$10,000 Per “SHAHID” from Iraq for Each Palestinian Martyr

Iraqi ruler Saddam Hussein has become the darling of the Palestinians: his pictures grace the newspapers along with the those of the shahids — Intifada casualties — the Iraqi flag is raised at demonstrations and funerals, Arafat writes him thank you notes and slogans are shouted in his favor at street demonstrations.

This wave of adulation is mainly a result of the monetary aid and moral support he gives the Palestinian Intifada. But it is also the product of an old alliance between Iraq and the Palestinians.

Ten years ago the Palestinians helped the Iraqi arm invade Kuwait. When Saddam sent Scuds at Israel — they danced on the rooftops.

Now Saddam is repaying the Palestinians. This week, for example, several wounded from Gaza and the West Bank were flown to Amman and from there to Baghdad for medical treatment, at his expense naturally.

Their arrival at the airport was shown on Iraqi and Palestinian television.

The wounded were welcomed by officials and one wounded man who could walk on his own, descended from the plane holding an Iraqi flag.

In addition, Iraq has taken another 20 Palestinian wounded brought by direct flight from Gaza to Baghdad. The flight also carried an official delegation of the Palestinian Legislative Council and a representative of the Chamber of Commerce bringing the Intifada’s blessing to the Iraqi people. The wounded and the delegation were greeted in an official ceremony with many participants, headed by Saddam Hussein’s deputy.

But Saddam bought most of this honor by the money he gives the families of the dad and wounded. A month ago he decided to give the family of every dead man the sum of $10,000 and the family of wounded men $ 1,000 each.

The money is given out in Gaza, Nablus, Hebron or Ramallah by Palestinian who are activists in the Iraqi Baath or activists in the Arab Liberation Front, two tiny pro-Iraqi Palestinian organizations.

Representatives of the Arabic Front said that even families of dead among Israeli Arabs would receive grants from Saddam Hussein.

And as if that were not enough, the Iraqi president announced a week ago in a special meeting with the Palestinian leadership that he would donate $9 million to the Palestinians. The money would be given as part of Iraq’s agreement with Arab states in an arrangement of oil for food.

Iraqi aid is not just monetary. Ten days ago a convoy of 68 trucks with 4,000 tons of medicine and basic food stuffs — rice, flour, oil, lentils, tea and coffee — arrived in Amman. Israel deliberated whether to allow it in, but eventually, mainly to stave off claims that Israel was starving the Palestinians, it allowed it in. The Iraqi trucks came to Allenby Bridge and from there the goods were transferred to Palestinian and Jordanian trucks and from there to the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

This money has made Saddam a hero in the Palestinian street. The families of the dead who received the grants, publish thank-you notices in the Palestinian press to the Iraqi leader with his picture next to that of the shahid. The picture of the Iraqi leader is now seen throughout the West Bank.

But not only Iraq is participating in the effort to help the Palestinian Intifada. The outburst of feelings in the Arab world on religious grounds has lead to huge anti-Israel demonstrations and a flurry of aid – from donations of clothes and food to money. The Arab states have also decided to take in wounded. Up to now more than 150 wounded have been moved from the West Bank and Gaza Strip for treatment in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Jordan, Egypt, Yemen, Libya and Iran.

How much is this costing them?

The Saudi interior minister, Prince Naif Bin Abed el-Aziz, transferred a sum $26 million last week for the families of the dead and wounded. Another Saudi prince, Talal Ibn Walid, transferred a sum of $22 million to the PA for workers unemployed because they can’t enter Israel.

The wave of sympathy for the Palestinian in Saudi Arabia has gotten as far as McDonalds. The Saudi management of the American firm decided to set aside 30 U.S. cents from every hamburger sold there for Intifada.

Representatives of the Dubai Red Crescent Society — one of the richest principalities in the Gulf — toured the Palestinian Authority ast week and gave families of the dead envelopes full of dollars.

In Hebron they said that the money was given according to the family’s financial situation.

Generous assistance of a few tens of millions of dollars was given also by Saudi Arabia and Kuwait who paid the salaries of 130,000 PA employees.

Even the Chechen rebels have decided to make a donation. The Chechen leadership organization announced a payment of $1,000 for every “shahid” family. This announcement was accompanied by an apology that due to their difficult financial situation, they could not give more. They also sent a supportive announcement: “The jihad is one and the way to peace does not mean relinquishing land.”

The PA is also busy. It pays each “shahid” family $2,000 for and $1,000 for every wounded. The Popular National Islamic Committee pays $1,000 for each dead and USD300 per wounded.

PA officials have also paid 600 Israeli Shekels to each worker registered in the Palestinian employment bureau as being employed in Israel.

At first the grant was given to 30,000 unemployed. The Palestinian minister of labor, Rafik al-Natshe, promised that day laborers too, who work in Israel without a permit, would soon receive the aid.

Hamas pays according to the family’s financial situation, not through a one-time grant but through monthly allowances.

Families in difficult financial straits are defined as “adopted families” and receive food supplies as well.

Israel is trying to help too. The Balad movement, headed by MK Azmi Bishara, embarked on a fund-raising campaign for the Intifada.

A three-day donation campaign was declared at Hebrew University in Jerusalem to collect donations.

A leaflet distributed at the universities reads: “Every day many of our country-men are killed and wounded in the noble Intifada. The Israeli occupation forces have imposed a closure and strangulation starvation on us. That is why we urge that you donate what you can in clothes and food for our needy country-men and to the families of the fallen.”

This article appeared in Yediot Aharonot on December 13, 2000

Official PA radio news – the PBC radio Dec. 14th

Summary and Analysis

VOP concentrated on what it has labeled as Israel’s assassination policy, but it also highlighted what it says was the heroic repulsion of an Israeli invasion of Khan Yunis.

VOP continued to push denials of current negotiations with Israel, but it is now quoting PA officials who are leaving the door open a bit-saying that there are “no serious talks” but acknowledging that talks could be revived under certain circumstances. One gets the impression that PA resistance to negotiations is lessening.

Bulletin-(as of 9:30 pm Thursday Evening)

VOP has not mentioned any resumption of negotiations with Israel, including meetings with Ben-Ami or Sher-despite israeli reports to the contrary. Also, there has been no report of Israel allowing thousands of Palestinian workers inside Israel-also contrary to Israeli reports.

VOP also escalated the war crimes charges against Israel by focusing on charges that Israel was using American-made radioactive ammunition against Palestinians. PA Environment Minister Dr. Youssef Abu Safia, who made the charges, was first quoted at length in several newspapers and was then the featured morning interview guest. ((No proof of the charges was presented.))

The wild charges against Israel and the intermittent anti-American tone may seem inconsistent with trying to get American support and Israeli concessions, but from VOP broadcasts it appears that the PA is pursuing seemingly different strategies on different fronts: encouraging anti-Israel and anti-settler violence while moving to isolate Israel (and to a certain extent, the United States) diplomatically, claiming little or no interest in talks, while keeping an active interest in talks.

VOP gave prominent coverage throughout the day to Israeli Arab MK Azmi Bishara being interrogated by the Israeli police on charges of having praised the activities of Hizballah.

“I said Hizballah was a heroic resistance group, and I do not take those words back,” said Bishara in a morning interview.

