The Palestine Liberation Organization
A history of the founding and activities of the PLO from 1964-1987.
By
David Margolis
Hundreds of thousands
of Arab residents of the former state of Palestine fled during Israel's War of
Independence during 1948-9 (called in Arabic, al-Nakba, "the
catastrophe"). Historians debate their reasons for flight. Were they
expelled by Israel? Did they choose to leave of their own accord, encouraged by
neighboring Arab nations, hoping to return to a state under Arab control? Whatever
the reasons, the result was a refugee problem. The question of establishing a
homeland for these Palestinian refugees has been and continues to be a major
issue in world politics.
The Palestine
Liberation Organization (PLO) has been a major player in this conflict since
1964. The following article discusses the organization and activities of the
PLO from 1964-1987. In the years since then, the PLO engaged in the peace
process leading to the Oslo Accords, which broke down with the second Intifada
and ongoing wave of suicide bombings in Israel.
Founded in 1964 as an umbrella organization of Palestinian
military groups, the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) stated as its
founding goal the destruction of Israel and its replacement with a
"secular, democratic state." It pursued this aim first by launching
guerrilla attacks against Israel from bases in Jordan. These attacks
intensified after the 1967 Six-Day War brought the West Bank and the Gaza Strip
under Israeli control. Yasser Arafat, co-founder and head of Al-Fatah, the
PLO's largest and best-funded constituent group, became Chairman of the PLO in
1968.
Israeli military responses to PLO attacks and the gradual
development of a PLO-run "state within a state" in Jordan, whose
population included many Palestinian refugees from the Arab-Israeli wars of
1948 and 1967, brought the organization into direct confrontation with the
Jordanian government. In a civil war that erupted in what the Palestinians
called "black September" of 1970, forces loyal to Jordan's King
Hussein expelled armed PLO elements into Lebanon.
Increasing Terrorism
During the 1970s, the PLO became virtually a synonym for
terrorism--a strategy that, ironically, increasingly won the Palestinian cause
sympathy in the international arena. The PLO invented airplane hijackings and
carried out many of them, and its constituent groups were responsible for a
large number of other terrorist attacks, including the assassination of
Jordan's prime minister in Cairo in 1971 and the murder of 11 Israeli athletes
at the Olympic Games in Munich in 1972, both enacted by an extremist offshoot
of Al-Fatah called Black September.
In October, 1974, a year after the Yom Kippur War, the heads
of the Arab states, meeting in Rabat, Morocco, formally affirmed the
"right of the Palestinian people to return to its homeland" and named
the PLO as the Palestinians' "sole legitimate representative."
Two weeks later, Yasser Arafat, a revolver strapped to his
hip in a dramatic breach of UN decorum, addressed the UN General Assembly with
the words, "I have come bearing an olive branch and a freedom fighter's
gun. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand."
In response, the UN affirmed the "inalienable
rights" of Palestinians to national independence and the following year
awarded the PLO "observer" status in the General Assembly and many UN
organizations. In 1976, the PLO was admitted to full membership in the Arab
League.
Israeli Response
Despite the PLO's success in bringing the Palestinian issue
to world attention, Israel refused to deal with it, preferring, with limited
success, to try to develop an independent Palestinian leadership in the West
Bank and Gaza. A 1980 Israeli law made it a crime for Israeli citizens to have
contact with the PLO. American policy toward the PLO, though it wavered
somewhat, generally insisted that the PLO renounce violence to achieve US
recognition.
In Lebanon, into which Jordan had expelled the PLO fighters,
the organization again used its host country's Palestinian refugee population
to establish a quasi-independent entity ("Fatahland," in Israeli
parlance) as a base for launching attacks against Israel. These included bloody
incursions into the northern Israeli towns of Ma'alot and Kiryat Shemonah in
which many civilians were killed.
PLO violence prompted Israel's June, 1982, invasion of Lebanon,
which drove the PLO out of the country, with forces loyal to Arafat
establishing a new organizational headquarters in Tunisia.
Uprising
A 1987 general uprising against Israeli rule in the West
Bank and the Gaza Strip, known as the first intifada
(literally, "shaking"), put the Palestinian question back on Israel's
and the world's agenda and incidentally gave the Palestinians another potent
symbol--rock-throwing youths defying well-armed Israeli soldiers and tanks.
Although an indigenous leadership in the "occupied territories"
guided the uprising, it deferred to Yasser Arafat and the PLO as its political
representative.
During this uprising, Jordan officially renounced its claims
to East Jerusalem and the West Bank, paving the way for the PLO to announce the
establishment of a "state of Palestine," which claimed Jerusalem as
its capital without defining its borders. With this step, the PLO became a kind
of government-in-exile that was soon recognized by some 70 countries.
The following year, the Palestine National Council, the
PLO's governing body, named Arafat president of the new "state."
During this period, the PLO also formally accepted UN resolutions 242 and 338
(the basis of the "land for peace" formula), thereby implicitly
acknowledging Israel's right to exist. That set the stage for the peace process
that would result in the Oslo Accords, which ultimately failed to bring a
lasting peace or an independent Palestinian state.
David Margolis was a Jerusalem-based
writer. His work included journalism and fiction. Examples of both can be seen
at http://www.davidmargolis.com/.