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The Role of the PLO
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11896 |
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CURRENT ISSUES
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8 / 1987 |
2,956 Words |
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Robert J. Hanks Rear Adm. Robert J. Hanks, USN (Ret), a former commander of
the U.S. Middle East Force, is a Washington-based freelance
writer and lecturer. Over the past 25 years, he has written
extensively on international political-military affairs and
maritime history. |
The April 1987 meeting of the Palestine National Council in Algiers transmitted a mixed series of messages to the rest of the world. Initially, it appeared that radical Palestinian factions had scored a major triumph by forcing Yasser Arafat to welcome them back into the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) fold and to espouse their hardline positions, all in order to promote Palestinian unity. Hopes for an international conference to resolve Middle East problems plummeted. Since then, however, further fallout from the meeting has somewhat altered this original evaluation. Still Middle Eastern waters remain exceedingly murky, and prospects for progress toward peace in the Middle East currently are uncertain at best.
The meeting of the National Council - the Palestinians' "parliament in exile" - is symptomatic of the problems confronting these displaced peoples as they continue to seek release from their diaspora and achieve self-determination in a land of their own. To comprehend what went on at the Algiers gathering and what the results could mean insofar as the future of the Middle East is concerned, one must understand the fractionated nature of the Palestinian movement.
Progressively radicalized by fruitless years of attempting to attract the world's attention to their grievances, Palestinians eventually turned to violence, precisely as the Jews did under the British Mandate. The transformation did not take place overnight, however. It began with Israel's victory over Arab forces in 1948 and subsequent wholesale expulsion of Palestinian Arabs from the new Zionist state. From the time of al-Nakba (the Catastrophe), as this period is known to Palestinians, until the late 1950s, the refugees looked to the world community for
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