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Yasser Arafat
1929 - 2004

Mohammed Abdel Raouf Arafat al-Qudwa Al-Husseini, more commonly
known as Yasser Arafat was the fifth of seven children born to a
Palestinian textile merchant on August 24, 1929. According to
Arafat and other sources, he was born in Jerusalem; however,
French biographers, Christophe Boltanski and Jihan El-Tahri
revealed in their 1997 book, Les sept vies de Yasser Arafat,
that he was actually born in Cairo, Egypt, and that is where his
birth certificate was registered. The Palestinian Academic
Society for the Study of International Affairs also lists
Arafat’s birthplace as Cairo. Ian Pacepa, a former Romanian
intelligence official, disclosed that the KGB had invented a
background for Arafat with a birthplace in Jerusalem.
Claims that Arafat was related to the Jerusalem Husseini clan
through his mother have been disputed by the Palestinian
historian Said Aburish. In an unauthorized biography, Aburish
claims that “The young Arafat sought to establish his
Palestinian credentials and promote his eventual claim to
leadership... [and] could not afford to admit any facts which
might reduce his Palestinian identity. ...Arafat insistently
perpetuated the legend that he had been born in Jerusalem and
was related to the important Husseini clan of that city.”
Arafat’s childhood was divided between Cairo and Jerusalem,
where he lived for four years with an uncle following the death
of his mother when he was five. Arafat entered the University of
King Faud I (later renamed Cairo University) in 1947 and studied
engineering. It was during his college years that Arafat adopted
the name Yasser, which means “easygoing” in Arabic.
During the 1948 Arab-Israeli war, Arafat left the university
and, along with other Palestinians, sought to enter Palestine to
fight for Palestinian independence. He was disarmed and turned
back by Egyptian military forces that refused to allow the
poorly trained partisans to enter the war zone. After returning
to the university, Arafat joined the Muslim Brotherhood and
served as president of the Union of Palestinian Students from
1952 to 1956. By 1956, Arafat graduated with a bachelor’s degree
in civil engineering and served as a second lieutenant in the
Egyptian Army during the Suez Crisis.
The PLO
After the Suez War, Arafat moved to Kuwait, where he found work
as an engineer and eventually set up his own contracting firm.
In Kuwait, he also helped found Fatah in 1957, an organization
dedicated to the establishment of an independent Palestinian
state in place of Israel and Jordan (i.e., historic Palestine).
Backed by Syria, Fatah began carrying out terrorist raids
against Israeli targets, starting with an unsuccessful attempt
to blow up an Israeli water pump in December 1964. From that
point on, Fatah launched dozens of raids against civilian
Israeli targets from Jordan, Lebanon and Egyptian-occupied Gaza
to avoid provoking reprisals against their Syrian patrons.
When the a coup occurred in Syria in 1966, a new leader was
appointed to head Fatah, but he was murdered. Arafat, who took
the nom de guerre Abu Ammar, was then arrested by the Syrians,
but was subsequently released and fled to Beirut with his inner
circle.
Arafat Takes Over
In 1964, the Arab League created the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO) as a tool in the war against Israel. Arafat’s
Fatah, which initially viewed the organization as a political
opponent, gradually became the organization’s dominant faction.
Following the humiliating defeat of the Arab forces in the 1967
War; the PLO decided that it could not rely on the Arab states
to achieve its objective of destroying Israel. For the next ten
years, this goal was the primary focus of the massive terrorist
campaign by which the PLO’s reputation was formed.
Meanwhile, Fatah established a base in the Jordanian city of
Karameh. This was the target of an Israeli assault planned in
reprisal for a terrorist attack against a school bus full of
children that killed two and wounded 28 on March 18, 1968. Three
days later, the Israelis dropped leaflets on Karameh warning of
an impending attack and advising civilians to leave. When the
Israeli forces arrived, they met unexpected resistance from
forces of the regular Jordanian army. In the ensuing battle,
from which Arafat fled after distributing weapons, the Israelis
said they suffered 28 dead and 90 wounded, whereas the
Jordanians had 100 dead and 90 wounded, and 170 terrorists had
been killed and 200 captured. The Jordanian account virtually
reversed these figures, claiming 200 Israeli dead compared to
only 20 of their soldiers. The Palestinian version presented an
entirely different picture, claiming their heroic resistance had
caused 500 Israeli casualties.
