After the popular resistance to the Israeli occupation of the
Founding
The core group of
As a movement of refugees, Fatah needed support from the Arab world, which it initially found in
In July 1968, during its second conference held in the Syrian town of
Guiding Principles
Fatah was the first national liberation movement since 1948 to be started by Palestinians themselves and that brought together Palestinian activists from different ideological and intellectual backgrounds. It called on all politically active Palestinians to abandon their party affiliations and to be united under its banner as a movement to “organize a vanguard that would rise above factionalism, whims and leanings to include the entire people.” The Arab nationalist slogan prevalent at the time was “Arab unity is the path to the liberation of Palestine.” Fatah reversed it, contending that “the liberation of Palestine is the road to Arab unity”; it acknowledged the pan-Arab dimension of the Palestinian cause but insisted that the Palestinian people had to rely on themselves in their struggle for liberation. For Fatah, the Palestinian revolution would be “Palestine in origin and [pan] Arab in its development.”
The movement’s leadership saw armed struggle as its primary means of liberating Palestine. It modeled itself after the revolutionary struggles in Algeria, Cuba , and Vietnam . It anticipated that this struggle would pass through three stages: the stage of small-scale operations by guerrilla fighters known as fedayeen [“sacrificers”]; the stage of full-scale guerrilla warfare; and the final stage of an all-out people’s war. In the first stage, the movement would rely upon an “indirect” strategy whose aim would be “to wear out the enemy and deplete his capabilities” through targeted guerrilla attacks. In the second, the guerrilla war would be “a dynamic war in a constant state of shift” carried out by “the few relying on the support of the many”; the most important element in this would be “training on how to create a mass support base.” After successfully winning the support of the masses, the movement would gradually shift into a form of “limited engagement” with the enemy. Then, the armed struggle would enter its third and final stage of “the long-term people’s war of liberation.”
Evolution of Fatah’s Experience in Armed Struggle
After Israel occupied the
Soon, the
The bloody clashes that broke out in September 1970 between the Jordanian army and Fatah and the other armed Palestinian organizations led to the elimination of the Palestinian resistance from Jordan in July 1971. Palestinian fighters withdrew to Syria and then Lebanon, where most of them established a longterm presence in the south. Fatah, along with the other resistance groups, had already rejected UN Security Council Resolution 242 of 22 November 1967. They saw it as a “threat” to the continuation of the armed struggle and an obstruction in its path to liberating “the entire” land of Palestine. In the latter half of 1968, the movement formulated the concept of “the democratic Palestinian state.”
The outcome of the October 1973 war
opened a path toward a negotiated political settlement. Fatah (along with other factions in the PLO) expressed its willingness to adopt a “phased” strategy for its struggle. During the PNC’s twelfth session, held 1–8 June 1974 in
Lebanese Civil War
broke out in mid-April 1975, and Egyptian president
Meanwhile, the Israeli government, led by Menachem Begin
, had begun to prepare for a broad ground invasion of Lebanon, which commenced on 4 June 1982. After the PLO forces stood firm and resisted the Israelis for nearly three months in the ensuing war, an agreement was reached where the PLO fighters were allowed to leave Lebanon with their light weapons under the supervision of a multinational force. After Fatah’s departure from Lebanon, its fighters were dispersed over various Arab countries, and the movement lost the “secure base” that had provided it the freedom of political action. Its leadership moved to
Through its second in command Khalil al-Wazir (Abu Jihad), the Fatah leadership played an important role in the actions and organizing of the Intifada, together with the Palestinian leadership in the occupied territories. This drove the Israeli government to order his assassination in Tunis on 16 April 1988, which made him the latest in a number of prominent Fatah leaders who were assassinated at the hands of the Israeli security services or the Fatah Movement-Revolutionary Council. The list that includes Kamal Adwan, Muhammad Youssef al-Najjar, Majed Abu Sharar,
The Fatah leadership also played a significant role in pushing the PNC, during its nineteenth session, held in
On the other hand, the intifada presented Fatah with a major challenge represented by the rise to prominence of Islamists as its primary opponents. The Islamist political program was contrary to the Fatah program, and the Islamists refused to recognize the PLO as the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people.
Abu Iyad (Salah Khalaf). My Home, My Land: A Narrative of the Palestinian Struggle (with Eric Rouleau). New York: New York Times Books, 1981.
Acosta, Teophilo. Al-Fat'h Commandos. Lahore: General Union of Palestinian Students [1969].
Denoyan, Gilbert. El Fath Parle, les Palestiniens contre Israël. Paris: Albin Michel, [1970].
Kurz, Anat N. Fatah and the Politics of Violence: The Institutionalization of a Popular Struggle. Brighton: Sussex Academic Press, 2005.
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.
The Palestine National Liberation Movement: Al-Fateh. Beirut: Palestine National Liberation Movement, al-Fateh, Information Office, 1969.
Revolution until Victory. Amman: Palestine National Liberation Movement, al-Fateh, 1970.
Sayigh, Yezid. Armed Struggle and the Search for State: the Palestine National Movement, 1949-1993. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1997.
Wazir, Khalil (Abu Jihad) [Interview]. “Khalil al-Wazir: The 17th Palestine National Council”. Journal of Palestine studies. vol. 14, no. 2 (winter 1985): 3-12.
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