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Muhammad Abd ar-Rauf al-Qudwah al-Husayni (born August 27, 1929), better known as Yasser Arafat, is the Chairman (from 1996) of the Palestinian Authority, Chairman (from 1969) of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), and leader of Fatah, the largest of the faction within the PLO.
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Biography Arafat was one of seven children born to a wealthy merchant. On his mother's side, Arafat is a member of the Husseini family of Jerusalem, the city's traditional leading landowners and a relative of Hajj Amin al-Husayni, the grand mufti of Jerusalem (d. 1974). The date and place of Arafat's birth are disputed. Most probably, as indicated by his birth certificate Arafat was born in Cairo, Egypt on August 24, 1929. However, some still to support Arafat's claim to have been born in Jerusalem on August 4, 1929. Be that as it may, Arafat grew up in Jerusalem. He then attended the University of Cairo and graduated as a civil engineer. As a student, he joined the Muslim Brotherhood and the Union of Palestinian Students, of which he was president from 1952 to 1956. In 1956 he served in the Egyptian army during the Suez Crisis. At the Palestinian National Congress[?] in Cairo on February 3, 1969 Arafat was appointed Palestinian Liberation Organization leader.
In 1968 Fatah was the major target of an Israeli attack on the Jordanian village of Karameh[?], in which 150 Palestinian guerrillas and 29 Israelis soldiers were killed, mostly by Jordanian armored forces. Despite the failure on the ground, the battle was a considered a strong showing for Fatah because the Israelis eventually withdrew, and did much to raise Arafat's and Fatah's profile. By the late 1960s Fatah had come to dominate the PLO and in 1969 Arafat was named chairman of the PLO, replacing Ahmed Shukairy, originally appointed by the Arab League.
Arafat became commander in chief of the Palestinian Revolutionary Forces two years later and in 1973 the head of the PLO's political department. Following the PLO's ambition to transfer Jordan into a Palestinian state (sponsored by the Soviet Union), as well as other reasons too complex to properly discuss here, during this same time, tensions between the Palestinians and Jordanian government greatly increased, leading eventually to hijacking of four planes by the PLO and ultimately to the Jordanian Civil War of 1970-1971 (in particular, events of the Black September).
In this conflict, the Jordanian monarchy with help from Israel, Great Britain and the United States was able to defeat the PLO and Syria, which had invaded Jordan in support of the PLO.
In September 1972 the Black September "group," which which is generally understood to have been an operational cover used by Arafat?s Fatah group, kidnapped 11 Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympic Games. A gunfight with the police later left all of the athletes dead. International condemnation of the attack made Arafat disassociate himself from similar acts in the future; in 1974 Arafat ordered the PLO to withdraw from acts of violence outside Israel and the West Bank and Gaza. In same year Arafat became the first representative of a nongovernmental organization to address a plenary session of the UN General Assembly.
However, critics claim that Arafat's disconnection from terrorism was illusionary. The Fatah has continued to launch terrorist attacks against Israeli targets; moreover, the late 1970s saw the appearance of numerous leftist Palestinian organizations, aligned with the PLO but supposedly not associated with them, that continued to attack both within Israel and out of it. Israelis claim that Arafat was in ultimate control over these organizations, and hence by no means abandoned terrorism as a means of policy.
In 1974 heads of Arab states declared the PLO as the sole legitimate representative of all Palestinians. The PLO was admitted to full membership in the Arab League in 1976.
The operations of the PLO within Lebanon did not receive much news coverage. It is however certain, that the PLO has played an important part in the tragedy of the Lebanese Civil War[?], and as Christian Lebanese allege, Arafat and the PLO were responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of their number.