Although its account was dubious, the Arab media glorified the
Palestinian stand against the Israelis at Karameh (much to the
chagrin of the Jordanians who did most of the fighting), and the
effect was to stimulate a wave of volunteers seeking to join the
PLO. The Palestinian terrorists escalated their attacks
throughout the year, with the casualty toll in 1968 alone
reaching 177 Israeli dead and 700 wounded, and 681 Palestinians
were killed and wounded in attacks and reprisals.
The “victory” at Karameh allowed Arafat to gain the prestige he
needed to exert greater influence over the PLO. The Palestinian
National Council met in 1968 and revised the Charter, adopting
Fatah's commitment to liberate Palestine by armed struggle
alone. A year later, when the Council met again, Arafat was
elected chairman of the PLO, a position he has held ever since.
Over the next year, Arafat consolidated his power by bringing
most of the militant Palestinian factions under the umbrella of
the PLO.
Challenging King Hussein
In the late 1960s, tensions between Palestinians and the
Jordanian government intensified; heavily armed Palestinian
resistance elements (fedayeen) had created a virtual “state
within a state” in Jordan, eventually controlling several
strategic positions, including the oil refinery near Az Zarq.
Jordan considered this a growing threat to its sovereignty and
security and attempted to disarm the Palestinian militias. Open
fighting erupted in June of 1970.
The final straw for King Hussein occurred when Palestinian
terrorists flew three hijacked planes to Jordan and blew them up
on September 12, 1970. Four days later, Hussein declared martial
law. That same day, Arafat became commander of the Palestine
Liberation Army (PLA), the regular military force of the PLO. In
the ensuing civil war, the PLO had the active support of Syria,
which invaded Jordan with a force of around 200 tanks. The
fighting was mainly between the Jordanian army and the PLA; the
U.S. Navy dispatched the Sixth Fleet to the eastern
Mediterranean and Israel deployed troops to aid Hussein, if
necessary. By September 24, the Jordanian army had defeated the
Palestinian forces. Most of the Palestinian leadership,
including Arafat (who disguised himself as a Kuwaiti official),
fled to Syria, and later Lebanon, where they soon set about
undermining the central government of that country.
The change in location did not effect Arafat’s commitment to
terror. In September 1972, a terrorist arm of Fatah, named Black
September for the debacle in Jordan, murdered 11 Israeli
athletes at the Munich Olympic Games. This attracted
international attention for the Palestinian cause, but also
condemnation for the tactics of the PLO.
On March 2, 1973, members of the PLO murdered U.S. Ambassador to
the Sudan Cleo Noel and chargé d'affaires George Moore. The
killers were captured by Sudan and admitted they had received
orders directly from the PLO. U.S. intelligence officials were
believed to also have evidence directly tying Arafat to the
killings, but for unknown reasons suppressed it. All the
terrorists were released
Aftermath of the 1973 War
After Arab armies were defeated yet again on the battlefield in
the October 1973 War, Arafat decided it was necessary to alter
his strategy. The PLO remained committed to the liberation of
Palestine through armed struggle, but decided to shift from
strictly terrorist activities to waging a diplomatic war against
Israel.
Arafat deftly manipulated the organization from one perceived by
the (Western) public as barbaric into one slowly being
considered a movement with legitimate claims. This new tack was
aided by the all-important recognition of the PLO by the United
Nations, which gave the organization a foothold into the
international body’s deliberations. On November 13, 1974, Arafat
made an unprecedented appearance before the UN, wearing his
military uniform with an empty holster [he was forced to remove
his pistol before entering the chamber] around his waist,. and
declared, “Today I have come bearing an olive branch and a
freedom fighter's gun. Do not let the olive branch fall from my
hand.”
Jordan’s claims to represent the Palestinians were then
permanently undercut by the Arab League’s declaration at the
Rabat Conference that the PLO was the sole legitimate
representative of the Palestinian people. This also enhanced the
PLO's standing as a political movement.
Life in Lebanon
While Arafat adopted an increasingly high profile diplomatic
pose, the PLO continued to employ terror against Israel,
primarily from its new base in southern Lebanon. Because of
Lebanon’s weak central government, the PLO was able to operate
virtually as an independent state (called “Fatahland” by
Israel). The PLO helped destabilize Lebanon and contributed to
the civil war, during which Arafat and the PLO were responsible
for the persecution and murder of thousands of Lebanese
citizens.
Palestinian fighters also mounted intermittent cross-border
attacks against Israel, which provoked repeated Israeli
counterattacks in an effort to prevent the Palestinians from
threatening Israelis in the north. Finally, in June 1982, Israel
mounted a full-scale assault that escalated into the Lebanon
War. In September, the United States brokered a cease-fire deal
in which Arafat and his leadership were sent to Tunisia, which
became his base of operations for the next decade.
Although a tiny minority at the time advocated negotiations with
the PLO, the vast majority of Israelis believed that they could
not negotiate with terrorists committed to their destruction.
Israeli officials held out hope that a group of moderate
Palestinian leaders would emerge in the West Bank and Gaza who
would be willing to reach an agreement. The problem was that no
such leadership could emerge because of the influence of the
PLO. Anyone who cooperated with the Israelis was considered a
collaborator and in constant danger of being killed by Arafat’s
supporters.
Even though the PLO itself remained fractured, Arafat was
considered (by virtually everyone but the Israelis and
Americans) to be the spokesmen for the Palestinians inside and
outside the territories. Most countries understood this and were
willing to work with Arafat, and the Europeans, especially,
pressured Israel to accept him as a negotiating partner.
For his part, Arafat refused to express any willingness to
abandon the goal of destroying Israel or using terror to
accomplish his objective. This made it impossible for any
mainstream Israeli politician to advocate talks with Arafat
(though many leftists met with him and other PLO officials).
Exiled in Tunisia
During the 1980s, Arafat became a globe-trotter, jet-setting
from capital to capital to build diplomatic support for the
Palestinian cause. Arafat received assistance from Iraq, which
allowed him to reconstruct the badly-battered PLO. This was
particularly useful during the first uprising when, after first
being surprised by the outbreak and persistence of the violence,
Arafat’s Fatah took control of the revolt in the West Bank and
Gaza Strip.
Arafat also continued to orchestrate international terror
activities. One of the most heinous was the hijacking of the
Achille Lauro cruise ship on October 7, 1985, during which
Palestinian terrorists shot a wheelchair-bound Jewish passenger
named Leon Klinghoffer and dumped his body overboard.
As he had in 1974, however, Arafat shifted tactics again, this
time in response to prodding from the United States. In a
December 13, 1988, address, Arafat accepted UN Security Council
Resolution 242, promised future recognition of Israel, and
renounced “terrorism in all its forms, including state
terrorism.”
This statement satisfied the conditions for opening a dialogue
between the PLO and the United States. Up to this point, the
United. States. had gone along with Israeli opposition to any
formal contacts between American and PLO officials (though many
informal discussions had taken place over the years).
Arafat’s statement was supposed to reflect a shift from one of
the PLO’s primary aims — the destruction of Israel (as in the
Palestinian National Covenant) — toward the establishment of two
separate entities, an Israeli state within the 1949 armistice
lines and a Palestinian state in the West Bank and the Gaza
Strip. However, on April 2, 1989, Arafat was elected by the
Central Council of the Palestine National Council (the governing
body of the PLO) to be the president of the proclaimed State of
Palestine, an entity which laid claim to the whole of Palestine
as defined by the British Mandate.
