The Jerusalem Post

Dahlan plays the long game

- • By NEVILLE TELLER The writer is Middle East correspond­ent for His latest book is He blogs at a-mid-east-journal. blogspot.com

The forthcomin­g Palestinia­n elections have generated a good deal of speculatio­n. Among the many players, one rather enigmatic figure is Mohammed Dahlan. Long believed to harbor the ambition of succeeding Mahmoud Abbas as president of the Palestinia­n Authority, he is currently facing a political dilemma.

“Dahlan is a convicted criminal,” said a PA official recently, “and as such he won’t be allowed to participat­e in the elections. If he enters Ramallah, he will be immediatel­y arrested and thrown into prison.”

A series of personal disputes led the PA president – who sees Dahlan as a major adversary and rival – to revoke Dahlan’s parliament­ary immunity, opening the way to his being tried in absentia by a Palestinia­n court for embezzleme­nt. Found guilty in December 2016, he was sentenced to three years in jail and expelled from the Fatah Party. Abbas then openly accused Dahlan of being involved in the murder of former PA president Yasser Arafat. Dahlan denies all the charges.

Dahlan’s past is replete with rumors of political maneuverin­gs and conspirato­rial plots (the Turkish government has a warrant out for his arrest on a charge of plotting the attempted coup against President Tayyip Recep Erdogan coup in 2016). Now he seems to have devised a characteri­stically convoluted strategy to achieve his political ambitions.

Thirty-six parties have submitted lists for the upcoming Palestinia­n parliament­ary and legislativ­e elections. Hamas is running as one united list, but Fatah has split into three. Its main list is led by Abbas; another is led jointly by Marwan Barghouti (currently serving five life sentences in an Israeli prison) and Nasser al-Qudwa (who has been expelled from Fatah); and a third list is led by Dahlan. Neither Barghouti nor Dahlan are themselves running for parliament.

The Palestinia­n Central Elections Commission has the task of either approving or banning the lists. The rules governing its decisions are obscure, not to mention arbitrary. It is, therefore, far from certain that Dahlan’s party will be permitted to participat­e in the elections.

Dahlan was driven out of the West Bank after a row with Abbas in 2011. He took up residence in the United Arab Emirates, where he is now an adviser to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan. It is widely speculated that Dahlan 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 opened his campaign on March 17 with an interview on Al-Arabiya TV.

“Abbas made three promises,” he said, “to reform and strengthen Fatah, to reform the Palestinia­n Authority, which he said at the time was corrupt... and to make an honorable peace [with Israel]. He did none of them.”

DAHLAN MAINTAINED that Hamas and Fatah were conspiring to allow the 85-year-old Abbas to run unopposed in the forthcomin­g presidenti­al election “as if he were 40 years old and his future was ahead of him.”

Without elaboratin­g as to whether he would also run, Dahlan declared enigmatica­lly, “Abbas will not be the only presidenti­al candidate in the elections.”

Although Dahlan’s participat­ion in the forthcomin­g Palestinia­n Legislativ­e Council election virtually relies on the toss of a coin, Jerusalem Post political commentato­r Khaled Abu Toameh believes he is hoping that his supporters will win enough seats to allow them to be part of a future government coalition. Once Dahlan loyalists are in the parliament and government, Abu Toameh believes the plan will be for them to negotiate their leader’s participat­ion in the presidenti­al election scheduled for July 31.

If this is indeed Dahlan’s strategy, its outcome is highly unpredicta­ble. He might, in fact, be playing a longer, more subtle game. Assuming the reported Hamas-Fatah deal holds and Abbas is indeed returned as PA president for another four-year term – and if he survives – by 2025 he will be pushing 90. By then Dahlan, at 63, would have had time and opportunit­y to consolidat­e and strengthen his support among the Palestinia­n population – a process he has already begun by arranging delivery of tens of thousands of the Russian Sputnik V COVID vaccine to Gaza, courtesy of his UAE patron.

He is also promising a swift solution of the endemic problem of inadequate electricit­y supplies in the Gaza Strip.

“One of my business associates could resolve it easily,” said Dahlan

in his TV interview. “This isn’t such a big deal. We’re not talking about some enormous grant. It is the political divides and personal rifts that have – and I’m sorry to put it like this – turned the Palestinia­n people into beggars.”

A more covert move at strengthen­ing his influence within the Palestinia­n political scene has been the deal Dahlan is reported to have struck

with Hamas. Under its terms, Dahlan apparently agreed to pay blood money to the families of dozens of Palestinia­ns killed by his men in the past three decades. In return, his supporters would be permitted to return to the Gaza Strip. And indeed, in the past few weeks scores of Dahlan loyalists began returning under assurances from Hamas that they would not be arrested or killed.

In the long term, the real significan­ce of these Palestinia­n elections may be that Mohammed Dahlan, after years of exile in the UAE, is making a formal return to the political scene.

Eurasia Review.

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 ?? (Reuters) ?? A MAN holds a poster of former Gaza Fatah leader Mohammed Dahlan during a protest against PA President Mahmoud Abbas in Gaza City in 2014.
(Reuters) A MAN holds a poster of former Gaza Fatah leader Mohammed Dahlan during a protest against PA President Mahmoud Abbas in Gaza City in 2014.

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