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{{short description|Palestinian militants}} | |||
'''Palestinian fedayeen''' (from the ] ''fidā'ī'', plural ''fidā'īyun'', فدائيون: meaning, "](s)"<ref name=Nawawy>{{cite book|title=''The Israeli-Egyptian Peace Process in the Reporting of Western Journalists''|author=Mohammed El-Nawawy|publisher=Inc NetLibrary|year=2002|page=49|isbn=1567505457}}</ref> or "self-sacrificers"<ref name=Rea>{{cite book|title=''The Arab-Israeli Conflict''|author=Tony Rea and John Wright|publisher=]|year=1993|page=43|isbn=019917170X}}</ref>) is a term used to refer to ] (i.e. ]s or ]s) from among the ]. Considered "freedom fighters" by most Palestinians,<ref name=Glaser>{{cite book|title=''The Design of Dissent''|author=Milton Glaser and Mirko Ilic|year=2005|publisher=Rockport Publishers|isbn=1592531172}}</ref> most Israelis consider them "]s". | |||
{{About|Palestinian guerrilla movements|other similarly named guerrilla movements|Fedayeen}} | |||
{{good article}} | |||
{{pp-30-500|small=yes}} | |||
] in ], ], 1979]] | |||
'''Palestinian fedayeen''' ({{langx|ar|فدائيون|fidā'iyūn}}) are militants or ]s of a nationalist orientation from among the ].<ref name=Burgat/><ref name=Milton/> Most Palestinians consider the ] to be ],<ref name=Glaser>{{cite book|title=The Design of Dissent|author=Milton Glaser and Mirko Ilic|year=2005|publisher=Rockport Publishers|isbn=978-1-59253-117-2}}</ref> while most Israelis consider them to be ]. | |||
The ''Encyclopedia of the United Nations and International Agreements'' defines '''fedayeen''' as "Palestinian resistance fighters"<ref name=Osmanczyk>{{cite book|title=''Encyclopedia of the United Nations and International Agreements''|author=Edmund Jan Osmanczyk|publisher=]|page=702|year=2002|isbn=0415939216}}</ref> and they have been considered symbols of the ].<ref name=Milton/> Drawing inspiration from guerrilla movements in ], ], and ], the fedayeen have always been portrayed in a ] role.<ref name=Milton/> Beverly Milton-Edwards describes them as "modern revolutionaries fighting for ], not religious salvation," and distinguishes them from '']'' (i.e. "fighters of the ] for ]").<ref name=Milton>{{cite book|title=''Islamic Politics in Palestine''|author=Beverley Milton-Edwards|year=1996|pages=94-95|publisher=I.B.Tauris|isbn=1860644759}}</ref> <ref name=Footnote1>While the fallen soldiers of both mujahaddin and fedayeen are called ] (i.e. "martyrs") by Palestinians, Milton nevertheless contends that it would be political and religious blasphemy to call the "] fighters" of the fedayeen, mujahaddin.</ref> | |||
Considered symbols of the ], the Palestinian fedayeen drew inspiration from guerrilla movements in Vietnam, China, Algeria and Latin America.<ref name=Milton/> The ideology of the Palestinian fedayeen was mainly ], ] or ], and their proclaimed purpose was to defeat ], claim ] and establish it as "a ], ], ] ]".<ref name=ONeill>{{cite book|title=The Intifada: Its Impact on Israel, the Arab World, and the Superpowers|chapter=The Intifada in the Context of Armed Struggle|author=Bard E. O'Neill|editor=Robert Owen Freedman|year=1991|pages=|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-8130-1040-3|chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/intifadaitsimpac0000unse/page/64}}</ref> The meaning of secular, democratic and non-sectarian, however, greatly diverged among fedayeen factions.<ref name=ONeill/> | |||
==Emergence of the fedayeen== | |||
Emerging from among the Palestinian refugees who fled or were expelled from their villages as a result of the ],<ref name=Almogp20>Almog, 2003, p. 20.</ref> in the mid-1950s the fedayeen began mounting ] into Israel from Syria, Egypt and Jordan. Fedayeen attacks were directed on the Gaza and Sinai borders with Israel. As a result Israel undertook ], targeting the fedayeen that also often targeted the citizens of their host countries, which in turn provoked more attacks. The earliest infiltrations were primarily against ], however, some infiltrations were against agricultural and military targets.<ref>{{cite book |author=Kameel B. Nasr|title=Arab and Israeli Terrorism: The Causes and Effects of Political Violence, 1936–1993|url={{Google books|QRXURzwdXS4C|page=PA40|keywords=|text=|plainurl=yes}}|year=1996|publisher=McFarland|isbn=978-0-7864-3105-2|pages=40– |quote=Fedayeen to attack...almost always against civilians}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Isaac Alteras|title=Eisenhower and Israel: U.S.-Israeli Relations, 1953–1960|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ydRHCPWngioC&pg=PAPA192|year=1993|publisher=University Press of Florida|isbn=978-0-8130-1205-6|pages=192–|quote=the removal of the Egyptian blockade of the Straits of Tiran at the entrance of the Gulf of Aqaba. The blockade closed Israel's sea lane to East Africa and the Far East, hindering the development of Israel's southern port of Eilat and its hinterland, the Nege. Another important objective of the Israeli war plan was the elimination of the terrorist bases in the Gaza Strip, from which daily fedayeen incursions into Israel made life unbearable for its southern population. And last but not least, the concentration of the Egyptian forces in the Sinai Peninsula, armed with the newly acquired weapons from the Soviet bloc, prepared for an attack on Israel. Here, Ben-Gurion believed, was a time bomb that had to be defused before it was too late. Reaching the Suez Canal did not figure at all in Israel's war objectives.|access-date=1 December 2018|archive-date=19 December 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231219071150/https://books.google.com/books?id=ydRHCPWngioC&pg=PAPA192|url-status=live}}</ref> The Gaza Strip, the sole territory of the ]—a Palestinian state declared in October 1948—became the focal point of the Palestinian fedayeen activity.<ref>Facts On File, Incorporated. ''''.</ref> | |||
The first attacks by Palestinian fedayeen were launched by ]s of the ], living in ]s in ], ], ], and ]. While the Palestinian fedayeen were generally supported by those governments, in some cases they came into conflict with them.<ref>], History of Israel, p. 450. cited at {{cite web |publisher= ] |title= Fedayeen Raids 1951 -1956 |url=http://www.jafi.org.il/education/100/maps/fed.html}}</ref> | |||
Fedayeen actions were cited by Israel as one of the reasons for its launching of the ] of 1956, the ], and the ] and ] of ]. Palestinian fedayeen groups were united under the umbrella the ] after the defeat of the Arab armies in the 1967 ], though each group retained its own leader and independent armed forces.<ref name=Gresh/> | |||
According to Orna Almog, the very first attack by Palestinian fedayeen was launched by refugee fighters from Syrian territory in 1951, though the majority of the attacks between 1951 and 1953 were launched by refugees from Jordanian territory.<ref name=Almog>{{cite book|title=''Britain, Israel, and the United States, 1955-1958: Beyond Suez''|author=Orna Almog|year=2003|page=20|publisher=]|isbn=0714652466}}</ref> These early fedayeen attacks were incursions on a limited scale. Yeshoshfat Harkabi, former head of Israeli military intelligence, stated that these early attacks were often motivated by economic reasons, with Palestinians crossing the border into Israel to, for example, harvest crops in their former villages.<ref name=Almog/> Fedayeen operations on a larger scale began to be mounted from 1954 onwards from Egyptian territory.<ref name=Almog/> | |||
==Definitions of the term== | |||
In 1953, ] ] created ] to retaliate against the fedayeen. Its commander was Major ]. Cross-border operations were conducted in both Egypt and Jordan, "in order to 'teach' the Arab leaders that the Israeli government saw them as responsible for these activities, even if they had not directly conducted them."<ref name=Almog/> ] felt that retaliatory action by Israel was the only way to convince ] countries that for the safety of their own citizens, they should work to stop fedayeen infiltrations. Said Dayan, "We are not able to protect every man, but we can prove that the price for Jewish blood is high."<ref name=Almog/> | |||
] (PDFLP) in Lebanon]] | |||
The words "Palestinian" and "fedayeen" have had different meanings to different people at various points in history. According to the Sakhr Arabic-English dictionary, ''fida'i''—the singular form of the plural ''fedayeen''—means "one who risks his life voluntarily" or "one who sacrifices himself".<ref name=Sakhr>{{cite web |title=Dictionaries |publisher=Sakhr |access-date=2008-01-06 |url=http://dictionary.sakhr.com/idrisidic_2MM.asp?Lang=E-A&Sub=%c7%e1%dd%cf%c7%c6%ed%f8%e6%e4}}</ref> In their book ''The Arab-Israeli Conflict'', Tony Rea and John Wright have adopted this more literal translation, translating the term fedayeen as "self-sacrificers".<ref name=Rea>{{cite book|title=The Arab-Israeli Conflict|author=Tony Rea and John Wright|publisher=]|year=1993|page=|isbn=978-0-19-917170-5|url=https://archive.org/details/arabisraeliconfl0000reat/page/43}}</ref> | |||
The ] reports that between 1951 and 1956, 400 Israelis were killed and 900 wounded in fedayeen attacks. <ref>{{cite web | publisher=] | title=Map|url=http://www.jafi.org.il/education/100/maps/fed.html}}</ref> Dozens of these attacks are today cited by the Israeli government as "Major Arab Terrorist Attacks against Israelis prior to the 1967 ]". | |||
<ref>{{cite web | publisher=]| title= Major terror attacks|url=http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Facts+About+Israel/Israel+in+Maps/1948-1967-+Major+Terror+Attacks.htm}}</ref> <ref>{{cite web | publisher=] | title= Palestinian Terror|url=http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Terrorism-+Obstacle+to+Peace/Palestinian+terror+before+2000/Which+Came+First-+Terrorism+or+Occupation+-+Major.htm}}</ref> According to the ], while the attacks violated the ] prohibiting hostilities by paramilitary forces, it was Israel that was condemned by the ] for its counterattacks.<ref>{{cite web |publisher= ] | title= Fedayeen |url=http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Terrorism/Fedayeen.html}}</ref> | |||
In his essay, "The Palestinian Leadership and the American Media: Changing Images, Conflicting Results" (1995), R.S. Zaharna comments on the perceptions and use of the terms "Palestinian" and "fedayeen" in the 1970s, writing: | |||
===Involvement of President Nasser and Egyptian intelligence=== | |||
<blockquote>''Palestinian'' became synonymous with ''terrorists'', '']s'', '']s'', and ''guerrillas''. The term ''fedayeen'' was often used but rarely translated. This added to the mysteriousness of Palestinian groups. Fedayeen means "freedom fighter."<ref name=Kamalipour>{{cite book|title=The U.S. Media and the Middle East: Image and Perception|author=Yahya R. Kamalipour|year=1995|publisher=Greenwood Press|page=43|isbn=978-0-313-29279-8}}</ref><ref name=Nawawy>{{cite book|title=The Israeli-Egyptian Peace Process in the Reporting of Western Journalists|author=Mohammed El-Nawawy|publisher=Inc NetLibrary|year=2002|page=49|isbn=978-1-56750-545-0}} Mohammed al-Nawaway uses Zaharna translation of fedayeen as "freedom fighters" in his book ''The Israeli-Egyptian Peace Process in the Reporting of Western Journalists'' (2002).</ref></blockquote> | |||
According to Martin Gilbert, who defines the fedayeen as "Palestinian terrorist groups", towards the end of 1954, the Egyptian government supervised the formal establishment of these groups in Gaza and the northeastern Sinai.<ref>{{cite book| url=http://books.google.com/books?id=cT16EWF9I4cC&pg=PA58&lpg=PA58&dq=fedayeen+israel&source=web&ots=mJR38hIH9V&sig=yGxT564et617hjyecoCKT8OX174#PPA58,M1| title=The Routledge Atlas of the Arab-Israeli Conflict| author=]| publisher=Routledge| year=2005| isbn=0415359015}}</ref> Lela Gilbert in ] writes that General Mustafa Hafez, appointed by Egyptian President ] (1918 - 1970) to command Egyptian army intelligence, was the one who founded the Palestinian fedayeen units in Egypt "to launch terrorist raids across Israel's southern border."<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1192380626879&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull| title=An 'infidel' in Israel| author=Lela Gilbert| publisher=]| date=], ]}}</ref> | |||
Edmund Jan Osmańczyk's ''Encyclopedia of the United Nations and International Agreements'' (2002) defines fedayeen as "] fighters",<ref name=Osmanczyk>{{cite book|title=Encyclopedia of the United Nations and International Agreements|author=Edmund Jan Osmanczyk|publisher=]|page=702|year=2002|isbn=978-0-415-93921-8}}</ref> whereas ]'s ''The Routledge Atlas of the Arab-Israeli Conflict'' (2005) defines fedayeen as "Palestinian terrorist groups".<ref name=Gilbertp58>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cT16EWF9I4cC&q=fedayeen+israel&pg=PA58|title=The Routledge Atlas of the Arab-Israeli Conflict| author=]| publisher=Routledge| year=2005| page=58|isbn=978-0-415-35901-6}}</ref> ] refers to the fedayeen simply as "guerrillas",<ref name=McNamara>{{cite book|title=Britain, Nasser and the Balance of Power in the Middle East 1952–1967|author=]|year=2003|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-7146-5397-6|page=74}}</ref> as do ] and Raphael Rothstein in their work ''Fedayeen: Guerrillas Against Israel'' (1972). Fedayeen can also be used to refer to militant or guerrilla groups which are not Palestinian. (See ] for more.) | |||
The Jewish Virtual Library illustrates the adoption of this new tactic by quoting an excerpt of a speech delivered by President Nasser on ] ]: | |||
