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PFLP Soul-Searching:
The Rise and Fall of Palestine's Socialists
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, November 27, 2014
When news reports alleged that the two cousins behind the
Jerusalem synagogue attack on 18 November were affiliated with the Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a level of confusion reigned. Why the
PFLP? Why now? The attack killed five Israelis and wounded others.
It was, to a degree, an expected addition to a violent episode caused by
police-sanctioned right-wing violence and abuse targeting the Palestinian
population of the illegally occupied East Jerusalem. Much of the violence
targeting Palestinians is systematic, involving severe restrictions on
Palestinian movement, targeting houses of worship, and nightly attacks by
Jewish mobs assailing Arabs, or anyone who may be suspected of being one. It
also included the hanging, lynching and burning alive of Jerusalem Arab
residents. Palestinians responded in kind. But most of their
violent responses seemed to be confined to individual acts, compelled by
despair, perhaps, but certainly removed from the organized nature of
armed-resistance. Then, Ghassan and Oday Abu Jamal attacked the
synagogue. The initial assumption was that the attack was also the work of
individuals, before
reports began linking them to the PFLP. Suddenly, the
discussion shifted, from the relevance of the attack to the difficult
situation in Jerusalem (both cousins were Jerusalemites) to something
entirely different pertaining to the Marxist group’s current standing
between two dominant forces: a Fat'h-led government in Ramallah, whose
leadership has long-abandoned armed struggle, and an Islamic-dominated
resistance groups led by Hamas in Gaza. Is the PFLP carving a new place for
itself
in anticipation of a third intifada? Or was the attack an anomaly? Was
it ordered by the group’s core leadership? And where is the PFLP heading
anyway? To begin with, there can be no easy answers. In fact, the
PFLP’s own muddled responses suggest an existing tussle within the group, if
not politically, at least intellectually. Abu Ali Mustafa Brigades, the
movement’s militant arm issued a fiery statement, but
refrained from taking responsibility. It was a clear attempt at
walking a fine line between revolutionary language and a politically
cautious discourse. It neither took responsibility for the attack, nor did
it declare the attackers to be its members. Instead, it merely conveyed the
Israeli accusation that the assailants were affiliated with the PFLP.
Another statement declared the attackers as heroes, yet still took no
responsibility. There is more than one context through which this
issue can be discussed, but most urgent among them is PFLP’s own identity,
incessant decline in political relevance and the unavoidable intellectual
conflict which has dogged the group since
its formation by Marxist Arab nationalist Christian leader Dr. George Habash
in 1967. What was an expected soul-searching of one of Palestine’s most
progressive political movements starting in the 1960s throughout the 80s,
became a political crisis necessitated by the decline of its strongest
supporters, the Soviet Union and the East European bloc, and the signing of
the Oslo accords a few years later.
The inception of the PFLP, formed from several progressive Arab
nationalist groups, in 1967 was a necessary retort to the failure of
traditional Arab armies to fight Israel. The resounding Arab defeat in the
1967 war (known as Naksa, or the setback) ushered in the rise of an
exclusively Palestinian political narrative, with, at times, desperate
militant tactics to bring attention to the plight of the Palestinian people.
The PFLP, which later declared itself a Marxist-Leninist
organisation, was still committed to pan-Arabism. It linked the liberation
of Palestine to the loftier goal of liberating oppressed classes throughout
the Arab world from corrupt, oppressive regimes. Although it can be
argued that the PFLP’s political ambitions by far exceeded its popularity on
the ground, it has enjoyed disproportionate influence over the resistance
discourse, partly because of the notable intellect and foresight of its
founder, but also because of its early attempts at armed struggle outside
the confines of Arab governments. Although the PFLP is
often
referenced in international media for its aircraft hijackings, mostly to
free Palestinian political prisoners, its impact on the current course of
armed resistance is much more profound. In the late 1960s and
throughout the 70s, it made its presence felt in Gaza, at a time that Fat'h
was failing to establish a stronghold in the crowded and impoverished strip.
Many of its members were killed fighting or assassinated, and others were
captured to be imprisoned indefinitely. However, with time,
disconnect grew between the group’s striking rhetoric and the harsh reality
in Palestine. While Arab nationalism was waning, the socialist bloc was
quickly collapsing, leaving the PFLP to face difficult questions. And when
Yasser Arafat signed the Oslo accords, the PFLP’s dilemma grew more
complicated. By then, the PFLP was no longer the second most
influential Palestinian party, as has been the case for many years. Hamas,
although operating outside the structure of the Palestine Liberation
Organisation (PLO), offered more relatable language and enjoyed a more
comprehensive grassroots presence. Like Hamas, but certainly unlike
Fatah, PFLP remained largely immune from open internal conflicts, at least
since the early splits it suffered in the late 1960s. In 2000, Habash
gracefully stepped down, and Abu Ali Mustafa took over. The new leader
returned to Ramallah with the understanding that the PFLP had changed its
stance regarding its advocacy of a one state solution and its subtle
agreement to the phased liberation model offered by Fat'h. Abu Ali
Mustafa, himself another erudite intellectual was assassinated by Israel in
August 2001, soon after his return. The new leader, Ahmad Sa’adat spent 4
years in a Palestinian Authority prison, before being kidnapped by Israeli
forces in 2006 to be held in solitary confinement in Israel. Since
then, the two-state solution discourse was abandoned, and occasional return
to arms by PFLP fighters is registered somewhere in the West Bank. However,
the only consistent and organised PFLP militant action persisted in Gaza.
For years, the PFLP remained hostage to far-reaching ambition and
radical language on one hand, and a reality that forced its members to
adjust to an unpleasant status quo and disorganised action on the other. In
2006, the group won four percent of the popular vote in Palestine, merely
three of the legislative council’s 132 seats. It refused to enter into a
coalition government with Hamas, which could have arguably reduced the
isolation of the elected government, and it failed, although it tried, to
construct a left-wing bloc involving other socialist and communist groups.
Without strong backers outside Palestine, and fragmented political
discourse that is divided between dominant Hamas and Fatah factions, the
PFLP continues to be caught in own internal struggle. It matters
little whether the cousins who attacked the synagogue in Jerusalem were
affiliated with the PFLP or not; the repeated muddled statements by the
group - justifying the attack, explaining it, owning it and disowning it all
at once- matters more. This confusion is becoming symbiotic of the PFLP
following the signing of Oslo. And while there are those who employ clever
language to maintain the group’s radical status, NGO perks and socialist
prestige, others expect a more serious discussion of what the PFLP is and
what it stands for after two decades of political failure, of which the
PFLP, like Fat'h and Hamas, should also be held accountable. -
Ramzy Baroud is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant,
an author and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My
Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
***
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