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PALESTINIAN MILITARY PERFORMANCE AND THE 2000 INTIFADA
Lieutenant colonel IDF (Res.) Gal Luft
The violent upheaval by Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza during
September-November 2000 raised many political issues. One of the most
interesting but least addressed is the role of Palestinian police and
military units during this second intifada. At various times, they
tried to
stop violence, participated in it, or acted merely as onlookers. What
does
this tell us about the capabilities, political function, and future
character of these all-important institutions?
Four years earlier, following the September 1996 opening of the
Hasmonean
Tunnel in Jerusalem, Palestinian policemen and Israeli soldiers
exchanged
heavy fire throughout the West Bank and Gaza Strip leaving 85
Palestinians
and 16 Israelis dead, and more than 1,200 Palestinians and 87 Israelis
wounded. The "September riots," as they were called, showed the
Palestinian
security services (PSS) acting very differently than had been expected
under the Oslo agreements, which gave them the task of providing for
peace
and security in the Palestinian Authority (PA) ruled territories.
While engaging in diplomatic negotiations with Israel, the Palestinians
have been planning and preparing for the scenario of a failed
diplomatic
option and the possibility of a next round of violence. After the 1996
events, the 41,000-strong security forces improved their tactical
sophistication, introduced new training methods and obtained new
weapons
and equipment.
But after weeks of intensive fighting in September-November 2000
between
PSS troops and the Israel Defense Force (IDF) the PSS's poor
performance is
puzzling.
Certainly, during those demonstrations, the Palestinian police failed
to
fulfill all the duties and functions assigned to them by the Oslo
agreements. These include: the maintenance of internal security and
public
order; the protection of property and places of special importance such
as
Jewish holy places in Palestinian-controlled territories; the
prevention of
incitement to violence and the fight against terrorism.
At the same time, though, PA Chairman Yasir Arafat and his lieutenants
not
only refrained from using their armed forces as an instrument to impose
peace, they also did not--contrary to some analysts' predications--use
their troops as a tool of war either. Throughout the clashes
Palestinian
troops did not demonstrate even a fraction of the capabilities they had
developed. They inflicted minimal casualties on the IDF, used virtually
none of the special weapons--such as anti-tank missiles--in their
possession, and failed to initiate and execute any significant military
operation against Israeli targets.
Was the poor military performance a result of pure incompetence? Lack
of
will? Or was it a result of Arafat's calculated strategy of incremental
use
of force that leaves, for now, the Palestinian military units in their
camps?
PALESTINIAN MILITARY BUILDUP SINCE SEPTEMBER 1996
Being more than a regular police force and short of being a
fully-matured
army, the 12 branches of the PSS have invested great efforts to learn
the
lessons from the previous major clashes with the IDF. New weapons and
tactics have been introduced, and training has improved considerably.
Palestinian police officers go through a rigorous training program.
Junior
officers are being trained in the Jericho police academy; more senior
company and battalion commanders received professional training in
Egypt,
Yemen, Algeria, and Pakistan as commanders of combat units. (1) This
training enabled them to think and plan as field commanders rather than
as
police officers.
Since 1996, the PSS have increased the size of formations capable of
executing independent military operations from small-sized units such
as
platoons and companies to full battalions. In the first half of 2000
alone,
half a dozen battalion-level exercises were held in the Gaza Strip. (2)
Despite the fact that live-fire training has been restricted to platoon
level, the battalions trained in rather complicated combat scenarios
such
as gaining control of an area of land and mock attacks on IDF posts and
Jewish settlements.
In an attempt to increase the number of Israeli casualties in case of a
war, the Palestinians recruited a large number of snipers equipped with
telescopic sights for their M-16 and AK-47 rifles. In addition, it has
been
reported that some of the Palestinian security apparatuses obtained
weapons
prohibited by the Oslo agreements such as light anti-armor weapons,
rocket
propelled grenades, anti-tank missiles, light mortars, land mines and
hand
grenades. Several reports indicated that the Palestinians also obtained
shoulder-launched anti-aircraft missiles and truck-mounted
anti-aircraft
guns. (3)
The PA succeeded in amassing stocks of weapons and ammunition through
smuggling and theft from Israeli military bases and private homes.
Cross-border smuggling, mainly from Jordan and Egypt, also enriched the
PA's arsenal. In this way, Palestinians were able to more than triple
the
number of light weapons originally entrusted to them by the Oslo
agreements
and, hence, arm civilian militias such as the Tanzim and veterans of
the
Fatah Hawks militia.