Beverly Milton-Edwards describes the Palestinian fedayeen as "modern revolutionaries fighting for ], not religious salvation," distinguishing them from ] (i.e. "fighters of the ]").<ref name=Milton>{{cite book|title=Islamic Politics in Palestine|author=Beverley Milton-Edwards|year=1996|pages=|publisher=I.B.Tauris|isbn=978-1-86064-475-7|url=https://archive.org/details/islamicpoliticsi00beve/page/94}}</ref> While the fallen soldiers of both mujahaddin and fedayeen are called ] (i.e. "martyrs") by Palestinians, Milton nevertheless contends that it would be political and religious blasphemy to call the "leftist fighters" of the fedayeen.<ref name=Milton/> | |||
:Egypt has decided to dispatch her heroes, the disciples of Pharaoh and the sons of Islam and they will cleanse the land of Palestine....There will be no peace on Israel's border because we demand vengeance, and vengeance is Israel's death.<ref>{{cite web |publisher= ] | title= Fedayeen |url=http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Terrorism/Fedayeen.html}}</ref> | |||
==History== | |||
Acording to the ], 260 Israeli citizens were killed or wounded by the fedayeen in 1955. <ref>{{cite web | publisher= ] | title=Record | url=http://www.adl.org/ISRAEL/Record/sinai.asp}}</ref> ] writes that the calculated acts of fedayeen terror, supported by the Arab countries, eventually contributed to the outbreak of the ].<ref>{{cite book| url=http://books.google.com/books?id=YUthqHRF-m8C&pg=PA420&lpg=PA420&dq=fedayeen+israel&source=web&ots=mz59gfgQCx&sig=MTOTo5reQeJnWZKeqnM7l9ZoSYg| title=Israel's Border Wars, 1949-1956: Arab Infiltration, Israeli Retaliation, and| author=]| publisher=Oxford University Press| year=1993| isbn=0198292627}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | publisher=palestinefacts.org | title= What happened during the period of the fedayeen attacks on Israel in the 1950s?|url=http://www.palestinefacts.org/pf_1948to1967_fedayeen.php}}</ref> | |||
===1948 to 1956=== | |||
==From the 1960s until the first intifada== | |||
{{main|Palestinian Fedayeen insurgency|Palestinian return to Israel}} | |||
] into Israel first emerged among the ]s of the ], living in ] in Jordan (including the ]), Lebanon, Egypt (including the Egyptian ]), and Syria. Initially, most infiltrations were economic in nature, with Palestinians crossing the border seeking food or the recovery of property lost in the 1948 war.<ref name=Almogp20/> | |||
Between 1948 and 1955, immigration by Palestinians into Israel was opposed by Arab governments,<ref>"There is strong evidence from Arab, British, American, UN and even Israeli sources to suggest that for the first six years after the war, the Arab governments were opposed to infiltration and tried to curb it...The Lebanese...effectively sealed the border with Israel. The Syrian authorities also exercised strict control over their border with Israel, and infiltration was rarer. The Egyptian authorities...pursued a consistent policy of curbing infiltration until 1955...Secret Jordanian documents captured by the Israeli army during the June 1967 war...reveal strenuous efforts on the part of the Jordanian military and civilian authorities...to keep from crossing ." – Shlaim, ''The Iron Wall'' pp. 84–85, {{ISBN|978-0-14-028870-4}}</ref><ref>As an Israel Foreign Ministry official stated: | |||
During the mid and late 1960s, a number of independent Palestinian fedyaeen groups emerged who sought to bring about "the liberation of all ] through a Palestinian armed struggle."<ref name=Ismael>{{cite book|title=''The Communist Movement In The Arab World''|author=Tareq Y. Ismael|publisher=]|year=2005|page=76|isbn=041534851X}}</ref> According to Jamal R. Nasser, the very first incursion by this set of fedayeen fighters took place on ] ] when a Palestinian commando infiltrated Israel to plant explosives that destroyed a section of pipeline designed to divert water from the ] into Israel.<ref name=Nasser>{{cite book|title=''Globalization and Terrorism: The Migration of Dreams and Nightmares''|author=Jamal R. Nassar|page=50|year=2005|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=074252504X}}</ref> | |||
For years the army has been informing the Ministry and the outside world that infiltration is being sponsored, inspired, guided, or at least utilised by the Legion or other powers that be. However...when asked ...some clear documentary proof of the Legion's complicity ...no clear answer came from the army. Finally Fati told Leo and myself, on two separate occasions, that no proof could be given because no proof existed. Furthermore, Fati told me that having personally made a detail study of infiltration, he had arrived at the conclusion that Jordanians and especially the Legion were doing their best to prevent infiltration, which was a natural decentralised and sporadic movement. In fact, listening to Fati or his colleagues these days, one could almost mistake them for British Foreign Office ." Benny Morris (1993) Israel's Border Wars, 1949–1956: Arab Infiltration, Israeli Retaliation, and the Countdown to the Suez War Oxford University Press, {{ISBN|978-0-19-829262-3}} P 67</ref> in order to prevent escalation into another war.{{citation needed|date=May 2014}} The problem of establishing and guarding the demarcation line separating the ] from the Israeli-held Negev area proved vexing, largely due to the presence of over 200,000 Palestinian Arab refugees in this Gaza area.<ref>{{dead link|date=January 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} a report on the activities of the ]</ref> The terms of the Armistice Agreement restricted Egypt's use and deployment of regular armed forces in the Gaza strip. In keeping with this restriction, the Egyptian Government's solution was to form a Palestinian para-military police force. The Palestinian Border police was created in December 1952. The Border police were placed under the command of ], a former Egyptian air brigade commander, member of the Muslim Brotherhood and member of the Revolutionary Council. 250 Palestinian volunteers started training in March 1953, with further volunteers coming forward for training in May and December 1953. Some Border police personnel were attached to the Military Governor's office, under 'Abd-al-'Azim al-Saharti, to guard public installations in the Gaza strip.<ref>Yezid Sayigh (1999) Armed Struggle and the Search for State: The Palestinian National Movement 1949–1993. Oxford University Press {{ISBN|978-0-19-829643-0}} p 61</ref> After an Israeli raid on an ] outpost in Gaza in February 1955, during which 37 Egyptian soldiers were killed, the Egyptian government began to actively sponsor fedayeen raids into Israel.<ref>"Records show that until the Gaza raid, the Egyptian military authorities had a consistent and firm policy of curbing infiltration...into Israel...and that it was only following the raid that a new policy was put in place, that of organizing the fedayeen units and turning them into an official instrument of warfare against Israel." – Shlaim, pp. 128–129. However, official policy and actual actions were not always consistent – whether due to incompetence or deliberately turning a blind eye to Palestinian actions, both in Jordan and in Egypt. In fact, during this period there were some 7,850 infiltrations and border incidents on the Jordanian border (including incidents in which Jordanian troops sniped into Israeli areas, conducted intelligence forays or, in one case tried to block the Israeli road leading to the southern Israeli town of Eilat) – how many of these actions by Jordanian troops were local initiatives and how many were officially sanctioned is not clear. On the Egyptian border there were in this period approximately 3,000 infiltrations and incidents, the vast majority along the Gaza section of that border. These too were virtually all Palestinian in origin, but also included an undetermined number of shooting incidents initiated by Egyptian troops – usually against Israeli border patrols. ''Carta's Atlas of Israel'' Volume 2: ''The First Years 1948–1961'' (Hebrew)</ref> | |||
Fedayeen groups began joining the ] (PLO), beginning in 1968.<ref name=Gresh>{{cite book|title=''The New A-Z of the Middle East''|author=Alain Gresh and Dominique Vidal|publisher=I.B.Tauris|year=2004|isbn=1860643264}}</ref> While the PLO was the "unifying framework" under which these groups operated, each fedayeen organization had its own leader and armed forces and retained autonomy in operations.<ref name=Gresh/> Of the dozen or so fedayeen groups under the framework of the PLO, the most important were the ] (PFLP) headed by ]), the ] (DFLP) headed by Nawaf Hawatmeh), the PFLP-General Command headed by ], ] (affiliated with Syria), and the ] (formerly controlled from ]).<ref name=Gresh/> | |||
The first struggle by Palestinian fedayeen may have been launched from Syrian territory in 1951, though most counterattacks between 1951 and 1953 were launched from Jordanian territory.<ref name=Almog>{{cite book|title=Britain, Israel, and the United States, 1955–1958: Beyond Suez|author=Orna Almog|year=2003|page=20|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-7146-5246-7|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vYmBoP09_kkC&q=infiltrations+palestinian+economic+fedayeen&pg=PA20}}</ref> According to ] (former head of ]), these early infiltrations were limited "incursions", initially motivated by economic reasons, such as Palestinians crossing the border into Israel to harvest crops in their former villages.<ref name=Almog/> Gradually, they developed into violent robbery and deliberate 'terrorist' attacks as fedayeen replaced the 'innocent' refugees as the perpetrators.{{citation needed|date=May 2014}} | |||
===West Bank=== | |||
In 1953, Israeli Prime Minister ] tasked ], then security chief of the Northern Region, with setting up of a new commando unit, ], designed to respond to fedayeen infiltrations (''see ]'').<ref name=Vidal/> After one month of training, "a patrol of the unit that infiltrated into the Gaza Strip as an exercise, encountered Palestinians in ] refugee camp, opened fire to rescue itself and left behind about 30 killed Arabs and dozens of wounded."<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130605014133/http://www.aisisraelstudies.org/2006papers/Gelber%20Yoav%202006.pdf |date=June 5, 2013 }}</ref> In its five-month existence, Unit 101 was also responsible for carrying out the ] on the night of 14–15 October 1953, in the Jordanian village of the same name.<ref name=Vidal/> Cross-border operations by Israel were conducted in both Egypt and Jordan "to 'teach' the Arab leaders that the ] saw them as responsible for these activities, even if they had not directly conducted them."<ref name=Almog/> ] felt that retaliatory action by Israel was the only way to convince ] that, for the safety of their own citizens, they should work to stop fedayeen infiltrations. Dayan stated, "We are not able to protect every man, but we can prove that the price for Jewish blood is high."<ref name=Almog/> | |||
In the late 1960s, attempts were made to organize fedayeen resistance cells in the ]. The mobilization that did occur was based to a large extent in the refugee population of the West Bank.<ref name=Hammer>{{cite book|title=''The Palestinian Diaspora: Formation of Identities and Politics of Homeland''|author=Helena Lindholm Schulz and Juliane Hammer|year=2003|page=68|publisher=]|isbn=0415268206}}</ref> The stony and empty terrain of the West Bank mountains made the fedayeen easy to spot and this, coupled with a harsh regime of ] deployed by Israeli forces against the families of fighters, resulted in the fedayeen being pushed out of the West Bank altogether within a few months.<ref name=Braizat/> Arafat reportedly escaped arrest in ] by jumping out a window as Israeli police came in the front door.<ref name=Braizat/> Having been pushed out of the West Bank and prevented from operating in Syria and Egypt, the fedayeen concentrated on Jordan.<ref name=Braizat/> | |||
According to Martin Gilbert, between 1951 and 1955, 967 Israelis were killed in what he claims as "Arab terrorist attacks",<ref name=Gilbertp58/> a figure Benny Morris characterizes as "pure nonsense".<ref name=Morris2>{{cite book|title=Israel's Border Wars, 1949–1956|author=]|year=1993|publisher=]|page=101|isbn=978-0-19-829262-3}}</ref> Morris explains that Gilbert's fatality figures are "3-5 times higher than the figures given in contemporary Israeli reports" and that they seem to be based on a 1956 speech by David Ben-Gurion in which he uses the word ''nifga'im'' to refer to "casualties" in the broad sense of the term (i.e. both dead and wounded).<ref name=Morris2/> According to the ] between 1951 and 1956, 400 Israelis were killed and 900 wounded in fedayeen attacks.<ref name=JAFI>{{cite web|publisher=] |title=Map |url=http://www.jafi.org.il/education/100/maps/fed.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090623224146/http://www.jafi.org.il/education/100/maps/fed.html |archive-date=2009-06-23 }}</ref> Dozens of these attacks are today cited by the Israeli government as "Major Arab Terrorist Attacks against Israelis prior to the 1967 ]".<ref name=MFA1>{{cite web|publisher=]|title=Major terror attacks|url=http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Facts+About+Israel/Israel+in+Maps/1948-1967-+Major+Terror+Attacks.htm}}</ref><ref name=MFA2>{{cite web|publisher=]|title=Palestinian Terror|url=http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Terrorism-+Obstacle+to+Peace/Palestinian+terror+before+2000/Which+Came+First-+Terrorism+or+Occupation+-+Major.htm}}</ref> | |||
===Jordan=== | |||
