The Al Deira Hotel, in Gaza
City, is a haven of calm
in a land beset by poverty, fear, and violence. In the middle of December 2007,
I sit in the hotel's airy restaurant, its windows open to the Mediterranean,
and listen to a slight, bearded man named Mazen Asad abu Dan describe the
suffering he endured 11 months before at the hands of his fellow Palestinians.
Abu Dan, 28, is a member of Hamas, the Iranian-backed Islamist organization
that has been designated a terrorist group by the United States, but I have a good
reason for taking him at his word: I've seen the video.
It shows abu
Dan kneeling, his hands bound behind his back, and screaming as his captors
pummel him with a black iron rod. "I lost all the skin on my back from the
beatings," he says. "Instead of medicine, they poured perfume on my wounds. It
felt as if they had taken a sword to my injuries."
On January 26, 2007,
abu Dan, a student at the Islamic University of Gaza, had gone to a local
cemetery with his father and five others to erect a headstone for his
grandmother. When they arrived, however, they found themselves surrounded by 30
armed men from Hamas's rival, Fatah, the party of Palestinian president Mahmoud
Abbas. "They took us to a house in north Gaza,"
abu Dan says. "They covered our eyes and took us to a room on the sixth floor."
The video
reveals a bare room with white walls and a black-and-white tiled floor, where
abu Dan's father is forced to sit and listen to his son's shrieks of pain.
Afterward, abu Dan says, he and two of the others were driven to a market
square. "They told us they were going to kill us. They made us sit on the
ground." He rolls up the legs of his trousers to display the circular scars
that are evidence of what happened next: "They shot our knees and feet-five
bullets each. I spent four months in a wheelchair."
Abu Dan had no
way of knowing it, but his tormentors had a secret ally: the administration of
President George W. Bush.
A clue comes
toward the end of the video, which was found in a Fatah security building by
Hamas fighters last June. Still bound and blindfolded, the prisoners are made
to echo a rhythmic chant yelled by one of their captors: "By blood, by soul, we
sacrifice ourselves for Muhammad Dahlan! Long live Muhammad Dahlan!"
There is no one
more hated among Hamas members than Muhammad Dahlan, long Fatah's resident
strongman in Gaza.
Dahlan, who most recently served as Abbas's national-security adviser, has
spent more than a decade battling Hamas. Dahlan insists that abu Dan was
tortured without his knowledge, but the video is proof that his followers'
methods can be brutal.
Bush has met
Dahlan on at least three occasions. After talks at the White House in July
2003, Bush publicly praised Dahlan as "a good, solid leader." In private, say
multiple Israeli and American officials, the U.S. president described him as
"our guy."
The United States has
been involved in the affairs of the Palestinian territories since the Six-Day
War of 1967, when Israel
captured Gaza from Egypt
and the West Bank from Jordan.
With the 1993 Oslo
accords, the territories acquired limited autonomy, under a president, who has
executive powers, and an elected parliament. Israel
retains a large military presence in the West Bank, but it withdrew from Gaza in 2005.
In recent
months, President Bush has repeatedly stated that the last great ambition of
his presidency is to broker a deal that would create a viable Palestinian state
and bring peace to the Holy Land. "People say,
‘Do you think it's possible, during your presidency?' " he told an audience in Jerusalem on January 9.
"And the answer is: I'm very hopeful."
The next day,
in the West Bank capital of Ramallah, Bush acknowledged that there was a rather
large obstacle standing in the way of this goal: Hamas's complete control of
Gaza, home to some 1.5 million Palestinians, where it seized power in a bloody
coup d'état in June 2007. Almost every day, militants fire rockets from Gaza into neighboring
Israeli towns, and President Abbas is powerless to stop them. His authority is
limited to the West Bank.
It's "a tough
situation," Bush admitted. "I don't know whether you can solve it in a year or
not." What Bush neglected to mention was his own role in creating this mess.
According to
Dahlan, it was Bush who had pushed legislative elections in the Palestinian
territories in January 2006, despite warnings that Fatah was not ready. After
Hamas-whose 1988 charter committed it to the goal of driving Israel into the
sea-won control of the parliament, Bush made another, deadlier miscalculation.
Vanity Fair has obtained
confidential documents, since corroborated by sources in the U.S. and Palestine,
which lay bare a covert initiative, approved by Bush and implemented by
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Deputy National Security Adviser
Elliott Abrams, to provoke a Palestinian civil war. The plan was for forces led
by Dahlan, and armed with new weapons supplied at America's behest, to give Fatah the
muscle it needed to remove the democratically elected Hamas-led government from
power. (The State Department declined to comment.)
But the secret
plan backfired, resulting in a further setback for American foreign policy
under Bush. Instead of driving its enemies out of power, the U.S.-backed Fatah
fighters inadvertently provoked Hamas to seize total control of Gaza.
Some sources
call the scheme "Iran-contra 2.0," recalling that Abrams was convicted (and
later pardoned) for withholding information from Congress during the original
Iran-contra scandal under President Reagan. There are echoes of other past
misadventures as well: the C.I.A.'s 1953 ouster of an elected prime minister in
Iran, which set the stage for the 1979 Islamic revolution there; the aborted
1961 Bay of Pigs invasion, which gave Fidel Castro an excuse to solidify his
hold on Cuba; and the contemporary tragedy in Iraq.
Within the Bush
administration, the Palestinian policy set off a furious debate. One of its
critics is David Wurmser, the avowed neoconservative, who resigned as Vice
President Dick Cheney's chief Middle East adviser in July 2007, a month after
the Gaza coup.
Wurmser accuses
the Bush administration of "engaging in a dirty war in an effort to provide a
corrupt dictatorship [led by Abbas] with victory." He believes that Hamas had
no intention of taking Gaza
until Fatah forced its hand. "It looks to me that what happened wasn't so much
a coup by Hamas but an attempted coup by Fatah that was pre-empted before it
could happen," Wurmser says.
The botched
plan has rendered the dream of Middle East
peace more remote than ever, but what really galls neocons such as Wurmser is
the hypocrisy it exposed. "There is a stunning disconnect between the
president's call for Middle East democracy and
this policy," he says. "It directly contradicts it."
Preventive
Security
Bush was not
the first American president to form a relationship with Muhammad Dahlan. "Yes,
I was close to Bill Clinton," Dahlan says. "I met Clinton many times with [the late Palestinian
leader Yasser] Arafat." In the wake of the 1993 Oslo
accords, Clinton sponsored a series of
diplomatic meetings aimed at reaching a permanent Middle
East peace, and Dahlan became the Palestinians' negotiator on
security.
As I talk to
Dahlan in a five-star Cairo
hotel, it's easy to see the qualities that might make him attractive to
American presidents. His appearance is immaculate, his English is serviceable,
and his manner is charming and forthright. Had he been born into privilege,
these qualities might not mean much. But Dahlan was born-on September 29, 1961-in the
teeming squalor of Gaza's
Khan Younis refugee camp, and his education came mostly from the street. In
1981 he helped found Fatah's youth movement, and he later played a leading role
in the first intifada-the five-year revolt that began in 1987 against the
Israeli occupation. In all, Dahlan says, he spent five years in Israeli jails.
From the time
of its inception as the Palestinian branch of the international Muslim
Brotherhood, in late 1987, Hamas had represented a threatening challenge to
Arafat's secular Fatah party. At Oslo,
Fatah made a public commitment to the search for peace, but Hamas continued to
practice armed resistance. At the same time, it built an impressive base of
support through schooling and social programs.
The rising
tensions between the two groups first turned violent in the early 1990s-with
Muhammad Dahlan playing a central role. As director of the Palestinian
Authority's most feared paramilitary force, the Preventive Security Service,
Dahlan arrested some 2,000 Hamas members in 1996 in the Gaza Strip after the
group launched a wave of suicide bombings. "Arafat had decided to arrest Hamas
military leaders, because they were working against his interests, against the
peace process, against the Israeli withdrawal, against everything," Dahlan
says. "He asked the security services to do their job, and I have done that
job."
It was not, he
admits, "popular work." For many years Hamas has said that Dahlan's forces
routinely tortured detainees. One alleged method was to sodomize prisoners with
soda bottles. Dahlan says these stories are exaggerated: "Definitely there were
some mistakes here and there. But no one person died in Preventive Security.
Prisoners got their rights. Bear in mind that I am an ex-detainee of the
Israelis'. No one was personally humiliated, and I never killed anyone the way
[Hamas is] killing people on a daily basis now." Dahlan points out that Arafat
maintained a labyrinth of security services-14 in all-and says the Preventive
Security Service was blamed for abuses perpetrated by other units.
Dahlan worked
closely with the F.B.I. and the C.I.A., and he developed a warm relationship
with Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet, a Clinton appointee who stayed on under Bush
until July 2004. "He's simply a great and fair man," Dahlan says. "I'm still in
touch with him from time to time."
"Everyone Was
Against the Elections"
In a speech in
the White House Rose Garden on June 24, 2002, President Bush announced that
American policy in the Middle East was turning
in a fundamentally new direction.
Arafat was
still in power at the time, and many in the U.S.
and Israel blamed him for
wrecking Clinton's
micro-managed peace efforts by launching the second intifada-a renewed revolt,
begun in 2000, in which more than 1,000 Israelis and 4,500 Palestinians had
died. Bush said he wanted to give Palestinians the chance to choose new
leaders, ones who were not "compromised by terror." In place of Arafat's
all-powerful presidency, Bush said, "the Palestinian parliament should have the
full authority of a legislative body."
Arafat died in
November 2004, and Abbas, his replacement as Fatah leader, was elected
president in January 2005. Elections for the Palestinian parliament, known
officially as the Legislative Council, were originally set for July 2005, but
later postponed by Abbas until January 2006.
Dahlan says he
warned his friends in the Bush administration that Fatah still wasn't ready for
elections in January. Decades of self-preservationist rule by Arafat had turned
the party into a symbol of corruption and inefficiency-a perception Hamas found
it easy to exploit. Splits within Fatah weakened its position further: in many
places, a single Hamas candidate ran against several from Fatah.
"Everyone was
against the elections," Dahlan says. Everyone except Bush. "Bush decided, ‘I
need an election. I want elections in the Palestinian Authority.' Everyone is
following him in the American administration, and everyone is nagging Abbas,
telling him, ‘The president wants elections.' Fine. For what purpose?"
The elections
went forward as scheduled. On January 25, Hamas won 56 percent of the seats in
the Legislative Council.
Few inside the U.S.
administration had predicted the result, and there was no contingency plan to
deal with it. "I've asked why nobody saw it coming," Condoleezza Rice told
reporters. "I don't know anyone who wasn't caught off guard by Hamas's strong
showing."
"Everyone
blamed everyone else," says an official with the Department of Defense. "We sat
there in the Pentagon and said, ‘Who the fuck recommended this?' "
In public, Rice tried to look on the bright side of the Hamas victory.
"Unpredictability," she said, is "the nature of big historic change." Even as
she spoke, however, the Bush administration was rapidly revising its attitude
toward Palestinian democracy.
Some analysts
argued that Hamas had a substantial moderate wing that could be strengthened if
America
coaxed it into the peace process. Notable Israelis-such as Ephraim Halevy, the
former head of the Mossad intelligence agency-shared this view. But if America paused
to consider giving Hamas the benefit of the doubt, the moment was "milliseconds
long," says a senior State Department official. "The administration spoke with
one voice: ‘We have to squeeze these guys.' With Hamas's election victory, the
freedom agenda was dead."
The first step,
taken by the Middle East diplomatic "Quartet"-the U.S., the European Union,
Russia, and the United Nations-was to demand that the new Hamas government
renounce violence, recognize Israel's right to exist, and accept the terms of
all previous agreements. When Hamas refused, the Quartet shut off the faucet of
aid to the Palestinian Authority, depriving it of the means to pay salaries and
meet its annual budget of roughly $2 billion.
Israel clamped down on
Palestinians' freedom of movement, especially into and out of the
Hamas-dominated Gaza Strip. Israel
also detained 64 Hamas officials, including Legislative Council members and
ministers, and even launched a military campaign into Gaza after one of its soldiers was kidnapped.
Through it all, Hamas and its new government, led by Prime Minister Ismail
Haniyeh, proved surprisingly resilient.
Washington reacted with dismay
when Abbas began holding talks with Hamas in the hope of establishing a "unity
government." On October
4, 2006, Rice traveled to Ramallah to see Abbas. They met at the
Muqata, the new presidential headquarters that rose from the ruins of Arafat's
compound, which Israel
had destroyed in 2002.
America's leverage in
Palestinian affairs was much stronger than it had been in Arafat's time. Abbas
had never had a strong, independent base, and he desperately needed to restore
the flow of foreign aid-and, with it, his power of patronage. He also knew that
he could not stand up to Hamas without Washington's
help.
At their joint
press conference, Rice smiled as she expressed her nation's "great admiration"
for Abbas's leadership. Behind closed doors, however, Rice's tone was sharper,
say officials who witnessed their meeting. Isolating Hamas just wasn't working,
she reportedly told Abbas, and America
expected him to dissolve the Haniyeh government as soon as possible and hold
fresh elections.
Abbas, one
official says, agreed to take action within two weeks. It happened to be
Ramadan, the month when Muslims fast during daylight hours. With dusk
approaching, Abbas asked Rice to join him for iftar-a snack to break the
fast.
Afterward,
according to the official, Rice underlined her position: "So we're agreed?
You'll dissolve the government within two weeks?"
"Maybe not two
weeks. Give me a month. Let's wait until after the Eid," he said, referring to
the three-day celebration that marks the end of Ramadan. (Abbas's spokesman
said via e-mail: "According to our records, this is incorrect.")
Rice got into
her armored S.U.V., where, the official claims, she told an American colleague,
"That damned iftar has cost us another two weeks of Hamas government."
"We Will Be
There to Support You"
Weeks passed
with no sign that Abbas was ready to do America's bidding. Finally, another
official was sent to Ramallah. Jake Walles, the consul general in Jerusalem, is a career foreign-service officer with many
years' experience in the Middle East. His
purpose was to deliver a barely varnished ultimatum to the Palestinian
president.
We know what
Walles said because a copy was left behind, apparently by accident, of the
"talking points" memo prepared for him by the State Department. The document
has been authenticated by U.S.
and Palestinian officials.
"We need to
understand your plans regarding a new [Palestinian Authority] government,"
Walles's script said. "You told Secretary Rice you would be prepared to move
ahead within two to four weeks of your meeting. We believe that the time has
come for you to move forward quickly and decisively."
The memo left
no doubt as to what kind of action the U.S. was seeking: "Hamas should be given
a clear choice, with a clear deadline: ... they either accept a new government
that meets the Quartet principles, or they reject it The consequences of Hamas'
decision should also be clear: If Hamas does not agree within the prescribed
time, you should make clear your intention to declare a state of emergency and
form an emergency government explicitly committed to that platform."
Walles and
Abbas both knew what to expect from Hamas if these instructions were followed:
rebellion and bloodshed. For that reason, the memo states, the U.S. was
already working to strengthen Fatah's security forces. "If you act along these
lines, we will support you both materially and politically," the script said.
"We will be there to support you." Enlarge image of memo.
Abbas was also
encouraged to "strengthen [his] team" to include "credible figures of strong standing
in the international community." Among those the U.S. wanted brought in, says an
official who knew of the policy, was Muhammad Dahlan.
On paper, the
forces at Fatah's disposal looked stronger than those of Hamas. There were some
70,000 men in the tangle of 14 Palestinian security services that Arafat had
built up, at least half of those in Gaza.
After the legislative elections, Hamas had expected to assume command of these
forces, but Fatah maneuvered to keep them under its control. Hamas, which already
had 6,000 or so irregulars in its militant al-Qassam Brigade, responded by
forming the 6,000-troop Executive Force in Gaza, but that still left it with
far fewer fighters than Fatah.
In reality,
however, Hamas had several advantages. To begin with, Fatah's security forces
had never really recovered from Operation Defensive Shield, Israel's massive 2002 re-invasion of the West Bank in response to the second intifada. "Most of
the security apparatus had been destroyed," says Youssef Issa, who led the Preventive
Security Service under Abbas.
The irony of
the blockade on foreign aid after Hamas's legislative victory, meanwhile, was
that it prevented only Fatah from paying its soldiers. "We are the ones who
were not getting paid," Issa says, "whereas they were not affected by the
siege." Ayman Daraghmeh, a Hamas Legislative Council member in the West Bank, agrees. He puts the amount of Iranian aid to
Hamas in 2007 alone at $120 million. "This is only a fraction of what it should give," he insists. In Gaza, another Hamas
member tells me the number was closer to $200 million.
The result was
becoming apparent: Fatah could not control Gaza's streets-or even protect its own
personnel.
At about 1:30
p.m. on September
15, 2006, Samira Tayeh sent a text message to her husband, Jad
Tayeh, the director of foreign relations for the Palestinian intelligence
service and a member of Fatah. "He didn't reply," she says. "I tried to call
his mobile [phone], but it was switched off. So I called his deputy, Mahmoun,
and he didn't know where he was. That's when I decided to go to the hospital."
Samira, a slim,
elegant 40-year-old dressed from head to toe in black, tells me the story in a
Ramallah café in December 2007. Arriving at the Al Shifa hospital, "I went
through the morgue door. Not for any reason-I just didn't know the place. I saw
there were all these intelligence guards there. There was one I knew. He saw me
and he said, ‘Put her in the car.' That's when I knew something had happened to
Jad."
Tayeh had left
his office in a car with four aides. Moments later, they found themselves being
pursued by an S.U.V. full of armed, masked men. About 200 yards from the home
of Prime Minister Haniyeh, the S.U.V. cornered the car. The masked men opened
fire, killing Tayeh and all four of his colleagues.
Hamas said it
had nothing to do with the murders, but Samira had reason to believe otherwise.
At three a.m. on June
16, 2007, during the Gaza
takeover, six Hamas gunmen forced their way into her home and fired bullets
into every photo of Jad they could find. The next day, they returned and
demanded the keys to the car in which he had died, claiming that it belonged to
the Palestinian Authority.
Fearing for her
life, she fled across the border and then into the West
Bank, with only the clothes she was wearing and her passport,
driver's license, and credit card.
"Very Clever
Warfare"
Fatah's
vulnerability was a source of grave concern to Dahlan. "I made a lot of
activities to give Hamas the impression that we were still strong and we had the
capacity to face them," he says. "But I knew in my heart it wasn't true." He
had no official security position at the time, but he belonged to parliament
and retained the loyalty of Fatah members in Gaza. "I used my image, my power." Dahlan
says he told Abbas that "Gaza
needs only a decision for Hamas to take over." To prevent that from happening,
Dahlan waged "very clever warfare" for many months.
According to
several alleged victims, one of the tactics this "warfare" entailed was to
kidnap and torture members of Hamas's Executive Force. (Dahlan denies Fatah
used such tactics, but admits "mistakes" were made.) Abdul Karim al-Jasser, a
strapping man of 25, says he was the first such victim. "It was on October 16,
still Ramadan," he says. "I was on my way to my sister's house for iftar.
Four guys stopped me, two of them with guns. They forced me to accompany them
to the home of Aman abu Jidyan," a Fatah leader close to Dahlan. (Abu Jidyan
would be killed in the June uprising.)
The first phase
of torture was straightforward enough, al-Jasser says: he was stripped naked,
bound, blindfolded, and beaten with wooden poles and plastic pipes. "They put a
piece of cloth in my mouth to stop me screaming." His interrogators forced him
to answer contradictory accusations: one minute they said that he had
collaborated with Israel,
the next that he had fired Qassam rockets against it.
But the worst
was yet to come. "They brought an iron bar," al-Jasser says, his voice suddenly
hesitant. We are speaking inside his home in Gaza, which is experiencing one of its
frequent power outages. He points to the propane-gas lamp that lights the room.
"They put the bar in the flame of a lamp like this. When it was red, they took
the covering off my eyes. Then they pressed it against my skin. That was the
last thing I remember."
When he came
to, he was still in the room where he had been tortured. A few hours later, the
Fatah men handed him over to Hamas, and he was taken to the hospital. "I could
see the shock in the eyes of the doctors who entered the room," he says. He
shows me photos of purple third-degree burns wrapped like towels around his
thighs and much of his lower torso. "The doctors told me that if I had been
thin, not chubby, I would have died. But I wasn't alone. That same night that I
was released, abu Jidyan's men fired five bullets into the legs of one of my
relatives. We were in the same ward in the hospital."
Dahlan says he
did not order al-Jasser's torture: "The only order I gave was to defend
ourselves. That doesn't mean there wasn't torture, some things that went wrong,
but I did not know about this."
The dirty war
between Fatah and Hamas continued to gather momentum throughout the autumn,
with both sides committing atrocities. By the end of 2006, dozens were dying
each month. Some of the victims were noncombatants. In December, gunmen opened
fire on the car of a Fatah intelligence official, killing his three young
children and their driver.
There was still
no sign that Abbas was ready to bring matters to a head by dissolving the Hamas
government. Against this darkening background, the U.S. began direct security
talks with Dahlan.
"He's Our Guy"
In 2001,
President Bush famously said that he had looked Russian president Vladimir
Putin in the eye, gotten "a sense of his soul," and found him to be
"trustworthy." According to three U.S. officials, Bush made a similar judgment
about Dahlan when they first met, in 2003. All three officials recall hearing
Bush say, "He's our guy."
They say this
assessment was echoed by other key figures in the administration, including
Rice and Assistant Secretary David Welch, the man in charge of Middle East
policy at the State Department. "David Welch didn't fundamentally care about
Fatah," one of his colleagues says. "He cared about results, and [he supported]
whatever son of a bitch you had to support. Dahlan was the son of a bitch we
happened to know best. He was a can-do kind of person. Dahlan was our guy."
Avi Dichter,
Israel's internal-security minister and the former head of its Shin Bet
security service, was taken aback when he heard senior American officials refer
to Dahlan as "our guy." "I thought to myself, The president of the United
States is making a strange judgment here," says Dichter.
Lieutenant
General Keith Dayton, who had been appointed the U.S. security coordinator for
the Palestinians in November 2005, was in no position to question the
president's judgment of Dahlan. His only prior experience with the Middle East
was as director of the Iraq Survey Group, the body that looked for Saddam
Hussein's elusive weapons of mass destruction.
In November
2006, Dayton met Dahlan for the first of a long series of talks in Jerusalem
and Ramallah. Both men were accompanied by aides. From the outset, says an
official who took notes at the meeting, Dayton was pushing two overlapping
agendas.
"We need to
reform the Palestinian security apparatus," Dayton said, according to the
notes. "But we also need to build up your forces in order to take on Hamas."
Dahlan replied
that, in the long run, Hamas could be defeated only by political means. "But if
I am going to confront them," he added, "I need substantial resources. As
things stand, we do not have the capability."
The two men
agreed that they would work toward a new Palestinian security plan. The idea
was to simplify the confusing web of Palestinian security forces and have
Dahlan assume responsibility for all of them in the newly created role of
Palestinian national-security adviser. The Americans would help supply weapons
and training.
As part of the
reform program, according to the official who was present at the meetings,
Dayton said he wanted to disband the Preventive Security Service, which was
widely known to be engaged in kidnapping and torture. At a meeting in Dayton's
Jerusalem office in early December, Dahlan ridiculed the idea. "The only
institution now protecting Fatah and the Palestinian Authority in Gaza is the
one you want removed," he said.
Dayton softened
a little. "We want to help you," he said. "What do you need?"
"Iran-Contra
2.0"
Under Bill
Clinton, Dahlan says, commitments of security assistance "were always
delivered, absolutely." Under Bush, he was about to discover, things were
different. At the end of 2006, Dayton promised an immediate package worth $86.4
million-money that, according to a U.S. document published by Reuters on January 5, 2007,
would be used to "dismantle the infrastructure of terrorism and establish law
and order in the West Bank and Gaza." U.S. officials even told reporters the
money would be transferred "in the coming days."
The cash never
arrived. "Nothing was disbursed," Dahlan says. "It was approved and it was in
the news. But we received not a single penny."
Any notion that
the money could be transferred quickly and easily had died on Capitol Hill,
where the payment was blocked by the House Subcommittee on the Middle East and
South Asia. Its members feared that military aid to the Palestinians might end
up being turned against Israel.
Dahlan did not
hesitate to voice his exasperation. "I spoke to Condoleezza Rice on several
occasions," he says. "I spoke to Dayton, to the consul general, to everyone in
the administration I knew. They said, ‘You have a convincing argument.' We were
sitting in Abbas's office in Ramallah, and I explained the whole thing to
Condi. And she said, ‘Yes, we have to make an effort to do this. There's no
other way.' " At
some of these meetings, Dahlan says, Assistant Secretary Welch and Deputy
National-Security Adviser Abrams were also present.
The
administration went back to Congress, and a reduced, $59 million package for
nonlethal aid was approved in April 2007. But as Dahlan knew, the Bush team had
already spent the past months exploring alternative, covert means of getting
him the funds and weapons he wanted. The reluctance of Congress meant that "you
had to look for different pots, different sources of money," says a Pentagon
official.
A State
Department official adds, "Those in charge of implementing the policy were
saying, ‘Do whatever it takes. We have to be in a position for Fatah to defeat
Hamas militarily, and only Muhammad Dahlan has the guile and the muscle to do
this.' The expectation was that this was where it would end up-with a military
showdown." There were, this official says, two "parallel programs"-the overt
one, which the administration took to Congress, "and a covert one, not only to
buy arms but to pay the salaries of security personnel."
In essence, the
program was simple. According to State Department officials, beginning in the
latter part of 2006, Rice initiated several rounds of phone calls and personal
meetings with leaders of four Arab nations-Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and the
United Arab Emirates. She asked them to bolster Fatah by providing military
training and by pledging funds to buy its forces lethal weapons. The money was
to be paid directly into accounts controlled by President Abbas.
The scheme bore
some resemblance to the Iran-contra scandal, in which members of Ronald
Reagan's administration sold arms to Iran, an enemy of the U.S. The money was
used to fund the contra rebels in Nicaragua, in violation of a congressional
ban. Some of the money for the contras, like that for Fatah, was furnished by
Arab allies as a result of U.S. lobbying.
But there are
also important differences-starting with the fact that Congress never passed a
measure expressly prohibiting the supply of aid to Fatah and Dahlan. "It was
close to the margins," says a former intelligence official with experience in
covert programs. "But it probably wasn't illegal."
Legal or not,
arms shipments soon began to take place. In late December 2006, four Egyptian
trucks passed through an Israeli-controlled crossing into Gaza, where their
contents were handed over to Fatah. These included 2,000 Egyptian-made
automatic rifles, 20,000 ammunition clips, and two million bullets. News of the
shipment leaked, and Benjamin Ben-Eliezer, an Israeli Cabinet member, said on
Israeli radio that the guns and ammunition would give Abbas "the ability to
cope with those organizations which are trying to ruin everything"-namely,
Hamas.
Avi Dichter
points out that all weapons shipments had to be approved by Israel, which was
understandably hesitant to allow state-of-the-art arms into Gaza. "One thing's
for sure, we weren't talking about heavy weapons," says a State Department
official. "It was small arms, light machine guns, ammunition."
Perhaps the
Israelis held the Americans back. Perhaps Elliott Abrams himself held back,
unwilling to run afoul of U.S. law for a second time. One of his associates
says Abrams, who declined to comment for this article, felt conflicted over the
policy-torn between the disdain he felt for Dahlan and his overriding loyalty
to the administration. He wasn't the only one: "There were severe fissures
among neoconservatives over this," says Cheney's former adviser David Wurmser.
"We were ripping each other to pieces."
During a trip
to the Middle East in January 2007, Rice found it difficult to get her partners
to honor their pledges. "The Arabs felt the U.S. was not serious," one official
says. "They knew that if the Americans were serious they would put their own
money where their mouth was. They didn't have faith in America's ability to
raise a real force. There was no follow-through. Paying was different than
pledging, and there was no plan."
This official
estimates that the program raised "a few payments of $30 million"-most of it,
as other sources agree, from the United Arab Emirates. Dahlan himself says the
total was only $20 million, and confirms that "the Arabs made many more pledges
than they ever paid." Whatever the exact amount, it was not enough.
Plan B
On February 1, 2007,
Dahlan took his "very clever warfare" to a new level when Fatah forces under
his control stormed the Islamic University of Gaza, a Hamas stronghold, and set
several buildings on fire. Hamas retaliated the next day with a wave of attacks
on police stations.
Unwilling to
preside over a Palestinian civil war, Abbas blinked. For weeks, King Abdullah
of Saudi Arabia had been trying to persuade him to meet with Hamas in Mecca and
formally establish a national unity government. On February 6, Abbas went,
taking Dahlan with him. Two days later, with Hamas no closer to recognizing
Israel, a deal was struck.
Under its
terms, Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas would remain prime minister while allowing Fatah
members to occupy several important posts. When the news hit the streets that
the Saudis had promised to pay the Palestinian Authority's salary bills, Fatah
and Hamas members in Gaza celebrated together by firing their Kalashnikovs into
the air.
Once again, the
Bush administration had been taken by surprise. According to a State Department
official, "Condi was apoplectic." A remarkable documentary record, revealed
here for the first time, shows that the U.S. responded by redoubling the
pressure on its Palestinian allies.
The State
Department quickly drew up an alternative to the new unity government. Known as
"Plan B," its objective, according to a State Department memo that has been
authenticated by an official who knew of it at the time, was to "enable [Abbas]
and his supporters to reach a defined endgame by the end of 2007 The endgame
should produce a [Palestinian Authority] government through democratic means
that accepts Quartet principles."
Like the Walles
ultimatum of late 2006, Plan B called for Abbas to "collapse the government" if
Hamas refused to alter its attitude toward Israel. From there, Abbas could call
early elections or impose an emergency government. It is unclear whether, as
president, Abbas had the constitutional authority to dissolve an elected
government led by a rival party, but the Americans swept that concern aside.
Security
considerations were paramount, and Plan B had explicit prescriptions for
dealing with them. For as long as the unity government remained in office, it
was essential for Abbas to maintain "independent control of key security
forces." He must "avoid Hamas integration with these services, while
eliminating the Executive Force or mitigating the challenges posed by its
continued existence."
In a clear
reference to the covert aid expected from the Arabs, the memo made this
recommendation for the next six to nine months: "Dahlan oversees effort in
coordination with General Dayton and Arab [nations] to train and equip
15,000-man force under President Abbas's control to establish internal law and
order, stop terrorism and deter extralegal forces."
The Bush
administration's goals for Plan B were elaborated in a document titled "An
Action Plan for the Palestinian Presidency." This action plan went through
several drafts and was developed by the U.S., the Palestinians, and the
government of Jordan. Sources agree, however, that it originated in the State
Department.
The early
drafts stressed the need for bolstering Fatah's forces in order to "deter"
Hamas. The "desired outcome" was to give Abbas "the capability to take the required
strategic political decisions ... such as dismissing the cabinet, establishing an
emergency cabinet."
The drafts
called for increasing the "level and capacity" of 15,000 of Fatah's existing
security personnel while adding 4,700 troops in seven new "highly trained
battalions on strong policing." The plan also promised to arrange "specialized
training abroad," in Jordan and Egypt, and pledged to "provide the security
personnel with the necessary equipment and arms to carry out their missions."
A detailed
budget put the total cost for salaries, training, and "the needed security
equipment, lethal and non-lethal," at $1.27 billion over five years. The plan
states: "The costs and overall budget were developed jointly with General
Dayton's team and the Palestinian technical team for reform"-a unit established
by Dahlan and led by his friend and policy aide Bassil Jaber. Jaber confirms
that the document is an accurate summary of the work he and his colleagues did
with Dayton. "The plan was to create a security establishment that could
protect and strengthen a peaceful Palestinian state living side by side with
Israel," he says.
The final draft
of the Action Plan was drawn up in Ramallah by officials of the Palestinian
Authority. This version was identical to the earlier drafts in all meaningful
ways but one: it presented the plan as if it had been the Palestinians' idea.
It also said the security proposals had been "approved by President Mahmoud
Abbas after being discussed and agreed [to] by General Dayton's team."
On April 30, 2007,
a portion of one early draft was leaked to a Jordanian newspaper, Al-Majd.
The secret was out. From Hamas's perspective, the Action Plan could amount to
only one thing: a blueprint for a U.S.-backed Fatah coup.
"We Are Late
in the Ball Game Here"
The formation
of the unity government had brought a measure of calm to the Palestinian
territories, but violence erupted anew after Al-Majd published its story
on the Action Plan. The timing was unkind to Fatah, which, to add to its usual
disadvantages, was without its security chief. Ten days earlier, Dahlan had
left Gaza for Berlin, where he'd had surgery on both knees. He was due to spend
the next eight weeks convalescing.
In mid-May,
with Dahlan still absent, a new element was added to Gaza's toxic mix when 500
Fatah National Security Forces recruits arrived, fresh from training in Egypt
and equipped with new weapons and vehicles. "They had been on a crash course
for 45 days," Dahlan says. "The idea was that we needed them to go in dressed well,
equipped well, and that might create the impression of new authority." Their
presence was immediately noticed, not only by Hamas but by staff from Western
aid agencies. "They had new rifles with telescopic sights, and they were
wearing black flak jackets," says a frequent visitor from Northern Europe.
"They were quite a contrast to the usual scruffy lot."
On May 23, none
other than Lieutenant General Dayton discussed the new unit in testimony before
the House Middle East subcommittee. Hamas had attacked the troops as they
crossed into Gaza from Egypt, Dayton said, but "these 500 young people, fresh
out of basic training, were organized. They knew how to work in a coordinated
fashion. Training does pay off. And the Hamas attack in the area was, likewise,
repulsed."
The troops'
arrival, Dayton said, was one of several "hopeful signs" in Gaza. Another was
Dahlan's appointment as national-security adviser. Meanwhile, he said, Hamas's
Executive Force was becoming "extremely unpopular I would say that we are kind
of late in the ball game here, and we are behind, there's two out, but we have
our best clutch hitter at the plate, and the pitcher is beginning to tire on
the opposing team."
The opposing
team was stronger than Dayton realized. By the end of May 2007, Hamas was
mounting regular attacks of unprecedented boldness and savagery.
At an apartment
in Ramallah that Abbas has set aside for wounded refugees from Gaza, I meet a
former Fatah communications officer named Tariq Rafiyeh. He lies paralyzed from
a bullet he took to the spine during the June coup, but his suffering began two
weeks earlier. On May 31, he was on his way home with a colleague when they
were stopped at a roadblock, robbed of their money and cell phones, and taken
to a mosque. There, despite the building's holy status, Hamas Executive Force
members were violently interrogating Fatah detainees. "Late that night one of
them said we were going to be released," Rafiyeh recalls. "He told the guards,
‘Be hospitable, keep them warm.' I thought that meant kill us. Instead, before
letting us go they beat us badly."
On June 7,
there was another damaging leak, when the Israeli newspaper Haaretz
reported that Abbas and Dayton had asked Israel to authorize the biggest
Egyptian arms shipment yet-to include dozens of armored cars, hundreds of
armor-piercing rockets, thousands of hand grenades, and millions of rounds of
ammunition. A few days later, just before the next batch of Fatah recruits was
due to leave for training in Egypt, the coup began in earnest.
Fatah's Last
Stand
The Hamas
leadership in Gaza is adamant that the coup would not have happened if Fatah
had not provoked it. Fawzi Barhoum, Hamas's chief spokesman, says the leak in Al-Majd
convinced the party that "there was a plan, approved by America, to destroy the
political choice." The arrival of the first Egyptian-trained fighters, he adds,
was the "reason for the timing." About 250 Hamas members had been killed in the
first six months of 2007, Barhoum tells me. "Finally we decided to put an end
to it. If we had let them stay loose in Gaza, there would have been more
violence."
"Everyone here
recognizes that Dahlan was trying with American help to undermine the results
of the elections," says Mahmoud Zahar, the former foreign minister for the
Haniyeh government, who now leads Hamas's militant wing in Gaza. "He was the
one planning a coup."
Zahar and I
speak inside his home in Gaza, which was rebuilt after a 2003 Israeli air
strike destroyed it, killing one of his sons. He tells me that Hamas launched
its operations in June with a limited objective: "The decision was only to get
rid of the Preventive Security Service. They were the ones out on every
crossroads, putting anyone suspected of Hamas involvement at risk of being
tortured or killed." But when Fatah fighters inside a surrounded Preventive
Security office in Jabaliya began retreating from building to building, they
set off a "domino effect" that emboldened Hamas to seek broader gains.
Many armed
units that were nominally loyal to Fatah did not fight at all. Some stayed
neutral because they feared that, with Dahlan absent, his forces were bound to
lose. "I wanted to stop the cycle of killing," says Ibrahim abu al-Nazar, a
veteran party chief. "What did Dahlan expect? Did he think the U.S. Navy was
going to come to Fatah's rescue? They promised him everything, but what did
they do? But he also deceived them. He told them he was the strongman of the
region. Even the Americans may now feel sad and frustrated. Their friend lost
the battle."
Others who
stayed out of the fight were extremists. "Fatah is a large movement, with many
schools inside it," says Khalid Jaberi, a commander with Fatah's al-Aqsa
Martyrs' Brigades, which continue to fire rockets into Israel from Gaza.
"Dahlan's school is funded by the Americans and believes in negotiations with
Israel as a strategic choice. Dahlan tried to control everything in Fatah, but
there are cadres who could do a much better job. Dahlan treated us
dictatorially. There was no overall Fatah decision to confront Hamas, and
that's why our guns in al-Aqsa are the cleanest. They are not corrupted by the
blood of our people."
Jaberi pauses.
He spent the night before our interview awake and in hiding, fearful of Israeli
air strikes. "You know," he says, "since the takeover, we've been trying to
enter the brains of Bush and Rice, to figure out their mentality. We can only
conclude that having Hamas in control serves their overall strategy, because
their policy was so crazy otherwise."
The fighting was over in less than five days. It began with attacks on Fatah
security buildings, in and around Gaza City and in the southern town of Rafah.
Fatah attempted to shell Prime Minister Haniyeh's house, but by dusk on June 13
its forces were being routed.
Years of
oppression by Dahlan and his forces were avenged as Hamas chased down stray
Fatah fighters and subjected them to summary execution. At least one victim was
reportedly thrown from the roof of a high-rise building. By June 16, Hamas had
captured every Fatah building, as well as Abbas's official Gaza residence. Much
of Dahlan's house, which doubled as his office, was reduced to rubble.
Fatah's last
stand, predictably enough, was made by the Preventive Security Service. The
unit sustained heavy casualties, but a rump of about 100 surviving fighters
eventually made it to the beach and escaped in the night by fishing boat.
At the
apartment in Ramallah, the wounded struggle on. Unlike Fatah, Hamas fired
exploding bullets, which are banned under the Geneva Conventions. Some of the
men in the apartment were shot with these rounds 20 or 30 times, producing
unimaginable injuries that required amputation. Several have lost both legs.
The coup has
had other costs. Amjad Shawer, a local economist, tells me that Gaza had 400
functioning factories and workshops at the start of 2007. By December, the
intensified Israeli blockade had caused 90 percent of them to close. Seventy
percent of Gaza's population is now living on less than $2 a day.
Israel,
meanwhile, is no safer. The emergency pro-peace government called for in the
secret Action Plan is now in office-but only in the West Bank. In Gaza, the
exact thing both Israel and the U.S. Congress warned against came to pass when
Hamas captured most of Fatah's arms and ammunition-including the new Egyptian
guns supplied under the covert U.S.-Arab aid program.
Now that it
controls Gaza, Hamas has given free rein to militants intent on firing rockets
into neighboring Israeli towns. "We are still developing our rockets; soon we
shall hit the heart of Ashkelon at will," says Jaberi, the al-Aqsa commander,
referring to the Israeli city of 110,000 people 12 miles from Gaza's border. "I
assure you, the time is near when we will mount a big operation inside Israel,
in Haifa or Tel Aviv."
On January 23,
Hamas blew up parts of the wall dividing Gaza from Egypt, and tens of thousands
of Palestinians crossed the border. Militants had already been smuggling
weapons through a network of underground tunnels, but the breach of the wall
made their job much easier-and may have brought Jaberi's threat closer to
reality.
George W. Bush
and Condoleezza Rice continue to push the peace process, but Avi Dichter says
Israel will never conclude a deal on Palestinian statehood until the
Palestinians reform their entire law-enforcement system-what he calls "the
chain of security." With Hamas in control of Gaza, there appears to be no
chance of that happening. "Just look at the situation," says Dahlan. "They say
there will be a final-status agreement in eight months? No way."
"An
Institutional Failure"
How could the
U.S. have played Gaza so wrong? Neocon critics of the administration-who until
last year were inside it-blame an old State Department vice: the rush to anoint
a strongman instead of solving problems directly. This ploy has failed in
places as diverse as Vietnam, the Philippines, Central America, and Saddam
Hussein's Iraq, during its war against Iran. To rely on proxies such as
Muhammad Dahlan, says former U.N. ambassador John Bolton, is "an institutional
failure, a failure of strategy." Its author, he says, was Rice, "who, like
others in the dying days of this administration, is looking for legacy. Having
failed to heed the warning not to hold the elections, they tried to avoid the
result through Dayton."
With few good
options left, the administration now appears to be rethinking its blanket
refusal to engage with Hamas. Staffers at the National Security Council and the
Pentagon recently put out discreet feelers to academic experts, asking them for
papers describing Hamas and its principal protagonists. "They say they won't
talk to Hamas," says one such expert, "but in the end they're going to have to.
It's inevitable."
It is
impossible to say for sure whether the outcome in Gaza would have been any
better-for the Palestinian people, for the Israelis, and for America's allies
in Fatah-if the Bush administration had pursued a different policy. One thing,
however, seems certain: it could not be any worse.
David Rose is a Vanity Fair contributing editor.
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