Quotes from Interview with Environment Minister Dr. Youssef Abu Safia:

“First of all, from the beginning of the Intifada, Israel has used every kind of shell and bullet against our people, but after the 27th of November there was a report in the global press and in America that Israel had used shells with enriched uranium….

There were also reports that America had used such weapons in the Gulf War in its aggression against Iraq.

Therefore when the brother, the president, Abu Amar (Arafat’s nickname) saw the formation of the commission, he thought it appropriate to bring the reports on this subject… to its attention.”

Rhetorical Elements

  1. “His excellency president Yasser Arafat relayed to the international investigating commission (the findings of ) Abu Safia that Israel was using shells with enriched uranium to repress the Intifada. (From Al Hayyat al-Jadida newspaper headlines read at 7:50 am on morning news round-up) (Note: Palestinian newspapers have been intermittently accusing Israel of using chemical weapons (so has VOP), radioactive means and biological agents against Palestinians, but this was first reading of such charges involving radioactive materials during prime-time radio broadcast—and put in the mouth of Arafat and other PA officials from the official PA newspaper)
  2. “Israel unleashes vicious dogs to attack farmers and students in Khan Yunis.” (headline from al-Ayyam read at 7:52 am)

Thursday Morning Headlines (7:30 am-9:00 am)

  • “Three attempts to invade Khan Yunis repelled, with forty injured, five of them seriously and damage to an Israeli tank;
  • The martyring of four members of security forces and a prominent Hamas member is assassinated in Hebron;
  • Mahmoud Abbas-Abu Mazen-denies the existence of any serious talks with Israel;
  • (Miguel) Moratinos and Hubert Vedrine in Gaza today;
  • The latest developments in the American election: Gore announces concession, Bush is president;
  • Al-Mujaida warns Israel against trying to invade portions of Palestinian National Authority territory.”

Official PA radio news – the PBC radio Dec. 12th

Radio Analysis and Excerpts: The Voice of Palestine-Dec 12 > SUMMARY AND ANALYSIS

The death of Islamic Jihad agent Anwar Ahmad Humran was treated as a top item by VOP during its evening broadcasts Dec 11 and throughout the day on Tuesday Dec. 12, but in a strange way: Humran was repeatedly described as “a student” without mentioning at all that he was a senior agent in Islamic Jihad who had been released from Palestinian Authority jails.

“The youth Anwar Ahmad Hamran was a student at the Jerusalem Open University and he was shot by Israeli fire from Mount Grezim near Nablus without there having been any confrontation,” announced VOP. VOP said that the 28-year-old Hamran was “assassinated on his way home from school” when “he was struck by more than 15 bullets in his stomach.”

VOP intensely covered Monday night the funerals of four men during the day, and continued its heavily detailed coverage of the same funerals and other deaths and injuries during Tuesday’s broadcasts. In this vein, VOP interviewed Tuesday Dr. Riyadh al-Za’anun, PA Health Minister, who said there were 272 Palestinian martyrs, in addition to 50 who were buried by Israel-bringing the number of martyrs to 322.

During Monday’s broadcasts, VOP made a point of saying that Israeli fire had been concentrated at Palestinian “national security forces” in Gaza.

There was no mention of any Palestinian fire at the Gilo neighborhood in Jerusalem, where an Israeli civilian women was shot in the neck. Similarly, there was no mention of Palestinian fire at any other Israeli targets, nor the placement and explosion of road-side bombs at several locations.

VOP placed strong emphasis on the beginning of activities of the Mitchell Commission-both Monday and Tuesday, but at the same time its anchor man Samir Interr (and several VOP interviewees) stressed “the American role in the continuing Israeli aggression against our people.”

Nevertheless, VOP mentioned (not in any leading headlines) that during his trip to Morocco, Yasser Arafat would meet American mediator Dennis Ross.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“During this period-67 days (of intifada), 10,450 people have been hospitalized.” (Dr Riyadh Za’anun, PA Health Minister)

NIGHTTIME HEADLINES-Dec 11/12 midnight:

*–“The youth Ahmad Hamran was martyred by occupation soliders;

*–Israeli shelling with missiles and heavy artillery on Khan Yunis as well as shooting on Beit Jallah and ‘Aida (refugee) Camp;

*–His Excellency President Yasser Arafat strongly urges the international investigating commission to begin its investigation of Israeli crimes…”

*******

TUESDAY MORNING HEADLINES-DEC 12 (7:30 am-9:00am)

*–“The martyring of 28-year-old student Anwar Ahmad Hamran, who was assassinated by Israeli Occupation soldiers;

*–Israel shells citizens’ homes in Khan Yunis, Beit Jalla and Aida;

*–His Excellency President Yasser Arafat heads off today for a visit to Morocco for a meeting with Moroccan monarch and leading officials there…;

*–His Excellency President Arafat meets the international investigation commission headed by former American senator George Mitchell;

*–A ministerial committee linked to the Arab summit finished its deliberations in the Syrian capital of Damascus today…;

*–Mr Farouk al-Qaddoumi will discuss the recent political developments.” (The names, ages and addresses of four martyrs were also read at the top of the news.)

Quotes from Interview with Information Minister Yasser Abd-Rabbo, on Arafat’s meeting with Mitchell Commission:

“For over two hours, President Abu-Amar (i.e. Arafat) explained in detail the events that preceded the eruption of the intifada and Israel’s continuing violations-on the political level-of the agreements, symbolized by the settlements, taking the land and leaving thousands of prisoners in jail – and other violations….They will not only deal with security causes, the direct causes of the eruption of the intifada, but also the deeper political reasons which disrupted the peace process

Official Palestinian Authority Radio “Voice of Palestine” Dec. 13

Summary and Analysis

VOP’s morning news bulletins and news-round-ups focused on “criminal” Israeli military attacks, in particularly those leading to deaths of four members of Palestinian security forces in Gaza. (Note: death toll changed throughout the day)

Wednesday morning’s reports focused on Israeli tank fire on Palestinian security forces that killed and wounded several PA soldiers. PA Cabinet Secretary Ahmad Abdul-Rahman, a featured morning interviewee, said the Israeli action showed the need for an international protection force as well as the warlike intentions of the Barak Government. He hinted broadly that he hoped the investigating commission would pay attention to Israel’s latest actions.

Notable and Newsworthy

In another “prime-time” interview, PA Speaker Ahmad Qreia (for the second time in three days), stressed three important diplomatic points:

  • that there were no talks under way with Israel;
  • that there would be no settlement with Israel without Israeli recognition of the Palestinian right of return;
  • and that the PA was insisting on a total Israeli withdrawal for establishing its independent state.

Once again, Qreia, perhaps the most senior (and some would say the most moderate of the Palestinian interlocutors) was publicly saying that the PA would not make peace with Israel without the right of return.

” There has to be a change in the Israeli mentality, especially the mentality of the Israeli leadership to execute the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people, among them: the right of return or the Palestinian refugees, according to Resolution 194, a return to the June 4 1967 lines, and an independent Palestinian state with Jerusalem its capital-all of Jerusalem.”