United Nations reports indicate that between 1949 and 1956, Israel launched more than seventeen raids on Egyptian territory and 31 attacks on Arab towns or military forces.<ref name=Mitchell>{{cite book|title=Native Vs. Settler: Ethnic Conflict in Israel/Palestine, Northern Ireland, and South Africa|author=Thomas G. Mitchell|page=133|year=2000|publisher=Bloomsbury Academic |isbn=978-0-313-31357-8}}</ref> | |||
After the influx of a second wave of ] from the 1967 war, fedayeen bases in Jordan began to proliferate and there were increased fedayeen attacks on Israel.<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> Fedayeen fighters launched ineffective bazooka-shelling attacks on Israeli targets across the ] and "brisk and indiscriminate" Israeli retaliations destroyed Jordanian villages, farms and installations, causing 100,000 people to flee the ] eastward.<ref name=Braizat>{{cite book|title=''The Jordanian-Palestinian Relationship: The Bankruptcy of the Confederal Idea''|author=Musa S. Braizat|year=1998|publisher=British Academic Press|page=138|isbn=1860642918}}</ref> According to Milton-Edwards and Hinchcliffe, the increasing ferocity of Israeli reprisals conducted against Jordanians, and not Palestinians, for the fedayeen raids into Israel became a growing cause of concern for the Jordanian authorities.<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> | |||
From late 1954 onwards, larger scale Fedayeen operations were mounted from Egyptian territory.<ref name=Almog/> The Egyptian government supervised the establishment of formal fedayeen groups in Gaza and the northeastern ].<ref name=Gilbert>{{cite book| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cT16EWF9I4cC&q=fedayeen+israel&pg=PA58| title=The Routledge Atlas of the Arab-Israeli Conflict| author=]| publisher=Routledge| year=2005| isbn=978-0-415-35901-6}}</ref> General Mustafa Hafez, commander of ] intelligence, is said to have founded Palestinian fedayeen units "to launch terrorist raids across Israel's southern border,"<ref name=JPOST>{{cite news|url=http://fr.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1192380626879&pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130706010441/http://fr.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1192380626879&pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull |url-status=dead |archive-date=2013-07-06 |title=An 'infidel' in Israel |author=Lela Gilbert |publisher=] |date=2007-10-23 }}</ref> nearly always against civilians.<ref name="Nasr1996p40">{{cite book|author=Kameel B. Nasr|title=Arab and Israeli Terrorism: The Causes and Effects of Political Violence, 1936–1993|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QRXURzwdXS4C&pg=PA40|date=1 December 1996|publisher=McFarland|isbn=978-0-7864-3105-2|pages=40–|quote=Fedayeen to attack...almost always against civilians}}</ref> In a speech on 31 August 1955, Egyptian President Nasser said: | |||
The ] in 1968 turned the Palestinian fedayeen into "daring heroes of the ]".<ref name=Schulz>{{cite book|title=''The Palestinian Diaspora: Formation of Identities and Politics of Homeland''|author=Helena Lindholm Schulz and Juliane Hammer|page=120|publisher=]|year=2003|isbn=0415268206}}</ref> Though the fedayeen lost the battle against Israeli forces at the Jordanian village of ], they did inflict much heavier casualties on Israel than had been expected. Thus, Karameh became what ] has termed the "foundation myth" of the Palestinian commando movement, whereby "failure against overwhelming odds brilliantly narrated as as heroic triumph."<ref name=Schulz/> | |||
:Egypt has decided to dispatch her heroes, the disciples of Pharaoh and the sons of Islam and they will cleanse the land of Palestine....There will be no peace on Israel's border because we demand vengeance, and vengeance is Israel's death.<ref name=JVL>{{cite web |publisher= ] | title= Fedayeen |url=https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Terrorism/Fedayeen.html}}</ref> | |||
The confidence of the Palestinian fedayeen had been bolstered by the battle of Karameh, recruitment increased, and the ruling ] authorities in Jordan were alarmed by the activities of the PLO who had established a "state within a state", providing military training and social welfare services to the Palestinian population while bypassing the Jordanian authorities.<ref name=Hinchcliffe>{{cite book|title=''Jordan: A Hashemite Legacy''|author=Beverley Milton-Edwards and Peter Hinchcliffe|year=2001|pages=46-48|publisher=]|isbn=0415267269}}</ref> Palestinian criticism of the poor performance of the ], the King's army, was an insult to both the King and the regime.<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> Further, many Palestinian fedayeen groups of the radical left, such as the PFLP, "called for the overthrow of the Arab monarchies, including the Hashemite regime in Jordan, arguing that this was an essential first step toward the liberation of Palestine."<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> | |||
In 1955, it is reported that 260 Israeli citizens were killed or wounded by the fedayeen.<ref name=ADL>{{cite web |publisher=] |title=Record |url=http://www.adl.org/ISRAEL/Record/sinai.asp |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071016201124/http://www.adl.org/ISRAEL/Record/sinai.asp |archive-date=2007-10-16 }}</ref> Some believe fedayeen attacks contributed to the outbreak of the ];<ref name=Benvenisti>{{cite book |title=Sacred Landscape, The Buried History of the Holy Land since 1948: Ghosts and Infiltrators |url=http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/8205/8205.ch05.html |author=] |publisher=] |access-date=2008-01-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060904163907/http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/8205/8205.ch05.html |archive-date=2006-09-04 |url-status=dead }}</ref> they were cited by Israel as the reason for undertaking the 1956 ].<ref name=Morrisp149>{{cite book| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YUthqHRF-m8C&q=fedayeen+suez+war+morris&pg=PA419| title=Israel's Border Wars, 1949–1956: Arab Infiltration, Israeli Retaliation, and| author=]| publisher=Oxford University Press| year=1993| isbn=978-0-19-829262-3|page=149}}</ref> Others argue that Israel "engineered eve-of-war lies and deceptions.... to give Israel the excuse needed to launch its strike", such as presenting a group of "captured fedayeen" to journalists, who were in fact Israeli soldiers.<ref name=Lustick>{{cite book|title=Traditions and Transitions in Israel Studies|author=]|publisher=]:SUNY Press|year=2003|page=23|isbn=978-0-7914-5585-2}}</ref> | |||
In the first week of September in 1970, PFLP forces highjacked three airplanes (British, Swiss and German) at ] in Jordan. The airplanes were evaucated and destroyed on the tarmac, and the three European governments were forced to free PFLP militants that had been held in European jails to secure the release of their citizens.<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> | |||
In 1956, ] entered ] in the Egyptian controlled Gaza Strip, conducting house-to-house searches for Palestinian fedayeen and weaponry.<ref name=Thomas>{{cite book|title=How Israel Was Won: A Concise History of the Arab-Israeli Conflict|url=https://archive.org/details/howisraelwaswonc00bayl|url-access=registration|author=Baylis Thomas|page=|year=1999|publisher=Lexington Books|isbn=978-0-7391-0064-6}}</ref> During this operation, 275 Palestinians were killed, with an additional 111 killed in Israeli raids on the ] refugee camp.<ref name=Thomas/><ref name=Chomsky>{{cite book|title=The Fateful Triangle: The United States, Israel, and the Palestinians|author=]|year=1999|page=102|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-89608-601-2}}</ref> Israel claimed these killings resulted from "refugee resistance", a claim denied by refugees;<ref name=Chomsky/> there were no Israeli casualties.<ref name=Chomsky/> | |||
On ] ], King Hussein ordered his troops to strike at and eliminate the fedayeen network in Jordan.<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> Syrian troops intervened to support the fedayeen but were turned back by Jordanian armour.<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> Thousands were killed in the initial battle which came to known as ], and thousands more in the security crackdown that followed, and by the summer of 1971, the Palestinian fedayeen network in Jordan had been effectively dismantled with most of the fighters setting up base in southern Lebanon instead.<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> | |||
===Suez Crisis=== | |||
The ] writer ] who visited Palestinian fedayeen at their bases in ] between 1970 and 1972, "memorialized what he perceived to be their bravery, idealism, flexibility of identity, and heroism" in his novel ''Prisoner of Love'' (1986).<ref name=Rubenberg>{{cite book|title=''The Palestinians: In Search of a Just Peace''|author=Cheryl Rubenberg|year=2003|page=40|publisher=Lynne Rienner Publishers|isbn=1588262251}}</ref> | |||
], 1956]] | |||
On 29 October 1956, the first day of ], Israeli forces attacked "fedayeen units" in the towns of Ras al-Naqb and Kuntilla. Two days later, fedayeen destroyed water pipelines in Kibbutz Ma'ayan along the ], and began a campaign of mining in the area which lasted throughout November. In the first week of November, similar attacks occurred along the Syrian and Jordanian borders, the Jerusalem corridor and in the ] region—although the state armies of both those countries are suspected as the saboteurs. On 9 November, four Israeli soldiers were injured after their vehicle was ambushed by fedayeen near the city of ]; and several water pipelines and bridges were sabotaged in the Negev.<ref name=Morris3>{{cite book|title=Border Wars, 1949–1956: The Sinai-Suez Wars and the end of the Fedayeen|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YUthqHRF-m8C&q=fedayeen+suez+war+morris&pg=PA419|author=] |pages=419–425 |year=1993 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-829262-3}}</ref> | |||
===Gaza Strip=== | |||
During the invasion of Sinai, Israeli forces killed fifty defenseless fedayeen on a lorry in Ras Sudar. (Reserve Lieutenant Colonel Saul Ziv told '']'' in 1995 he was haunted by this killing.)<ref name=Vidal>{{cite book |title=The New A-Z of the Middle East |author=Alain Gresh |author2=Dominique Vidal |pages= |year=2004 |publisher=I.B. Tauris |isbn=978-1-86064-326-2 |url=https://archive.org/details/newazofmiddleeas0000gres/page/282 }}</ref> After Israel took control of the ], dozens of fedayeen were summarily executed, mostly in two separate incidents. Sixty-six were killed in screening operations in the area; while a US diplomat estimated that of the 500 fedayeen captured by the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF), "about 30" were killed.<ref name=Morris3/> | |||
The emergence of a fedayeen movement in the Gaza Strip was catalyzed by Israel's occupation of the territory during the ].<ref name=Milton/> Palestinian fedayeen from Gaza "waged a mini-war" against Israel for three years before the movement was crushed by the Israeli military in 1971 under the orders of then Defense Minister, ].<ref name=Milton/> | |||
===1956 to 1967=== | |||
Palestinians in Gaza were proud of their role in establishing a fedayeen movement there when no such movement existed in the ] at the time. The fighters were housed in refugee camps or hid in the ] groves of wealthy Gazan landowners, carrying out raids against Israeli soldiers from these sites.<ref name=Milton/> | |||
Between the ] and the ], Israeli civilian and military casualties on all Arab fronts, inflicted by regular and irregular forces (including those of Palestinian fedayeen), averaged one per month — an estimated total of 132 fatalities.<ref name=Finkelstein2>{{cite book|title=Image and Reality of the Israel-Palestine Conflict|author=]|page=253|year=2003|publisher=]|isbn=978-1-85984-442-7}}</ref> | |||
During the mid and late 1960s, there emerged a number of independent Palestinian fedayeen groups who sought "the liberation of all ] through a Palestinian armed struggle."<ref name=Ismael>{{cite book|title=The Communist Movement in the Arab World|author=Tareq Y. Ismael|publisher=]|year=2005|page=76|isbn=978-0-415-34851-5}}</ref> The first incursion by these fedayeen may have been the 1 January 1965 commando infiltration into Israel, to plant explosives that destroyed a section of pipeline designed to divert water from the ] into Israel.<ref name=Nasser>{{cite book|title=Globalization and Terrorism: The Migration of Dreams and Nightmares|url=https://archive.org/details/globalizationter0000nass|url-access=registration|author=Jamal R. Nassar|page=|year=2005|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=978-0-7425-2504-7}}</ref> In 1966, the Israeli military ] the Jordanian-controlled West Bank village of ], in response to ] raids against Israel's eastern border, increasing tensions leading to the ]. | |||
The most active of the fedayeen groups in Gaza was the ] (PFLP) who enjoyed instant popularity among the secularised, ] population who had come of age during Egyptian President Nasser's rule of Gaza. The emergence of armed struggle as the liberation strategy for the Gaza Strip reflected larger ideological changes within the Palestinian national movement toward political violence. This armed struggle was conceived of in secular terms with exhortations to take up arms not as part of a jihad, but in order to "free the oppressed from the ] ] regime."<ref name=Milton/> The "radical left" dominated the political scene, and the overarching slogan of the time was, "We will liberate Palestine first, then the rest of the Arab world."<ref name=Milton/> | |||
===1967 to 1987=== | |||
During Israel's 1971 military campaign to contain or control the fedayeen, an estimated 15,000 suspected fighters were rounded up and ]ed to detention camps in Abu Zneima and Abu Rudeis in the ]. Tens of homes were ] by Israeli forces, rendering hundreds of people homeless. According to Milton-Edwards, "This security policy successfully instilled terror in the camps and wiped out the fedayeen bases."<ref name=Milton/> It is also paved the way for the rise of the Islamic movement, which began organizing as early as 1969-1970, led by ]. | |||
] patrol unit in ], 1969 ]] | |||
Fedayeen groups began joining the ] (PLO) in 1968.<ref name=Gresh>{{cite book|title=The New A-Z of the Middle East|author=Alain Gresh and Dominique Vidal|publisher=I.B.Tauris|year=2004|isbn=978-1-86064-326-2|page=|url=https://archive.org/details/newazofmiddleeas0000gres/page/232}}</ref> While the PLO was the "unifying framework" under which these groups operated, each fedayeen organization had its own leader and armed forces and retained autonomy in operations.<ref name=Gresh/> Of the dozen or so fedayeen groups under the PLO framework, the most important were the ] (PFLP) headed by ], the ] (DFLP) headed by ], the ] headed by ], ] (affiliated with Syria), and the ] (backed by ]).<ref name=Gresh/> | |||
The most severe act of sabotage of the fedayeen occurred on 4 July 1969, when a single militant placed three pounds of explosives under the manifold of eight pipelines carrying oil from the ] to the dockside. As a result of the explosion, three pipelines were temporarily out of commission and a fire destroyed over 1,500 tons of refined oil.<ref name=TIME>{{cite web|title=Commando Riposte|date=July 4, 1969|publisher=]|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,840176,00.html?promoid=googlep|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121022101845/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,840176,00.html?promoid=googlep|url-status=dead|archive-date=October 22, 2012}}</ref> | |||
===Lebanon=== | |||
====West Bank==== | |||
On ] ], the Lebanese government signed the ] which granted Palestinians the right to launch attacks on Israel from southern Lebanon in coordination with the Lebanese army.<ref name=Tanca/> After the expulsion of the Palestinian fedayeen from Jordan and a series of Israeli raids on Lebanon, the Lebanese government granted the PLO the right to defend Palestinian refugee camps there and to possess heavy weaponry.<ref name=Tanca/> After the outbreak of 1975 ], the PLO increasingly began to act once again as a "state within a state".<ref name=Tanca/> Israel invaded southern Lebanon in the ], occupying a 20 kilometer wide area there to put an end to Palestinian attacks on Israel, but fedayeen missile attacks on villages in northern Israel continued.<ref name=Tanca/> | |||
In the late 1960s, attempts were made to organize fedayeen resistance cells among the refugee population in the West Bank.<ref name=Hammer>{{cite book|title=The Palestinian Diaspora: Formation of Identities and Politics of Homeland|url=https://archive.org/details/palestiniandiasp00schu|url-access=limited|author=Helena Lindholm Schulz and Juliane Hammer|year=2003|page=|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-415-26820-2}}</ref> The stony and empty terrain of the West Bank mountains made the fedayeen easy to spot; and Israeli ] against the families of fighters resulted in the fedayeen being pushed out of the West Bank altogether, within a few months.<ref name=Braizat/> ] reportedly escaped arrest in ] by jumping out a window, as ] came in the front door.<ref name=Braizat/> Without a base in the West Bank, and prevented from operating in Syria and Egypt, the fedayeen concentrated in Jordan.<ref name=Braizat/> | |||
====Jordan==== | |||
], supported by ] and ] again entered Lebanon on ] ] in an operation code-named "Peace for Galilee", encountering "fierce resistance" from the Palestinian fedayeen there.<ref name=Tanca>{{cite book|title=''Foreign Armed Intervention in Internal Conflict''|author=Antonio Tanca|year=1993|page=178|publisher=Martinus Nijhoff Publishers|isbn=0792324269}}</ref> Israel's occupation of southern Lebanon and its siege and constant shelling of the capital ] in the ], eventually forced the Palestinian fedayeen to accept an internationally brokered agreement that moved them out of Lebanon to different places in the Arab world.<ref name=Nasser/> The headquarters of the PLO was moved out of Lebanon to ] at this time.<ref name=Nasser/> | |||
After the influx of a second wave of ] from the 1967 war, fedayeen bases in Jordan began to proliferate, and there were increased fedayeen attacks on Israel.<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> Fedayeen fighters launched ineffective bazooka-shelling attacks on Israeli targets across the ], while "brisk and indiscriminate" ] destroyed Jordanian villages, farms and installations, causing 100,000 people to flee the ] eastward.<ref name=Braizat>{{cite book|title=The Jordanian-Palestinian Relationship: The Bankruptcy of the Confederal Idea|author=Musa S. Braizat|year=1998|publisher=British Academic Press|page=138|isbn=978-1-86064-291-3}}</ref> The increasing ferocity of those Israeli reprisals directed at Jordanians (not Palestinians) for fedayeen raids into Israel became a growing cause of concern for the Jordanian authorities.<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> | |||
One such Israeli reprisal was in the Jordanian town of ], home to the headquarters of an emerging fedayeen group called ], led by Yasser Arafat. Warned of large-scale Israeli military preparations, many fedayeen groups, including the PFLP and the DFLP, withdraw their forces from the town. Advised by a pro-Fatah Jordanian divisional commander to withdraw his men and headquarters to nearby hills, Arafat refused,<ref name="Consolidation of Power">{{cite book |last=Aburish |first=Said K. |author-link=Said K. Aburish |title=From Defender to Dictator |year=1998 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |pages=69–98 |location=New York |isbn=978-1-58234-049-4 }}</ref> stating "We want to convince the world that there are those in the Arab world who will not withdraw or flee."<ref name="Sayigh">{{cite book |last=Sayigh |first=Yezid |title=Armed Struggle and the Search for State, the Palestinian National Movement, 1949–1993 |year=1997 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-829643-0 }}</ref> Fatah remained, and the ] agreed to back them if heavy fighting ensued.<ref name="Consolidation of Power" /> | |||
During a ] ] press conference at the ], ] stated that, "] was the first Palestinian fedayeen who carried his sword along the path on which the Palestinians today carry their cross."<ref name=Yeor>{{cite book|title=''The Dhimmi: Jews and Christians Under Islam''|author=]|publisher=Fairleigh Dickinson Univeristy Press|page=145|year=1985|isbn=0838632629}}</ref> | |||
On the night of 21 March 1968, Israel attacked Karameh with heavy weaponry, armored vehicles and fighter jets.<ref name="Consolidation of Power" /> Fatah held its ground, surprising the Israeli military. As Israel's forces intensified their campaign, the Jordanian Army became involved, causing the Israelis to retreat in order to avoid a full-scale war.<ref name=Bullochp165>{{cite book |last=Bulloch |first=John |title=Final Conflict |year=1983 |publisher=Faber Publishing |pages=165 }}</ref> By the battle's end, 100 Fatah militants had been killed, 100 wounded and 120-150 captured; Jordanian fatalities were 61 soldiers and civilians, 108 wounded; and Israeli casualties were 28 soldiers killed and 69 wounded. 13 Jordanian tanks were destroyed in the battle; while the Israelis lost 4 tanks, 3 half tracks, 2 ], and an airplane shot down by Jordanian forces.<ref name=Pollack>{{cite book|title=Arabs at War: Military Effectiveness, 1948–1991|author=Kenneth M. Pollack|year=2004|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-8032-8783-9|page=334}}</ref> | |||
==The first intifada onwards== | |||
The Battle of Karameh raised the profile of the fedayeen, as they were regarded the "daring heroes of the Arab world".<ref name=Schulz>{{cite book|title=The Palestinian Diaspora: Formation of Identities and Politics of Homeland|url=https://archive.org/details/palestiniandiasp00schu|url-access=limited|author=Helena Lindholm Schulz and Juliane Hammer|page=|publisher=]|year=2003|isbn=978-0-415-26820-2}}</ref> Despite the higher Arab death toll, Fatah considered the battle a victory because of the Israeli army's rapid withdrawal.<ref name="Consolidation of Power" /> Such developments prompted ] to dub the Battle of Karameh the "foundation myth" of the Palestinian commando movement, whereby "failure against overwhelming odds brilliantly narrated as heroic triumph."<ref name=Schulz/> | |||
During the ], armed violence on the part of Palestinians was kept to a minimum, in favor of mass demonstrations and acts of ].<ref name=Nassar/> However, the issue of the role of armed struggle did not die out altogether.<ref name=Nassar/> Those Palestinian groups affiliated with the PLO and based outside of historic ], such as rebels within ] and the PFLP-GC, used the lack of fedayeen operations as their main weapon of criticism against the PLO leadership at the time.<ref name=Nassar/> The PFLP and DFLP even made a few abortive attempts at fedayeen operations inside Israel.<ref name=Nassar/> According to Jamal Raji Nassar and Roger Heacock, "<blockquote> at least parts of the Palestinian left sacrificed all to the golden calf of armed struggle when measuring the degree of revolutionary commitment by the number of fedayeen operations, instead of focusing on the positions of power they doubtless held inside the Occupied Territories and which were major assests in struggles over a particular political line."<ref name=Nassar>{{cite book|title=''Intifada: Palestine at the Crossroads''|author=Jamal Raji Nassar and Roger Heacock|year=1990|pages=221-222|publisher=Praeger/Greenwood|isbn=027593411X}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
] (leader of ]) and ] (leader of ]) at an ] press conference discussing the situation between the fedayeen and ]ian authorities, 1970]] | |||
During the first intifada, but particularly after the signing of the ], the fedayeen steadily lost ground to the emerging forces of the ], represented initially and most prominently by Hamas.<ref name=Burgat/> The fedayeen lost their position as a political force and the secular nationalist movement that had represented the first generation of the Palestinian resistance became instead a symbolic, cultural force that was seen by some as having failed in its duties.<ref name=Burgat>{{cite book|title=''Face to Face With Political Islam''|author=François Burgat|page=117|year=2003|publisher=I.B.Tauris|isbn=1860642136}}</ref> | |||
Financial donations and recruitment increased as many young Arabs, including thousands of non-Palestinians, joined the ranks of the organization.<ref name=Cobban>{{cite book |last=Cobban |first=Helena |title=The Palestinian Liberation Organization, Power, People and Politics |year=1984 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |pages= |isbn=978-0-521-27216-2 |url=https://archive.org/details/palestinianliber0000cobb/page/39 }}</ref> The ruling ] authorities in Jordan grew increasingly alarmed by the PLO's activities, as they established a "state within a state", providing ] and social welfare services to the Palestinian population, bypassing the Jordanian authorities.<ref name=Hinchcliffe>{{cite book|title=Jordan: A Hashemite Legacy|author=Beverley Milton-Edwards and Peter Hinchcliffe|year=2001|pages=46–48|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-415-26726-7}}</ref> Palestinian criticism of the poor performance of the ] (the King's army) was an insult to both the King and the regime.<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> Further, many Palestinian fedayeen groups of the radical left, such as the PFLP, "called for the overthrow of the Arab monarchies, including the Hashemite regime in Jordan, arguing that this was an essential first step toward the liberation of Palestine."<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> | |||
In the first week of September 1970, PFLP forces hijacked three airplanes (British, Swiss and German) at ] in Jordan. To secure the release of the passengers, the demand to free PFLP militants held in European jails was met. After everyone had disembarked, the fedayeen destroyed the airplanes on the tarmac.<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> | |||
==== Black September in Jordan ==== | |||
{{main|Black September in Jordan|Syrian invasion of Jordan}} | |||
On 16 September 1970, ] ordered his troops to strike and eliminate the fedayeen network in Jordan.<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> Syrian troops intervened to support the fedayeen, but were turned back by Jordanian armour and Israeli army overflights.<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> Thousands of Palestinians were killed in the initial battle — which came to be known as ] — and thousands more in the security crackdown that followed. By the summer of 1971, the Palestinian fedayeen network in Jordan had been effectively dismantled, with most of the fighters setting up base in southern Lebanon instead.<ref name=Hinchcliffe/> | |||
====Gaza Strip==== | |||
The emergence of a fedayeen movement in the ] was catalyzed by Israel's occupation of the territory during the ].<ref name=Milton/> Palestinian fedayeen from Gaza "waged a mini-war" against Israel for three years before the movement was crushed by the Israeli military in 1971 under the orders of then ], ].<ref name=Milton/> | |||
Palestinians in Gaza were proud of their role in establishing a fedayeen movement there when no such movement existed in the ] at the time. The fighters were housed in refugee camps or hid in the ] groves of wealthy Gazan landowners, carrying out raids against Israeli soldiers from these sites.<ref name=Milton/> | |||
The most active of the fedayeen groups in Gaza was the PFLP, an offshoot of the ] (ANM)—who enjoyed instant popularity among the already secularized, ] population who had come of age during Egyptian President Nasser's rule of Gaza. The emergence of armed struggle as the liberation strategy for the Gaza Strip reflected larger ideological changes within the Palestinian national movement toward political violence. | |||
<blockquote>The ideology of armed struggle was, by this time, broadly secular in content; Palestinians were asked to take up arms not as part of a ] against the infidel but to free the oppressed from the Zionist colonial regime. The vocabulary of liberation was distinctly secular.<ref name=Milton/></blockquote> | |||
The "radical left" dominated the political scene, and the overarching slogan of the time was, "We will liberate Palestine first, then the rest of the Arab world."<ref name=Milton/> | |||
During Israel's 1971 military campaign to contain or control the fedayeen, an estimated 15,000 suspected fighters were rounded up and deported to detention camps in Abu Zneima and Abu Rudeis in the Sinai. Dozens of homes were ] by Israeli forces, rendering hundreds of people homeless. According to Milton-Edwards, "This security policy successfully instilled terror in the camps and wiped out the fedayeen bases."<ref name=Milton/> The destruction of the secular infrastructure, paved the way for the rise of the ], which began organizing as early as 1969–1970, led by ]. | |||
====Lebanon==== | |||
On 3 November 1969, the Lebanese government signed the ] which granted Palestinians the right to launch attacks on Israel from southern Lebanon in coordination with the ]. After the expulsion of the Palestinian fedayeen from Jordan and a series of Israeli raids on Lebanon, the Lebanese government granted the PLO the right to defend Palestinian refugee camps there and to possess heavy weaponry. After the outbreak of 1975 ], the PLO increasingly began to act once again as a "state within a state". On 11 March 1978, twelve fedayeen led by ] infiltrated Israel from the sea and hijacked a bus along the coastal highway, killing 38 civilians in the ensuing gunfight between them and police.<ref name="Recognition"/> Israel invaded southern Lebanon in the ], occupying a {{convert|20|km|mi}} wide area there to put an end to Palestinian attacks on Israel, but fedayeen rocket strikes on northern Israel continued.<ref name=Tanca/> | |||
Israeli armoured artillery and infantry forces, supported by air force and naval units again entered Lebanon on 6 June 1982 in an operation code-named "Peace for Galilee", encountering "fierce resistance" from the Palestinian fedayeen there.<ref name=Tanca>{{cite book|title=Foreign Armed Intervention in Internal Conflict|author=Antonio Tanca|year=1993|page=178|publisher=Martinus Nijhoff Publishers|isbn=978-0-7923-2426-3}}</ref> Israel's occupation of southern Lebanon and its siege and constant shelling of the capital ] in the ], eventually forced the Palestinian fedayeen to accept an internationally brokered agreement that moved them out of Lebanon to different places in the Arab world.<ref name=Nasser/> The headquarters of the PLO was moved out of Lebanon to ] at this time.<ref name=Nasser/> The new PLO headquarters was destroyed during an Israeli ] in 1985. | |||
During a September 2, 1982 press conference at the United Nations, Yasser Arafat stated that, "Jesus Christ was the first Palestinian fedayeen who carried his sword along the path on which the Palestinians today carry their cross."<ref name=Yeor>{{cite book|title=The Dhimmi: Jews and Christians Under Islam|author=]|publisher=Fairleigh Dickinson University Press|page=145|year=1985|isbn=978-0-8386-3262-8}}</ref> | |||
===First Intifada=== | |||
On 25 November 1987, PFLP-GC launched an ], in which two fedayeen infiltrated northern Israel from an undisclosed Syrian-controlled area in southern Lebanon with hang gliders. One of them was killed at the border, while the other proceeded to land at an army camp, initially killing a soldier in a passing vehicle, then five more in the camp, before being shot dead. ] said that judging by commentary in the Arab world, the raid was seen as a boost to the Palestinian national movement, just as it had seemed to be almost totally eclipsed by the ].<ref>Friedman, Thomas L. "", ''New York Times'', 1987-11-27.</ref> Palestinians in Gaza began taunting Israeli soldiers, chanting "six to one" and the raid has been noted as a catalyst to the ].<ref name=morris>{{cite book|edition=1st|publisher=Knopf|isbn=978-0-679-42120-7|pages=|last=Morris|first=Benny|title=Righteous Victims: A History of the Zionist–Arab Conflict, 1881–1999|url=https://archive.org/details/righteousvictims00morr_626|url-access=limited|year=1999}}</ref> | |||
During the First Intifada, armed violence on the part of Palestinians was kept to a minimum, in favor of mass demonstrations and acts of ].<ref name=Nassar /> However, the issue of the role of armed struggle did not die out altogether.<ref name=Nassar /> Those Palestinian groups affiliated with the PLO and based outside of historic ], such as rebels within Fatah and the PFLP-GC, used the lack of fedayeen operations as their main weapon of criticism against the PLO leadership at the time.<ref name=Nassar /> The PFLP and DFLP even made a few abortive attempts at fedayeen operations inside Israel.<ref name=Nassar /> According to Jamal Raji Nassar and Roger Heacock, | |||
<blockquote> at least parts of the Palestinian left sacrificed all to the golden calf of armed struggle when measuring the degree of revolutionary commitment by the number of fedayeen operations, instead of focusing on the positions of power they doubtless held inside the ] and which were major assets in struggles over a particular political line.<ref name=Nassar>{{cite book|title=Intifada: Palestine at the Crossroads|author=Jamal Raji Nassar and Roger Heacock|year=1990|pages=|publisher=Praeger/Greenwood|isbn=978-0-275-93411-8|url=https://archive.org/details/intifadapalestin00nass/page/221}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
During the First Intifada, but particularly after the signing of the ], the fedayeen steadily lost ground to the emerging forces of the mujaheddin, represented initially and most prominently by Hamas.<ref name=Burgat /> The fedayeen lost their position as a political force and the secular ] that had represented the first generation of the Palestinian resistance became instead a symbolic, cultural force that was seen by some as having failed in its duties.<ref name=Burgat>{{cite book|title=Face to Face With Political Islam|author=François Burgat|page=117|year=2003|publisher=I.B.Tauris|isbn=978-1-86064-213-5}}</ref> | |||
===Second Intifada and current situation=== | |||
After being dormant for many years, Palestinian fedayeen reactivated their operations during the ]. In August 2001, ten Palestinian commandos from the ] (DFLP) penetrated the electric fences of the fortified army base of ], killing an Israeli major and two soldiers and wounding seven others. One of the commandos was killed in the firefight. Another was tracked for hours and later shot in head, while the rest escaped. In Gaza, the attack produced "a sense of euphoria—and nostalgia for the Palestinian fedayeen raids in the early days of the ]." Israel responded by launching airstrikes at the police headquarters in Gaza City, an intelligence building in the central Gaza town of ] and a police building in the West Bank town of ]. Salah Zeidan, head of the DFLP in Gaza, stated of the operation that, "It's a classic model—soldier to soldier, gun to gun, face to face Our technical expertise has increased in recent days. So has our courage, and people are going to see that this is a better way to resist the occupation than suicide bombs inside the Jewish state."<ref name=Goldenberg>{{cite web|title=Israeli jets avenge raid on army by commandos|author=Suzanne Goldenberg|work=]|date=August 27, 2001|access-date=2008-02-04|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/aug/27/israel}}</ref> | |||
Today, the fedayeen have been eclipsed politically by the ] (PNA), which consists of the major factions of the PLO, and militarily by Islamist groups, particularly ]. Already strained relations between Hamas and the PNA collapsed entirely when the former ] in 2007. Although the fedayeen are leftist and secular, during the ], fedayeen groups fought alongside and in coordination with Hamas even though a number of the factions were previously sworn enemies of them. The ], an armed faction loyal to the Fatah-controlled PNA, undermined Palestinian president ] by lobbing rockets into southern Israel in concert with rivals Hamas and the Islamic Jihad. According to researcher Maha Azzam, this symbolized the disintegration of Fatah and the division between the grassroots organization and the current leadership. The PFLP and the ] also joined in the fighting.<ref name="Bauer"/> | |||
To rival the PNA and increase Palestinian fedayeen cooperation, a ]-based coalition composed of representatives of Hamas, Islamic Jihad, the PFLP, as-Sa'iqa, the ], the Revolutionary Communist Party, and other anti-PNA factions within the PLO, such as ], was established during the ] in 2009.<ref name="Bauer">Bauer, Shane {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090122095501/http://english.aljazeera.net/focus/war_on_gaza/2009/01/200911915455957756.html |date=January 22, 2009 }}, ]. 2009-01-20.</ref> | |||
==Philosophical grounding and objectives== | ==Philosophical grounding and objectives== | ||
The objectives of the fedayeen were articulated in the statements and literature they produced, which were consistent with reference to the aim of destroying Zionism.<ref name=ONeill/> In 1970, the stated aim of the fedayeen was establishing Palestine as "a secular, democratic, nonsectarian state." Bard O'Neill writes that for some fedayeen groups, the secular aspect of the struggle was "merely a slogan for assuaging world opinion," while others strove "to give the concept meaningful content."<ref name=ONeill/> Prior to 1974, the fedayeen position was that ] who renounced Zionism could remain in the Palestinian state to be created. After 1974, the issue became less clear and there were suggestions that only those Jews who were in Palestine prior to "the Zionist invasion", alternatively placed at 1947 or 1917, would be able to remain.<ref name=ONeill/> | |||
Bard O'Neill also wrote that the fedayeen attempted to study and borrow from all of the revolutionary models available, but that their publications and statements show a particular affinity for the ]n, ]n, ]ese, and ] experiences.<ref name=ONeill/> | |||
The objectives of the fedayeen were articulated in the statements and literature they produced, which were consistent with reference to the aim of destroying ].<ref name=Freedman>{{cite book|title=''The Intifada: Its Impact on Israel, the Arab World, and the Superpowers''|author=Robert Owen Freedman et al.|year=1991|pages=64-66|publisher=]|isbn=0813010403}}</ref> In 1970, the stated aim of establishing Palestine as "a secular, democratic, nonsectarian state" was for some fedayeen groups "merely a slogan for assuaging world opinion," while others strove "to give the concept meaningful content."<ref name=Freedman/> Prior to 1974, the fedayeen position was that any ] who renounced Zionism could remain in the Palestinian state to be created. After 1974, the issue became less clear and there were suggestions that only those Jews who were in Palestine prior to "the Zionist invasion", alternatively placed at 1947 or 1917, would be able to remain.<ref name=Freedman/> | |||
===Infighting and breakaway movements=== | |||
In ''The Intifada:Its Impact on Israel, the Arab World, and the Superpowers'', Bard O'Neill writes that the fedayeen attempted to study and borrow from all of the ] models available, but that their publications and statements show a particular affinity for the ]n, ]n, ], and ] experiences.<ref name=Freedman/> | |||
During the post-Six-Day War era, individual fedayeen movements quarreled over issues about the recognition of Israel, alliances with various Arab states, and ideologies.<ref name="Recognition"/> A faction led by ] and ] split from PFLP in 1974, because they preferred a ] and non-] approach. This new movement became known as the ] (DFLP).<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081121033709/http://www.al-bab.com/arab/countries/palestine/orgs2.htm#DFLP |date=November 21, 2008 }} Arab Gateway to Palestinian Organizations.</ref> In 1974, the PNC approved the ] (drawn up by Arafat and his advisers), and proposed a compromise with the Israelis. The Program called for a Palestinian national authority over every part of "liberated Palestinian territory",<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.un.int/palestine/PLO/docone.html |title=Political Program Adopted at the 12th Session of the Palestine National Council |publisher=Permanent Observer Mission of Palestine to the United Nations |date=1974-06-08 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080118193127/http://www.un.int/palestine/PLO/PNA1.html |archive-date=2008-01-18 }}</ref> which referred to areas captured by Arab forces in the ] (present-day ] Strip). Perceived by some Palestinians as overtures to the ] and concessions to Israel, the program fostered internal discontent, and prompted several of the PLO factions, such as the PFLP, DFLP, as-Sa'iqa, the ] and the ], among others, to form a breakaway movement which came to be known as the ].<ref name="Recognition">{{cite book |last=Aburish |first=Said K. |author-link=Said K. Aburish |title=From Defender to Dictator |year=1998 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |pages=140–142 |location=New York |isbn=978-1-58234-049-4 }}</ref> | |||
