My first impression of Abu-Mazen was of a serious,
methodical, somewhat aloof introvert. He reminded me of a high-school
principal, very different from Arafat, the impulsive extrovert, prone to
personal gestures, exuding warmth to all around him.
I met Abu-Mazen for the first time some 28 years ago. We
were secretly in Tunis to meet Yasser Arafat. There were three of us:
Matti Peled, a general in the reserves, Ya’acov Arnon, a former Director
General of the Treasury and I. We met Abu-Mazen first to prepare practical
proposals for joint actions, to be put before the "Old Man", as Arafat -
then 54 – was called.
I had first heard mention of the name Abu-Mazen nine years
earlier, with my first secret contacts with senior PLO officials. They
told me that the Fatah leadership had appointed a committee of three for
contacts with Israelis. They were the "three Abus" (as I called them):
Abu-Amar (Yasser Arafat), Abu-Iyad (Salah Halaf) and Abu-Mazen (Mahmud
Abbas).
Abu-Mazen was directly responsible for the contacts that
started in 1974. At the first stage, they were conducted with me
personally, but, from the autumn of 1976 on, the Israeli partner was the
"Israeli Council for Israeli-Palestinian Peace". The Palestinians who met
us were Sa’id Hamami and Issam Sartawi – who were both murdered by the
Iraqi-supported Palestinian arch-terrorist, Abu-Nidal, a mortal enemy of
Arafat.
When Arafat and Abu-Mazen were both present at meetings
with us, I got a clear picture of their mutual standing. The detailed
discussions were conducted by Abu-Mazen, who had a good knowledge of
things Israeli, but it was Arafat who, in the end, made the decisions.
More than once I had the impression that the senior PLO leaders were quite
content to leave to Arafat the responsibility for the courageous,
dangerous and unpopular decisions that led up to the agreement with
Israel.
Now there is a new situation. Arafat has agreed to appoint
Abu-Mazen Prime Minister. (The very fact that the whole world, and Israel
too, have welcomed the Palestinian "government" and "Prime Minister" is a
big step towards the establishment of the State of Palestine. In Oslo
Israel still strenuously resisted terms like "President", "government" and
"parliament" for the Palestinians.)
Abu-Mazen has taken upon himself a great responsibility
vis-a-vis his own people and the world. He has put himself in a
well-nigh impossible position.
Sharon & Co. demand that he first of all put an end to
"terrorism" ("armed struggle" in Palestinian parlance), liquidate the
"terrorist organizations" collect their arms and prevent "incitement".
Only after the successful completion of all this can real negotiations
begin. Freezing the construction of settlements, of course, should not
even be mentioned at this stage.
The Palestinian public, on the other hand, demands that
first of all the Israeli army should leave the Palestinian towns, stopping
"targeted assassinations", settlement activity, the demolition of homes
and all other acts of oppression, and start real negotiations for the
establishment of the State of Palestine.
This threatens to become a deadlock.
If the US and Europe exert massive pressure on Sharon, the
way they have put massive pressure on Arafat, the deadlock might be
broken. The Israeli army would withdraw, the situation in the Palestinian
territories would change completely, the Palestinians would be able to
breathe again and Abu-Mazen would appear as a leader who had already
attained a great achievement. The popularity of the extreme organizations
would decline.
Even if this happened, Abu-Mazen could not dream of making
mass arrests, destroying the organizations and confiscating their weapons.
There is nothing the Palestinians fear more than fratricidal war. However,
the pressure of Palestinian public opinion would lead, at least, to an
effective armistice. Even the extreme organizations are sensitive to the
attitudes of their public – if it wants quiet, there will be quiet. That
has already happened in the first period after the Oslo agreement.
Let’s assume that this happens. The attacks stop almost
completely (there will always be some individuals and local groups who
feel they have to act on their own). The Abu-Mazen government functions
well in the Palestinian towns and villages. Then what?
After the publication of the Road Map, Sharon will propose
dozens of "corrections". Even now the "map" is strongly tilted towards
Sharon. While the Palestinians gave up 78% of the country in Oslo and
accepted the remaining 22% for building their own state, and have declared
that they want to live in peaceful co-existence with Israel, Sharon talks
about "painful concessions" without spelling out what he really means.
If Sharon’s "corrections" are even partly accepted, the
plan will lose most of what content it still has. Abu-Mazen will stand
there with empty hands, the negotiations will stagnate as in previous
rounds. Gradually, the Palestinians will be forced to the conclusion that
they can achieve nothing without violence, the fighting organizations will
regain the initiative and the armed struggle will resume.
Sharon and Bush will blame the Palestinians, of course.
They will say that Abu-Mazen "has not delivered the goods". The
Palestinians, for their part, will say that Abu-Mazen is naive, that he
has fallen into an American-Israeli trap. He will resign, Arafat’s
prestige will rise to new heights.
The next chapter can be foreseen. The Christian
fundamentalists and Zionist neo-cons, who control Washington at this time,
will demand that Sharon be given a free hand. The Palestinians will embark
on the third intifada, more extreme than the two before. Blood and
fire and columns of smoke.
It could be different. For example: the US stops treating
the Quartet with contempt, pressure is put on Sharon, Bush is not
reelected, the negotiations bear fruit, the peace camp wins in Israel, the
Palestinian state is founded in peace.
In the Holy Land, miracles have happened before.
But in the meantime, don’t envy Abu-Mazen.