Palestinian politics drift away from America (ISRAEL HAYOM OP-ED) Elliott Abrams 04/29/12)
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=1799
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Several news stories in recent days about Palestinian politics are
linked by a thread that may not immediately be apparent.
First, there was a raft of stories about the feud between Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Salam Fayyad; here’s one.
The two men were not even speaking for several days, though they have
now met and patched things up – on the surface at least. They have
been feuding for at least a year, and it was widely known that Fayyad
thought little of the drive Abbas was making at the U.N. to get a
vote on Palestinian statehood. That Fayyad was right, and that the
drive failed and damaged the Palestinians, cannot have made Abbas
feel any better about Fayyad. More recently, Fayyad refused to
deliver to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu a letter from
Abbas with whose contents and timing he did not agree.
Second, Abbas has removed Yasser Abed Rabbo as head of Palestinian
Authority broadcasting. Abed Rabbo was supposed to go along with
Fayyad in delivering the Abbas letter to Netanyahu, but he too
refused. Abed Rabbo remains secretary-general of the PLO, second only
to its chairman, who is Abbas. There has been speculation in the
press that Abed Rabbo will also be removed from his PLO post.
Third, Abbas has shut down several websites critical of him and the
PA leadership. Of course this is a press freedom issue, and the
United States has expressed its concern about press censorship. But
there is another angle here: The Associated Press reports that “the
sites belong to an Abbas rival, former Gaza strongman Mohammed
Dahlan.” As the AP story notes, “Dahlan has been feuding with Abbas
for the past year, calling him a weak leader and accusing him of
allowing his sons to profit financially from his rule.”
Here’s the thread: No three men were closer to the United States
during the years of negotiations under Presidents Bill Clinton and
George W. Bush than Fayyad, Abed Rabbo, and Dahlan. Developments in
Palestinian politics appear to be reducing, not enhancing, their
influence. Dahlan has been pushed to the sidelines, and it seems that
Abed Rabbo will be next. Fayyad is, for now, protected by his
reputation among donors: “Donor countries have warned Palestinian
Authority President Mahmoud Abbas against trying to replace Prime
Minister Salam Fayyad or confiscate his control over the PA Finance
Ministry,” the Jerusalem Post reported last week. But over time, it
is likely that politics with the PLO and the Fatah party will turn
against Fayyad, who is an official of neither organization. And it is
unlikely that the successors to officials like Fayyad and Abed Rabbo
will have ties to the United States like they do now or the respect
among American officials that they have earned over the years.
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