The PLO squandered the opportunity the United States offered by
continuing terrorist attacks. In May 1990, the Palestine
Liberation Front attacked the beaches near Tel Aviv, aiming to
raid hotels and the U.S. Embassy. This was the final straw for
the Bush Administration, which suspended its dialogue with the
PLO and refocused its attention on efforts to persuade
Palestinians in the territories to talk directly with the
Israelis.
The Peace Process Begins
U.S. policymakers recognized that agreement on
Israeli-Palestinian negotiations wasn’t likely until the Arab
states took steps toward peace with Israel. It was toward this
end that U.S. Secretary of State James Baker shuttled to the
Middle East in 1991 and won agreement from Israel and her
neighbors to attend a regional peace conference.
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir had labored to keep the
PLO out of the negotiations, but he ultimately bowed to the
reality that the Palestinians in the territories were not strong
enough to make decisions and that they were forced to take
directions from Tunis. During the 1991 Madrid Conference, Israel
conducted open negotiations with the PLO for the first time.
No agreements came out of the Madrid talks and elections brought
new leaders to power in Israel and the United States. Shortly
thereafter, Israelis and PLO officials began secretly
negotiating in Oslo and ultimately reached an agreement to give
the Palestinians self-rule in Gaza and Jericho to be followed by
autonomy in other parts of the territories. Under the Oslo
agreement, Israel and the PLO recognized each other in an
exchange of letters between Arafat and Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin.
On September 13, 1993, the Declaration of Principles between the
Israelis and Palestinians was signed in Washington, D.C. The
following year, Arafat was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize along
with Shimon Peres and Yitzhak Rabin.
Explaining Arafat’s Reversal
The price of Israeli recognition of the PLO amounted to Arafat’s
seemingly total capitulation to Israeli demands: recognition of
Israel, renunciation of terrorism, and a promise to revoke the
provisions of its covenant that call for the destruction of the
Jewish State. Israel’s concession was that it legitimized the
PLO on the basis of its words without first testing to see that
its deeds were consistent with them.
One important reason for Arafat’s shift was the collapse of the
Soviet Union. The end of the Cold War eliminated a major source
of financial and political support for the Palestinian cause.
The PLO’s financial problems did not reach crisis proportions,
however, until the Gulf War, when Arafat’s decision to support
Iraq alienated its benefactors in the Gulf, notably Saudi Arabia
and Kuwait. The lack of money put constraints on the PLO’s
activities, in particular its ability to provide benefits to
Palestinians whose loyalty to the organization was largely a
result of these payoffs. In addition, Arafat came under
increasing criticism for mismanagement and corruption.
While the PLO’s resources were declining, Islamic
fundamentalists were growing in power, particularly in the Gaza
Strip. “Moderate Palestinian” leaders in the territories, such
as Faisel Husseini, also were becoming increasingly influential
at Arafat’s expense.
The intifada also had proved a failure. The insurrection had
generated tremendous publicity and tarnished Israel’s image in
1988-89, but the Gulf crisis erased the memories of the clashes
between rock-throwing youths and Israeli soldiers. By 1992, the
fiery intifada was little more than an ember that no longer
attracted media attention or concerned Israeli decision- makers.
The most important factor in determining the timing of Arafat’s
decision was probably the change in American administrations,
which forced Arafat to give up hope that the United States would
impose his conditions on Israel. While George Bush was seen as
the most sympathetic president the Palestinians had ever dealt
with, Bill Clinton was viewed as clearly pro-Israel. This meant
that the Palestinians would have to wait at least four years and
hope another Bush would come along, but they realized this was
unlikely. Thus, the American electoral cycle, combined with his
own age and waning influence, convinced Arafat that his only
chance of retaining power was to demonstrate that he could
deliver an agreement that would finally end his people’s
suffering.
