MIFTAH
Wednesday, 3 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

How do you get rid of the few powerful leaders in the Palestinian National Authority? Simple, promote them to the post of prime minister, then watch them fail and recede to the background having crashed and burned their political career. Championing the creation of the post of prime minister, it is ironic that the Bush administration has created a situation where any potential prime minister is immediately placed between a rock and a hard place. This has dramatically whittled down the list of viable candidates for the post and rather than enforcing American policy of sidelining Arafat, it is helping him emerge as the only possible choice as leader of the Palestinians.

With Mahmoud Abass’ sudden though inevitable exit from the political scene, Ahmed Qurei has stepped up to take over from where his predecessor left off. He is due to unveil a new Palestinian government within days to be approved by parliament. The cabinet will be composed of 24 ministers, including 15 members of Arafat's Fatah movement. However, Qurei is keen to enlarge the support base of his government and accordingly is expected to appoint for the first time a minister from the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine. Other factions from the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), such as the People's Party and the small Palestine Democratic Union (also known as Fida), will likewise be represented in the new line-up. Moreover, Qurei is planning to inject new blood into the Palestinian executive by bringing in young Fatah members such as Kadura Fares, Hatem Abdel Kader and Dalal Salamah.

Qurei, unlike his predecessor, is facing extreme pressure from the U.S. and Israel even before taking office and appointing his government. US Secretary of State Colin Powell gravely warned that "if it (Qurei's) is a government that does not have political authority independent from the machinations of Yasser Arafat, and if all the security forces are not consolidated under the new prime minister, and if that new prime minister is not committed to ending terrorism, stopping the actions of Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad and the others, then we're not going to be able to move forward on the roadmap." Qurei’s political shrewdness will be tested by his ability to effectively respond to U.S. demands without relenting to all their dictates and sidelining Arafat.

The biggest challenge will be dealing with Hamas and Islamic Jihad in such a way that satisfies Washington and allows the peace process, currently at a dead halt, to resume without causing a civil war, a fear that does not seem to register with the Bush administration. As Hamas and Islamic Jihad continue to gain prominence courtesy of Israel’s assassination policy, confronting them at this time would make the PNA appear to have succumbed and joined Israel in killing Palestinians, an image Qurei would most definitely like to avoid. Essentially Qurei must reign in these militant groups without a fight.

Qurei told reporters at Arafat's West Bank headquarters on Monday that "there is an agreement between all factions that we must put an end to the mess in the Palestinian street, in the Palestinian administration and in the Palestinian minds. And for sure this mess includes the chaos in using, distributing and storing weapons." However, he stopped short of saying that his government would try to confiscate the factions' arms. That was one of the strongest statements yet by a Palestinian leader against the proliferation of illegal weapons in the hands of militants in the Palestinian areas, but it is unlikely to please the Americans. It is very difficult to see how Qurei will deal with this issue, particularly given the lack of incentives he has to offer the Palestinian people as Israel continues building the separation wall, raiding cities, assassinating members of Hamas and Islamic Jihad and making life unbearable for all Palestinians.

Secretary of State Colin Powell recently sympathized with Sharon in an interview on the question of settlements, saying it would be almost impossible for an Israeli leader to appear to be yielding to U.S. pressure while Palestinians remain unwilling to confront Hamas and Islamic Jihad. This clearly indicates the lack of an evenhanded approach by the U.S. administration for surely the exact same sympathy should be afforded to Qurei, given all of Israel’s countless transgressions. If the U.S. wants to truly move with the peace process, they should provide more flexible options to Ahmed Qurei that eliminate the catch-22 scenario whereby the prime minister either agrees to U.S. demands and confronts militant groups at the risk of a civil war, or refuses to fight militants and suffers being shunned by the Americans and excluded from the peace process.

 
 
Read More...
 
Footer
Contact us
Rimawi Bldg, 3rd floor
14 Emil Touma Street,
Al Massayef, Ramallah
Postalcode P6058131

Mailing address:
P.O.Box 69647
Jerusalem
 
 
Palestine
972-2-298 9490/1
972-2-298 9492
info@miftah.org

 
All Rights Reserved © Copyright,MIFTAH 2023
Subscribe to MIFTAH's mailing list
* indicates required