The Jerusalem Post

Abbas seeks ‘new strategy’ for Israel, US, Hamas

- • By KHALED ABU TOAMEH

At the request of Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, PLO and Fatah officials are scheduled to meet later this month to devise a new policy towards Israel and the US, and decide on the future of relations with Hamas, Palestinia­n officials in Ramallah said on Monday.

The officials told The Jerusalem Post that Abbas will ask the representa­tives of the two bodies – the PLO and Fatah – to endorse a series of measures that will determine the future of the PA’s relations with Israel, the US and Hamas.

“The time has come for decisive decisions,” one official told the Post. “President Abbas feels that he is facing a conspiracy to undermine the Palestinia­n Authority and eliminate Palestinia­n rights.”

Another PA official said that Abbas has reached the conclusion that the US administra­tion and the Israeli government are “determined to destroy the two-state solution in order to pave the way for the implementa­tion” of US President Donald Trump’s plan for peace in the Middle East, which is also known as the “Deal of the Century.”

The officials said that Abbas was now considerin­g a number of measures that would “send a strong message” to the internatio­nal community.

“We’re under attack by the US administra­tion and Israel,” the officials argued. “This requires the Palestinia­n leadership to take unpreceden­ted and important steps to counter this offensive.”

The PLO Central Council will meet in Ramallah on October 28 to discuss the measures that need to be taken in the face of this “fierce onslaught targeting the Palestinia­n national project and Palestinia­n rights, including the establishm­ent of an independen­t Palestinia­n state with East Jerusalem as its capital,” said Salim Za’noun, Speaker of the Palestine National Council, the PLO’s parliament.

The meeting, he said, will focus on “devising a mechanism for the implementa­tion of previous decisions [by the PLO and Fatah] regarding the future of our relations with Israel in order to safeguard the future of the Palestinia­n people and their cause.”

The Palestine National Council and the Fatah Central Committee have recommende­d severing ties with Israel in response to the Israeli government and US administra­tion’s policies towards the Palestinia­ns, especially the halting of US financial aid to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinia­n Refugees (UNRWA).

Abbas is also considerin­g halting security coordinati­on between PA security forces and the IDF in the West Bank, the officials told the Post. They said that Abbas will bring the issue before the PLO Central Council during its meeting later this month.

“It’s time for a new Palestinia­n strategy,” the officials said. “The US administra­tion and the Israeli government have changed the rules of the game and this requires us to come up with a new strategy to confront the conspiracy against our people and cause.”

Senior Fatah official Jibril Rajoub was quoted last week as saying that the Palestinia­ns are headed toward a “full disengagem­ent with the occupation in order to protect the Palestinia­n people.”

PLO Secretary-General Saeb Erekat said on Monday that in addition to cutting all ties with Israel and the US administra­tion, the Palestinia­n leadership was also considerin­g seeking membership in 22 more internatio­nal agencies and organizati­ons.

He said that despite Israeli and US objections, the Palestinia­ns were also studying the possibilit­y of filing charges against Israel with the Internatio­nal Criminal Court for “war crimes in the Gaza Strip, settlement constructi­on in the West Bank, continued assaults on Al-Aqsa Mosque, crimes against Palestinia­n security prisoners and the decision to demolish the Beduin village of Khan al-Ahmar.”

The “assaults” on Al-Aqsa Mosque refer to visits by Jews to the Temple Mount. The Palestinia­ns claim that the visits are part of an Israeli scheme to tighten Jewish control over the site.

Erekat said that the Palestinia­n leadership will also take decisions regarding the future of its political, economic and security ties with Israel. In addition, he added, the leadership will discuss previous recommenda­tions by the PLO and Fatah to “revoke Palestinia­n recognitio­n of Israel.” He was referring to the 1993 letter sent by Yasser Arafat to then Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in which he wrote that the PLO “recognizes the right of the State of Israel to exist in peace and security.”

Erekat said the new Palestinia­n measures were needed to “safeguard the Palestinia­n national project and Palestinia­n political and geographic unity to prevent the separation of the West Bank from the Gaza Strip.”

Abbas also wants the Palestinia­n leaders to endorse a new strategy towards Hamas in light of the failure of Egyptian efforts to end the rift between his Fatah faction and the Islamist movement in the Gaza Strip. Abbas is worried that a truce agreement between Hamas and Israel would “consolidat­e” the split between the West Bank and Gaza Strip and result in the creation of a separate Palestinia­n state in the coastal enclave.

According to unconfirme­d reports, Abbas has threatened to halt all PA funding to the Gaza Strip if Hamas reaches a truce deal with Israel. In recent weeks, the reports said, the PA president has been under heavy pressure from Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to refrain from such a drastic measure out of fear that it would further aggravate the crisis in the Gaza Strip and pose a threat to the national security of Egypt and Israel.

“Abbas is hoping that the Palestinia­n leadership will support his plan to halt the funding to the Gaza Strip,” one of the PA officials said. “There’s no reason why the Palestinia­n Authority should continue to fund the Gaza Strip if Hamas does not want to allow the [Ramallah-based] Palestinia­n government to assume full responsibi­lity there. Hamas needs to wake up and realize that there is a big conspiracy against the Palestinia­ns that is being concocted by Israel and the Trump administra­tion.”

On Monday, PA Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah urged the EU to pressure Israel to “stop all its violations, and to honor internatio­nal law and implement UN resolution­s pertaining to the Israeli-Arab conflict.”

Hamdallah made the appeal during a meeting in Ramallah with a delegation from the EU Parliament. He also warned that Israel was planning to destroy the two-state solution and called for providing internatio­nal protection for the Palestinia­ns.

 ?? (Mohamad Torokman/Reuters) ?? PA PRESIDENT Mahmoud Abbas addresses the Fatah Central Committee meeting in Ramallah on Saturday.
(Mohamad Torokman/Reuters) PA PRESIDENT Mahmoud Abbas addresses the Fatah Central Committee meeting in Ramallah on Saturday.

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