CIA-Trained Security Chiefs Elected to the Palestinian Leadership 
What Actually Happened in Fatah's Elections? 
By Esam AL-Amin 

“He is our guy.” 
George W. Bush speaking of Palestinian security chief Muhammad Dahlan, June 4, 
2003
August 14, 2009 "Counterpunch" -- The U.S. government has been meddling in the 
Palestinian internal affairs since at least 2003. Its effort is to transform 
the Palestinian national movement for liberation and independence into a more 
compliant or quisling government, willing to accede to Israel’s political and 
security demands. 
The tactics employed by the U.S. include military, security, diplomatic, and 
political components. With the ascension of Hamas after the 2006 legislative 
election, U.S. strategy has been fixed on unraveling the election results. Its 
aim for a political comeback of the pro-American camp within the Palestinian 
body politic has been initiated with the convening of Fatah’s national 
conference this last week.
During the week of August 4, 2009, the Palestinian National Liberation Movement 
Fatah, convened its sixth national conference in its 44-year history. Fatahhas 
historically been considered the largest Palestinian faction, but that 
perception changed when it lost the legislative elections to Hamas in January 
2006. As the group wrapped up its conference after eight days, it announced the 
results of its elections. The international media, particularly western 
outlets, framed the election as “fresh” and “new” faces ascending to power in 
the movement. But what actually happened in the vote? 
Fatah’s internal structure is unlike most political parties or resistance 
movements. It is not hierarchical and its members’ loyalty largely follows a 
system of patronage and factionalism embodied in a 23-member Central Committee.
The Central Committee is technically supposed to reflect a system of collective 
leadership and the political program of a national liberation movement. Even 
its founder, the late Yasser Arafat, who led the organization from its 
inception in 1965 until his death in 2004, did not have an official title 
beyond that of a member of the committee and commander-in-chief of its military 
wing. But over time, in the eyes of many Palestinians, Fatah’s leadership has 
symbolized, a system of cronyism, corruption, collaboration with Israel, and 
political failures, especially since the Oslo process.
Although its internal charter calls for a national conference every four years 
to elect its leadership, the major questions at the eve of this conference 
were: Why did it take Fatah two decades to convene this one? Did the election 
of Fatah’s new leadership reflect the aspirations of the Palestinian people and 
a new and fresh approach to the political process? And finally, who are the 
backers of the main individuals who were recently elected to lead it?
Fatah’s Central Committee led by Arafat made the strategic decision in 1988 to 
negotiate a political settlement with Israel, and accept the United States 
government as the main broker. For two decades, especially in the aftermath of 
the 1993 Oslo accords, the Palestinian issue gradually receded from the 
international agenda, becoming an almost exclusive affair between the U.S, 
Israel, and the Palestinian leadership whether it was the PLO or after 1994, 
the Palestinian Authority (PA).
Most neutral Middle East analysts such as Robert Malley, the Middle East 
Program Director at the International Crisis Group, and a former National 
Security Council (NSC) staff member during the Clinton administration, observe 
that American negotiators throughout several administrations (both Democratic 
and Republican) have mostly adopted the Israeli point of view and placed most 
of the pressure on the Palestinian leadership (whether Bill Clinton with 
Yitzhak Rabin and Ehud Barak, or George W. Bush with Ariel Sharon and Ehud 
Olmert.) 
During the first term of the Bush administration, Arafat, as the head of the 
PA, was isolated, while Washington promoted those within the Palestinian 
leadership such as Mahmoud Abbas (imposed on Arafat as prime minister in 2003), 
and former security chief Muhammad Dahlan, both of whom embraced the American 
strategy in the region. In 2005, Bush declared his freedom and democracy 
agenda, demanding elections in the Palestinian territories, and hoping for a 
Fatah victory to implement his vision.
However, the administration soon abandoned its agenda of promoting democracy in 
the Arab world when Hamas won a landslide victory in the January 2006 
legislative elections. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice expressed shock 
about the results saying, “No one saw it coming.” A Department of Defense 
official told David Rose of Vanity Fair in 2008, “Everyone blamed everyone 
else,” “We sat there in the Pentagon and said, ‘Who the f...@# recommended 
this?’?”