Oslo’s Demise
On July 1, 1994, Arafat arrived in Gaza and assumed control over
the Palestinian Authority (PA) — the provisional entity created
by the Oslo Accords. On January 20, 1996, Arafat was elected
president of the PA (he is also known by the Arabic word ra’is
or “head”), with an overwhelming 83% majority (the only other
candidate was Samiha Khalil). Though he was to serve for only
three years, no other presidential elections have ever been
held.
Despite Arafat’s pledges, violence continued throughout the end
of the decade, with more than 100 Israelis being killed and
1,000 injured in terrorist attacks. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud
Barak then decided that rather than further draw out the
negotiating process with the Palestinians, he would go directly
to the end game and try to achieve a peace agreement. President
Clinton agreed with this idea and called for a summit meeting
with Arafat and Barak at Camp David on July 11-14, 2000, with
the goal of hammering out the end to the conflict.
Clinton hoped to recreate the magic of Jimmy Carter’s successful
summit that helped bring about peace between Israel and Egypt.
In that case, however, Carter had two willing partners. Anwar
Sadat had already demonstrated to Israel that he was prepared to
make peace and, when he accepted the compromises offered at Camp
David, Menachem Begin agreed to give up the Sinai. Clinton found
a different situation; Arafat had done little in the seven years
since Oslo to convince Israelis he had given up his dream of
destroying Israel. Nevertheless, Barak came prepared to offer
the Palestinians independence and offered a series of
formulations to resolve the major issues. Arafat not only
rejected all of the American and Israeli ideas, he refused to
offer any of his own. As a result, Clinton blamed the summit’s
failure on Arafat.
Israel agreed to withdraw from 97% of the West Bank, 100% of the
Gaza Strip, dismantle most of the settlements, and create a
Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital. The only
concessions Arafat had to make were to acknowledge Israeli
sovereignty over the parts of the Western Wall religiously
significant to Jews (that is, not the entire Temple Mount), and
to agree to three early warning stations in the Jordan Valley,
which Israel would withdraw from after six years.
The Palestinian negotiators wanted to accept the deal, but
Arafat rejected it. According to the principal U.S. peace
negotiator, Dennis Ross, the critical issue was the clause in
the agreement that said the conflict would now be over. Arafat,
whose life has been governed by that conflict, Ross said, simply
could not end it.
A series of horrific terror attacks were carried out over the
next several weeks — including two gunmen opening fire on a bus
stop, which killed two and wounded injured dozens more; suicide
bombings in a pedestrian mall in Jerusalem and two others in
Haifa; and a bomb and gunfire attack on a bus. After Israeli
Minister of Tourism Rehavam Ze'evi was assassinated, and more
than 30 other Israelis were murdered and several hundred were
wounded, Israel’s new Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon, declared
Arafat “irrelevant” and, on December 22, 2001, sent troops into
his headquarters in Ramallah to confine him to his office.
Sharon said that Arafat would remain isolated until the killers
of Ze'evi were arrested and extradited to Israel. Arafat refused
and appealed to the international community to pressure Israel
to end its siege.
The level of violence continued to escalate while Arafat ignored
repeated warnings from the Bush Administration to take steps to
prevent attacks against Israelis. By mid-2002, President Bush
was convinced that Arafat was deeply involved in directing
terror, and concluded that the only hope for achieving progress
in the peace process was for the Palestinians to find a new
leader.
Not only the Americans had soured on Arafat. Palestinian youths
became increasingly disillusioned by what they perceived as the
plodding dictatorial and corrupt nature of the PLO, and Arafat's
failure to deliver on his promise to liberate Palestine. Many of
these Palestinians turned to the Muslim fundamentalist
organizations, Islamic Jihad and Hamas, which never accepted the
Oslo accords, and remained committed to the use of terror to
drive the Israelis out of all of “Palestine.”