During the Lebanese Civil War (1975–1990), the PLO aligned itself with the Communist and Nasserist ]. Although they were initially backed by Syrian president ], when he switched sides in the conflict, the smaller pro-Syrian factions within the Palestinian fedayeen camp, namely as-Sa'iqa and the ] fought against Arafat's Fatah-led PLO.<ref>{{cite book |last=Aburish |first=Said K. |author-link=Said K. Aburish |title=From Defender to Dictator |year=1998 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |pages=150–175 |isbn=978-1-58234-049-4 }}</ref> In 1988, after Arafat and al-Assad partially reconciled, Arafat loyalists in the refugee camps of ] and ] attempted to force out ]—a pro-Syrian Fatah breakaway movement formed by ] in 1983. Instead, al-Muragha's forces overran Arafat loyalists from both camps after bitter fighting in which Fatah al-Intifada received backing from the Lebanese ] militia.<ref>{{cite book |author=Taylor and Francis Group and Lucy Dean |title=The Middle East and North Africa 2004 |year=2004 |publisher=Routlegde |pages= |isbn=978-1-85743-184-1 |url=https://archive.org/details/middleeastnortha50thunse/page/720 }}</ref> | |||
The PLO and other Palestinian armed movements became increasingly divided after the Oslo Accords in 1993. They were rejected by the PFLP, DFLP, Hamas, and twenty other factions, as well as Palestinian intellectuals, ]s outside of the Palestinian territories, and the local leadership of the territories. The Rejectionist fedayeen factions formed a common front with the Islamists, culminating in the creation of the ]. This new alliance failed to act as a cohesive unit, but revealed the sharp divisions among the PLO, with the fedayeen finding themselves aligning with Palestinian Islamists for the first time. Disintegration within the PLO's main body Fatah increased as ]—in charge of foreign affairs—voiced his opposition to negotiations with Israel. Members of the PLO-Executive Committee, poet ] and refugee leader ] resigned from their posts in response to the PLO's acceptance of Oslo's terms.<ref>{{cite book |last=Aburish |first=Said K. |author-link=Said K. Aburish |title=From Defender to Dictator |year=1998 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |pages=256–265 |isbn=978-1-58234-049-4 }}</ref> | |||
===Tactics=== | |||
Until 1968, fedayeen tactics consisted largely of hit-and-run raids on Israeli military targets.<ref name=Follain>{{cite book|title=Jackal: The Complete Story of the Legendary Terrorist, Carlos the Jackal|author=John Follain|pages=|year=1998|publisher=]|isbn=978-1-55970-466-3|url=https://archive.org/details/jackalcompletest00foll/page/20}}</ref> A commitment to "armed struggle" was incorporated into PLO Charter in clauses that stated: "Armed struggle is the only way to liberate Palestine" and "Commando action constitutes the nucleus of the Palestinian popular liberation war."<ref name=Follain/> | |||
Preceding the Six-Day War in 1967, the fedayeen carried out several campaigns of sabotage against Israeli infrastructure. Common acts of this included the consistent mining of water and irrigation pipelines along the ] and its tributaries, as well as the Lebanese-Israeli border and in various locations in the ]. Other acts of sabotage involved bombing bridges, mining roads, ambushing cars and vandalizing (sometimes destroying) houses.<ref name=Morris3/> After the Six-Day War, these incidents steadily decreased with the exception of the bombing of a complex of oil pipelines sourcing from the Haifa refinery in 1969.<ref name=TIME/> | |||
The IDFs ] tactics, which from 1967 onwards regularly included the use of ], ]s, ]s, and other forms of ], effectively precluded the ability of the Palestinian fedayeen to create internal bases from which to wage "a people's war".<ref name=Beitler>{{cite book|title=The Path to Mass Rebellion: An Analysis of Two Intifadas|author=Ruth Margolies Beitler|year=2004|publisher=]|pages=56–57|isbn=978-0-7391-0709-6}}</ref> The tendency among many captured guerrillas to ] with the Israeli authorities, providing information that led to the destruction of numerous "terrorist cells", also contributed to the failure to establish bases in the ].<ref name=Beitler/> The fedayeen were compelled to establish external bases, resulting in frictions with their host countries which led to conflicts (such as ]), diverting them from their primary objective of "bleeding Israel".<ref name=Beitler/> | |||
====Airplane hijackings==== | |||
The tactic of exporting their struggle against Israel beyond the Middle East was first adopted by the Palestinian fedayeen in 1968.<ref name=Aubrey>{{cite book|title=The New Dimension of International Terrorism|author=Stefan M. Aubrey|page=34|year=2004|publisher=Hochschulverlag|isbn=978-3-7281-2949-9}}</ref> According to John Follain, it was ] of the PFLP who, unconvinced with the effectiveness of raids on military targets, masterminded the first hijacking of a civilian passenger plane by Palestinian fedayeen in July 1968. Two commandos forced an ] Boeing 747 en route from Rome to Tel Aviv to land in Algiers, renaming the flight "Palestinian Liberation 007".<ref name=Follain/> While publicly proclaiming that it would not negotiate with terrorists, the Israelis did negotiate. The passengers were released unharmed in exchange for the release of sixteen Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.<ref name=Follain/> | |||
<!-- Image with inadequate rationale removed: ] in the 1970s]] --> | |||
The first hijacking of an American airliner was conducted by the PFLP on 29 August 1969.<ref name=Kumamoto/> Robert D. Kumamoto describes the hijacking as a response to an American veto of a ] resolution ] for its March 1969 aerial attacks on Jordanian villages suspected of harbouring fedayeen, and for the impending delivery of American ] jets to Israel. The flight, en route to Tel Aviv from Rome, was forced to land in ] where, ], one of the two fedayeen to hijack the plane proclaimed that, "this hijacking is one of the operational aspects of our war against Zionism and all who support it, including the United States ... it was a perfectly normal thing to do, the sort of thing all freedom fighters must tackle."<ref name=Kumamoto>{{cite book|title=International Terrorism & American Foreign Relations, 1945–1976|author=Robert D. Kumamoto|year=1999|publisher=UPNE|isbn=978-1-55553-389-2|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/internationalter0000kuma}}</ref> Most of the passengers and crew were released immediately after the plane landed. Six Israeli passengers were taken hostage and held for questioning by Syria. Four women among them were released after two days, and the two men were released after a week of intensive negotiations between all the parties involved.<ref name=Kumamoto/> Of this PFLP hijacking and those that followed at Dawson's field, Kumamoto writes: "The PFLP hijackers had seized no armies, mountaintops, or cities. Theirs was not necessarily a war of arms; it was a war of words – a war of propaganda, the exploitation of violence to attract world attention. In that regard, the Dawson's Field episode was a publicity goldmine."<ref name=Kumamoto/> | |||
George Habash, leader of the PFLP, explained his view of the efficacy of hijacking as a tactic in a 1970 interview, stating, "When we hijack a plane it has more effect than if we killed a hundred Israelis in battle." Habash also stated that after decades of being ignored, "At least the world is talking about us now."<ref name=Aubrey/> The hijacking attempts did indeed continue. On 8 May 1972, a Sabena Airlines 707 was forced to land in Tel Aviv after it was commandeered by four Black September commandos who demanded the release of 317 fedayeen fighters being held in Israeli jails. While the ] was negotiating, Israeli paratroopers disguised as mechanics stormed the plane, shot and killed two of hijackers and captured the remaining two after a gunfight that injured five passengers and two paratroopers.<ref name=Kumamoto/> | |||
The tactics employed by the Black September group in subsequent operations differed sharply from the other "run-of-the-mill PLO attacks of the day". The unprecedented level of violence evident in multiple international attacks between 1971 and 1972 included the Sabena airliner hijacking (mentioned above), the assassination of the Jordanian Prime Minister in ], the ], and the ]. In ''The Dynamics of Armed Struggle'', ] contends that "armed struggle" is a message to the enemy that they are "doomed by history" and that operations are "violent message units" designed to "accelerate history" to this end.<ref name=Bell1>{{cite book|title=The Dynamics of the Armed Struggle|author=J. Bowyer Bell|year=1998|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-7146-4865-1|pages=168–169}}</ref> Bell argues that despite the apparent failure of the Munich operation which collapsed into chaos, murder, and gun battles, the basic fedayeen intention was achieved since, "The West was appalled and wanted to know the rationale of the terrorists, the Israelis were outraged and punished, many of the Palestinians were encouraged by the visibility and ignored the killings, and the rebels felt that they had acted, helped history along."<ref name=Bell1/> He notes the opposite was true for the 1976 hijacking of an Air France flight redirected to ] where the Israelis scored an "enormous tactical victory" in ]. While their death as martyrs had been foreseen, the fedayeen had not expected to die as villains, "bested by a display of Zionist skill."<ref name=Bell1/> | |||
====Affiliations with other guerrilla groups==== | |||
Several fedayeen groups maintained contacts with a number of other guerrilla groups worldwide. The ] for example had long held ties with Palestinians, and volunteers trained at fedayeen bases in Lebanon.<ref name=Bell2>{{cite book|title=The Secret Army: The IRA|author=J. Bowyer Bell|pages=|year=1997|publisher=Transaction Publishers|isbn=978-1-56000-901-6|url=https://archive.org/details/secretarmyira00bell/page/437}}</ref> In 1977, Palestinian fedayeen from Fatah helped arrange for the delivery of a sizable arms shipment to the Provos by way of ], but it was intercepted by the ] authorities.<ref name=Bell2/> | |||
The PFLP and the DFLP established connections with revolutionary groups such as the ] of West Germany, the ] of France, the ] of Italy, the ]<!-- , the ] --> and the ] of Uruguay. These groups, especially the Japanese Red Army participated in many of the PFLP's operations including hijackings and the Lod Airport massacre. The Red Army Faction joined the PFLP in the hijackings of two airplanes that landed in ].<ref name="Aburish">{{cite book |last=Aburish |first=Said K. |author-link=Said K. Aburish |title=From Defender to Dictator |year=1998 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |pages=101–102 |location=New York |isbn=978-1-58234-049-4 }}</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] (appointed as first Chairman of the ] by a summit of Arab leaders in 1964) | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] (military wing of PLO headed by ] in 1964, under control of Egypt's President ]) | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{ |
{{reflist|30em}} | ||
== Further reading == | |||
==External links== | |||
*{{cite book| author=Orna Almog| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vYmBoP09_kkC&q=fedayeen+israel&pg=PA20| title=Britain, Israel and the United States, 1955–1958: Beyond Suez| publisher=Routledge| year=2003| isbn=978-0-7146-5246-7}} | |||
* | |||
*{{cite book| author=Michael Curtis| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cJV6501Saa0C&q=fedayeen+israel&pg=PA273| title=People and Politics in the Middle East| publisher=Transaction Publishers| year=1971| isbn=978-0-87855-500-0}} | |||
* | |||
* '']'' ], ] | |||
* '']'' ], ] | |||
*{{cite book| url=http://books.google.com/books?id=vYmBoP09_kkC&pg=PA20&lpg=PA20&dq=fedayeen+israel&source=web&ots=-fiFfXSD4X&sig=H8b1-erX6m5r4uaWgrfY72VQhuc#PPA22,M1| title=Britain, Israel and the United States, 1955-1958: Beyond Suez| author=Orna Almog| publisher=Routledge| year=2003| isbn=0714652466}} | |||
*{{cite book| url=http://books.google.com/books?id=cJV6501Saa0C&pg=PA273&lpg=PA273&dq=fedayeen+israel&source=web&ots=Ah45iq8PdD&sig=PeECLmQje6UD7e0C44EQvzKZEvQ#PPA274,M1| title=People and Politics in the Middle East| author=Michael Curtis| publisher=Transaction Publishers| year=1971| isbn=0878555005}} | |||
*{{cite book| url=http://books.google.com/books?id=VCPvHOWwUDAC&pg=PA178&lpg=PA178&dq=fedayeen+israel&source=web&ots=5355piiHYL&sig=AAZvtGJmrBbHDQZedZr4_jnRC34| title=The Complete Idiot's Guide to Middle East Conflict| author=]| publisher=Alpha Books| year=2003| isbn=0028644107}} | |||
* OnWar.com | |||
{{Arab-Israeli Conflict}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 17:39, 24 December 2024
Palestinian militants This article is about Palestinian guerrilla movements. For other similarly named guerrilla movements, see Fedayeen.