Preparing for a long, protracted military confrontation with Israel
also
required the build-up of a strong logistical base to supply Arafat's
forces
with food, water, medications, weapons and ammunition. Throughout the
West
Bank and Gaza Strip, the PA established warehouses where war material
was
prepared and stored. Prior to the eruption of the al-Aqsa intifada, the
PA
imported large amounts of food supplies, stored large amounts of water
and
oil and prepared an alternative power source by deploying large
generators
in various locations in the PA. [Where? was this all smuggling or also
legal imports?
ASSESSMENT OF PSS PERFORMANCE DURING THE RIOTS
The massive wave of violent demonstrations that broke out on September
29
was met with a weak response by the Palestinian police. In September
1996
Palestinian policemen formed, in many cases, human chains to prevent
demonstrators from advancing on Israeli settlements and military
outposts.
During the current crisis, they did not interfere with Palestinians
demonstrating against Israel in such areas as Nezarim Junction in Gaza
or
outside the West Bank towns of Nablus, Ramallah, Tulkarm, Qalqilia
Bethlehem, and in Hebron.
Two incidents in October--the destruction of the Jewish holy site
Joseph's
Tomb in Nablus and the murderous attack on the Palestinian police
station
in Ramallah where two Israeli soldiers were held by the police--showed
the
Palestinian police's lack of resolve in dealing with a rioting mob. In
many
cases, Palestinian policemen took off their uniforms, joined the
demonstrators and opened fire on IDF troops.
There were several reasons for this conduct. First, the PSS have had
relatively little training in crowd control. They also lack necessary
equipment such as shields, helmets, flak jackets, clubs, radio
equipment,
armored vehicles, tear gas and other non-lethal weapons to contain
massive
demonstrations.
Second, the policemen themselves are strong nationalists who support
the
demonstrators' cause and methods. As one Western diplomat put it: "they
don't have their hearts in it because they'd probably prefer to be
throwing
stones at the Israelis themselves." (4)
The Palestinian police showed in the past that it could put down
violent
riots aimed against the PA itself. On Friday, November 18, 1994, the
PSS
clashing with thousands of Hamas demonstrators outside the Filastin
Mosque
in Gaza killed 13 and wounded about 200 demonstrators. This kind of
resolution could not be demonstrated when demonstrators attack IDF
troops.
PSS personnel do not want to be seen as Israeli lackeys and would not
even
contemplate opening fire at their own people.
Third, the PSS is responsive to Arafat's orders. This explains the
difference between its performance during the earlier part of the 1996
violence and the role it played during the 2000 violence.
Nevertheless, the PSS also seemed to show less military ability in 2000
compared to the part it played in the rioting of 1996. Despite the
heavy
volume of fire exchanged between Palestinian policemen and the IDF--and
despite the long training undergone--Palestinian policemen didn't reach
a
high level of marksmanship and proficiency with their weapons. Unlike
the
September 1996 riots in which PSS officers succeeded in killing 14
Israeli
soldiers including some senior officers, in the al-Aqsa intifada not
one
Israeli soldier has been killed in combat with Palestinian police
officers.
This outcome could be attributed to the great efforts the IDF made
since
1996 to improve its troops' protection, but the main reason for the
IDF's
low casualty rate lies in the fact that most Palestinian fire was
sporadic
and inaccurate. The sniper units were not put into action.
GOOD COP, BAD COP
The main problem in the PSS's operations is lack of coordination among
the
various security services and between members of the official security
services and the civilian militias. The PSS is comprised of no less
than 12
different services, the most prominent of which are the Civil Police,
National Security Forces, Preventive Security Forces, General
Intelligence,
Civil Defense, Military Police, Military Intelligence and the
Presidential
Security Forces, better known as Force 17.
Most of the branches have two commanders, equal in rank: one in the
West
Bank and the other in the Gaza Strip. Those regional commanders report
directly to Arafat rather than being subjected to an intermediate level
of
operational command or a general staff-like body. Competition,
suspicion
and tense relations exist between the security chiefs to the extent
that in
several cases armed clashes occurred between members of competing
services.
Palestinian security apparatuses invest great efforts undermining each
other and are encouraged by Arafat to spy on each other. Arafat, as a
result, is the only one who can arbitrate among the different forces
and
through him their chiefs communicate with each other. This system of
command ensures that none of the security forces becomes powerful
enough to
pose a threat to Arafat's leadership. But in time of war Arafat's style
of
command impairs coordination and unity of effort between the security
apparatuses. Heads of security apparatuses receive, mostly through
unsecured phone lines, contradictory orders from Arafat's office.
Simultaneously, one service may receive an order to tighten control
over
the crowd while the other receives an order to loosen it.
Arafat's differing use of his security services can be seen in his
treatment of Hamas and Islamic Jihad members. One PSS unit may be
ordered
to arrest opposition activists while another unit may be instructed to
release Hamas prisoners or allow them to "escape" from prison. IDF head
of
the Southern Command Major General Yom-Tov Samia revealed that the
senior
PSS officers who are in daily contact with the IDF are aware of the
fact
that Arafat "speaks in a different language with each body in the PA's
security establishment." (5)
Consequently, PSS chiefs do not feel accountable to agreements Israel
entered with their colleagues. Israeli military officials complained
that
at least three times during the first two weeks of the clashes they
succeeded in securing commitments by senior PSS military
commanders--among
them commander of National Security Forces in Gaza General Abd al-Raziq
Majaida and his West Bank counterpart General Haj Ismail--to reduce the
violence but to no avail.
The Palestinian commanders admitted that they could not exercise their
control over any security forces not under their direct command. In
most
countries, all the branches of the military forces submit to the
command of
a general staff headed by a chief of staff. By way of contrast, Arafat
is
the only person who controls all the PA's military bodies. But for
seven of
the first nine days of the crisis Arafat was away from the battle
scene.
Rather than managing the crisis from his command post in Gaza, Arafat
preferred to travel between Jordan, Egypt, France and Spain. In
his absence, the PSS became an even more confused, chaotic organ that
did
not have much effect on events on the ground.
The Palestinians' weak system of command and control may undermine
their
capability to engage in a long, protracted war against Israel. The
disunity
between the services and the absence of a general staff-type body
prevents
effective control over essential elements of the war effort such as
supplies, manpower, weapons and ammunition.
Several times during the clashes, Palestinian fighters ran out of
ammunition and had to cease fire. There were warehouses of weapons and
ammunition not far away but these belonged to another security force
which
would not reduce its own supplies (and, hence, power) by giving
equipment
to another group. There is little mutual logistical assistance among
the
forces and they do not coordinate their operations.
THE PROBLEM OF TANZIM
Another problem the PSS face is the growing power of the Tanzim, the
armed
wing of Fatah, the largest faction of the Palestine Liberation
Organization. Tanzim led the rioting and confrontation with the IDF in
September 1996 and the Nakba riots of May 2000. It has about 20,000
members, some of whom are armed with automatic weapons and trained by
the
PSS. The turning over of arms to the Tanzim contradicts the Oslo
agreements.
The Tanzim's primary duty is to control opposition to Arafat in the PA.
For this purpose, Arafat has been funding and grooming the
organization. At
the same time, though, Arafat has distrusted and tried to undercut the
power of the Tanzim's chief, Marwan Barghuti, leader of Fatah in the
West
Bank. For his part, Barghuti has often criticized Arafat indirectly and
battled the PA's official security organs, which he accuses of
corruption.
The organization, however, has grown in power and prestige, at the
expense
of the PA's military apparatus.
Armed Tanzim activists often brush off the uniformed policemen and
disobey
their instructions. Palestinian policemen are reluctant to confront the
militia which has grown to become the most visible and active armed
body of
the PA. Arafat prefers to yield leading role of his armed intifada to
the
popular, plainclothes Tanzim activists since this lets him present the
Palestinian struggle as an authentic popular uprising.
Several times during the first weeks of the clashes, Arafat instructed
the
Tanzim to escalate the violence, while at the same time giving his
uniformed security chiefs opposite instructions. As a result,
Palestinian
policemen find themselves confronted by an uncontrolled armed force
backed
by Arafat. Hence, they are prevented from exercising the power and
authority granted to them by both the Oslo agreement and the PA itself.
Another problem is that many members of Tanzim, especially in the Gaza
Strip, are in fact PSS employees. During the day, these people work as
intelligence agents and police officers enforcing the law. Off-duty,
they
participate in the same activities they are being paid to thwart.