Ever since that election, the American administration employed three different 
but overlapping strategies in order to undo the results. These efforts by the 
State Department, the White House and the Defense Department, were scantily 
planned and poorly coordinated. 
Throughout 2006 and the first half of 2007, the State Department used its 
diplomatic resources and political muscle to topple the democratically-elected 
Palestinian government led by Hamas. In an April 2008 report, Vanity Fair 
disclosed that an American talking point memo emerged after a U.S. diplomat 
accidentally left it behind in a Palestinian Authority building in Ramallah. 
The document echoed Rice’s demand that Abbas dissolve the national unity 
government and take on Hamas.
Meanwhile, as detailed by Vanity Fair, neo-con and NSC deputy director Elliot 
Abrams was plotting a coup in Gaza against Hamas with former Gaza security 
chief Muhammad Dahlan in the spring of 2007. It included coordination with 
Israel, several Arab countries such as UAE and Jordan, payments to Dahlan of 
over $30 million, the training of five hundred security personnel, a campaign 
to destabilize Gaza, and a torture program against Hamas members and other 
Islamists. 
Dahlan admitted as much to the magazine’s writer, David Rose, saying that he 
told his American counterpart who was pushing for a confrontation with Hamas, 
“If I am going to confront them, I need substantial resources. As things stand, 
we do not have the capability.” 
The Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported on June 7, 2007, that the American 
administration had asked Israel to authorize a large Egyptian arms shipment, 
including dozens of armored cars, hundreds of armor-piercing rockets, thousands 
of hand grenades, and millions of rounds of ammunition. Rose explains that 
Abrams’s plan stressed the need to bolster Fatah’s forces in order to “deter” 
Hamas. According to a senior administration official the “desired outcome” was 
to give Abbas “the capability to take the required strategic political 
decisions (i.e. fulfilling the Israeli conditions for a political settlement) 
and dismissing the (Hamas led) cabinet, establishing an emergency cabinet.” 
But Dick Cheney’s Middle East advisor, David Wurmser, admitted the failed 
effort when he told the magazine, “It look(ed) to me that what happened wasn’t 
so much a coup by Hamas but an attempted coup by Fatah that was pre-empted (by 
Hamas) before it could happen.”
The third effort, was mainly overseen by the Pentagon, and led by Lt. General 
Keith Dayton. In a speech before the pro-Israel think tank, the Washington 
Institute on Near East Policy (WINEP) in May 2009, he said that the Office of 
the U.S. Security Coordinator, which he has been leading since December 2005, 
is “an effort to assist the Palestinians in reforming their security services.” 
But according to the notes of a meeting between Dayton and a Palestinian 
security chief in Ramallah in early 2007, the real purpose of the mission was 
revealed when Dayton said, “[W]e also need to build up your forces in order to 
take on Hamas.” 
Since 2007, Congress has given Dayton $161 million dollars to implement his 
plan. In addition, this year Congress appropriated an additional $209 million 
dollars to Dayton for the 2009 and 2010 fiscal years, to accelerate his program 
after receiving high marks from Israeli security chiefs. In the past year 
alone, more than 1,000 Hamas and Islamic Jihad members have been arrested and 
detained without trials, with many tortured and killed under interrogation, by 
U.S.-trained Palestinian security personnel in the West Bank. Amnesty 
International and many other human rights organizations have condemned these 
actions and called for an immediate halt to the human rights abuses of 
Palestinian detainees in PA prisons.
In his WINEP speech Dayton acknowledged this crackdown when he said, “I don't 
know how many of you are aware, but over the last year-and-a-half, the 
Palestinians have engaged upon a series of what they call security offensives 
throughout the West Bank, surprisingly well coordinated with the Israeli army.” 
He further admitted that during the 22-day Gaza war last winter, U.S.-trained 
Palestinian security forces prevented Palestinians in the West Bank from 
organizing mass protests against the Israeli army, which ironically allowed for 
the reduction of the Israeli military presence in the West Bank in order to 
redeploy those troops to Gaza. Dayton added, “As a matter of fact, a good 
portion of the Israeli army went off to Gaza from the West Bank— think about 
that for a minute, and the (Israeli military) commander (of the West Bank) was 
absent for eight straight days.” 
