To truly “revitalize” the P.A., a two-pronged strategy must be adopted: One that would address its relations with Israel and another to manage its internal governance.
(JNS / Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs) In the aftermath of the Oct. 7 massacre, the Palestinian Authority and its leader, Mahmoud Abbas, publicly declared their commitment to reassert control over the Gaza Strip and bolster the standing of the P.A.
Their determination was dampened by Israel’s reservations but encouraged by the United States. U.S. President Joe Biden declared that “Gaza and the West Bank should be reunited under a single governance structure, ultimately under a revitalized Palestinian Authority.”
Since the word “revitalized” is ambiguous and not often used to convey critical and fundamental changes a failed governance structure needs to undergo, Abbas seized the opportunity.
To achieve his goal, Abbas and the P.A. are implementing several cosmetic changes to claim that the P.A. has been “revitalized.” While the P.A. propaganda machine is working to justify the move, the truth is that the changes are mostly irrelevant.
Abbas does not want change. He has been the P.A.’s autocratic, corrupt and widely criticized ruler for the past 19 years. He, his family and his cronies have amassed huge personal fortunes. Abbas’s has reportedly reached $100 million. His sons have accumulated fortunes in excess of $300 million, controlling monopolies on the import of cigarettes and in the fields of civil engineering, electronics, real estate and cellular communications.
Abbas and the P.A. constitute a leadership catastrophe for the Palestinian public. The failed P.A. that Abbas inherited from its previous leader, Yasser Arafat, steadily but surely managed to sink to even deeper lows. Every attempt to further the peace process, even entailing Israeli withdrawal, was met with Abbas’s refusal.
Internally, P.A. corruption is rife. The P.A. never established an independent judiciary or other vehicles of legitimate governance. P.A. security organizations, on the other hand, popped up and flourished like mushrooms after a rain. At one stage, the P.A. security mechanisms even boasted more generals than the U.S. Army. Abbas regularly blames P.A. failures on Israel, the United States, or other Western powers.
While Abbas and the P.A. leadership have deflected responsibility to everyone and anyone else, the Palestinian people were not hoodwinked. Already back in 2006, when given the chance to vote in elections for the P.A. parliament and choose between Abbas’s Fatah Party and the internationally designated terrorist organization Hamas, the Palestinian people chose Hamas.
After the international community rejected the Hamas government, Abbas deposed it and installed a so-called “technocrat” government. The fact that Hamas remained a genocidal terrorist organization did not appear to bother Abbas. He feared the potential loss of control, contracts and commensurate spoils. The convergence of interests worked well for Abbas. He sidelined Hamas and blamed Israel and the United States for forcing his hand.
Palestinian public opinion polls today show unprecedented public opposition to Abbas and Fatah, while Hamas has consistently grown stronger.
In their relations with Israel, Abbas and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO)—also headed by Abbas—used the P.A. as an effective vehicle to promote the “Plan of Stages” to destroy Israel. Adopted by the PLO in 1974, the “Plan of Stages” set out the principles according to which the PLO has since operated. The plan includes the use of terror to achieve its goals, and the strategic decision to take any territorial foothold it can get as a springboard to continue on the path to the destruction of Israel.
The P.A. education system was radicalized and used to incite generation after generation of Palestinians to terror and to teach the subversion of Israel. Terrorist glorification became commonplace. Abbas entrenched the “pay-for-slay” terror reward program, spending hundreds of millions of dollars every year paying robust salaries and allowances to terrorists and their families. At the same time, Abbas launched a multi-front international “lawfare” assault to delegitimize Israel.
Cosmetic changes when surgery is required
Given his track record and the U.S. call to “revitalize” the P.A., Abbas is again trying to hoodwink the Americans and the international community by adopting mere cosmetic changes.