Quotes of the Day

  1. “The Barak Government is a murderous government which has no thoughts about peace.” (Cabinet secretary Ahmad Abdul-Rahman, in morning interview repeated throughout the day in top headlines)
  2. “The Israeli forces perpetrated out a new massacre this morning in the Khan Yunis Camp near the Israeli settlements of Nevei Dekalim and Gush Katif, both of which were built on land belonging to citizens from Khan Yunis.” (Gaza correspondent ‘Adil Za’anun, morning news)

Quotes from Interview with Ahmad Abdul-Rahman, cabinet secretary: “This aggressive Israeli war is not ceasing despite all the contortions by some Israelis about the reaction of world opinion….There’s someone in the Israeli army who is determined to destroy any Palestinian national presence, by striking the Palestinian people, believing or fantasizing that by doing that they will get the Palestinian people… to accept Israeli outposts and settlements…

This crime that was committed this morning is another sign that the Barak Government is a murderous government and a government of aggression…. Therefore, the Palestinian people has no choice but steadfastness and resistance….

This Israeli crime and the previous Israeli crimes are a strong condemnation against the Israeli government and the Israeli army….

Why did this happen and what happened yesterday? Because the settlers want to destroy any Palestinian presence wherever they (i.e. the settlers) are, whether it be a community or trees. Well, we now have two dead and 40 wounded from this Israeli crime. This is a sign to the international commission where Israel’s intentions are in its aggressive policies against the Palestinian people.”

Q: “In addition to the shelling and siege, there is a new Israeli assassination policy-one commander of the Fatah movement yesterday in Bethlehem and another commander of Islamic Jihad. What is demanded of us internally as we face this policy?”

A: “This is organized state terrorism carried out by Israel, especially since we know that the head of this government carried out assassination operations against the Palestinian leadership since 1973….

There is an Israeli decision to kill civilians and to kill those prominent in the Intifada-as seen in one of the decisions taken by Mofaz, the Israeli chief of Staff.”

(Note: Abdul-Rahman mentioned General Shaul Mofaz a day after a Palestinian attempted to kill General Mofaz’s brother, Shalom Mofaz. Is this just an ironic twist of fate or might it suggest that the PA has its own “assassination policy.”)

Wednesday Morning Headlines

  • “The occupation continues its criminal attacks against our people, wickedly shelling the Khan Yunis camp, killing two citizensand wounding others (note: toll figures changed later);
  • Occupation forces tried to invade Palestinian territory near Khan Yunis but were forced to retreat by a violent resistance by our citizens and national forces;
  • Occupation forces assassinate one of the Fatah’s commanders: Youssef Ahmad Abu-Swei of Bethlehem prefecture;
  • Masses in Jenin accompany the funeral of the martyr Anwar Ahmad Humran yesterday who was martyred two days ago;
  • Israel deliberately escalates its wicked siege and its racist and conceited actions by its soldiers against our citizens at road blocks;
  • His Excellency President Araat meets in Moroccan capital of Rabat with the Moroccan King Muhammad VI;
  • His Excellency also meets with the American mediator Dennis Ross;
  • Speaker Ahmad Qreia says that there must be a complete and total cessation of Israeli hostilities and a complete Israeli withdrawal and a stop of all settlements as prerequisite for ending demonstrations on the land (i.e. in the field)-as well as keeping all agreements-(including or especially) the decision (guaranteeing) rights of the Palestinian refugees for return-in exchange of a return to negotiations. ((Note: if that seems quite a mouthful for headline, it’s still the headline that came out of the mouth of VOP morning narrator Samir Interr))

(Note during the 8 am news round-up, there was coverage of the Likud Conference, with the usual descriptions of “the extremist Ariel Sharon” but without any slurs against Binyamin Netanyahu. There was also short mention of elections in Sudan and the Supreme Court decision in the United States.)

Quotes from Interview with Ahmad Qreia

Q: Are we going to wake up one of these days with surprising news of results from secret talks with Israel?

A: I have told you there are absolutely no talks going on. And I don’t know of any benefit from going to talks unless Israel presents them with what is known in English as ‘pre-negotiation’-that is preceding talks dealing with all the obligations to which it is bound: stopping all the settlements, releasing all the women prisoners and the (male) detainees. They have (also) to carry out the interim agreement (i.e. withdrawal from three villages around Jerusalem), and then we can sit down, if those things are pushed forward-all the things to which they are bound….Not just as pretty words….Why should we open up any channels until we see that??!!

Q: The Israeli media are talking about a meeting with Geilad Sher in two days???

A: I know of no such meeting or any other contact….If Israel really wants a return to talks then it first must carry out all the obligations to which it is bound. All the obligations. It has to pull out all its roadblocks, and it has to stop the economic strangulation…. Without that there will be no public or secret talks.

Q: Is there anything optimistic from the international efforts?

A: The international efforts have to be to help stop the aggression against our people….This aggression is meant to force certain things, certain conditions, on our people. The Palestinian people have responded with their heroic intifada, and there is no power that can overcome us, that can force anything on us

Q: Do you think in the remaining 60 days of Barak, the remaining time of Clinton, that something will happen.

A: I don’t believe so. Neither the period of Clinton nor the period of Barak, till the elections, is sufficient time to fulfill the conditions needed for a just solution. Absolutely not….There has to be a change in the Israeli mentality, especially the mentality of the Israeli leadership to execute the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people, among them: the right of return or the Palestinian refugees, according to Resolution 194, a return to the June 4 1967 lines, and an independent Palestinian state with Jerusalem its capital-all of Jerusalem.

There will be no peace in the region unless these points are realized.”

Word Usage

During his interview, Cabinet Secretary Abdul-Rahman used the term al-‘udu al-Israeli (the Israeli enemy).

Official Palestinian Authority PBC Radio – Dec 9

Summary and Analysis

VOP continued to focus on the heavy death toll and casualty rate from the first “day of rage” declared by national and Islamic forces. Particular attention was paid to the “wicked massacre” carried out by occupation forces against Palestinian security forces in Jenin.

PA officials again painted a picture of a clumsy Israeli army using excessive force to no avail against a brave and resourceful people resisting aggression. Indeed, Parliamentary Affairs Minister Nabil ‘Amr, in a bitingly sarcastic interview, made fun of Israel, the United States and the West when he noted that “what was supposed to be the outpost of Western civilization” in the region (i.e. Israel) was “the only country now being branded for mass murder”.

Quote of the Day
from Nabil ‘Amr, Parliamentary Affairs Minister

“This army (the Israeli army), which was one of the world’s best armies, has become the laughingstock of world opinion. It has used all the means of destruction provided by the United States of America to kill Palestinian children.”

Morning Headlines

  • Thirteen years to the Intifada;
  • Eight martyrs, five of them in a massacre in Jenin;
  • Occupation forces strengthen their siege on the cities and arteries of the homeland;
  • The leadership after a meeting last night declares the need for international protection for our people;
  • Ministerial meeting tomorrow in Damascus to discuss implementation of Arab summit decisions;

Official Voice of Palestine PBC Radio: Dec. 10

Summary and Analysis

VOP gave very low-key coverage to the resignation of Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak Saturday night. The late-night news broadcasts covered the resignation in very terse, matter-of-fact style, without commentary or analysis. (This was in keeping with the low-key response to the first passing of the election law in late November, when Arafat and other PA officials were careful to say that the matter was an internal Israeli affair.)

