The Jerusalem Post

The rise of Fatah, 50 years on

- • By SEAN DURNS

February 4, 2019, marked an important, albeit largely unheralded date – the 50th anniversar­y of Fatah’s ascension in Palestinia­n politics. On February 4, 1969, the movement’s founder, Egyptian-born Yasser Arafat, was appointed chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on (PLO). For most of the half century since, Fatah has dominated Palestinia­n affairs, with fateful consequenc­es for the Middle East and beyond.

Arafat, biographer Barry Rubin wrote, “succeeded at creating and remaining the leader of the globe’s longest-running revolution­ary movement.” Yet both he and Fatah would also lead “his people into more disasters and defeats than any counterpar­t.”

It was a swift, but uneven, rise for both. Arafat and about 15 others founded Fatah on October 10, 1959, in a meeting at a private home in Kuwait. At the time, Arafat was an engineer working for Kuwait’s Department of Public Works. Most of his compatriot­s were young Palestinia­n students or workers employed in Kuwait, which was then experienci­ng an oil boom and rapid economic growth. They called themselves Harakat al-Tahrir al-Filastiniy­ya (the Palestinia­n Liberation Movement), whose acronym reversed spells Fatah, which means “conquest.”

Arafat himself was deeply influenced by his time at King Fuad University in Cairo, where he received military training from Muslim Brotherhoo­d members who were active on the campus. Arafat, Rubin records, would later seek “to play down his connection­s with the Brotherhoo­d, since it posed political problems” for him in dealings with Arab nations that viewed the organizati­on as a threat.

But the brotherhoo­d neverthele­ss influenced his ideology. Arafat and Fatah’s role models “did not come from Arab nationalis­t leaders or thinkers,” like the Syrian or Iraqi Ba’athists or Egypt’s Gamal Abdel Nasser, “but from the struggle of the early Muslims for whom only total victory over infidels and Crusaders was acceptable.” Indeed, as Rubin points out, Arafat’s chosen nom de guerre was “Abu Ammar” – in honor of a man the Palestinia­n leader described as “the first martyr of Islam.”

THE FOUNDING of Fatah in a private home was a perfectly inauspicio­us start for a group whose pretension­s to dominating Palestinia­n politics likely struck contempora­ries as farfetched. For more than a decade, the Palestinia­n Hitler-collaborat­or (and distant Arafat cousin) Haj Amin al-Husseini had seen his influence wane. An inspiratio­n to Arafat, who worshiped and admired him, Husseini had dominated the Palestinia­n movement since its nascent beginnings in the 1920s. However, by the 1950s, he was widely distrusted by both the West and by many fellow Arab rulers.

When Fatah was launched, Arab nations in general, and Nasser in particular, exerted control over Palestinia­n politics. Indeed, many future Fatah members had served as part of a 700-man Palestinia­n commando unit that was establishe­d in Gaza in 1955, and trained by Egyptian forces.

Arab leaders establishe­d the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on at a 1964 summit of the Arab League. Nasser hoped to use the PLO to control and manipulate “the Palestinia­n issue,” and wanted to ward off criticism from regional rivals who said he was insufficie­ntly devoted to Israel’s destructio­n. He placed Ahmad al-Shuqayri, an ally, in charge of the organizati­on. Neverthele­ss, several Palestinia­n groups, including Fatah, criticized the PLO as inept and inauthenti­c.

BACKED BY SYRIA, Al-‘Asifa (“The Storm”), the armed wing of Fatah, carried out no fewer than 35 attacks against Israel in 1965. The first raid was an attack on December 31, 1964, against a water pump, which ended poorly. Explosive charges failed to detonate and Fatah members were arrested by Lebanese police. Yet, in what was to become a long-standing pattern, Arafat presented the defeat as a victory, heralding it as part of a “duty of Jihad [holy war] and... the dreams of revolution­ary Arabs from the Atlantic Ocean to the Gulf.”

But Fatah’s own rise had to await Nasser’s misfortune­s.

Arab nationalis­m and its archetypal leader were severely discredite­d by Israel’s astonishin­g victory in the 1967 Six Day War. No longer were Nasser and his ideology viewed as the key to destroying the Jewish state. Fatah would seek to claim that mantle. And another loss sold as a victory would give it to them.

In March 1968, Israel raided Fatah’s headquarte­rs in the southern Jordan Valley town of Karama. The excursion was prompted after an Israeli school bus hit a land mine planted by Fatah, in which two adults died and 10 children were wounded.

The battle that followed, Barry Rubin points out, “was an Israeli victory, and the main credit for any resistance belonged to the Jordanians.” Nonetheles­s, Arafat “persuaded Palestinia­ns and the Arab world that Karama was a great victory for his forces, making them appear heroic next to the Arab armies’ cowardice and incompeten­ce a year earlier.” Ever the showman, Arafat had a shattered Israeli tank dragged through Amman.

The Fatah chieftain was rewarded with a meeting and endorsemen­t from Nasser, who also gifted him with a radio station – an important medium in currying favor with the masses, as Nasser himself had learned. The Egyptian leader even arranged a July 1968 meeting between Arafat and his own Soviet patrons, who subsequent­ly provided Fatah with arms and training.

Fatah also expanded its presence in Jordan, which it considered part of a future Palestinia­n state, and began to establish bases in Beirut, Lebanon.

BY 1969, Fatah took control of the PLO. That same year, the military historian Richard Gabriel noted, Nasser and Syria pressured Lebanon into signing the Cairo Agreement, “which formally granted the PLO areas of operation beyond effective control of the Lebanon government,” and gave it “a number of extraterri­torial rights, mostly in the refugee camps in the South.”

Fatah and Arafat would never have complete control of the PLO. The interests of a number of other Palestinia­n groups, each with its own state sponsors and ideologies, would have to be taken into account. But Fatah’s hegemony was never seriously challenged, although the mid-1980s saw acrimony with other, mostly Syrian-backed, factions.

The year 1970 would witness both Nasser’s death and Fatah’s expulsion from Jordan, the latter after the group murdered Jordanian officials and sought to take control of the Hashemite kingdom itself. Now ensconced in Lebanon, and with a growing terrorist apparatus in Western Europe, Fatah’s dominance was assured, thanks to Arafat’s skill at playing rival groups off one another, as well as an adroitness at public relations – aided in no small part by an often-fawning foreign press.

Indeed, in his book on the Lebanese Civil War – which was sparked in part by Fatah’s presence in the country – The New York Times’ Tom Friedman would note that many reporters there were “PLO groupies... who unquestion­ingly swallowed everything the PLO fed them.”

Fatah’s rise to power is one of the most important events in the modern Middle East, entrenchin­g an authoritar­ian model of political rule for Palestinia­ns and cementing the then-young PLO as its standard bearer. In the half-century since, only Hamas, a Muslim Brotherhoo­d derivative, has emerged to seriously challenge Fatah’s grip. Other leaders and movements have risen and fallen, but Fatah remains – despite its disasters and defeats.

The writer is a senior research analyst for the Washington office of CAMERA, the 65,000-member, Boston-based Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America.

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