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 Palestine's New Status:  A History Rerun or a New Palestinian Strategy
	 By Ramzy Baroud Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 10, 2012  
 Palestine has become a “non-member state” at the United Nations 
	as of Thursday November 29, 2012.The draft of the UN resolution beckoning 
	what many perceive as a historic moment passed with an overwhelming majority 
	of General Assembly members: 138 votes in favor, nine against and 41 
	abstentions.
 
 It was accompanied by a passionate speech delivered by 
	Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. But decades earlier, a more 
	impressive and animated Palestinian leader, Yasser Arafat sought 
	international solidarity as well. The occasion then was also termed 
	‘historic’.
 
 Empowered by Arab support at the Rabat Arab League 
	summit in October 1974, which bestowed on the Palestine Liberation 
	Organization (PLO), the ever-opaque title "the sole legitimate 
	representative of the Palestinian people", Arafat was invited to speak at 
	the UN General Assembly. Despite the fervor that accompanied the newly found 
	global solidarity, Arafat's language singled a departure from what was 
	perceived by Western powers as radical and unrealistic political and 
	territorial ambitions.
 
 In his speech on November 13, Arafat spoke of 
	the growing PLO’s legitimacy that compelled his actions: “The PLO has earned 
	its legitimacy because of the sacrifice inherent in its pioneering role and 
	also because of its dedicated leadership of the struggle. It has also been 
	granted this legitimacy by the Palestinian masses .. The PLO has also gained 
	its legitimacy by representing every faction, union or group as well as 
	every Palestinian talent, either in the National Council or in people’s 
	institutions..” The list went on, and, despite some reservations, each had a 
	reasonable degree of merit.
 
 The same however can hardly be said of 
	Abbas’ Palestinian Authority (PA), which exists as a result of an ambiguous 
	‘peace process’ nearly 20-years ago. It has all but completely destroyed the 
	PLO’s once functioning institutions, redefined the Palestinian national 
	project of liberation around a more ‘pragmatic’ – read self-serving – 
	discourse that is largely tailored around self-preservation, absence of 
	financial accountability and a system of political tribalism.
 
 Abbas 
	is no Yasser Arafat. But equality important, the Arafat of 1974 was a 
	slightly different version of an earlier Arafat who was the leader of the 
	revolutionary Fatah party. In 1974, Arafat made a statehood proposal that 
	itself represented a departure from Fatah's own previous commitment to a 
	‘democratic state on all Palestine’. Arafat's revised demands contained the 
	willingness to settle for "establishing an independent national state on all 
	liberated Palestinian territory". While the difference between both visions 
	may be attributed to a reinterpretation of the Palestinian liberation 
	strategy, history showed that it was much more. Since that date and despite 
	much saber-rattling by the US and Israel against Arafat’s ‘terrorism’ and 
	such, the PLO under Arafat’s Fatah leadership underwent a decade-long 
	scrutiny process, where the US placed austere demands in exchange for an 
	American ‘engagement’ of the Palestinian leadership. This itself was the 
	precondition that yielded Oslo and its abysmal consequences.
 
 Arafat 
	was careful to always sugarcoat any of his concessions with a parallel 
	decision that was promoted to Palestinians as a national triumph of some 
	sort. Back then there was no Hamas to stage a major challenge to the PLO’s 
	policies, and Leftist groups within the PLO structure were either 
	politically marginalized by Fatah or had no substantial presences among the 
	Palestinian masses. The field was virtually empty of any real opposition, 
	and Arafat’s credibility was rarely questioned. Even some of his opponents 
	found him sincere, despite their protests against his style and distressing 
	concessions.
 
 The rise of the PLO’s acceptability in international 
	arenas was demonstrated in its admission to the United Nations as a 
	“non-state entity” with an observer status on Nov 22, 1974. The Israeli war 
	and subsequent invasion of Lebanon in 1982 had the declared goal of 
	destroying the PLO and was in fact aimed at stifling the growing legitimacy 
	of the PLO regionally and internationally. Without an actual power base, in 
	this case, Lebanon, Israeli leaders calculated that the PLO would either 
	fully collapse or politically capitulate.
 
 Weakened, but not 
	obliterated, the post-Lebanon war PLO was a different entity than the one 
	which existed prior to 1982. Armed resistance was no longer on the table, at 
	least not in any practical terms. Such change suited some Arab countries 
	just fine. A few years later, Arafat and Fatah were assessing the new 
	reality from headquarters in Tunisia.
 