Yet beginning Sunday morning VOP began covering Israeli election developments in depth, hinting that Israeli election developments-though an internal matter– would definitely have an impact on the “peace process.”

VOP quoted Barak saying he was trying to seek a new mandate in a special election that would be held in 60 days.

Morning Headlines

  • “Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak officially submits his resignation today to Israeli President Moshe Katsav, and Israeli parties hold hectic meetings to discuss Barak’s sudden announcement;
  • Barak avoids facing Netanyahu (in election) because Basic Law says that only members of Knesset can run for prime minister;
  • Voices in the Likud call for making a special law to enable Netanyahu to run;
  • In reaction, the Palestinian Authority says that the Barak resignation is an internal Israeli matter;
  • The United States says the resignation is an internal affair but is likely to affect the peace process;
  • A child is martyred in Rafah…;
  • His Excellency President Yasser Arafat meets the Saudi King Fahd Ben-Abdel-Aziz in Riyadh…;
  • Foreign Ministerial meeting in Damascus today in wake of Arab summit…”

Official Palestinian Authority Voice of Palestine Radio Dec 11; ABU ALA CALL FOR THE ‘RIGHT OF RETURN’

Summary and Analysis

In one of the most revealing interviews ever on VOP, Ahmad Qreia (Abu Ala), Speaker of the PA legislature, discussed the coming Israeli elections and their effect on the diplomatic agenda. Qreia, who has logged more “Israeli hours” than almost anyone else inside the PA leadership underscored the PA’s main goals:

  • fulfillment of the Palestinian right of return;
  • fulfillment of the right of self determination;
  • and the establishment of a Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital.

Qreia placed the right of return at the top of his list, and it was not the first time that he and other PA officials have done so in the last two months.

Indeed, Qreia made it very clear that this Palestinian demand was unacceptable to Israel-as was the Palestinian insistence that Israel remove every Jew and every Jewish settlement “from any square centimeter of Palestinian land.” The PA speaker took cognizance of Ehud Barak’s position that 80-percent of Israeli settlers remain in place under settlements blocs that would be annexed to Israel-and he dismissed this position.

Qreia emphasized that the PA realized that the Israeli elections would have an effect on the peace process and that the Palestinians were waiting for a “historic leader” for Israel who would accept the Palestinian right of return and the total withdrawal of Israel and any Israeli presence from the West Bank and Gaza.

VOP continued in-depth coverage of the deaths and funerals of the martyrs as well as those wounded in assorted attacks. The gritty descriptions of these incidents still leads the news shows, even ahead of the announcement of diplomatic developments involving President Yasser Arafat. VOP quoted Arafat as saying that Israel was using internationally-banned weapons against the Palestinian people.

Quotes from Interview with Ahmad Qreia (Abu Ala), Speaker Palestinian Legislature: (8 am morning news round-up)

“First I would say that what is happening in Israel is a sign of the realization of the desires of the Palestinian people, the goal of the Palestinian people to exercise its legitimate rights: the (right of) return, self determination and the establishment of a Palestinian state with Jerusalem its capital. These are the reasons Netanyahu was defeated, because he did not realize this, and these are also the causes for the speeding up of the fall of Barak….

They were not willing to concretize the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people and the desire of the Palestinian people to cling to these rights. That is why we see in Israel an unusual political entanglement: a prime minister who cannot stay in power longer than a year and a half, resigns, and for more than half a year is operating without a majority in parliament. And on the other hand, the opposition is divided and broken. Its internal formations change constantly…based on ideologies and histories that have no foundation.

Anyone who does not realize…(the need) to recognize the just demands of the Palestinian people, based on international legitimacy-which is the same international legitimacy that established Israel (i.e. the U.N.)-then this situation will only lengthen the entanglement inside Israel….

I do not see any alternative-coming from inside Israel– but for a strong call to the Palestinian people to exercise (its rights), its heroism, its sacrifices, its mighty intifada which will show Israel and the whole world its strong desires which will not be denied….

We’re not afraid of blows. A day does not go by when we don’t absorb some blow-even a light blow-from the occupation of 1967 and of course from 1948. Yet our way is the way of banners (i.e. flags), sacrifices and redemption.

(Note: Qreia used the term “fidaya” which is the root of “Fedayeen” or “men of sacrifice and redemption”-a term used by Palestinian fighters especially in the 1950’s and 1960’s.)

We are in the final hours of the realization of our victory and our independence, God Willing. We will be steadfast. We will be steadfast…. We will continue in our way, focusing on our goals. We will continue with our intifada. Our refusal of any occupation is clear. On the contrary, it only gets stronger. We will continue on our path….”

Q: “Some… say that the only chance for Barak is in the hands of the Palestinian people….What do you say?”

A: “His chances for success are in his hands, not in those of the Palestinian leadership. Because if he wants an agreement…. He has to face the Israeli people on all the subjects, with complete courage and with complete candor and say that here are the rights of the Palestinian people which must be granted if we are to live in security and peace.

These rights are represented by the Return for the Palestinian refugees, self-determination, and an independent Palestinian state with Jerusalem its capital, and the complete withdrawal from every square centimeter of Palestinian land.”

(note: He said “Al-Awda “, “The Return”, not “The Right of Return” – and this suggests strongly that Qreia and the Palestinian leadership are not talking about even a symbolic recognition or token)

Official Palestine Authority Radio – Voice of Palestine, Dec. 8

Summary and Analysis

During the morning news, VOP chose to feature the funerals yesterday of two martyrs. The shootings of three Israelis near Qiryat Arba was at first almost ignored (at 8 am), then mentioned at 9 am as a news item from Israeli journalistic sources. VOP did not condemn the shooting and referred to the settlers as “from Qiryat Arba, a settlement built on land taken from local residents.” Mentioning a location in such a way on VOP is another way of saying “the settlers are fair game.”

Precise description of the attack: “A woman settler was killed and two settlers were wounded in an armed attack this morning near Qiryat Arba, a settlement near Hebron built on land taken from citizens.” (From 1pm news program)

The background music to the news reports and feature shows remains Islamic programming and heavy martial music, extolling the virtues of martyrdom.

Increasingly, VOP’s correspondents refer to the Barak Government as “the Tel Aviv government” or the “war government” and to Israel as “the Zionist entity.”

