US wants shakeup of Palestinian Authority to run Gaza after Hamas
Send a link to a friend
[December 16, 2023]
By Samia Nakhoul, Ali Sawafta and Matt Spetalnick
(Reuters) - A succession of top U.S. officials have travelled to the
West Bank in recent weeks to meet with Mahmoud Abbas in the hope the
88-year-old – a spectator in the war between Israel and Hamas – can
overhaul his unpopular Palestinian Authority enough to run Gaza after
the conflict.
An architect of the 1993 Oslo peace accords with Israel that raised
hopes of Palestinian statehood, Abbas has seen his legitimacy steadily
undermined by Israeli settlement building in the occupied West Bank,
which he oversees. Many Palestinians now regard his administration as
corrupt, undemocratic and out of touch.
But in the wake of Hamas' Oct. 7 attacks on Israel, President Joe Biden
has made it clear that he wants to see a revitalized Palestinian
Authority – which Abbas has run since 2005 - take charge in Gaza once
the conflict is over, unifying its administration with the West Bank.
Jake Sullivan, Biden's national security advisor, met with Abbas on
Friday, becoming the latest senior U.S. official to urge him to
implement rapid change. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told reporters
after meeting the Palestinian leader in late November that they
discussed the need for reforms to combat corruption, empower civil
society and support a free press.
Three Palestinian and one senior regional official briefed on the
conversations said that Washington's proposals behind closed doors would
also involve Abbas ceding some of his control over the Authority.
Under the proposals that have been floated, Abbas could appoint a
deputy, hand broader executive powers to his prime minister, and
introduce new figures into the leadership of the organization, the
Palestinian and regional sources said.
The White House did not provide answers to Reuters questions. The State
Department said leadership choices were a question for the Palestinian
people and did not elaborate on the steps needed to revitalize the
Authority.
In an interview with Reuters at his office in Ramallah, Abbas said he
was ready to revamp the Palestinian Authority with new leaders and to
hold elections – which have been suspended since Hamas won the last vote
in 2006 and pushed the PA out of Gaza – provided there was a binding
international agreement that would lead to the creation of a Palestinian
state.
That has been something Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and
his far-right coalition have refused to countenance.
"The problem is not changing (Palestinian) politicians and forming a new
government, the problem is the policies of the Israeli government,"
Abbas said in the interview last week, when asked about the U.S.
proposals.
While Abbas may accept that his long rule is nearing its end, he and
other Palestinian leaders say the U.S., Israel's key strategic ally,
must press Netanyahu's government to allow the establishment of a
Palestinian state encompassing Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
According to a person in Washington familiar with the matter, Abbas has
privately expressed openness to some U.S. proposals for reform of the
PA, including bringing in "new blood" with technocratic skills and
giving the prime minister's office new executive powers.
While U.S. officials insist they had not proposed any names to Abbas,
regional sources and diplomats say some in Washington and Israel favour
Hussein al-Sheikh – a senior PLO official - as a possible deputy and
future successor.
Washington has appealed to Jordan, Egypt and Gulf states – which have
some sway with the PA - to persuade Abbas to pursue institutional
reforms with urgency to prepare for the "day after", four U.S. sources
said, including two administration officials. Officials in Jordan,
Egypt, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates did not immediately respond to
requests for comment.
Abbas has pledged several times to overhaul his administration in recent
years and has little to show for it, so senior U.S. officials will
continue to push as they wait to see if he will follow through this
time, the U.S. sources said.
U.S. officials recognize, however, that Abbas remains the only realistic
Palestinian leadership figure for the time being, despite being
unpopular among Palestinians and distrusted by Israel, which has
denounced his failure to condemn Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack.
Biden's aides have quietly urged Israeli leaders to drop their
resistance to the PA, once it is revitalized, taking a leading role in
post-conflict Gaza, according to a senior U.S. administration official ,
who asked not to be identified because of the confidential nature of the
talks.
"There is no other show in town," said another of the U.S. sources. In
the short term, Israel needs to unblock more tax transfers to the PA,
which it froze in the wake of Oct 7, so it can pay salaries, U.S.
officials say.
ISRAEL ADAMANT
Conversations about what happens once the war is over have picked up in
recent weeks, but no plan has been presented to Abbas, Palestinian and
U.S. diplomatic sources said.
International condemnation of Israel's offensive has risen as the death
toll has climbed, approaching 19,000 people on Friday according to Gaza
health authorities, but Netanyahu has insisted the war will continue
until Hamas is destroyed, hostages returned, and Israel made safe from
future attacks.
Israeli forces invaded Gaza in retaliation for Hamas' cross-border
rampage in southern Israel more than two months ago in which it killed
about 1,200 people and took 240 hostages. On Thursday, Sullivan
discussed with Netanyahu moves to shift Israel's attacks on Gaza to
lower-intensity operations focused on high-value targets.
