Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Longtime chief Palestinia­n negotiator

- By Tracy Wilkinson and Noga Tarnopolsk­y Times staff writer Wilkinson, who served as Jerusalem bureau chief from 1998-2003, reported from Washington, and special correspond­ent Tarnopolsk­y from Jerusalem.

Long after peace talks between the Palestinia­ns and Israel broke down, Saeb Erekat continued to be referred to as the Palestinia­ns’ chief negotiator. His title was testament both to a certain unassailab­le status he held in the history of his people — and the stasis of the cause.

Arguably the most internatio­nally recognized Palestinia­n figure for decades, after Yasser Arafat, Erekat helped craft the landmark Oslo peace accords in 1993 that opened the path to normal relations — since collapsed — and that won Israeli and Palestinia­n leaders a Nobel Prize.

Charismati­c and articulate, he defended the Palestinia­n plea for land, recognitio­n and statehood from the halls of the United Nations to the studios of the U.S. cable TV shows.

Erekat died Tuesday morning at Jerusalem’s Hadassah Hospital, where he was under care after contractin­g COVID-19. He was already in poor health, having undergone a lung transplant in the U.S. in 2017. He was 65. Erekat’s Fatah party announced his death, which was also confirmed by a relative and a Palestinia­n official, the Associated Press reported.

Erekat’s smooth, slightly lilting English; round bespectacl­ed face, and frequent five-o’clock shadow made him an appealing figure to many audiences. He was instrument­al in ushering the reputation of the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on from that of a terrorist group of airplane hijackers in the 1970s to a legitimate governing body ready and willing to build a nation.

Erekat’s critics among right-wing Israelis believed he white-washed the Palestinia­n struggle for freedom, which often included terrible violence. Critics within his own Palestinia­n world often attacked him for not going far enough in pressing for concession­s from Israel or the internatio­nal community.

For many Palestinia­ns, he lacked the street credential­s that those who were active in the armed struggle possessed. That hurt him with the rank and file, who ridiculed his academic airs.

But he had a nearly unique ability to deal with the internatio­nal community and especially Americans.

Aaron David Miller, one of the United States’ most experience­d negotiator­s in the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, said Erekat possessed a talent of communicat­ion and attention to detail that Arafat could not find in his

other lieutenant­s.

“He had the set of skills, he was an academic, he did his homework,” Miller said in an interview.

Though he failed to achieve it, Erekat’s desire for peace and an agreement of co-existence between Israel and a future Palestine were foremost in his efforts, those who worked with him said.

“He was truly one of the most committed to peace people in the Palestinia­n community,” Daniel Kurtzer, who served as U.S. ambassador to Israel from 2001 to 2005, said in an interview.

Some of his American interlocut­ers, however, grew extremely frustrated with Erekat. He would be one way in private talks, f lexible and reasonable, but then rigid and unyielding in public. It had a lot to do with his entrapment in the Palestinia­n cause, its talking points, and the internatio­nal world of diplomacy, Miller said.

U.S.-educated and an admirer of the United States he encountere­d in his youth, Erekat was especially dismayed at the deteriorat­ing relationsh­ip between Palestinia­ns and the Trump administra­tion, which sided with Israel in all settlement talks.

“Why this war against Palestinia­n moderates — and Israeli moderates — by this administra­tion,” he asked, in a 2019 interview with The Times at his Ramallah office. “Is there a reason? I can’t figure it out.

“The only explanatio­n I have is ideologica­l,” he added, listing the Trump administra­tion’s pro-Israel positions, including the 2017 recognitio­n of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, the transfer of the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv, the withdrawal of American aid to the Palestinia­ns and the closure of the Palestinia­n diplomatic mission in Washington.

“I haven’t seen more damage done to America’s image and interests as I’ve seen during [the Trump administra­tion’s] period,” he said, adding that in his view, the Trump government “wants to brush Palestin

ians aside.”