8:00 am Morning Headlines

  • “Two citizens from Gaza were martyred last night, one dying in Jordanian hospital from injuries suffered in a recent confrontation with Occupation forces…(names and ages of martyrs given);
  • Occupation forces strongly attacked an inhabited neighborhood in Khan Yunis in Gaza, according to our correspondent, using heavy machine guns and artillery;
  • Israelis attacked two citizens from the town of Jedaida in Haifa inside the Green Line last night, seriously damaging their spines and other parts of their bodies…;
  • Occupation authorities strengthened their siege on the town of Burqa, between Jenin and Nablus, and three settlers were injured, two seriously, when their car was shot by unknown assailants; (note: VOP has come to use this location for attacks on settlers – i.e, describing the “unknown attackers” – while all injuries to Palestinians are reported as deliberate attacks by known sources: i.e.occupation soldiers or extremist and criminal settlers. The fact that two of the settlers in this attack died-a fact that was not reported on VOP )
  • In Jericho, citizen Hussein Khalil Abayat, 30 years old, was wounded when occupation soldiers fired on him in a confrontation near the town of ‘Uja in the prefecture Jericho;
  • In confrontations in Jenin, Tulkarm and Qalqilya, five other citizens were wounded in battles with occupation soldiers;
  • In occupied Jerusalem, soldiers arrested three youths in the neighborhood of Silwan south of the Old City;
  • The Palestinian Authority called on the international investigating committee to pursue its duties in earnest….;
  • His excellency Minister of Information Yasser Abd-Rabbo said in a press interview that Israel is continuing its violations of agreements, especially the Fourth Geneva Convention, and Abd-Rabbo said that the UN resolution 1322 made it clear that Israel was responsible for the massacres and violations perpetrated against our people, and he warned against Israeli attempts to interfere with the committee and its investigations…”

9:00 am News

  • “A woman settler was killed and two injured-all three from Qiryat Arba (note: item in detail explained that this was a settlement built on land taken from Arabs);
  • At dawn today, Israeli occupation forces attacked the village of Khader near Bethlehem;
  • Assorted Israeli attacks at various locations across the homeland;
  • At dawn today, the massive movement of Israeli forces around all the entry points to Jerusalem.”

Song of the Day
(Refrain: “Ardinna M’in’ul Ardinna” from “Jerusalem Operetta”)

“It’s our land, we say it’s our land
It’s our land, it’s our blood, it’s from us;
It’s our land, we say it’s our land
We have millions with us; Jerusalem is ours

1:00 pm Afternoon News [new items]

Leading news items continue with::

  • Two martyrs in Gaza;
  • One woman settler killed and two wounded from Qiryat Arba
  • Massive Israeli troop movements around Jerusalem))

Summary

On Friday night, VOP stressed the great death toll during the aftermath of the Friday prayers. There were lengthy reports on the nature of the deaths and injuries (which are not offered here) and the expansion of the Israeli closure.

VOP reported at the end of the news that PA President Yasser Arafat had chaired a late-night cabinet session to discuss Israeli escalations.

Dec 8-11pm– Evening Headlines

  • “Eight citizens were martyred at the hands of Israeli forces and extremist Jews in their aggression against our people today;
  • In Jenin, five citizens were martyred, four of them from the (Palestinian) homeland security forces in a loathsome massacre carried out by occupation forces…. (lists of martyrs, ages, home addresses);
  • Many of the casualties came when occupation forces fired on peaceful marches after Friday prayers;
  • Israeli forces shelled the secondary school in Taysir;
  • In Ramallah, it was announced that Hassan Shaheen of Butunia was martyred when he was hit by to a blow to his head by extremist Jews. He was working inside the Green Line, and an extremist Jewish organization has taken credit for his death…
  • National and Islamic forces called on the masses of our people to participate again in marches and demonstrations tomorrow, Saturday, in observance of the thirteenth anniversary of the Great Intifada of 1987;
  • Mr. Marwan Barghouti, the Fatah Secretary in the West Bank, said after a meeting of four organizational units that there would be a closure of businesses tomorrow from 11:00 AM until 2:00 PM in observance of the Intifada and the funerals of the exalted martyrs who fell today.”

Official Palestinian Authority PBC Radio Broadcast: Dec. 7

Summary and Analysis

The Palestinian Authority made it clear Thursday that it expects a show of rage and protest tomorrow (Friday) and Saturday, and in this context it also turned its microphones over to Marwan al-Barghouti, the head of Fatah-Tanzim. (see below)

In an interview that lasted more than six minutes, Barghouti specifically called on Palestinians not to fire their weapons from inhabited locations-so as not to draw Israeli fire, but the implication was clear: firing weapons was fine as long as it did not endanger Palestinian civilians.

These actions and statements made it clear that Yasser Arafat, who controls VOP directly, is not steering clear of Baghrouti and his espousal and dispatch of violence, but rather endorsing and encouraging his statements and actions.

In its morning news round-up, VOP contended that Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak had a new plan: trading control of the Jerusalem holy sites in exchange for deferral of the right of return for refugees.

Interview with Marwan Baghrouti, Fatah-Tanzim leader, 2:08 p.m.

Q: “In connection with the national and Islamic forces declaring Friday and Saturday as ‘days of rage and marches,’ calling to use all means to fill the goals of the Palestinian society…we have with us Mr. Marwan Baghrouti, Secretary of the Fatah in the West Bank, and we asked him about this call…

A: First of all the national and Islamic forces in their communique call in a clear way for Fridays in the blessed month of Ramadan to be days for heading towards prayer in Jerusalem and days of destiny demonstrations, and the coming two days-Friday and Saturday-call for an increase in demonstrations, popular marches and various activities of the popular Intifada, an increase in the escalation and resistance of the people in all ways, especially as the thirteenth commemoration of the first glorious Intifada (i.e. December 1987) and on this occasion to reawaken the first intifada in our memory and to cause the first intifada and the Al Aqsa Intifada to be joined in our memory. And this means to go out to marches from the mosques from various villages and the camps after the prayers across the homeland and to heed the call to march on the road blocks of Jerusalem towards the Al Aqsa Mosque and to pray in front of the road blocks of the Israeli Occupation. That is what the national forces and the Islamic forces and the forces of Tanzim are calling for….we also call once again for refraining from firing from inhabited houses and populated neighborhoods in order to prevent casualties to residents from Israeli shelling.

Midday Headlines

  • Israeli military siege is clamped down harder throughout the homeland;
  • Occupation army strengthens its formations around the colonies;
  • His excellency President Yasser Arafat receives the American Consul General this morning and the European representative at this moment”

2PM–AFTERNOON HEADLINES for ‘PANAORAMA’ SHOW

  • His Excellency President Yasser Arafat receives at his Gaza headquarters the European representative to the peace process, Miguel Moratinos;
  • Sheikh Muhammad al-Hussein says Occupation Authorities are turning Jerusalem into a military zone;
  • A call from the national and Islamic forces to come out in force for demonstrations-and this in an interview with Mr. Marwan Baghrouti;
  • A call for the use of all means to resist the economic and military siege on Palestinian lands…;
  • A message to Arab and international forces to put an end to the Israeli aggression…;
  • 65 girls in Qalqilya Primary School suffer Israeli gas attack;
  • President Yasser Arafat receives IMF representative Salam Fayad at his headquarters to discuss the difficult situation facing the homeland;
  • A Lebanese ministerial delegation visited Baghdad today by plane to discuss economic cooperation between the two countries.”

Quotes from interview with PA Parliamentary Affairs Minister Nabil ‘Amr

Q: In your opinion, why is Mr. Barak trying out all these new ideas (i.e. control of Jerusalem sites in exchange for deferral of refugee question)?

A: “There is no doubt that Mr. Ehud Barak needs, for internal reasons, to show himself as the man of peace…and regionally because of the extremely hostile stance to Israel..and he feels it internationally despite the actions of the United States and the Zionists…In addition he is trying to get the votes of the Arabs in Israel. He feels the need to be the man of peace….But we don’t know why he wants deferral (of the refugee question)…In order for there to be a just and lasting peace, all questions have to be settled….But it has to be said that any deferral means the continuation of the conflict (i.e. the Arab-Israeli Conflict) and not its solution.”

Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen) was quoted at length about the economic strains on Palstinian society, noting that 380,000 Palestinians had lost their source of livelihood due to Israeli closures. He said the PA had only received thirty million dollars of aid f

How the CIA Operates in Israel

The American intelligence agency bears the main responsibility for the military development of the Palestinian Authority. CIA agents organized courses for snipers, trained special units, and provided sophisticated listening devices, all in exchange for security cooperation with Israel. Now George Tenet, the head of the organization, and John O’Connor, station chief in Israel, have become the only communications channel between the sides. No great success has been chalked up

THE INTELLIGENCE PROS [note: the Hebrew used for “pros” – ashfei – also uses the same letters as the Hebrew for PLO – ASHAF]

At the unsuccessful Paris summit George Tenet, the Director of the CIA, met Yasser Arafat, and demanded that he calm the atmosphere and stop the violence. Tenet did not forget to remind the Palestinian leader that it was not for nothing that the CIA has a reputation of builder and destroyer of nations. According to the British Independent newspaper, the head of the Palestinian Authority was not impressed by the threat.

This was not the first time that Tenet met with Arafat. The Director of the American intelligence agency is considered to be the patron of Israeli-Palestinian-American cooperation since ’96. Over the course of years, Tenet and Arafat met in the region a number of times in order to clinch security deals. Thus the organization, and especially Tenet, who heads it, have gradually become an integral part of all the contacts conducted between the Israelis and the Palestinians in the last three years. And thus the head of the organization, who is responsible for the Bay of Pigs and the Iran-Contras scandals (who did not anticipate even a single important political development in the region, such as the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait or the Oslo accords), has become the object of the wet dreams of the Israeli and Palestinian leaderships.

The American agents trained sniper units, policemen, and intelligence officers, and conducted military exercises for additional units in the Palestinian military apparatus. They also provided sophisticated equipment, built a headquarters for Jibril Rajub, from which they also operate, and operated satellite stations in the Authority’s cities. The Israeli governments, that felt confident of American support, did not express opposition, knowing that, in the final analysis, American intelligence information concerning what was happening in the Authority would aid the security situation in Israel.

Everything has gone topsy-turvy in recent weeks. The security cooperation between Israel and the Authority has become a faint memory, and except for individual initiatives by political elements, in recent weeks, since the outbreak of the riots, Tenet, by means of John O’Connor, the CIA station chief in Tel Aviv, has succeeded in taking control of the communications channels between Israel and the Palestinians. O’Connor was actively involved in the attempts to rescue Yusef Madhat from Joseph’s Tomb about a month ago, and according to the testimony of security sources, also in the surrendering of the lynchers from Ramallah. After four years of active involvement by the CIA in the security contacts between the sides, the failure to calm the situation is glaring. The agreements (that were violated) concerning the Beit Jala-Gilo sector and the meetings between Israeli and Palestinian security elements in Cairo placed O’Connor, Tenet, and the entire CIA organization in the embarrassing situation in which the sides may possibly be beating a path to their door, but do not honor any agreement to which they committed themselves before it [the CIA].

An Opening for the PLO [Hebrew wordplay: petah le-Fatah]

The CIA’s ties with the Palestinians are not something new. Similar to other regions in which the Agency developed ties with the countries with which the US does not officially talk, this also happened with the Palestinian movements and with the PLO.

This began in the ‘seventies in Lebanon, when Bob Ames, the CIA station chief there, started to maintain ties with elements in the Arab world, and especially with PLO people and other factions in Lebanon. In meetings with Israelis he told a great deal about his ties with Abu Jihad and Arafat. The Americans preferred to conceal these ties because of Israeli opposition, and the Palestinian identification with the Soviet bloc, but this did not prevent them from maintaining the open channel. Thus, for example, they exchanged messages with the leading members of the Young Fatah in Beirut, most prominent among whom was the Operations Officer of Black September and the founder of Force 17, Ali Hasan Salameh, who would later be murdered by the Mossad in the explosion of a car bomb.

Salameh served, among other tasks, as the central intelligence officer of the Fatah, alongside Abu-Iyad, and on the background of his ties with Ames, he delivered lectures twice at the headquarters of the CIA organization at Langley, Virginia, about the then-forming PLO. Salameh would later recompense the Americans by protecting the US embassy in Beirut at the beginning of the Lebanese civil war, and provided security for the evacuation of American citizens from the city in 1976. These ties were never broken: Ames mediated between Israel and Arafat during the course of the transfer of the PLO forces from Beirut to Tunis, and Arafat, who met with him on a steady basis, always regarded the ties with the US as a central goal. A tangible insurance policy, paralleling the PLO’s ties with the USSR and the Eastern bloc.

In the ‘eighties the Americans maintained a direct link with Abu-Iyad, that also included preliminary feelers after the eruption of the intifada in 1987, in an attempt to examine the possibility of diplomatic negotiations between the PLO and Israel. These ties became public in the meetings between Robert Pelletreau, the US ambassador in Tunis, and Yasser Abu-Rabo, the deputy of Naif Hawatma, the head of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

The American contacts were conducted in parallel to the Palestinian ties with France and security services in additional European countries. In 1990 the US announced the suspension of the dialogue with the PLO, that was already public, in the wake of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait and Arafat’s support for Saddam Hussein. Despite this, the contacts continued, and upon the conclusion of the Gulf War and at the time of the preparations for the Madrid Conference the tie once again became public.

The secret negotiations conducted at Oslo between Israel and the PLO caught the CIA by surprise. Even if the Americans knew about some of the meetings, they certainly were not aware of their scope and significance, and they only got on the horse after the fundamental agreements had been reached. The main importance of the story, however, lies specifically in the consequences for the relationship between the Palestinian national movement and the US, consequences that, as far as Arafat is concerned, make an appearance at present as well. The connection with the CIA fulfills a number of goals for him, at this time as well. This is a connection that also guards his life as the head of the Palestinian national movement against the radical elements in Fatah and in Libya, in Iran, and in Iraq. Arafat understood that he needs a new intelligence arrangement. He began to search for this, and he also found it.

Problems in Concentrating

When Arafat signed of the Declaration of Principles in September 1993, Arafat received, for the first time, vital legitimacy from Israel, and with it American support. Israel presented him as a partner and ally in the war against the Hamas terror. The seal of approval received even stronger validity in the Cairo agreement in May 1994, that permitted the entry of the Authority to Gaza and Jericho, and later to the cities of the [West] Bank as well. Before the entry of the forces, security matters were clarified, such as the scope and structure of the Palestinian police. The entire process created exaggerated Israeli expectations. In practice, Arafat did not really take control of the Hamas and Fatah, who were active in the field. Rather, Arafat’s entry to Gaza was also accompanied by a change in the format that had been determined in the agreements. Instead of establishing an administration of the different policing mechanisms that would command the forces, Arafat began to direct the police in a centralized manner. The number of the mechanisms and their function changed; thus came into being the General Intelligence apparatus, under the command of Amin al-Hindi, from Black September; the Preventive Security apparatus, that was headed by Mohammed Dahlan in the Gaza Strip and Jibril Rajub in the [West] Bank; and a string of additional organizations such as Force 17, the Presidential Guard, the Special Security, and the National Security – the Palestinian army, that is based primarily on members of the Palestine Liberation Army that was deployed in Arab countries. Arafat directly controlled each apparatus and intervened in what happened in each, to the smallest details.

