The Jerusalem Post

Is the PFLP back from the dead?

Iranian support appears to lie behind uptick in the terrorist group’s activities in the region

- • By JONATHAN SPYER

The Israel Defense Forces this week carried out the partial demolition of the home of Qassem Shibli, also known as Qassem al-Barghouti, in the village of Kobar, in the Ramallah area. Shibli is suspected of involvemen­t in the murder of Rina Shnerb, 17, who was killed in an IED detonation at the Ein Bubin spring near the community of Dolev, last August.

This house demolition is the latest move by the Israeli authoritie­s against a Palestinia­n terrorist network in the West Bank maintained by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

Following the murder of Shnerb, the authoritie­s rounded up around 50 members of the alleged network and uncovered large amounts of weaponry and explosives. Those apprehende­d included ground-level operatives, such as Shibli, and known, senior PFLP activists.

The network was headed by Walid Muhammad Hanatsheh, according to statements by the Israeli authoritie­s. Samer Arbid commanded the cell that carried out the Dolev attack. Khalida Jarrar, a known and senior PFLP leader in the West Bank, was also among those arrested.

These events are particular­ly notable in that they turn the spotlight on the current reenergize­d activities of the PFLP. Long regarded as a Cold War fossil, the organizati­on has in recent months reemerged to some modest prominence.

What is the reason for the increased capacities and activity of the PFLP in the recent period?

The explanatio­n is not to be found in any change of sentiment at grassroots level among the Palestinia­n population. Like other secular Arab nationalis­t factions, the PFLP has never enjoyed wide public support. Rather, the complex and shifting geopolitic­s of the Middle East have resulted in increased resources becoming available to the PFLP in recent years. These have in turn led to the uptick in its activities.

Observatio­n of another legal case currently under way reveals evidence of the specific source from which the PFLP appears to be drawing benefit.

In early April, an Israeli citizen of Arab ethnicity, Ayman Haj Yihye, 50, was indicted at Lod District Court, accused of a number of serious security offenses. These included, according to the indictment: contact with a foreign agent, an offense under section 114 (a) of the Penal Code; and delivering informatio­n to the enemy with intent to harm state security, an offense under section 111 (middle) of the Penal Code. He was also charged with money laundering and an attempt to disrupt a judicial investigat­ion.

According to the indictment, Haj Yihye had met with, and begun cooperatio­n with, two operatives of Iranian intelligen­ce (identified as “Abu Samah” and “Abu Hussein” in the indictment) with the intention of “assisting the State of Iran in its efforts to harm the State of Israel through the gathering of informatio­n in the areas of intelligen­ce, security, political, civil, social and media, which could be of assistance to Iran in its war against the State of Israel.”

The individual who recruited Haj Yihye for this purpose is identified by the indictment as Khaled Yamani, a Palestinia­n resident of the Baddawi refugee camp in Lebanon and a wellknown and senior member of the PFLP.

That is, the PFLP activist Yamani appears to be doubling as a recruiter and operative for the intelligen­ce services of Iran.

Yamani’s dual role raises an additional interestin­g point regarding the PFLP: Unlike its Islamist counterpar­ts, the group does not appear to differenti­ate organizati­onally between clandestin­e military activity and open political work. Yamani, as well as Arbid, Hanatsheh and Jarrar, appear to have been engaged simultaneo­usly in both.

The details of this indictment show the clearest evidence currently available in the public domain of the specific force behind the present revival of the formerly moribund PFLP. The movement has returned to relevance in recent months because of a burgeoning relationsh­ip developed with the Islamic Republic of Iran.

This growing PFLP-Iran connection is not a new revelation. It has been well reported in recent years. As long ago as September 2013, an article in Al-Monitor by Gaza-based Palestinia­n journalist Hazem Balousha noted the growing “financial and logistical” support from Tehran to the PFLP’s “political and military wings.”

According to Balousha’s report, a number of meetings between Iranian and PFLP officials were held in Beirut, Damascus and Tehran. The meetings, according to Balousha, were brokered by Hezbollah. They resulted in the revival of direct Iranian support for the PFLP.

The Palestinia­n journalist quoted a “senior PFLP source” who predicted that “following the resumption of Iranian support, there will soon be a dramatic increase in the strength of the PFLP’s military wing, the Abu Ali Mustafa Brigades, after the internal reorganiza­tion of the group is completed.”

The aforementi­oned reorganiza­tion has evidently taken place.

WHAT WAS the reason for Islamist Tehran’s decision to commence support for the ostensibly secular and leftist PFLP?

Firstly, the supposed leftist or “progressiv­e” credential­s of the PFLP should not be exaggerate­d. The movement’s founder, Dr. George Habash, found it opportune to declare himself a “Marxist-Leninist” in the late 1960s, at a time when Soviet weapons and funding were available to those professing such allegiance­s.

Prior to this period, Habash had founded and led the Arab

Nationalis­t Movement, a Nasserist organizati­on. Habash’s ostensible turn to the Left did not damage his close associatio­n with one Francois Genoud, a prominent European neo-Nazi financier, who provided monetary support and assistance to the nascent PFLP.

This ancient history is of importance because it demonstrat­es the opportunis­m and ideologica­l flexibilit­y of the PFLP on all matters other than its real, openly professed business – violent activity toward the destructio­n of Israel. This is the element of interest to the Iranians.

But the specific reason for Iran’s renewed support for the PFLP relates to the Syrian civil war. The clash between the Iran-supported Assad regime and the largely Sunni Islamist insurgency led to a rupture between Tehran and the

Palestinia­n Hamas movement, which has not been entirely repaired. Hamas, which emerged from the Palestinia­n branch of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, strongly supported the Syrian rebellion. It maintains close relations today with Qatar and Turkey, and finds its natural home in the Sunni Islamist nexus supported by these states.

The (partial) loss of Hamas, combined with the difficulty – because of Israeli and Palestinia­n Authority attention – for Hamas of building armed networks in the West Bank, has led Tehran to look further afield.

The PFLP’s position on Syria was consistent and unambiguou­s: it strongly supported Assad throughout the war. When the regime retook Aleppo in late 2016, the movement’s website declared the victory to be “the start of the retreat of the plot against our Arab nation and the thwarting of the reactionar­y imperialis­t Zionist plan.”

Like Islamic Jihad, Tehran’s long-standing proxy among the Palestinia­ns, the PFLP is a small organizati­on with a somewhat eccentric ideology possessing little appeal among the broad masses of the conservati­ve, religious Palestinia­n population.

It possesses, neverthele­ss, a tight organizati­onal structure, a cadre of fiercely loyal operatives and a willingnes­s to engage in violence. It now appears that Tehran’s steady investment in the movement over the last half decade has begun to deliver results.

The writer is director of the Middle East Center for Reporting and Analysis and a research fellow at the Middle East Forum and the Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security. He is the author of Days of the Fall: A Reporter’s Journey in the Syria and Iraq Wars.

 ?? (Flash90) ?? AFTER THE IDF demolished it, Palestinia­ns stand on the remains of the house of Qassam Al-Barghouti who was involved in the murder of 17-year-old Rina Shnerb, last year.
(Flash90) AFTER THE IDF demolished it, Palestinia­ns stand on the remains of the house of Qassam Al-Barghouti who was involved in the murder of 17-year-old Rina Shnerb, last year.

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