After a failed coup and brutal military offensive failed to dislodge Hamas from 
Gaza, the Israeli and U.S. strategy sought to intensify its pressure against 
Hamas through a suffocating economic siege in Gaza, massive security detentions 
in the West Bank, financial squeeze in the region and political isolation 
internationally. Meanwhile, according to several Hamas spokesmen, including the 
deposed prime minister Ismael Haniyya in Gaza and political chief Khaled Meshal 
in Damascus, the main obstacle to any national reconciliation with Fatah has 
been the detention of hundreds of Hamas members and the PA’s security 
collaboration with the military occupation overseen by Dayton.
The next phase in this effort is to reinvent Fatah and present it as a viable 
political alternative to Hamas and other resistance movements by improving the 
living conditions in the West Bank in contrast to Gaza’s devastating siege. But 
more important, the plan envisions a new Fatah that is considered a reliable 
partner willing to accomodate Israel’s conditions for a political settlement. 
The sixth Fatah conference and accompanying elections was thus convened to 
dispose of its corrupt and dysfunctional image. 
For over a year, the Central Committee, the highest body in its structure, 
could not agree on many major issues, including where to hold the conference 
(the final decision was to hold it in the occupied Palestinian territories, 
which means that Israel has a veto on which delegates from abroad would be 
allowed to participate). They also squabbled about which delegates would be 
appointed to the conference, which would determine the composition of the new 
leadership, as well as the political program and the role of armed resistance 
against the occupation.  Abbas and his inner circle vetoed the decision of the 
committee, and decided to hold the conference in Bethlehem, virtually 
hand-picking all the participants to guarantee the election outcome.
Historically, the delegates to Fatah’s national conference were elected or 
appointed by the Central Committee, but at least fifty-one percent came from 
the military apparatus. Since most of the military wing has either been 
disbanded or wanted by the Israelis, a large number of the delegates to this 
conference were security personnel substituting for the military ones. This 
fact guaranteed that the election results would be skewed towards the security 
chiefs and their supporters. 
The original number of delegates was supposed to be around 700. Then it 
increased to 1,250 but eventually mushroomed to 2,355. Less than ten percent 
were actually indirectly elected by the virtue of their positions, while the 
overwhelming majority was appointed by a small group in Ramallah led mainly by 
Abbas and other power brokers such as Dahlan and former West Bank security 
chief Jibreel Rujoub, who used to hang the picture of former CIA director 
George Tenet above his desk alongside that of Arafat. 
The number of Central Committee members was also increased from 21 to 23, with 
19 directly elected by the delegates. Abbas was to appoint four members later, 
but he himself was chosen by acclamation, to avoid embarrassment if he does not 
garner first place in a direct election. The 18 individuals who were elected at 
the end of the week-long conference comprised four from the “old guard” who are 
considered close to Abbas, and 14 new members, three of whom are former 
security chiefs who’ve been close to the CIA. These include Dahlan, Rujoub, and 
Tawfiq Tirawi, a former intelligence chief, who is currently heading a security 
training academy in Jericho under the supervision of Gen. Dayton.
>From the outset, this conference was heavily tilted towards delegates from the 
>West Bank. Unlike previous conferences, Palestinians in the Diaspora were 
>hardly represented since Israel allowed only a few people to enter from 
>abroad. While Gaza’s population is equal to that of the West Bank, less than 
>400 people were selected as delegates from Gaza, while there were over three 
>times as many delegates from the West Bank.
But most of the Gaza delegates did not even attend because Hamas prevented them 
from leaving the strip, demanding in return that hundreds of its detained 
members in the West Bank be freed by the PA, which it summarily refused. In 
short, aside from Dahlan, who no longer lives in Gaza, not a single elected 
person is from or lives in Gaza. This prompted the entire Fatah leadership in 
Gaza, including former Central Committee member Zakariya al-Agha, to resign en 
mass one day after the conference, protesting not only the results, but also 
the whole election process.
