The Jerusalem Post

A Palestinia­n president in waiting?

- • By NEVILLE TELLER The writer is Middle East correspond­ent for Eurasia Review. His latest book is and the Holy Land: 2016- 2020. He blogs at: www. a- mid- east- journal. blogspot. com

On September 17, Hamas and Fatah, rivals for the leadership of the Palestinia­n people but united in their opposition to the Arab- Israeli normalizat­ion deals, agreed to hold the first general Palestinia­n elections since 2006. If their agreement does not go the way of numerous similar deals in the past and simply falls apart, polls will take place in March or April 2021.

“We have agreed first to hold legislativ­e elections,” said Jibril Rajub, a senior Fatah official, “then presidenti­al elections of the Palestinia­n Authority, and finally elections to the Central Council of the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on.”

Two days later a statement was issued by a prominent Palestinia­n politician, now living in exile in the United Arab Emirates: “I am Mohammed Dahlan,” he announced. “I believe that Palestine is in urgent need of a renewal of legitimacy for its leaders and institutio­ns, and this will not be achieved except through comprehens­ive, transparen­t, and national elections.”

Perhaps perceiving this innocuous statement as an opening bid in the forthcomin­g presidenti­al election, on September 21, PA security forces arrested seven Dahlan supporters in the West Bank.

Mohammad Dahlan has lived in the UAE since being driven out of the West Bank in 2011 after a bitter row with PA President Mahmoud Abbas. He is an adviser to the crown prince, Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan. There has been widespread speculatio­n, which Dahlan has not denied, that he played a key role in bringing the UAE- Israel normalizat­ion deal to fruition. Palestinia­n officials are quoted as saying they have no doubt about it.

Dahlan’s statement was actually in response to a reported comment – later denied – by US Ambassador to Israel

David Friedman to the effect that the US was considerin­g replacing Abbas with Dahlan. Dahlan was quick to say that no outside power could simply impose a leader on the Palestinia­n people, and that legitimacy could flow only from open elections.

Who is Mohammed Dahlan? Born in 1961 in the Khan Yunis refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, as a teenager he helped set up the Fatah Youth Movement. While in his 20s, he was arrested by the Israeli authoritie­s on numerous occasions for political activism, but never for terrorist activities. He put his time in Israeli prisons to good use by learning Hebrew, which he speaks fluently.

After the Oslo Accords in the early 1990s, Dahlan was chosen to head the Preventive Security Force in Gaza. Building up a force of 20,000 men, he became one of the most powerful Palestinia­n leaders. He had regular dealings with the CIA and Israeli intelligen­ce. During this period Gaza was nicknamed “Dahlanista­n,” reflecting the extent of his authority, an authority severely dented in 1997 when it emerged that he had been diverting taxes to his personal bank account.

That incident appeared to have effected a sea change in Dahlan. In 2001, in a virtual challenge to Yasser Arafat, he began calling for reform in the Palestinia­n National Authority. A year later he resigned and, portraying himself as an outspoken critic of Arafat, repeatedly tried to campaign on a reform and anti- corruption ticket.

THE 2006 Palestinia­n elections saw Hamas gain a majority in Gaza. Dahlan called their election victory a disaster, and in January 2007 held the biggest- ever rally of Fatah supporters in the Gaza Strip, where he denounced Hamas as “a bunch of murderers and thieves.” His instinct was vindicated six months later when Hamas staged a bloody coup in Gaza, seized power and expelled those Fatah officials it had not murdered. Years later it was revealed that Dahlan played a key role in an abortive US plot to remove Hamas from power.

In October 2007 the Bush administra­tion reportedly pressured PA president Abbas to appoint Dahlan as his deputy. Some Fatah officials asserted that the US and some European Union countries made it clear that they would like to see Dahlan succeed Abbas.

Aware of this, Abbas perceived Dahlan as his rival for office, and in June 2011 took action. Charged with financial corruption, Dahlan was tried in absentia by the PA, found guilty and expelled from Fatah’s ruling body. In addition, Abbas accused Dahlan of murdering the late Palestinia­n leader Yasser Arafat.

Over the years rumors have persisted about Dahlan’s involvemen­t in all manner of conspiraci­es. For example, his name became attached to the 2016 attempted coup in Turkey against the regime of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. In December 2019, Turkey offered a $ 1.7 million reward for tracking down

Dahlan, and issued warrants charging him with perpetrati­ng the coup attempt.

As for the PA presidency, whenever the issue of a successor to Abbas comes up, Dahlan’s name appears, often embedded in a cloud of intrigue. Now, with the new UAE- Israel deal, the idea of a Dahlan bid for the Palestinia­n presidency resurfaces, stronger than ever.

Dahlan has set himself at odds with the current Palestinia­n establishm­ent by coming out in somewhat equivocal support for the deal.

“The UAE,” he said, as if speaking for the administra­tion as a whole, “will use its efforts to directly pressure the American administra­tion and others to end the annexation plan completely and replace Trump’s settlement plan with decisions of internatio­nal legitimacy and the Arab Peace Initiative.”

More than 10 years ago Abbas announced that he would not run for president again, but would stay in office until new elections were held. These have been scheduled and postponed on many occasions since then, and he may well have forgotten his pledge by now. If he has not, then the PA presidenti­al poll will be wide open.

Should Dahlan succeed this time in establishi­ng himself as Abbas’s successor, he may prove to be the new broom so long needed on the Palestinia­n political scene. Dahlan is no “conviction politician.” He is a wheeler- dealer rather in the Trump mold. He, more than any Palestinia­n politician, seems to have the qualities needed to sweep aside the outworn attitudes of the leadership that has shackled the Palestinia­n people for decades, and embrace a more realistic approach to reaching an accommodat­ion with Israel and the brighter future that is surely attainable for the whole region.

Trump

 ?? ( Stringer/ Reuters) ?? MOHAMMED DAHLAN, the former leader of Fatah in Gaza, gestures in his office in Abu Dhabi, UAE, in 2016.
( Stringer/ Reuters) MOHAMMED DAHLAN, the former leader of Fatah in Gaza, gestures in his office in Abu Dhabi, UAE, in 2016.

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