Arafat’s Revolving Door
Under pressure from the United States, Arafat did periodically
take steps against the violence, condemning attacks and
arresting low-level terrorists. The problem was that his
condemnations were typically in English and couched in
equivocations that accused Israel of terrorism as well. In
Arabic, he would call for a jihad against Israel and a million
martyrs to liberate Jerusalem. The men he arrested were also
released after a few weeks or months, and many subsequently
committed acts of terror. Israel’s view was that Arafat either
could stop the violence and chose not to, or had no control over
militant Palestinians. In either case, they said it made no
sense to negotiate with him since the result was the same —
violence.
Sharon’s view that Arafat directed the terror was given greater
credence in early January 2002, when Israeli forces stopped a
ship, the Karine-A, bound for the Palestinian Authority carrying
50 tons of weapons from Iran that were paid for by one of
Arafat's top aides. The shipment also marked a turning point in
Arafat’s relations with President Bush, who demanded an
explanation for the arms shipment. U.S. intelligence confirmed
Israel’s information that Arafat was behind the smuggling
operation, so when Arafat denied any involvement, the President
knew he was being lied to, and subsequently would not trust
Arafat.
Following a new wave of terror, Israeli tanks rolled into the
major cities of the West Bank on March 28, 2002, surrounding
them and imposing curfews in what was called “Operation
Defensive Shield.” Sharon also went beyond his earlier
castigation of Arafat as irrelevant and labeled him an enemy of
Israel and surrounded his compound with tanks.
The fact that no Arab state came to the Palestinians’ rescue, as
Arafat had expected, showed how thin the support for the
Palestinians really was in Arab capitals. Although he once again
emerged as a survivor, avoiding deportation, which Sharon
favored, and assassination, which the Palestinians feared,
Arafat’s prestige was also severely damaged.
Israel kept Arafat isolated in his Ramallah headquarters for the
next two years. During that time, Arafat continued to rule the
PA, and to receive a steady stream of foreign visitors, but he
lost his position on the world stage and was rarely seen or
heard from.
Reshuffling the Palestinian Deck
The decline in Arafat’s popularity was reinforced by Israel’s
refusal to negotiate with him and the United States’ insistence
that the Palestinian Authority institute reforms. In response,
Arafat reshuffled his cabinet and promised to hold new
elections. Arafat’s actions were still being viewed both by
Palestinians and others as suspect because the cabinet changes
did not reflect any meaningful shift in power.
On June 24, 2002, Bush laid out a plan that called on the
Palestinians to replace Arafat as their leader, reform the
governmental institutions of the Palestinian Authority, end
terrorism, and adopt democratic and free-market principles. The
President agreed with the Israeli view that Arafat had to be
replaced, and that terrorism had to end, before they were
required to act.
The Palestinians were angry and felt betrayed. They did not
believe the United States had the right to tell them who their
leader should be, and continued to insist that Israel had to
withdraw from all the territories before they would end their
violent struggle.
Despite the Palestinians’ response, the Bush plan stimulated
changes in the Palestinian Authority. Desperate to hold onto
power, Arafat offered a reform plan and a timetable for new
elections. Palestinians who had been cowed into silence by
Arafat’s unquestioned authority for the first time began to
speak out about the Palestinian Authority’s corruption and the
need for changes.
Under international pressure, Arafat subsequently appointed
Mahmud Abbas (Abu Mazen) to be the Prime Minister of the
Palestinian Authority. The United States had hoped Abbas would
become the authority of the PA and Arafat would be reduced to a
figurehead. Arafat saw things just the reverse and maintained
authority over all the main levers of power, in particular the
security services. In frustration, Abbas resigned and was
replaced by Ahmed Korei (Abu Alaa), who had no more success than
Abbas in wresting control of the PA from Arafat.
Arafat’s Source of Power
In addition to being a symbol of the Palestinian national
movement, Arafat also derived much of his influence by
controlling a vast financial empire first established by the PLO
through its criminal activities and later augmented by hundreds
of millions of dollars siphoned from donations by the
international community to the Palestinian Authority. Rather
than use these resources to live the kind of luxurious lifestyle
typified by other Arab despots, Arafat has used his money
primarily to buy loyalty.