Similarly, Fatah members abroad did not fare well. Only two people were elected 
to the Central Committee, though more than two-thirds of Palestinians (eight 
million) live outside of the Palestinian territories, many in squalid refugee 
camps, with the “right of return”, considered a hot- button issue in future 
negotiations, up in the air. On the other hand, the overwhelming majority of 
the new members were either from the West Bank or already living in Ramallah as 
part of Abbas’ closest aides, affirming the American-led ‘West Bank first’ 
strategy.
Some of the historic old guard who oppose Abbas’s political program such as 
Central Committee secretary Farouk Kaddoumi or Hani Al-Hassan did not even 
attend or run as candidates. Kaddoumi condemned the conference, questioned its 
legitimacy, and went as far as accusing Abbas and Dahlan of plotting with the 
Israelis to poison Arafat, eventually causing his death. 
Other former members who ran as candidates were defeated and cried foul. Former 
prime minister and negotiator Ahmad Qurai (Abu Alaa) questioned the credentials 
of the delegates and the integrity of the election procedure. When Abbas chief 
of staff, Tayeb Abdel-Rahim lost, he demanded a recount and was eventually 
declared a winner, after the election committee claimed he was actually tied 
for last. Many delegates, especially female candidates, all of whom lost, 
criticized this blatant cronyism. Nevertheless, several popular and “clean” 
candidates were able to win a seat such as Marwan Bargouthi, who is serving 
five life sentences in Israel, and Mahmoud Al-Aloul, a former mayor of Nablus.
As Palestinians watched this conference unfold, many were hoping that it would 
be the beginning of a national reconciliation and the establishment of a unity 
government. However, it seems that as a result of this conference Fatah itself 
may further disintegrate, as its Gaza leaders and Abu Alaa are threatening to 
launch a new faction called “Fatah Awakening,” further increasing division and 
tension within the Palestinian ranks.
The next step in the strategy of the pro-American camp is to hold presidential 
and legislative elections in the Palestinian territories next January, hoping 
to present a rejuvenated Fatah as an alternative to Hamas and other resistance 
movements.  Jonathan Steele of the Guardian further exposed on June 22, 2007 
the U.S. "hard coup" of June ’07, as well as its political strategy. He 
detailed US officials' conversations with several Arab regimes. These were, 
among others, “ ‘to maintain President Abbas and Fatah as the center of gravity 
on the Palestinian scene’, ‘avoid wasting time in accommodating Hamas,’ 
‘undermining Hamas’s political status,’ and ‘calling for early elections.’” 
In the words of Gen. Dayton, the Palestinian personnel trained by the U.S 
pledge after their graduation that they “were not sent here to learn how to 
fight Israel, but were rather sent here to learn how to keep law and order.” 
The main purpose of these security battalions is to halt any resistance to or 
rejection of the occupation including non-violent means. He then added that 
senior Israeli military commanders frequently ask him, "How many more of these 
new Palestinians can you generate, and how quickly?”
Many of the questions, posed by ordinary Palestinians before the conference, 
remain unanswered. What is Fatah’s political program in light of the current 
Israeli intransigence and pre-conditions? What of national reconciliation with 
other Palestinian factions and the establishment of a national unity 
government? What is the role of resistance against the occupation, the 
suffocating siege against Gaza, and most importantly, the continuous 
collaboration with the Israeli security agencies and military against their own 
citizens? 
These questions persist while Israel’s occupation and its brutal policies, the 
expansion of settlements, the separation wall, the detention of over 11,000 
Palestinians, the expropriation of land, the depopulation of East Jerusalem’s 
Palestinian residents, and the denial of Palestinian refugees’ right of return, 
continue unabated.
Simply put, the U.S. wants a Palestinian leadership that will answer these 
questions in a way that is satisfactory to Israel. As one State Department 
official said to Vanity Fair regarding American objectives in the 
Israeli-Palestinian struggle, “[W]e care about results, and [we support] 
whatever son of a bitch [w]e have to support. Dahlan was the son of a bitch we 
happened to know best.”  
Esam Al-Amin can be reached at: [email protected]
 
 
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article23273.htm


 



Satrio Arismunandar 
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