Upon the outbreak of the recent riots, the intelligence officers of the Central Command, who briefed IDF forces in Bitunia to the west of Ramallah, warned that the Palestinians received training in anti-terror measures and sniper marksmanship from foreign experts in the tent camp near Jibril Rajub’s new headquarters. It can hardly be said that, as far as the IDF is concerned, that this is an exceptional development. Already in 1994, upon the entry to the territories of the Authority’s forces, Israel accepted this pattern. The goal was strengthening Arafat against the Hamas.

Dr. Boaz Ganor, from the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliyah, explains: “At the basis of the conception was the idea of reliance upon the Palestinian intelligence capabilities, especially since in ’93 they were vastly superior to our [intelligence capabilities] as occupiers. This is a system that lives within its people, is familiar with it, and receives cooperation from it.”

And so thousands of Palestinian police found themselves receiving American training, along with courses by Scotland Yard, courses by the French police, and the police forces of Germany, Austria, Holland, and the Scandinavian countries. Even different frameworks of the UN have, since 1993, been providing training courses, that extend from days to weeks. The training courses include responding to disturbances of public order, the war against terror, interrogations and questioning, administrative police courses, and more. Added to these courses are more advanced and complex topics, of an intelligence nature.

An Israeli intelligence source explains: “On the part of Israel, there was an oral understanding with the Palestinians, that was based on the need to build a Palestinian police force. Everything was conducted under the general understanding that subjects that could trouble the State of Israel would not be taught within the context of the courses.” This was conducted, according to the source, with full transparency to the foreign countries. “The problem was never the very holding of one course or another, but with its content. This was a troubling subject, to which objections were raised by the GSS and by the other organizations, in a specific manner. This was always perceived as a potential threat, but, to the best of my recollection, it never constituted a causus belli. Israel, at the most, expressed its displeasure and moved along.”

The CIA, that conducted some of the courses, also was not free of its own interests. “From my knowledge of the way in which intelligence organizations work,” a military source relates, “the central consideration on the part of the foreign organizations is the recruitment of agents, and during the course of these training sessions they undoubtedly recruited whoever they could.” The source cites as an especially problematic example the training courses that were given in Egypt and in Jordan. “As far as Egypt is concerned, mainly Gaza, but also the [West] Bank, is its front yard, and they have a double motive to know what is happening in the Authority, and through it to also know what is happening in Israel. The Authority’s security cooperation with Egypt unquestionably exceeds the relations with other Arab countries. There are clear indications that people from the Egyptian intelligence are currently present in the territories, and closely follow the recent riots.”

The Element of Penetration

Despite the original Israeli conception of the Palestinian Authority’s [security/intelligence] apparatuses, as if their goal is to fight terror, it was clear, already from the beginning, that the main efforts of the apparatuses were directed to the locating Israeli penetration of their services and the disrupting of the Israeli capability in this context. As is known, old habits die slowly, and decades of activity against Israel in the territories and outside them established a pattern of limited cooperation with Israel. There was no reason why Amin al-Hindi, who for decades had waged the war of minds with the GSS and the Mossad (and maintained for Fatah contacts with the foreign intelligence organizations) would smoothly make the transition to a format of cooperation with Israel; and also for the heads of the other apparatuses, such as Rajub, Dahlan, and others, there is no natural tendency like this, in spite of the Israeli expectations. Additionally, the continued operation of agents in the areas of the Authority after the agreement, and various events, such as the discovery of listening devices attributed to Israel in the headquarters of the one who was supposed to head the Palestinian police, General Nasser Yusuf, did not contribute to a change of this atmosphere.

Between 1994 and 1996 the appearance was created of intensive cooperation, that concealed great hostility and suspicion. In some instances, the Palestinians agreed to act in accordance with Israeli information, but such information led to a chain reaction on the Palestinian side, that had the goal, first and foremost, of revealing how the information had leaked to the GSS. “The instances of the transferal of information or independent Palestinian prevention [of terror] activity are extremely rare, and they happened, for example, on the eve of the last elections in Israel, when the apparatus of Mohammed Dahlan prevented the infiltration of large explosive charges for the purpose of conducting a major terrorist attack in the center of Israel,” a security source explains.

The suicide bombings in February and March ’96 in Jerusalem and in Ashkelon were a turning point in the Palestinian policy. The attacks also constituted a turning point in terms of involvement by CIA operatives, who saw how public opinion in Israel, and Binyamin Netanyahu’s chances of rising to power, cast doubt upon the continuation of the diplomatic process.

After Peres, by means of his emissaries, had attained the April understandings, that included consent to outlawing the Hamas and the Islamic Jihad, the American intelligence entered the picture once again, this time in a more active manner than ever.

The first stage was the entry by Stan Moskowitz, the former CIA station chief in Tel Aviv, into the details of the security contacts and the sending of representatives of the intelligence agency to accompany the activity of the Preventive Security and General Intelligence people in Gaza and in Jericho. Meir Dagan, the head of Netanyahu’s security staff: “It is my assessment that the involvement did not stem from a specific and clear decision, but rather from a gradual development. The United States always wanted to know what was really happening, but there is a well-known process of the dragging of intelligence organizations into a crisis. This is a slow process, that receives gradual legitimization by the relevant parties.” First and foremost, the CIA functioned as a conduit for the passing of personal messages to Arafat. “Until then, if information about a senior individual in Hamas had accumulated in Israel, Israel would have addressed Arafat with the information and requested clarifications,” relates a senior security personage. “Arafat would say that the information does not exist or is groundless, or ‘I checked, and there is nothing to it.’ The American involvement began a process of the active clarification and determination of information details in the field.”

Rajub as a Chatterbox

Moskowitz also played a part in the deep involvement of the CIA in that period. Moskowitz, who was his sixties at the time, is described as someone who had free access to the Rais [leader]’s chamber, and as having an open line to the head of the GSS, the Mossad, and the IDF Intelligence Branch, and to the Prime Minister’s Bureau. In that period the Americans also began to undertake the training of Arafat’s Presidential Guard, with courses for the protection of individuals, and improving intelligence capability by means of courses and visits to the Agency headquarters in Virginia. American sources report of visits by apparatus heads Rajub and Dahlan to the American headquarters of the CIA and other intelligence agencies such as the FBI.

In addition to the training of the forces, courses were also given in the organization of databases, along with improving the capability of employing advanced surveillance and photography methods, and the supply of sophisticated listening equipment, such as computer programs capable of monitoring a large number of frequencies. The CIA also supplied the Palestinians with advanced radio scanners, that could also be used to listen in on the frequencies of the Israeli security forces, and additional intelligence equipment.

As the process continued, CIA liaison offices were established on the ground in Hebron, Ramallah, and Shechem. The construction of the Preventive Security compound in Bitunia, next to Ramallah, was completed at the beginning of the year, with the activity of the [Preventive Security] service transferred there from Jericho. This compound, that was built with the aid of the American intelligence agency, is called “the Pentagon” in the Palestinian street. Palestinian sources report of an additional compound of the General Security, that also will be constructed in the Ramallah area.