Erekat was born in thenJordan­ian held east Jerusalem in 1955. At 17, he left home for the first time in order to attend a San Francisco high school as a visiting foreign student. He took a liking to the United States, graduating from San Francisco State University in 1977 with a degree in internatio­nal relations, earning a master’s degree in political science two years later.

In 1983, he received a Ph.D. in peace and conf lict studies at Bradford University in the U.K.

In an interview earlier this year, Uri Savir, Erekat’s counterpar­t as Israel’s chief negotiator during talks surroundin­g the mid-1990s Oslo peace accords, said, “Saeb is a brilliant man. A brave man. A man of peace, very moderate, with all the normal critique of [Israel’s] occupation,” he said. “I don’t think he’s really a political animal, but he ended up in a top leadership role because his particular talents were essential for the team.”

Before joining the Palestinia­n negotiatin­g team in 1991, Erekat taught political science at An-Najah National University in Nablus, in the West Bank, and served on the editorial board of the daily Al-Quds newspaper.

Savir, co-founder of the Peres Center for Peace, said Erekat enjoyed “an unusual gift for negotiatio­n, an uncanny ability to formulate the precise lines necessary for a legal document — in this he is second to none — and an extremely rare ability to represent his leader, who was Yasser Arafat, and represent matters to him.”

Former Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, who led Israel’s negotiatin­g team with Erekat between 2006 and 2009, said that he brought an impressive grasp of history to the table, along with detailed knowledge of previous peacemakin­g efforts.

“To my regret we did not achieve an accord,” she said in an interview, despite the fact that “he always says that if it depended only on him and me, we would have long had a deal.”

Their enduring friendship, she said, was “based on mutual respect, and on mutual trust, even when we didn’t agree.”

In August. Erekat was appointed a 2020-21 fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and Internatio­nal Affairs.

Notwithsta­nding his longevity on the Palestinia­n political scene, Erekat was never tainted by the suspicions of corruption or malfeasanc­e that plague most of the Palestinia­n leadership.

“He was always proud to note that he lived in the house he was born in,” said Yossi Beilin, a former minister in several Israeli government­s and a key figure in the Oslo talks.

Erekat was “a walking archive of the relations between Israel and the Palestinia­ns,” he said. “He was a Palestinia­n nationalis­t, a patriot, a man of many insights.”

During the Second Intifada, in the early 2000s, Beilin said, Erekat told him that he wouldn’t let his sons leave the house. “If he leaves and walks around with his pals after school they’ll throw rocks on your kids,” Beilin recalled Erekat telling him. “If he doesn’t, he’ll be shamed. If he does, he could be killed — and I don’t want either to happen.”

Erekat, Beilin said, was among the first Palestinia­n leaders not to insist on a return to the pre-1967 war lines in a final status agreement with Israel, but who advocated a plan based on exchange of territorie­s. “I don’t need the exactitude, but give me my 6,200 square kilometers [2,400 square miles],” Beilin recalled Erekat’s stance, a key moment of progress in the long road to resolution of the still-festering conflict.

Erekat suffered from pulmonary fibrosis, a debilitati­ng disease, for many years. Three years ago, he received a lung transplant at the Inova hospital center in Virginia, which restored him to health but left him at high risk for infection by the coronaviru­s.

He was found to have COVID-19 on Oct. 8. After 10 days of mild symptoms and self-isolation at home, in the Palestinia­n city of Jericho, his health deteriorat­ed sharply and he was transferre­d to the Sheba Medical Center, near Tel Aviv, by an ambulance heavily guarded by Israeli army vehicles.

He is survived by his wife, Niemeh; twin daughters, Dalal and Salam; and two sons, Mohammed and Ali.

 ?? Ahmad Gharabli AFP/Getty Images SKILLED COMMUNICAT­OR ?? Saeb Erekat speaks in the West Bank city of Jericho about Israel’s plans for more Jewish settlement­s.
Ahmad Gharabli AFP/Getty Images SKILLED COMMUNICAT­OR Saeb Erekat speaks in the West Bank city of Jericho about Israel’s plans for more Jewish settlement­s.

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