At the end of January 2024, the P.A. announced a slew of reforms, including the appointment of new regional governors (to replace the 12 Abbas sacked in August 2023), changes in the recruitment mechanisms of the P.A. security forces (that were even recruiting terrorists), changes to the media market (that had shrunk as Abbas consolidated his dictatorial rule) and a restructuring of the health sector. At the time, senior P.A. officials said Washington requested the measures to achieve a “revitalized P.A.”
Now, the P.A. government has resigned, opening the door for Abbas to feign legitimacy again and appoint a new and “revitalized” technocrat government.
Abbas approved these insignificant changes, in the hope that they would be sufficient to ensure the survival of the P.A. This hope has been bolstered by the repeated U.S. commitments to the “two-state solution” and rumors that U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken ordered his staff to consider the implications of unilateral U.S. recognition of the “State of Palestine.”
Notwithstanding U.S. declarations, however, the P.A. has been an abject failure. Despite tens of billions of dollars of aid over the past 30 years, the systematic failure of the P.A. and its leadership to establish a working and viable government have been clear for more than two decades.
The additional factor that undermines both the bona fides of the reforms and poses an increasing danger is the Russian-driven talks of “Palestinian reconciliation.” While reconciliation is often positive, “Palestinian reconciliation” means that a new bond will be formed between Abbas’s hated Fatah party and the genocidal Hamas movement. Reconciliation talks between the two rivals have been going on since Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip in 2007—following its electoral win the year before—by killing Fatah members, on some occasions throwing them from the tops of buildings and on others dragging their bodies through the streets of Gaza.
Facilitating the survival of Hamas through “reconciliation” and allowing the movement to continue to play a central role in Palestinian society would be unacceptable to Israel, which has sworn to destroy both the military and governance capabilities of the terrorist movement that planned and led the Oct. 7 massacre.
If successful, the Russian-led efforts would undermine the efforts of the U.S. administration to assist the Palestinians in fighting terror and undermine the repeated call of President Biden to “eliminate” Hamas.
Policy recommendations
The piecemeal measures offered by Abbas to effectively “revitalize” the P.A. are insufficient. To “revitalize” the P.A., a two-pronged strategy must be adopted: One that would address its relations with Israel and another to manage its internal governance.
Regarding the P.A. relations with Israel, IDF Brig. Gen. (res) Yossi Kupperwasser and this author recently mapped out six non-negotiable steps the P.A. must take as a condition of its reconstruction. These steps include the need to condemn the Oct. 7 massacre, abolish the P.A./PLO’s “pay-for-slay” policy, recognize Israel as the State of the Jewish people, cease incitement to murder and glorification of terror against Israelis, halt all P.A. political assaults on Israel in international fora, while actively combating terror.
Regarding the P.A.’s internal workings, several necessary steps must be adopted.
First, 88-year-old Abbas must resign. Now in the 19th year of a four-year term, Abbas was never popular among the Palestinians, and his overt corruption resulted in broad public demand that he vacate his position as P.A. leader. New P.A. elections should be held under international supervision, both for the position of P.A. chairman and P.A. parliament. Internationally designated terrorist organizations such as Hamas, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine would not be allowed to participate, whether running under their own or any other name. The new P.A. chairman and parliament would function under strict international stewardship to prevent their radicalization.
Second, the leadership and staff of the P.A. Finance Ministry will need to be replaced by agreed-upon international personnel, who would ensure the elimination of corruption and that the P.A. budget is spent for the purposes for which it was designated, as opposed to enriching Abbas’s family or Fatah cronies or to incentivize, support and reward terror.
Third, the P.A. judiciary, over which Abbas has taken complete control, must be disbanded and reconstituted under the guidance and control of agreed international authorities.
Finally, the P.A. must sever its ties with the PLO, whose members still include internationally designated terror organizations and to whom the P.A. funnels hundreds of millions of dollars annually.
Only once these preliminary steps are adopted would it be possible to further assess what a truly “revitalized” P.A. might look like.
Originally published by The Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs.