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Posted: June 24, 2007

Trusting Abbas. Again

It was early September 2003, and Mahmoud Abbas, the recently appointed but even more recently resigned prime minister of the Palestinian Authority, was addressing the Palestinian legislative council to explain his departure. I don't work for the Americans or the Israelis, Abbas told his fellow Palestinians. "If they really wanted my government to succeed?as they kept saying?they would have helped me. They didn't help, which proves that they didn't want it to succeed."

Time and again, Abbas had to promise his people that he wanted to keep them united, that he would never engage in a civil war. "It wasn't my intention to confront Hamas or Islamic Jihad," Abbas said back then. "We treated the different organizations as different branches of the Palestinian society"?not rivals or enemies. The government, Abbas said, was preaching for a "hudnah" (cease-fire) with Israel to avoid a Palestinian "civil war."

The 2007 incarnation of Abbas is different but, in many ways, little has changed. That's why, a couple of months ago, he decided to sign the now-nullified Mecca Agreement with Hamas and to share power with them in a national unity government. Using force against Hamas was not what he planned for the Palestinians; it was something others constantly pushed for: Israel, the United States, some of his aides. Eventually, he was forced into it, this time by Hamas itself.

"Critics will say that this is typical of Abbas," wrote Martin Indyk of the Saban Center and a former U.S. ambassador to Israel. The man who caved in Gaza is "a weak leader who would rather appease his challengers than confront them. But perhaps Abbas understands the emerging realities better than they do," Indyk wrote. People talking to Abbas in recent days testify to a newfound resolve, the development of a backbone. They try as hard as they can to sell the story Indyk is pushing: Giving up on Gaza was a smart move, and Hamas has overplayed its hand. Gaza is a mess; let them deal with it.

The trouble is that Abbas' history suggests otherwise. He didn't make a decision; he was pushed into it. And this decision cannot endure for very long. "While Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has declared an end to the national unity government, I have little doubt that he will be talking to Hamas in the relatively near future," wrote Dennis Ross, former special U.S. envoy for the peace process who knows Abbas as well as anyone in the West. "We should not be fooled by Abbas' rhetoric. Sooner or later he will be forced to pursue new power-sharing arrangements between Hamas and Fatah and restore unity among Palestinians," wrote Robert Malley and Aaron David Miller, two other former members of the Clinton team, who rarely agree with Ross.

"[O]ur hope is that President Abbas and that Prime Minister [Salam] Fayyad, who is a good fellow, will be strengthened to the point where they can lead the Palestinians in a different direction," President Bush said Tuesday. Some will take this as a sign of Bush's recognition that it's time to give Abbas some help. But looking at it from a different angle, it's the same old Abbas story. The story of the reluctant leader, dragged almost against his will into the operating room, where he receives a backbone transplant.

So, two questions arise: Does Abbas have the strategy, and does he have the character? Neither question is easy to answer.

Strategy-wise (and some will say this is also a matter of character), in the past Abbas chose to accommodate Hamas and unite the Palestinians, but now he seems to have taken a different path. Ruling the West Bank and leaving Gaza to its fate for a while is an intriguing idea?one that very few people believe can actually work?and lacking other, better, ideas, it might be worth a try. But characterwise, the big question about Abbas is more personal and much more difficult to answer: Does anyone believe that people can change at the age of 72?

A slightly longer version of this article was published in Slate last week.

  1.   Trusting Abbas again 16:39  |  Steve Gure 24/06/07
  2.   Abbas, Hamas, and thecycle of appeasement 17:01  |  D S 24/06/07
  3.   Hilarious 17:22  |  Dan Tana 24/06/07
  4.   Trusting Abbas. Again 17:26  |  Don 24/06/07
  5.   WHAT HAS ABBAS EVER DONE TO BE VIEWED AS A PARTNER OR A LEADER 17:56  |  Leon 24/06/07
  6.   GJ Olmert 18:21  |  NYC 24/06/07
  7.   Do Not Enable Abbas-Fatah-Hamas-Iran-Syria 19:13  |  Gordon 24/06/07
  8.   trusting abbas 21:28  |  iletzter 24/06/07
  9.   The Sad One Choice 03:05  |  Yoram 25/06/07
  10.   The One Sad Course I Regret To Say 03:14  |  Yoram 25/06/07
  11.   IT WON`T WORK, NO SIR 09:26  |  indrajaya 25/06/07
  12.   Abbas and Terrorism 10:43  |  Johnny Weintraub 25/06/07
  13.   Can Abbas Deliver? 11:06  |  isratinian 25/06/07
  14.   Trust Abbas 11:07  |  JewishHeart 25/06/07
  15.   TRUSTING ABBAS 11:14  |  Akram Malik 25/06/07
  16.   # 12, JOHNNY WEINTRAUB 11:27  |  indrajaya 25/06/07
  17.   PLAYING SILLY BEGGARS AGAIN 11:30  |  paul harris 25/06/07
  18.   Abbas Is A Total Waste Of Time. 11:56  |  Terry 25/06/07
  19.   Trusting a Holocaust denier 12:21  |  Jonathan S 25/06/07
  20.   abu mazen.... history 13:02  |  ravi 25/06/07
  21.   Oh, Lord, please have mercy !!!! 13:03  |  Swiss (Dino) 25/06/07
  22.   Repeating the mistakes of the past 13:55  |  Zev 25/06/07
  23.   PALESTINIANS Have No Partner: In Israel. BUSH Needs To Act--NOW! 14:16  |  Proud Pal Defender 25/06/07
  24.   The differnce between smart and stupid 14:52  |  Gene 25/06/07
  25.   ABBAS HAS BECOME AN OBSESSION 15:04  |  Ian 25/06/07
  26.   #23 eh?? abbas the non terrorist supporter proud pat 15:19  |  victor hardman 25/06/07
  27.   Where was Abbas in Black Sept and Lebanon 1? 15:50  |  JewishHeart 25/06/07
  28.   Wrong tactics all round 15:59  |  outsider 25/06/07
  29.   ABBAS DESERVES: A FINAL Peace Deal--NOW! !!To End Hamas--NOW!! 16:10  |  Proud Pal Defender 25/06/07
  30.   Reply to Indrajaya (Post No. 16) 16:27  |  Johnny Weintraub 25/06/07
  31.   Proud Pal Defender 17:22  |  Polybios 25/06/07
  32.   Swiss Dino 17:36  |  Polybios 25/06/07
  33.   # 21 How About Jimmy Carter? 18:08  |  Tony Anthony 25/06/07
  34.   `10 Yoram 18:33  |  Labhras 25/06/07
  35.   # 32 Polybios 18:47  |  Swiss (Dino) 25/06/07
  36.   # 34- Not Aware of Much? 19:29  |  Yoram 25/06/07
  37.   Swiss Dino 19:35  |  Polybios 25/06/07
  38.   trusting Abbas. Again 19:36  |  sarah lascar 25/06/07
  39.   `36 Yoram Have you forgotten your post `10 19:43  |  Labhras 25/06/07
  40.   The lesson he is to learn 20:55  |  Mark Lincoln 25/06/07
  41.   Trusting Abbas ... hrmmph 22:08  |  Diane 25/06/07
  42.   #39- My Posts Are Consistent 22:40  |  Yoram 25/06/07
  43.   Best available 22:45  |  Colin Wright 25/06/07
  44.   40# Mark Lincoln.Was not kind to Abass. 23:34  |  Akram Zekaria 25/06/07
  45.   # 37 Polybios (2nd try) 23:35  |  Swiss (Dino) 25/06/07
  46.   Abbas, Hamas, all the same 23:48  |  Larry 25/06/07
  47.   Abbas, Hamas, all the same Part2 23:52  |  Larry 25/06/07
  48.   Polybios to Proud Pal 00:17  |  Larry 26/06/07
  49.   A New Strategy? 00:21  |  Larry 26/06/07
  50.   A New Strategy? Part2 00:25  |  Larry 26/06/07
  51.   Even a terrorist can change his colours 00:30  |  Larry 26/06/07
  52.   Indrayoyo 00:35  |  Larry 26/06/07
  53.   Larry 00:48  |  Polybios 26/06/07
  54.   INDRAJAYA, you promised Alan Johnston free ten days ago. 01:27  |  Genuine Tosefta 26/06/07
  55.   Israel has no real alternative 01:29  |  Bill 26/06/07
  56.   no he`s proved to be incompetent inadequate and not a leader 02:31  |  ralph 26/06/07
  57.   @32, polybios, where did you find peace loving pals? 05:18  |  vladimir 26/06/07
  58.   It was yogi berra who said 06:19  |  noah 26/06/07
  59.   Just shoot him. 07:43  |  Seth Halpern 26/06/07
  60.   # 54, GENUINE TOSEFTA 08:21  |  indrajaya 26/06/07
  61.   Does he [Abbas] or doesn`t he have the support of the PEOPLE? 09:13  |  Virginia 26/06/07
  62.   # 61, VIRGINIA 10:12  |  indrajaya 26/06/07
  63.   #61 And the answer to YOUR question, Virginia 16:39  |  Johnboy 26/06/07
  64.   Suddenly INDRAJAYA is at a loss for words! 00:11  |  Genuine Tosefta 27/06/07


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