The U.S. is also telling Israel that PA security forces eventually must
have a presence in Gaza after the war, as they already do in parts of
the West Bank, said the senior U.S. official.
Netanyahu said on Tuesday, however, there was disagreement with his
American ally about the PA governing Gaza. Gaza "will neither be Hamas-stan
nor Fatah-stan," he said.
[to top of second column]
|
Smoke rises in Gaza, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and
the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, as seen from Southern Israel,
December 15, 2023. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne/File Photo
Founded after the 1993 Oslo accords, the PA, controlled by Abbas'
Fatah party, was meant to be an interim administration to lead the
way towards an independent Palestinian state. It has been run by
Abbas for the past 18 years without achieving that.
U.S. officials think Abbas has potential to regain some credibility
among Palestinians if he can show he is rooting out corruption,
nurturing a new generation of leaders, mobilising foreign aid to
rebuild Gaza after the war and building support abroad for
Palestinian statehood.
In his interview with Reuters, Abbas called on the United States to
sponsor an international peace conference to agree the final steps
leading to a Palestinian state. Such a gathering could be modeled
after the 1991 Madrid summit convened by U.S. President George Bush
following the 1990-91 Gulf War.
A senior U.S. official said the idea of a conference had been
discussed with partners, but the proposal was still at a preliminary
stage.
Abbas and other Palestinian leaders believe the U.S. must press
Israel harder to allow the establishment of a Palestinian state
encompassing Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
"It is the only power that is capable of ordering Israel to stop the
war and fulfil its obligations, but unfortunately it doesn't," he
told Reuters.
The Palestinian Prime Minister, Mohammad Shtayyeh, called on
Washington to exert real pressure on Israel through measures such as
Security Council votes, stopping arms deliveries and imposing
sanctions against settlement expansion.
Blinken announced this month sanctions on Israeli settlers
responsible for attacks on Palestinians, but the U.S. government has
remained a staunch defender of Israel at the United Nations –
rejecting calls for a humanitarian ceasefire – and Biden has pushed
through military aid in recent weeks.
"AN AUTHORITY WITHOUT AUTHORITY"
Sari Nusseibeh, a moderate Palestinian from Jerusalem who was
president of Al Quds University, said there were misgivings about
the PA's monopoly on power, and what he termed its disengagement
from reality and its corruption. But he said that without Israel
ending its occupation of the West Bank and allowing the creation of
a Palestinian state the situation would not improve.
"The problem is not limited to Abbas, because if Abbas goes, no
matter who replaces him can do nothing," said Nusseibeh, a professor
of philosophy.
Biden aides are grappling with how to provide a "political horizon"
for the Palestinians, with the Israeli public in no mood for
concessions.
Even in the West Bank, the PA is now unpopular because it is
regarded as a subcontractor of the Israeli occupation. Israeli
forces often carry out raids into areas under PA rule, including
Ramallah.
A poll conducted by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey
Research, published on Wednesday, showed growing popularity for
Hamas among Palestinians versus a decline for Abbas, suggesting the
militant group might win any elections in Palestinian territories.
Though a ballot is long overdue, the U.S. believes it would be
premature to send Palestinians to the polls soon after the war ends.
U.S. officials are mindful of Hamas’ victory in 2006 legislative
elections, which were encouraged by Washington and other Western
governments. Whenever elections are held, Hamas must be excluded,
U.S. sources said.
The West Bank is increasingly the site of expanding Israeli
settlements and security checkpoints that make Palestinians’ daily
journeys arduous. Many complain of a rise in violent attacks: in the
past two months, Israelis have killed at least 287 West Bank
Palestinians.
"This is an authority without authority," said Dr. Mustafa Barghouti,
an independent Palestinian politician whose name has been floated as
a possible candidate for prime minister, noting that the PA didn't
control its own revenues or security. He said it was the end of
Israeli occupation – rather than internal reform – that would
legitimize Palestinian leadership.
"Any Palestinian Authority that is going to serve the Israeli
occupation is going to be discredited and illegitimate".
Some Palestinian officials say that restoring the authority's
credibility would require expanding its base in a national unity
administration, governing Gaza and the West Bank, that would include
Hamas.
But Washington is adamantly against Hamas leaders playing any role,
even as a junior partner, the U.S. officials said. They also said
Israel troops should not remain in Gaza for more than an unspecified
"transitional" period once the war is over.
"We need something in Gaza. That something cannot be Hamas, which is
bad for the people of Gaza and a threat to Israel, and Israel won't
stand for it," the senior Biden administration official said. "A
vacuum isn't the solution either, because that would be terrible and
might give Hamas space to return."
(Additional reporting from Humeyra Pamuk and Matt Spetalnick in
Washington, Nidal al-Mughrabi and Aidan Lewis in Cairo, James
Mackenzie and Dan Williams in Jerusalem; Ali Sawafta in Ramallah;
Writing by Samia Nakhoul; Editing by Angus McDowall and Daniel
Flynn)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|