Palestinian fedayeen (Arabic: فدائيون, romanized: fidā'iyūn) are militants or guerrillas of a nationalist orientation from among the Palestinian people. Most Palestinians consider the fedayeen to be freedom fighters, while most Israelis consider them to be terrorists.
Considered symbols of the Palestinian national movement, the Palestinian fedayeen drew inspiration from guerrilla movements in Vietnam, China, Algeria and Latin America. The ideology of the Palestinian fedayeen was mainly left-wing nationalist, socialist or communist, and their proclaimed purpose was to defeat Zionism, claim Palestine and establish it as "a secular, democratic, nonsectarian state". The meaning of secular, democratic and non-sectarian, however, greatly diverged among fedayeen factions.
Emerging from among the Palestinian refugees who fled or were expelled from their villages as a result of the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, in the mid-1950s the fedayeen began mounting cross-border operations into Israel from Syria, Egypt and Jordan. Fedayeen attacks were directed on the Gaza and Sinai borders with Israel. As a result Israel undertook retaliatory actions, targeting the fedayeen that also often targeted the citizens of their host countries, which in turn provoked more attacks. The earliest infiltrations were primarily against civilian targets, however, some infiltrations were against agricultural and military targets. The Gaza Strip, the sole territory of the All-Palestine Protectorate—a Palestinian state declared in October 1948—became the focal point of the Palestinian fedayeen activity.
Fedayeen actions were cited by Israel as one of the reasons for its launching of the Sinai Campaign of 1956, the 1967 War, and the 1978 and 1982 invasions of Lebanon. Palestinian fedayeen groups were united under the umbrella the Palestine Liberation Organization after the defeat of the Arab armies in the 1967 Six-Day War, though each group retained its own leader and independent armed forces.
Definitions of the term
The words "Palestinian" and "fedayeen" have had different meanings to different people at various points in history. According to the Sakhr Arabic-English dictionary, fida'i—the singular form of the plural fedayeen—means "one who risks his life voluntarily" or "one who sacrifices himself". In their book The Arab-Israeli Conflict, Tony Rea and John Wright have adopted this more literal translation, translating the term fedayeen as "self-sacrificers".
In his essay, "The Palestinian Leadership and the American Media: Changing Images, Conflicting Results" (1995), R.S. Zaharna comments on the perceptions and use of the terms "Palestinian" and "fedayeen" in the 1970s, writing:
Palestinian became synonymous with terrorists, skyjackers, commandos, and guerrillas. The term fedayeen was often used but rarely translated. This added to the mysteriousness of Palestinian groups. Fedayeen means "freedom fighter."
Edmund Jan Osmańczyk's Encyclopedia of the United Nations and International Agreements (2002) defines fedayeen as "Palestinian resistance fighters", whereas Martin Gilbert's The Routledge Atlas of the Arab-Israeli Conflict (2005) defines fedayeen as "Palestinian terrorist groups". Robert McNamara refers to the fedayeen simply as "guerrillas", as do Zeev Schiff and Raphael Rothstein in their work Fedayeen: Guerrillas Against Israel (1972). Fedayeen can also be used to refer to militant or guerrilla groups which are not Palestinian. (See Fedayeen for more.)
Beverly Milton-Edwards describes the Palestinian fedayeen as "modern revolutionaries fighting for national liberation, not religious salvation," distinguishing them from mujahaddin (i.e. "fighters of the jihad"). While the fallen soldiers of both mujahaddin and fedayeen are called shahid (i.e. "martyrs") by Palestinians, Milton nevertheless contends that it would be political and religious blasphemy to call the "leftist fighters" of the fedayeen.
History
1948 to 1956
Main articles: Palestinian Fedayeen insurgency and Palestinian return to IsraelPalestinian immigration into Israel first emerged among the Palestinian refugees of the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, living in camps in Jordan (including the Jordanian-occupied West Bank), Lebanon, Egypt (including the Egyptian protectorate in Gaza), and Syria. Initially, most infiltrations were economic in nature, with Palestinians crossing the border seeking food or the recovery of property lost in the 1948 war.
Between 1948 and 1955, immigration by Palestinians into Israel was opposed by Arab governments, in order to prevent escalation into another war. The problem of establishing and guarding the demarcation line separating the Gaza Strip from the Israeli-held Negev area proved vexing, largely due to the presence of over 200,000 Palestinian Arab refugees in this Gaza area. The terms of the Armistice Agreement restricted Egypt's use and deployment of regular armed forces in the Gaza strip. In keeping with this restriction, the Egyptian Government's solution was to form a Palestinian para-military police force. The Palestinian Border police was created in December 1952. The Border police were placed under the command of 'Abd-al-Man'imi 'Abd-al-Ra'uf, a former Egyptian air brigade commander, member of the Muslim Brotherhood and member of the Revolutionary Council. 250 Palestinian volunteers started training in March 1953, with further volunteers coming forward for training in May and December 1953. Some Border police personnel were attached to the Military Governor's office, under 'Abd-al-'Azim al-Saharti, to guard public installations in the Gaza strip. After an Israeli raid on an Egyptian military outpost in Gaza in February 1955, during which 37 Egyptian soldiers were killed, the Egyptian government began to actively sponsor fedayeen raids into Israel.
The first struggle by Palestinian fedayeen may have been launched from Syrian territory in 1951, though most counterattacks between 1951 and 1953 were launched from Jordanian territory. According to Yeshoshfat Harkabi (former head of Israeli military intelligence), these early infiltrations were limited "incursions", initially motivated by economic reasons, such as Palestinians crossing the border into Israel to harvest crops in their former villages. Gradually, they developed into violent robbery and deliberate 'terrorist' attacks as fedayeen replaced the 'innocent' refugees as the perpetrators.
In 1953, Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion tasked Ariel Sharon, then security chief of the Northern Region, with setting up of a new commando unit, Unit 101, designed to respond to fedayeen infiltrations (see retribution operations). After one month of training, "a patrol of the unit that infiltrated into the Gaza Strip as an exercise, encountered Palestinians in al-Bureij refugee camp, opened fire to rescue itself and left behind about 30 killed Arabs and dozens of wounded." In its five-month existence, Unit 101 was also responsible for carrying out the Qibya massacre on the night of 14–15 October 1953, in the Jordanian village of the same name. Cross-border operations by Israel were conducted in both Egypt and Jordan "to 'teach' the Arab leaders that the Israeli government saw them as responsible for these activities, even if they had not directly conducted them." Moshe Dayan felt that retaliatory action by Israel was the only way to convince Arab countries that, for the safety of their own citizens, they should work to stop fedayeen infiltrations. Dayan stated, "We are not able to protect every man, but we can prove that the price for Jewish blood is high."
According to Martin Gilbert, between 1951 and 1955, 967 Israelis were killed in what he claims as "Arab terrorist attacks", a figure Benny Morris characterizes as "pure nonsense". Morris explains that Gilbert's fatality figures are "3-5 times higher than the figures given in contemporary Israeli reports" and that they seem to be based on a 1956 speech by David Ben-Gurion in which he uses the word nifga'im to refer to "casualties" in the broad sense of the term (i.e. both dead and wounded). According to the Jewish Agency for Israel between 1951 and 1956, 400 Israelis were killed and 900 wounded in fedayeen attacks. Dozens of these attacks are today cited by the Israeli government as "Major Arab Terrorist Attacks against Israelis prior to the 1967 Six-Day War".
United Nations reports indicate that between 1949 and 1956, Israel launched more than seventeen raids on Egyptian territory and 31 attacks on Arab towns or military forces.
From late 1954 onwards, larger scale Fedayeen operations were mounted from Egyptian territory. The Egyptian government supervised the establishment of formal fedayeen groups in Gaza and the northeastern Sinai. General Mustafa Hafez, commander of Egyptian army intelligence, is said to have founded Palestinian fedayeen units "to launch terrorist raids across Israel's southern border," nearly always against civilians. In a speech on 31 August 1955, Egyptian President Nasser said:
- Egypt has decided to dispatch her heroes, the disciples of Pharaoh and the sons of Islam and they will cleanse the land of Palestine....There will be no peace on Israel's border because we demand vengeance, and vengeance is Israel's death.
In 1955, it is reported that 260 Israeli citizens were killed or wounded by the fedayeen. Some believe fedayeen attacks contributed to the outbreak of the Suez Crisis; they were cited by Israel as the reason for undertaking the 1956 Sinai Campaign. Others argue that Israel "engineered eve-of-war lies and deceptions.... to give Israel the excuse needed to launch its strike", such as presenting a group of "captured fedayeen" to journalists, who were in fact Israeli soldiers.
In 1956, Israeli troops entered Khan Yunis in the Egyptian controlled Gaza Strip, conducting house-to-house searches for Palestinian fedayeen and weaponry. During this operation, 275 Palestinians were killed, with an additional 111 killed in Israeli raids on the Rafah refugee camp. Israel claimed these killings resulted from "refugee resistance", a claim denied by refugees; there were no Israeli casualties.
Suez Crisis
On 29 October 1956, the first day of Israel's invasion of the Sinai Peninsula, Israeli forces attacked "fedayeen units" in the towns of Ras al-Naqb and Kuntilla. Two days later, fedayeen destroyed water pipelines in Kibbutz Ma'ayan along the Lebanese border, and began a campaign of mining in the area which lasted throughout November. In the first week of November, similar attacks occurred along the Syrian and Jordanian borders, the Jerusalem corridor and in the Wadi Ara region—although the state armies of both those countries are suspected as the saboteurs. On 9 November, four Israeli soldiers were injured after their vehicle was ambushed by fedayeen near the city of Ramla; and several water pipelines and bridges were sabotaged in the Negev.
