C. on September 13, 1993 with Yasser Arafat and
Yitzhak Rabin. The Accords granted the Palestinians right to
self-government on the Gaza Strip and the West Bank through the creation
of the Palestinian Authority. Yasser Arafat was appointed head of the PA
and the PLO came to dominate the administration. The headquarters of the
PA (and thereby Yasser Arafat and the PLO) were established in Ramallah
on the West Bank.
On 9 September 1993, Arafat issued a press release stating that "the PLO
recognizes the right of the State of Israel to exist in peace and
security". Some factions within the PLO and the PA, who used to seek
peaceful coexistence with Israel while creating a Palestinian state
within the West Bank and Gaza, have lost popular support due to the
reoccupation of PA controlled areas in the West Bank.
In addition to Arafat, the PLO has many other well known leaders. One of
them is the Palestinian Christian Hanan Ashrawi. She is a Professor of
Literature at a West Bank university who has contributed to the
understanding of English literature among the Palestinians and developed
and compiled that people's own literature. By doing so, Palestinian
identity and development has been furthered, consistent with the basic
principles of the PLO.
Numerous leaders within the PLO and the PA, including Yasser Arafat
himself, have declared that the State of Israel has a permanent right to
exist, and that the peace treaty with Israel is genuine, though members
of the PLO have claimed responsibility for a number of attacks against
Israelis since the Oslo Accords. Some Palestinian officials have stated
that the peace treaty must be viewed as permanent. A majority of
Israelis believe Palestinians should have a state of their own. At the
same time, a significant portion of the Israeli public and some
political leaders (including the former Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu) express doubt over whether a peaceful, coherent state can be
founded by the PLO and call for significant re-organization, including
the elimination of all terrorism, before any talk about independence.
PLO National Charter
The text of the Palestinian National Charter as amended in 1968 contains
many clauses calling for the destruction of the state of Israel. In
letters exchanged between Arafat and Rabin in conjunction with the 1993
Oslo Accords, Arafat agreed that those clauses would be removed. On 26
April 1996, the Palestine National Council voted to nullify or amend all
such clauses, and called for a new text to be produced. A letter from
Arafat to US President Clinton in 1998 listed the clauses concerned, and
a meeting of the Palestine Central Committee approved that list. A
public meeting of PLO, PNC and PCC members also confirmed the letter in
Clinton's presence, and Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
accepted this as the promised nullification. Nevertheless, a new text of
the Charter has never been produced, and this is the source of a
continuing controversy. Critics of the Palestinian organizations claim
that failure to produce a new text proves the insincerity of the clause
nullifications. One of several Palestinian responses is that the proper
replacement of the Charter will be the constitution of the forthcoming
state of Palestine. The published draft constitution states that the
territory of Palestine "is an indivisible unit based upon its borders on
the 4th of June 1967".
The 1968 PLO Charter endorses the use of violence, specifically "armed
struggle" against what they call "zionist imperialism." Article 10 of
the Palestinian National Charter states "Commando (Feday’ee) action
constitutes the nucleus of the Palestinian popular liberation war. This
requires its escalation, comprehensiveness, and the mobilization of all
the Palestinian popular and educational efforts and their organization
and involvement in the armed Palestinian revolution. It also requires
the achieving of unity for the national (watani) struggle among the
different groupings of the Palestinian people, and between the
Palestinian people and the Arab masses, so as to secure the continuation
of the revolution, its escalation, and victory."
Allegations of Terrorism
Successive Israeli governments have considered the PLO to be a terrorist
organization both because its conflict with Israeli security forces and
because it has targetted and killed Israeli civilians in Israel and
abroad.
In contrast, Palestinian supporters and some international jurists
consider some attacks on the Israeli military legitimate resistance to
Israeli occupation[2]. Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions (1949),
which however has not been universally accepted in whole as
international law, particularly not by Israel and the United States
offers support for this view.
Despite disagreements about the legitimacy of the PLO's attacks on
Israeli military personnel, almost all international opinion considers
targeted attacks on Israeli civilians to be terrorist acts.
Statements made by PLO
The PLO has a wide diversity of opinions within it, some more peaceful
than others. The opinions expressed by some PLO members do not
necessarily reflect the organization as a whole.