This situation pushed Israel to ally with Lebanese Christians, and conduct two major operations into Lebanon, first being Operation Litani (1978), in which a narrow strip of land ("Security Zone") was captured and jointly held by the IDF and South Lebanon Army (SLA), and second - Operation Peace for Galilee (1982), in which Israel occupied most of South Lebanon, but retreated back to the Security Zone in 1985. It was during the second of these operations that between 800 and 3,500 Palestinians were killed in refugee camps at Sabra and Shatila, causing a long-lasting bitterness and mistrust between Palestinians and the then-minister of Defense, Ariel Sharon. This would eventually impact the peace process when Ariel Sharon was elected prime minister.
During the 1980s, Arafat has received assistance from Saddam Hussein, the Iraqi president, which allowed him to reconstruct the badly-battered PLO. This came very handy when the First Intifada began in December, 1987. Within weeks, Arafat was in control of the riots (contrary to his statements, their beginning was spontaneous), and it was mainly because of Fatah forces in the West Bank that the civil unrest has continued for such a long time.
On Nov. 15, 1988, the PLO proclaimed the "State of Palestine," a government-in-exile for the Palestinians, under the terms of U.N. Security Council Resolution 181 (1947 partition offer). In the December 13, 1988 address, Arafat has declared acceptance of UN Security Council Resolution 242, promised future recognition of Israel and renounced terrorism. On April 2, 1989, Arafat was elected by the Central Council of the Palestine National Council (the governing body of the PLO) to be the president of this hypothetical Palestinian state.
The December 13 address was dictated by the American administration, who was anxious to begin political negotiations (the Camp David accords set the recognition of Israel as a necessary starting point); nevertheless it also indicated a shift from the PLO's traditional aim - the destruction of Israel (as in the Palestinian National Covenant) - towards the establishment of two separate entities, an Israeli one within the 1967 borders and a Palestinian one in West Bank and Gaza Strip.
This in turn allowed the beginning of a political process. In the 1991 Madrid Conference, Israel has conducted open negotiations with the PLO for the first time. However, the relationship with Iraq became a major problem for Arafat during the Gulf War of 1991. He was the only Arab party that has sided with Iraq before the war; consequently, the Americans have boycotted him, which impeded the Israeli-Palestinian negotiations already underway.
On January 20, 1996, Arafat was elected president of the PA, with an overwhelming 87% majority. Considering allegations that most of the opposition movements did not participate in the elections, and numerous incompatibilities of the elections with the democratic principle, many have claimed the elections to be fabricated. Independent international observers however reported the elections to have been free and fair. Following international pressure, further elections were announced for January 2002, but were later postponed, citing the tense situation and ongoing Israeli restrictions to freedom and movement as reasons.
In the mid-1996, following the election of Benjamin Netanyahu as Prime Minister of Israel, Palestinians-Israeli relations grew more hostile. Benjamin Netanyahu tried to obstruct transition to Palestinian statehood than the one outlined in the Israel-PLO accord. In 1998 U.S. President Bill Clinton intervened, arranging meeting with the two leaders. The resulting Wye River Memorandum[?] of 23 October 1998 detailed the steps to be taken by the Israeli government and PLO to complete the peace process. Arafat continued negotiations with Netanyahu's successor, Ehud Barak. Due partly to his own politics (Barak was from the leftist Labor Party, whereas Netanyahu was from the rightist Likud Party) and partly due to immense pressure placed by American President Bill Clinton, Barak offered Arafat a Palestinian state in West Bank and Gaza with East Jerusalem as its capital, a return of a limited number of refugees and a compensation for the rest, but failing to address other issues seen as vital to the process. In a widely criticized move, Arafat rejected Barak's offer, failed to make a counter-offer, and, following a highly controversial visit by Ariel Sharon to the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound and the violence which followed, ordered the so-called Second Palestinian Intifada (2000-present).
Recent news and commentary Given the extremely dangerous nature and the frequency of assassination attempts (and successes) in the volatile politics of the Middle East and the "terrorism" associated with it, Arafat's personal and political survival is taken by most Western commentators as a sign of his mastery of asymmetric warfare and propaganda, and his skill as a tactician. It is said that he has studies organizations such as the Haganah, Irgun and the Stern Gang.