In 2003, a team of American accountants hired by the PA finance
ministry began examining Arafat’s finances. The team determined
that part of the Palestinian leader’s wealth was in a secret
portfolio worth close to $1 billion — with investments in
companies like a Coca-Cola bottling plant in Ramallah, a
Tunisian cell phone company and venture capital funds in the
U.S. and the Cayman Islands. The head of the investigation
stated that “although the money for the portfolio came from
public funds like Palestinian taxes, virtually none of it was
used for the Palestinian people; it was all controlled by
Arafat. And none of these dealings were made public.”
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) conducted an audit of the
Palestinian Authority and discovered that Arafat diverted $900
million in public funds to a special bank account controlled by
Arafat and the PA Chief Economic Financial Advisor. It was,
therefore, not surprising when Forbes ranked Arafat sixth on its
2003 list of “Kings, Queens and Despots,” estimating his
personal wealth at a minimum of $300 million.
Arafat’s wife Suha reportedly receives a stipend of $100,000
each month from the PA budget. In October 2003, the French
government opened a money-laundering probe of Suha after
prosecutors learned about regular transfers of nearly $1.27
million from Switzerland to Mrs. Arafat’s accounts in Paris.
Arafat’s Final Days
In 1990, Arafat, a Sunni Muslim, married Suha Tawil, a
Palestinian Greek Orthodox Christian who converted to Islam
before marrying him. At the time, Arafat was 62 and Suha 28.
Suha's mother, a Palestinian activist and writer, introduced
Arafat to her daughter, who was then studying at the Sorbonne.
Arafat subsequently hired Suha to work on his personal staff in
Tunis. In July 1995, the couple had a daughter Zawha, named
after Arafat’s deceased mother. After the start of the second
uprising, Suha moved to live with her mother and daughter in
Paris.
Arafat survived several assassination attempts over the years,
as well as a plane crash in a sandstorm in the Libyan desert on
April 7, 1992. For the last several years of his life he was in
failing health and rumored to have Parkinson's Disease. His
conditioned worsened in October 2004. Israel agreed to allow him
to be transferred to a hospital in Paris on October 29 where his
wife stayed by his side. He died November 11, 2004, at age 75.
The cause of death was never announced, and remains a mystery.
Conspiratorial suggestions that Israel was somehow involved were
quickly rejected by Palestinian authorities. Rumors have
circulated for decades that Arafat was gay, and much of the
speculation about his death, and the associated secrecy of the
circumstances, have led to suggestions that he may have died of
AIDS.
After his death, Arafat’s body was flown from Paris to Cairo,
where a ceremony was held in his honor attended by numerous
foreign dignitaries. Arafat’s remains were then flown to
Ramallah where he was interred in a grave near his headquarters.
The Palestinians had wanted to bury Arafat in Jerusalem, but the
Israelis objected. In the short-run, the Palestinians plan to
make Arafat’s grave a shrine, but they have expressed the
intention of moving his body to Jerusalem after achieving
independence and establishing a capital in some part of the holy
city.
For nearly half a century Arafat was the symbol of Palestinian
nationalism. Though he was not a military man, he was rarely
seen out of his uniform in an effort to project strength and his
commitment to armed struggle. He wore his kaffiyeh in a unique
fashion, draped over his shoulder in the shape of Palestine,
that is, all of historic Palestine, including Israel. The
high-profile terrorist attacks he directed helped gain
international attention and sympathy for the Palestinian cause,
but, ultimately, his unwillingness to make the psychological
leap from terrorist mastermind to statesman prevented him from
achieving independence for the Palestinian people, and brought
them decades of suffering that could have been avoided had he
abandoned his revolutionary zeal for liberating Palestine and
agreed to live in peace with Israel.
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