On fighting against Israel:
"We plan to eliminate the state of Israel and establish a purely
Palestinian state. We will make life unbearable for Jews by
psychological warfare and population explosion. . . . We Palestinians
will take over everything, including all of Jerusalem." --Yasser Arafat,
Chairman of the PLO (in front of an Arab audience in Stockholm in 1996)
"Whoever thinks of stopping the uprising before it achieves its goals, I
will give him ten bullets in the chest." --Yasser Arafat, Chairman of
the PLO
"I come bearing an olive branch in one hand, and the freedom fighter's
gun in the other. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand." --Yasser
Arafat, Chairman of the PLO (November, 1974, while speaking at the
United Nations)
"We know only one word: jihad,jihad, jihad.When we stopped the intifada,
we did not stop the jihad for the establishment of a Palestinian state
whose capital is Jerusalem. And now we are entering the phase of the
great jihad prior to the establishment of an independant Palestinian
state whose capital is Jerusalem...We are in a conflict with the Zionist
movement and the Balfour Declaration and all imperialist activities." --Yasser
Arafat, Chairman of the PLO (During an October 21,1996 speech at the
Dehaishe refugee camp)
On accepting Israel:
"Consequently, the PLO undertakes to submit to the Palestinian National
Council for formal approval the necessary changes in regard to the
Palestinian covenant." --Yasser Arafat, Chairman of the PLO (in the
exchange of letters with Israel on 9 September 1993)
"Israel must not demand that the PLO alter its covenant, just as the PLO
does not demand that the Jewish nation cancel the Bible." --Ziad Abu
Ziad, senior PLO official (in a speech to the American Jewish
Federation, 23 October 1993)
"Palestinians are no strangers to compromise. In the 1993 Oslo Accords,
we agreed to recognize Israeli sovereignty over 78 percent of historic
Palestine and to establish a Palestinian state on only 22 percent." --
Saeb Erekat, Chief Palestinian negotiator, 5 August 2000
In his 22 April 2004 interview with the Jordanian newspaper Al-Arab, the
PLO minister still living in Tunisia Farouk Kaddoumi said that the PLO
charter was never changed so as to recognize Israel's right to exist.
"The Palestinian national charter has not been amended until now. It was
said that some articles are no longer effective, but they were not
changed. I'm one of those who didn't agree to any changes." He said
also: "...the national struggle must continue. I mean the armed
struggle... Fatah was established on the basis of the armed struggle and
that this was the only way to leading to political negotiations that
would force the enemy to accept our national aspirations. Therefore
there is no struggle other than the armed military struggle... If Israel
wants to leave the Gaza Strip, then it should do so. This means that the
Palestinian resistance has forced it to leave. But the resistance will
continue. Let the Gaza Strip be South Vietnam. We will use all available
methods to liberate North Vietnam." (Source: [3])
"If you are asking me, as a man who belongs to the Islamic faith, my
answer is also "From the river to the sea," the entire land is an
Islamic Waqf which can not be bought or sold, and it is impossible to
remain silent while someone is stealing it ..." -- Faisal Husseini
(1940-2001), Fatah leader and PA Minister for Jerusalem, 'Al-Arabi'
(Egypt), 24 June 2001. [4]. Similar statements made in the newspaper
'As-Safir' on 3 March 2001 page 23 of the report [5]
On whether the PLO police force will work with Israel against terrorism:
"The Joint Security Coordination and Cooperation Committee set up under
Article II hereunder shall develop a plan to ensure full coordination
between the Israeli military forces and the Palestinian police..." --
from the agreement signed by Israel and the PLO in Cairo on 4 May 1994
(paragraph 2a of Annex I to the agreement)
"Anyone who thinks the Palestinian police will try to prevent attacks
outside the borders of the autonomous area is making a bitter mistake."
--- Sufian Abu Zaida, a leader of Yasser Arafat's Fatah faction in Gaza
(Maariv, 25 April 1994)
"If there are those who oppose the agreement with Israel, the gates are
open to them to intensify the armed struggle." -- Jibril Rajoub, PLO
security chief for the West Bank, during a lecture at Bethlehem
University (Yediot Aharonot, 27 May 1994)
On the right of return of Palestinian refugees:
"I recently read an interview with an elderly Palestinian woman living
in the Ein el Hilwa camp in Lebanon. Tightly gripping the rusted key to
her family's farm near Jaffa, she asked her interviewer how she should
explain to her grandchildren, who had known only the stench of the
camp's open sewers, what it was like to wake up to the scent of fresh
lemons." -- Elia Zureik, a Professor of Sociology at Queen's University,
Kingston, Canada, Advises the Palestine Liberation Organization on
Refugee Issues
"800,000 Palestinians among those who left after 1967 will come back in
the transitional period, which is five years. Those who left in 1948
will come back after the declaration of the Palestinian independent
state." -- Nabil Sha'ath, head of the PLO delegation to the talks with
Israel in Taba (Al-Hayat, 28 September 1993)
"In my opinion, the refugees problem is more important than a
Palestinian state" -- Faruk Kadumi, general secretary of the Fatah
council (Kul Al-Arab, 3 Jannuar 2003)
On why the PLO signed the Cairo agreement with Israel:
"The money is the carrot for signing the peace agreement with Israel. We
have signed." -- Hassan Abu Libdah, deputy chairman of the PLO's
Palestinian Economic Council for Development and Reconstruction (The New
York Times, 10 June 1994)
On Palestinian statehood:
"Palestinians believe that Jerusalem should be a shared, open city; two
capitals for two states." -- Faisal Husseini, senior PLO representative
in Israel, 3 July 2000
"Gradually, stage by stage, we will reach an independent Palestinian
state with Jerusalem as the capital." -- Faisal Husseini, senior PLO
representative in Israel (Beirut Times, 16 September 1993)
The Palestinian flag "will fly over the walls of Jerusalem, the churches
of Jerusalem and the mosques of Jerusalem." -- Yasser Arafat, Former
Chairman of the PLO (Jordanian TV, 13 September 1993)
From:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palestinian_Liberation_Organization
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