His ability to adapt to new tactical and political situations is perhaps exemplified by the rise of the Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad organizations, fundamentalist terrorist groups using Islamic rhetoric to motivate suicide attacks. In the 1990s, these seemed to threaten Arafat's capacity to hold together a secular nationalist organization with a goal of statehood. They appeared to be wholly out of Arafat's influence and control, and were fighting with Fatah, but their activities were tolerated by Arafat, who is alleged to have used their violence as a means of applying pressure on Israel. See PLO and Hamas for statements in that respect. Others view the retributions and restrictions by the IDF on Arafat and his security forces as having prevented him from effectively controlling the region.
However, as of 2002, the Israeli government and many neutral commentators were convinced that the Fatah faction's Al Aqsa Brigades had simply adopted the methods of the fundamentalist groups, and were under Arafat's direct command. What is more, spokesmen for Hamas and Islamic Jihad were publicly supporting Arafat. Arafat seemed to be adopting a similar structure to that of the Irish Republican Army and its political wing Sinn Fein, wherein the political arm can claim plausible deniability of actions undertaken by the military arm.
On May 6, 2002, the Israeli government released a report (http://www.mfa.gov.il/mfa/go.asp?MFAH0lom0), based in part on documents allegedly captured during the Israel Defense Forces' occupation of Arafat's Ramallah headquarters, which shows the connections, and includes copies of papers seemingly signed by Arafat himself authorizing funding for those organizations' terror activities. These documents however drew skepticism from various quarters since the IDF forcefully prevented any independent observers or reporters from observing the operation.
Others simply point to the constraints of the political situation, and argue that Arafat could neither condemn nor constrain the tactics employed; and that any attempt to do so would endanger his rule or his life. Furthermore, refusal to employ terrorism would amount to a de facto surrender to Israel, which has access to weapons that Palestinians so far lack. The use of suicide bombers appears to be a permanent feature of this conflict. The number and intensity of attacks rose sharply in the first months of 2002.
In March 2002, the Arab League made an offer to recognize Israel in exchange for Israeli retreat from all territories captured in the Six-Day War and statehood for Palestine and Arafat's Palestinian Authority. Supporters of this declaartion see this as a historic recognition of Israel by the Arab states, while critics of this offer say that it would constitute a heavy blow to Israel's security, while not even guaranteeing Israel the cessation of suicide bombing attacks.
The Arab League offer coincided, however, with yet another upsurge of Palestinian terrorism against Israel (some of which came from Arafat's own Fatah militants), that led to more than 50 Israeli dead. Ariel Sharon has previously pressured Arafat to speak strongly in Arabic against frequent suicide bombings; following the attacks, he declared that Arafat assisted the terrorists and therefore made himself an enemy of Israel and obviously irrelevant to any immediate peace negotiations. The declaration was followed by Israeli entry to the cities of the West Bank, in a program called "Operation Defensive Shield[?]".
There was some speculation that lack of personal trust between the two men played a part in this escalation.
Persistent attempts by the Israeli government to identify another Palestinian leader to deal with had failed; and Arafat was enjoying the support of groups that, given his own history, would normally have been quite wary of dealing with him or of supporting him.
Arafat was finally allowed to leave his compound on May 3, 2002 after intensive negotiations led to a settlement; six terrorists wanted by Israel, who had been holed up with Arafat in his compound, would not be turned over to Israel, but neither would they be held in custody by the Palestinian Authority. Rather, a combination of British and American security personnel would ensure that the wanted men remained imprisoned in Jericho. With that, and a promise that he would issue a call in Arabic to the Palestinians to halt terrorist attacks on Israelis, Arafat was released. He issued such a call on May 8, 2002, but, as was the case before, not even his own Fatah acted accordingly.
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