A CIA officer also is resident in Jerusalem, in the offices of the American consulate in East Jerusalem. This officer conducts tours of Bethlehem and of “seam” [= 1967 border] areas, while disguised in traditional Islamic garb, and conducts meetings on a steady basis with Palestinian security and political elements.

Laboratory Conditions

In January 1997 the CIA involvement acquires a new dimension, when Moskovitz is involved in the formulation of the security appendix to the Hebron agreement, and is directly in charge of the contacts between the Palestinians and the Israelis. He is supervised by Tenet, then only the deputy of John Deutsch, the ousted head of the intelligence agency. Inspired by the agreement, the CIA began to conduct additional activities, such as counting, at Israel’s request, the Hamas members imprisoned in the Palestinian prisons and supervision of the lists of Palestinian policemen.

In July ’97 the American envoy for Middle East affairs Dennis Ross conducts a low-profile security visit, that leads to a clash between him and Netanyahu’s people, on the background of the demand for action against the Hamas infrastructure. When Ross insisted, “You, too, were not successful in contending with the Hamas,” a senior member of the Netanyahu government replied: “You need a terrorist to deal with a terrorist.” Despite the difficult atmosphere, contacts continued for the creation of a formula for the continued transferal of area to the Palestinians, in exchange for determined war against the Hamas (the code word for the arrest of activists, on demand), supervision of continued arrests, the locating of laboratories for explosives, and the arrest of senior wanted [terrorists].

In operational terms, the security cooperation began to acquire a new form. A senior Israeli official at the time relates that Ross’s visit “led to the creation of a veto mechanism, according to which if the Palestinians want to release Hamas members, the names would be given to the CIA, who had the right of veto over the release. In parallel, we conducted a quiet dialogue and updating with the Americans, with the Palestinians being aware of this.” In addition, the American agents went to the prisons to confirm in the field the continued imprisonment of the wanted [terrorists], cooperation that eventually led in practice to the elimination of the military arms of the Hamas and of the Islamic Jihad.

They Shot the Sheriff

A week after the terrorist attack at Cafe Apropo, the CIA people came to Bitunia to examine the garage in which the explosion occurred, as a result of which Muhi ed-Din esh-Sharif, who was known as the Engineer no. 2, was killed. GSS people also were seen beside them. In the end, a joint version was established, that esh-Sharif was murdered with a pistol by I’adal Awadallah, as a result of financial and tactical disagreements. Hamas, of course, denied this, but the episode was a major embarrassment for the movement.

The CIA-inspired security cooperation was also noticeable in the capture of two members of the Tzurif gang that carried out the terrorist attack at Apropo. Jamal Alhud and Abd-el-Rahman Janimat fled to Hebron after the attack, and were arrested by members of the Preventive Security. The two were transferred for some reason from the Hebron prison to the one in Shechem, and close to the village of Hawara IDF special units took control of the vehicle and captured them without opening fire. Following the arrest, demonstrations by Hamas activists against Rajub were held in Hebron. Rajub himself denied that the arrest was the result of any cooperation with Israel, and claimed that the pair were transferred to Shechem in order to stand trial. An Israeli security source describes: “Unrelated to the diplomatic contacts, during the course of the entire period, there was noticeable determined action by the Palestinian security services, under supervision by CIA people, that included action against preachers identified with the Hamas in the mosques, and continued arrests of members of the movement.”

As a result of this activity, I’adl and Imad Awadallah, the heads of the military arm of Hamas, were eliminated by a Yamam [special antiterrorist police unit] force at a farm near Hebron, in a region under Israeli control, and in December 1999 the Hamas members Iad Batat and Nadr Musala, also senior members of the military arm, were killed in a clash with Duvdevan soldiers in the village of Bet-Awa, southwest of Hebron. Sheikh Abd el-Hakim el-Masalama, a member of the political leadership of the Islamic Jihad, who currently sits on the joint committee with Fatah, said this week: “There is no doubt that the security cooperation under American inspiration had harsh consequences for the Hamas and the Islamic Jihad. The most prominent expression of this policy is the Palestinian Authority’s policy of political arrests, that was done under American pressure. Beyond this, our people encountered American agents in the prisons, when they came to check that they were under arrest. It is clearly known among the Ramallah people that an entire floor in the ‘Pentagon’ is used by the CIA people.”

Screen Check

In November ’97 Tenet appeared before the Conference of Jewish Organizations and shared his feelings with those present: “There is a single ray of light on the background of the terrorist attacks in the past two years in Israel, and that is the contribution by the US to the work of the sides in facilitating the dialogue and security cooperation, especially in that it caused the Palestinians to fulfill their obligations.”

The entry of the organization into direct action aroused criticism in Israel. “Until the entry of the CIA, we were forced to contend with low-level State Department reports regarding the construction in the settlements,” relates one of Netanyahu’s people, “until this construction became the central dynamics between the secret services. Censuses of mobile homes became the central focus of interest by the CIA people, and the subject also arose in the security discussions.” In another instance the Arab weekly that is published in Paris, Alwatan el-Arab, claimed that Netanyahu even demanded the firing of Moskovitz, claiming that he was pro-Palestinian. The report resulted in denials from Jerusalem.

Despite the criticism, the outing by Tenet and Moskovitz came about, in all places, in the Wye talks, when the two were present for the first time publicly in the rooms of the discussions, and accompanied the negotiations during the nine days they were held. The presence of the two, who came after a direct invitation from Clinton and the involvement of the Agency in the resolution of the disagreement between Israel and the Authority, stirred up much criticism in the American media and in the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, that oversees the organization. The head of the committee, Senator Richard Shelby, defined the role of the CIA as a nuisance, and voiced the opinion of many who thought that there was a problem in the CIA’s being about to be involved up to its neck in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Melvin Goodman, a professor of international security and who is close to high-level American security circles, describes the problematics: “Clinton initiates moves, and the Senate goes along with him willingly in order to assure the attainment of a diplomatic agreement. This is a matter for statesmen, and not for secret services. The CIA has defined tasks of information gathering, the recruitment of agents, and the writing of situation assessments. Tenet, who is no more than a skilled Democratic politician who spent most of his time on Capitol Hill, did not know about the bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, and now he ‘cooks up’ situation assessments for Clinton.”

After the outbreak of the latest clashes with the Palestinian Authority, Tenet and O’Connor were asked to save the diplomatic process and their role as referees in this game, so far without results. The terrorist attacks in the past week merely attest to the inability of the CIA people, who are not successful in calming the arena. In practice, the Agency people are still in the field, but their function is not tangibly expressed in a calming of the situation.

Several months after King Hussein’s death last year and the crowning of Abdullah, American security sources reported a strengthening of regional cooperation in the war against terror. The sources, who briefed senior American reporters, proudly spoke of the creation of a regional regime of effective cooperation between Jordan, Israel, the Palestinians, and Egypt under the aegis of the CIA against the fundamentalist elements in the Islamic world. A senior Israeli political figure, who is familiar with the CIA involvement in the current conflict, said this week: “In a situation of military conflict between Israel and the Palestinians and the danger of an expansion of the conflict, it is preferable for Tenet and his buddies, and the can of worms that accompanies them, to direct their calming efforts to other places.”

The American embassy stated that it does not respond to matters related to the CIA.

This piece ran in Kol HaIr on Nov. 24th