The
Founding
By the first week of February 1969, these differences became sharper, and armed clashes began to erupt between the two opposing factions. Then, on 22 February, a communiqué was issued by the “progressive wing” inside the PFLP, announcing that it was forming the Popular Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, that would operate autonomously and would cut all ties with the
The group continued to operate under the name Popular Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine until 1975, when it decided to adopt the name Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP). Its most prominent leader is
Organizational Structure of the DFLP
The DFLP structure consists of its branches in the occupied
Since holding its first national general congress (also its founding meeting) in August 1970, the DFLP has held seven congresses and four conferences, through which it has developed how it defines itself from “a unified leftist front” (i.e. a revolutionary democratic organization) to a democratic leftist party that is guided by “scientific socialism as its method to analyze social reality and how to work to change it.” It sees itself as “part of the Palestinian working class movement” and as “working to strengthen the relationship between its different factions in all their components in their common struggle.” This is stated in the resolutions of its seventh and most recent congress, convened in stages over the first half of 2018 under the title “The Congress for
The Evolution of the DFLP’s Intellectual and Political Positions
At its founding, the DFLP’s ideology was a mix of ideas taken from the Vietnamese Revolution
, Che Guevara-style guerrilla warfare
, and Trotskyist revolutionary workers’ councils, which were championed in the literature of the European “new left.” This school of thought differentiated itself from the classical Marxism-Leninism
adopted by the Arab communist parties, which the DFLP took issue with for not having taken a “correct internationalist position” on the Palestinian question. (The Arab communist parties supported the political compromise to the conflict based on UN Security Council
Resolution 242
and were seen as not take a “correct” position on armed struggle, which represented “the highest form of struggle.”) The DFLP also criticized the Soviet Union
for its positions on the Palestinian issue, seeing them as reinforcing “
On the political level, since its founding the DFLP considered the Palestinian resistance as facing an inherent crisis that was manifested in its “impromptu and sentimental” relationship to the Palestinian masses. It held that for the resistance to transform into a full-fledged people’s war of liberation, it was necessary that the masses be organized and armed with “a fundamental political consciousness” that linked them to the resistance. In this context, the DFLP expressed its opposition to the operational style of the PFLP, and the international hijackings it carried out, which it considered too reliant on individuals.
The front identified what it considered another manifestation of the “inherent crisis” of the Palestinian resistance: the phenomenon of “scattering” that stemmed from the lack of uniformity among the various strata of the Palestinian middle class, which played the main role in forming resistance groups. Other factors played a role in this scattering, such as the geographic dispersal of the Palestinian people and the embedding of “phony” groups by various Arab regimes inside the resistance movement. Nevertheless, the DFLP has participated in the legislative and executive bodies of the
Since the beginning of May 1969, the DFLP has called for the rejection of “a colonial-Zionist chauvinistic and reactionary solution based on a recognition of the state of Israel” and “to struggle for a popular, democratic solution to the Palestinian and Israeli questions, based on dismantling the Zionist entity and establishing a popular, democratic Palestinian state in which Arabs and Jews would live together without discrimination.” It has called for “initiating a dialogue with all ‘progressive’ Jews in Israel and the rest of the world” and inviting them “to participate in the Palestinian national movement for national liberation in the Palestinians’ armed struggle to eradicate the Zionist entity.” To this end the DFLP did in fact engage in dialogue with a small leftist-Israeli group of Trotskyist leanings called Matzpen .
Based on its conviction that “an organic relationship” exists between the Palestinian and Arab nationalist causes, the DFLP advocated the establishment of “a popular, democratic, nationalist regime” in
However, the defeat and expulsion of the Palestinian resistance in the summer of 1971 drove the DFLP to critically reexamine its policies and led to its proposing to the Palestine National Council during its ninth session in July 1971 the setting up of “a dependable, liberated fulcrum in the occupied territories that would ensure the continuity of the Palestinian revolution.” After the 1973 war
, the front proposed adopting the tactic of struggle in stages, under the influence of two factors. First, most residents of the occupied territories called for the PLO to take responsibility for the fate of these territories that Israel may withdraw from. The
After having played a prominent role in the drafting of the
On the Arab front, the DFLP has consistently supported the autonomy of Arab national liberation movements, including their right to have independent programs, to operate within their national borders, and to establish frameworks to collaborate and work together to maintain good relations with one another. Within the DFLP, activists have been able to rise through its leadership ranks to the very highest rung, irrespective of their national origins. The front also called for working with Arab government bodies as autonomous and equal partners on anything that would serve the Palestinian national cause.
On the international level, the DFLP considers the Palestinian national liberation movement to be part of the progressive, democratic, socialist forces of liberation that struggle against the ambitions of imperialism. It regards globalization as the highest stage of imperialism, and its aim is to tighten its control on the resources of the world’s peoples and countries.
The Contribution of the DFLP to Armed Struggle
Since its early inception, the DFLP formed small units of commandos (fedayeen) that later grew into the “
Throughout the DFLP’s history, its fighters have carried out high-level operations deep inside occupied Palestine launched from “anchor points” that were established in Jordan, the
However, the DFLP’s sway in the Palestinian political arena has witnessed a steady decline since the 1990s; this has affected all leftist groups in Palestinian politics. This decline has resulted from several factors, among them the collapse of the Soviet Union; the changes experienced by the structure of Palestinian society after the establishment of the
Bröning, Michael. Political Parties in Palestine: Leadership and Thought. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013.
Democratic Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. Manchester, UK: Committees for Solidarity with the Palestinian Revolution, 1969.
DFLP website at: dflp-palestine.net.
Palestine Lives: Interviews with Leaders of the Resistance: Khaled al-Hassan, Fateh, Abu Iyad, Fateh, George Habash, PFLP, Nayef Hawatmeh, PDFLP, Sami al-Attari, Sa'iqa, A.W. Sa'id, Arab Liberation Front. Beirut: Palestine Liberation Organization, Research Center, 1973.
Political Program of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine. Beirut: D.F.L.P., Department of International Information, 1978.
Sayigh, Yezid. Armed Struggle and the Search for State: The Palestine National Movement, 1949-1993. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1997.