 The political landscape in 
	Palestine was vastly changing. A popular uprising (Intifada) erupted in 1987 
	and quite spontaneously a local leadership was being formed throughout the 
	occupied territories. New names of Palestinian intellectuals were emerging. 
	They were community leaders and freedom fighters that mostly organized 
	around a new discourse that was created out of local universities, Israeli 
	prisons and Palestinian streets. It was then that the legend of the Intifada 
	was born with characters such as children with slingshots, mothers battling 
	soldiers, and a massive reservoir of a new type of Palestinian fighter along 
	with fresh language and discourse. Equally important, new movements were 
	appearing from outside the traditional PLO confines. One such movement is 
	Hamas, which has grown in numbers and political relevance in ways once 
	thought impossible.
 
 That reality proved alarming to the US, Israel 
	and of course, the traditional PLO leadership. There were enough vested 
	interests to reach a ‘compromise'. This naturally meant more concessions by 
	the Palestinian leadership in exchange for some symbolic recompense by the 
	Americans. The latter happily floated Israel’s trial balloons so that the 
	Israeli leadership didn't appear weak or compromising. Two major events 
	defined that stage of politics in 1988: On Nov 15, the PLO’s National 
	Council (PNC) proclaimed a Palestinian state in exile from Algiers and 
	merely two weeks later, US Ambassador to Tunisia Robert H. Pelletreau Jr., 
	was designated as the sole American liaison whose mission was to establish 
	contacts with the PLO. Despite the US’ declared objection of Arafat’s move, 
	the US was in fact pleased to see that the symbolic declaration was 
	accompanied by major political concessions. The PNC stipulated the 
	establishment of an independent state on Palestinian 'national soil’ and 
	called for the institution of “arrangements for security and peace of all 
	states in the region” through a negotiated settlements at an international 
	peace conference on the basis of UN resolution 242 and 338 and Palestinian 
	national rights.
 
 Although Arafat was repeatedly confronted by even 
	more American demands – that truly never ceased until his alleged murder by 
	poison in Ramallah in 2004 – the deceleration was the real preamble of the 
	Oslo accords some few years later. Since then, Palestinians have gained 
	little aside from symbolic victories starting in 1988 when the UNGA 
	“acknowledged” the Algiers proclamation. It then voted to replace the 
	reference to the “Palestine Liberation Organization” with that of 
	“Palestine”. And since then, it has been one symbolic victory after another, 
	exemplified in an officially acknowledged Palestinian flag, postage stamps, 
	a national anthem and the like. On the ground, the reality was starkly and 
	disturbingly different: fledgling illegal Jewish settlements became 
	fortified cities and a relatively small settler population now morphed to 
	number over half a million settlers; Jerusalem is completely besieged by 
	settlements, and cut off from the rest of the occupied territories; the 
	Palestinian Authority established in 1994 to guide Palestinians towards 
	independence became a permanent status of a Palestinian leadership that 
	existed as far as Israel’s would permit it to exist; polarization caused by 
	the corruption of the PA and its security coordination with Israel lead to 
	civil strife that divided the Palestinian national project between factional 
	and self-serving agendas.
 
 The support that ‘Palestine’ has received 
	at the United Nations must be heartening, to say the least, for most 
	Palestinians. The overwhelming support, especially by Palestine’s 
	traditional supporters (most of humanity with few exceptions) indicates that 
	the US hegemony, arm twisting and Israeli-US propaganda was of little use 
	after all. However, that should not be misidentified as a real change of 
	course in the behavior of the Palestinian Authority which still lacks legal, 
	political and especially moral legitimacy among Palestinians who are seeking 
	tangible drive towards freedom, not mere symbolic victories.
 
 If 
	Abbas thinks that obtaining a new wording for Palestine status at the UN 
	would provide a needed political theater to justify another 20 years of 
	utter failures, then time is surely to prove him wrong. If the new status, 
	however, is used as a platform for a radically different strategy that would 
	revitalize a haggard political discourse with the sole aim of unifying the 
	ranks of all Palestinians around a new proud national project, then, there 
	is something worth discussing. Indeed, it is not the new status that truly 
	matters, but rather how it is interpreted and employed. While history is not 
	exactly promising, the future will have the last word.
 
 –
	Ramzy Baroud ( 
	www.ramzybaroud.net ) is an internationally syndicated columnist and the 
	editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom 
	Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
 
   
 
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