One incident demonstrates the complex relations between Tanzim and the
PSS. When a critically wounded IDF soldier was trapped on October 1 in
Joseph's Tomb in Nablus, the IDF requested that two PSS commanders in
the
West Bank, Preventive Security chief Jibril Rajub and Palestinian
Police
chief Haj Ismail facilitate his evacuation. But the tomb compound was
surrounded by Tanzim activists. For two hours, the Tanzim prevented the
PSS
chiefs from entering the compound. The soldier died of his wounds
before
medical assistance was allowed to arrive while the helpless PSS chiefs
stood by powerless to act.
Since the beginning of the clashes, many speculated on the extent in
which
Arafat controls the Tanzim. The dominant assessment is that the Tanzim
is
tightly controlled by Arafat and will continue to submit to his
authority,
whatever personal or political frictions take place between Arafat and
Barghuti. (6)
Yet this situation also creates a new problem for Arafat in regulating
the
relations between the official security forces and the unofficial
forces of
the Tanzim. Failure to do so would continue to erode the PSS's power,
let
the Tanzim claim credit for waging the struggle, and lead more
Palestinian
policemen to give their loyalty to the Tanzim and not their own
commanders.
As a result, Arafat could face resentment from the security forces and
a
challenge from the Tanzim itself.
CONCLUSIONS
At first sight, the PSS's performance during the recent clashes in the
West Bank and Gaza Strip may raise doubts about the Palestinians'
military
effectiveness and the PSS's ability to pose a serious challenge to the
IDF.
But the apparent weakness of the Palestinian police is more likely due
to a
calculated decision by Arafat to spare, at least for the moment, his
uniformed armed forces from the fray.
Arafat seems to have chosen to keep the lion share of his security
forces
disengaged from the fighting and put them into action only if and when
an
all-out war with Israel broke out. Seeking international sympathy and
wary
of the IDF's military superiority, Arafat did not want to escalate the
battle too much. To do so would have destroyed any chance of using a
diplomatic option. Thus, the PSS as such did not launch concerted
attacks
or use certain weapons in its possession, while Arafat portrayed the
rioting as a defensive but popular struggle of the masses.
Equally important, Arafat surely knows that an exposure of the PA's
true
military capabilities might confirm the Israeli claim that the PA has
been
clandestinely developing an army under the disguise of a police force.
Exposing the PA's military capabilities at this stage would be
self-defeating because it would enforce the legitimacy of the Israeli
demands for Palestinian demilitarization as part of future
negotiations.
Indeed, to show the capability of the PA's military could also be a
serious disincentive for Israel to make concessions or accept the
creation
of an independent Palestinian state. Beyond a certain point, it is
against
Arafat's interest to expose the threat that Palestinian forces could
pose
to Israel under such circumstances.
A month into the clashes, when Palestinian casualties were 12 times
higher
than those of Israel, Jibril Rajub commented in an interview: "So far
the
PA has shown restraint in its conflict with Israel but the crimes of
the
settlers, the closure, the collective punishment and the heavy hand of
the
IDF will leave no other alternative to the PA but to respond." (8)
Rajub's
comment should indicate to Israel that it would be imprudent to draw
premature conclusions on the PSS's poor military effectiveness based on
its
performance during the events of autumn 2000.
* Lieutenant colonel IDF (Res.) Gal Luft is a doctoral candidate at the
Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies and
author of The Palestinian Security Forces: Between Police and Army
(Washington, DC: 1998). His article, "The Palestinian Armed Forces"
appeared in Meria Journal, Vol. 3 No. 2 (June 1999).
Notes
(1) Ha'aretz, July 12, 2000.
(2) Yediot Ahronot, Weekend Supplement, June 23, 2000.
(3) Ha'aretz, June 23, 2000, Yediot Ahronot, November 3, 2000.
(4) The Washington Post, October 22, 2000.
(5) Interview with Maj. General Yom-Tov Samia, Yediot Ahronot, October
8,
2000.
(6) Yediot Ahronot, Weekend Supplement, October 13, 2000.
(7) For a discussion of the security forces, the Tanzim, and their
political positions, see Barry Rubin, The Transformation of Palestinian
Politics (NY, 1999). See also Gal Luft, "The Palestinian Armed Forces"
Meria Journal, Vol. 3 No. 2 (June 1999). Available at
.
(8) Ha'aretz, internet edition, October 27, 2000.
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