During the invasion of Sinai, Israeli forces killed fifty defenseless fedayeen on a lorry in Ras Sudar. (Reserve Lieutenant Colonel Saul Ziv told Maariv in 1995 he was haunted by this killing.) After Israel took control of the Gaza Strip, dozens of fedayeen were summarily executed, mostly in two separate incidents. Sixty-six were killed in screening operations in the area; while a US diplomat estimated that of the 500 fedayeen captured by the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF), "about 30" were killed.
1956 to 1967
Between the 1956 war and the 1967 war, Israeli civilian and military casualties on all Arab fronts, inflicted by regular and irregular forces (including those of Palestinian fedayeen), averaged one per month — an estimated total of 132 fatalities.
During the mid and late 1960s, there emerged a number of independent Palestinian fedayeen groups who sought "the liberation of all Palestine through a Palestinian armed struggle." The first incursion by these fedayeen may have been the 1 January 1965 commando infiltration into Israel, to plant explosives that destroyed a section of pipeline designed to divert water from the Jordan River into Israel. In 1966, the Israeli military attacked the Jordanian-controlled West Bank village of Samu, in response to Fatah raids against Israel's eastern border, increasing tensions leading to the Six-Day War.
1967 to 1987
Fedayeen groups began joining the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) in 1968. While the PLO was the "unifying framework" under which these groups operated, each fedayeen organization had its own leader and armed forces and retained autonomy in operations. Of the dozen or so fedayeen groups under the PLO framework, the most important were the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) headed by George Habash, the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP) headed by Nayef Hawatmeh, the PFLP-General Command headed by Ahmed Jibril, as-Sa'iqa (affiliated with Syria), and the Arab Liberation Front (backed by Iraq).
The most severe act of sabotage of the fedayeen occurred on 4 July 1969, when a single militant placed three pounds of explosives under the manifold of eight pipelines carrying oil from the Haifa refinery to the dockside. As a result of the explosion, three pipelines were temporarily out of commission and a fire destroyed over 1,500 tons of refined oil.
West Bank
In the late 1960s, attempts were made to organize fedayeen resistance cells among the refugee population in the West Bank. The stony and empty terrain of the West Bank mountains made the fedayeen easy to spot; and Israeli collective punishment against the families of fighters resulted in the fedayeen being pushed out of the West Bank altogether, within a few months. Yasser Arafat reportedly escaped arrest in Ramallah by jumping out a window, as Israeli police came in the front door. Without a base in the West Bank, and prevented from operating in Syria and Egypt, the fedayeen concentrated in Jordan.
Jordan
After the influx of a second wave of Palestinian refugees from the 1967 war, fedayeen bases in Jordan began to proliferate, and there were increased fedayeen attacks on Israel. Fedayeen fighters launched ineffective bazooka-shelling attacks on Israeli targets across the Jordan River, while "brisk and indiscriminate" Israeli retaliations destroyed Jordanian villages, farms and installations, causing 100,000 people to flee the Jordan Valley eastward. The increasing ferocity of those Israeli reprisals directed at Jordanians (not Palestinians) for fedayeen raids into Israel became a growing cause of concern for the Jordanian authorities.
One such Israeli reprisal was in the Jordanian town of Karameh, home to the headquarters of an emerging fedayeen group called Fatah, led by Yasser Arafat. Warned of large-scale Israeli military preparations, many fedayeen groups, including the PFLP and the DFLP, withdraw their forces from the town. Advised by a pro-Fatah Jordanian divisional commander to withdraw his men and headquarters to nearby hills, Arafat refused, stating "We want to convince the world that there are those in the Arab world who will not withdraw or flee." Fatah remained, and the Jordanian Army agreed to back them if heavy fighting ensued.
On the night of 21 March 1968, Israel attacked Karameh with heavy weaponry, armored vehicles and fighter jets. Fatah held its ground, surprising the Israeli military. As Israel's forces intensified their campaign, the Jordanian Army became involved, causing the Israelis to retreat in order to avoid a full-scale war. By the battle's end, 100 Fatah militants had been killed, 100 wounded and 120-150 captured; Jordanian fatalities were 61 soldiers and civilians, 108 wounded; and Israeli casualties were 28 soldiers killed and 69 wounded. 13 Jordanian tanks were destroyed in the battle; while the Israelis lost 4 tanks, 3 half tracks, 2 armoured cars, and an airplane shot down by Jordanian forces.
The Battle of Karameh raised the profile of the fedayeen, as they were regarded the "daring heroes of the Arab world". Despite the higher Arab death toll, Fatah considered the battle a victory because of the Israeli army's rapid withdrawal. Such developments prompted Rashid Khalidi to dub the Battle of Karameh the "foundation myth" of the Palestinian commando movement, whereby "failure against overwhelming odds brilliantly narrated as heroic triumph."
Financial donations and recruitment increased as many young Arabs, including thousands of non-Palestinians, joined the ranks of the organization. The ruling Hashemite authorities in Jordan grew increasingly alarmed by the PLO's activities, as they established a "state within a state", providing military training and social welfare services to the Palestinian population, bypassing the Jordanian authorities. Palestinian criticism of the poor performance of the Arab Legion (the King's army) was an insult to both the King and the regime. Further, many Palestinian fedayeen groups of the radical left, such as the PFLP, "called for the overthrow of the Arab monarchies, including the Hashemite regime in Jordan, arguing that this was an essential first step toward the liberation of Palestine."
In the first week of September 1970, PFLP forces hijacked three airplanes (British, Swiss and German) at Dawson's field in Jordan. To secure the release of the passengers, the demand to free PFLP militants held in European jails was met. After everyone had disembarked, the fedayeen destroyed the airplanes on the tarmac.
Black September in Jordan
Main articles: Black September in Jordan and Syrian invasion of JordanOn 16 September 1970, King Hussein ordered his troops to strike and eliminate the fedayeen network in Jordan. Syrian troops intervened to support the fedayeen, but were turned back by Jordanian armour and Israeli army overflights. Thousands of Palestinians were killed in the initial battle — which came to be known as Black September — and thousands more in the security crackdown that followed. By the summer of 1971, the Palestinian fedayeen network in Jordan had been effectively dismantled, with most of the fighters setting up base in southern Lebanon instead.
Gaza Strip
The emergence of a fedayeen movement in the Gaza Strip was catalyzed by Israel's occupation of the territory during the 1967 war. Palestinian fedayeen from Gaza "waged a mini-war" against Israel for three years before the movement was crushed by the Israeli military in 1971 under the orders of then Defense Minister, Ariel Sharon.
Palestinians in Gaza were proud of their role in establishing a fedayeen movement there when no such movement existed in the West Bank at the time. The fighters were housed in refugee camps or hid in the citrus groves of wealthy Gazan landowners, carrying out raids against Israeli soldiers from these sites.
The most active of the fedayeen groups in Gaza was the PFLP, an offshoot of the Arab Nationalist Movement (ANM)—who enjoyed instant popularity among the already secularized, socialist population who had come of age during Egyptian President Nasser's rule of Gaza. The emergence of armed struggle as the liberation strategy for the Gaza Strip reflected larger ideological changes within the Palestinian national movement toward political violence.
The ideology of armed struggle was, by this time, broadly secular in content; Palestinians were asked to take up arms not as part of a jihad against the infidel but to free the oppressed from the Zionist colonial regime. The vocabulary of liberation was distinctly secular.
The "radical left" dominated the political scene, and the overarching slogan of the time was, "We will liberate Palestine first, then the rest of the Arab world."
During Israel's 1971 military campaign to contain or control the fedayeen, an estimated 15,000 suspected fighters were rounded up and deported to detention camps in Abu Zneima and Abu Rudeis in the Sinai. Dozens of homes were demolished by Israeli forces, rendering hundreds of people homeless. According to Milton-Edwards, "This security policy successfully instilled terror in the camps and wiped out the fedayeen bases." The destruction of the secular infrastructure, paved the way for the rise of the Islamic movement, which began organizing as early as 1969–1970, led by Sheikh Ahmed Yassin.
Lebanon
On 3 November 1969, the Lebanese government signed the Cairo Agreement which granted Palestinians the right to launch attacks on Israel from southern Lebanon in coordination with the Lebanese Army. After the expulsion of the Palestinian fedayeen from Jordan and a series of Israeli raids on Lebanon, the Lebanese government granted the PLO the right to defend Palestinian refugee camps there and to possess heavy weaponry. After the outbreak of 1975 Lebanese Civil War, the PLO increasingly began to act once again as a "state within a state". On 11 March 1978, twelve fedayeen led by Dalal Mughrabi infiltrated Israel from the sea and hijacked a bus along the coastal highway, killing 38 civilians in the ensuing gunfight between them and police. Israel invaded southern Lebanon in the 1978 Israel-Lebanon conflict, occupying a 20 kilometres (12 mi) wide area there to put an end to Palestinian attacks on Israel, but fedayeen rocket strikes on northern Israel continued.
Israeli armoured artillery and infantry forces, supported by air force and naval units again entered Lebanon on 6 June 1982 in an operation code-named "Peace for Galilee", encountering "fierce resistance" from the Palestinian fedayeen there. Israel's occupation of southern Lebanon and its siege and constant shelling of the capital Beirut in the 1982 Lebanon War, eventually forced the Palestinian fedayeen to accept an internationally brokered agreement that moved them out of Lebanon to different places in the Arab world. The headquarters of the PLO was moved out of Lebanon to Tunis at this time. The new PLO headquarters was destroyed during an Israeli airstrike in 1985.
During a September 2, 1982 press conference at the United Nations, Yasser Arafat stated that, "Jesus Christ was the first Palestinian fedayeen who carried his sword along the path on which the Palestinians today carry their cross."
First Intifada
On 25 November 1987, PFLP-GC launched an attack, in which two fedayeen infiltrated northern Israel from an undisclosed Syrian-controlled area in southern Lebanon with hang gliders. One of them was killed at the border, while the other proceeded to land at an army camp, initially killing a soldier in a passing vehicle, then five more in the camp, before being shot dead. Thomas Friedman said that judging by commentary in the Arab world, the raid was seen as a boost to the Palestinian national movement, just as it had seemed to be almost totally eclipsed by the Iran–Iraq War. Palestinians in Gaza began taunting Israeli soldiers, chanting "six to one" and the raid has been noted as a catalyst to the First Intifada.
During the First Intifada, armed violence on the part of Palestinians was kept to a minimum, in favor of mass demonstrations and acts of civil disobedience. However, the issue of the role of armed struggle did not die out altogether. Those Palestinian groups affiliated with the PLO and based outside of historic Palestine, such as rebels within Fatah and the PFLP-GC, used the lack of fedayeen operations as their main weapon of criticism against the PLO leadership at the time. The PFLP and DFLP even made a few abortive attempts at fedayeen operations inside Israel. According to Jamal Raji Nassar and Roger Heacock,
at least parts of the Palestinian left sacrificed all to the golden calf of armed struggle when measuring the degree of revolutionary commitment by the number of fedayeen operations, instead of focusing on the positions of power they doubtless held inside the Occupied Territories and which were major assets in struggles over a particular political line.
During the First Intifada, but particularly after the signing of the Oslo Accords, the fedayeen steadily lost ground to the emerging forces of the mujaheddin, represented initially and most prominently by Hamas. The fedayeen lost their position as a political force and the secular nationalist movement that had represented the first generation of the Palestinian resistance became instead a symbolic, cultural force that was seen by some as having failed in its duties.
Second Intifada and current situation
After being dormant for many years, Palestinian fedayeen reactivated their operations during the Second Intifada. In August 2001, ten Palestinian commandos from the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP) penetrated the electric fences of the fortified army base of Bedolah, killing an Israeli major and two soldiers and wounding seven others. One of the commandos was killed in the firefight. Another was tracked for hours and later shot in head, while the rest escaped. In Gaza, the attack produced "a sense of euphoria—and nostalgia for the Palestinian fedayeen raids in the early days of the Jewish state." Israel responded by launching airstrikes at the police headquarters in Gaza City, an intelligence building in the central Gaza town of Deir al-Balah and a police building in the West Bank town of Salfit. Salah Zeidan, head of the DFLP in Gaza, stated of the operation that, "It's a classic model—soldier to soldier, gun to gun, face to face Our technical expertise has increased in recent days. So has our courage, and people are going to see that this is a better way to resist the occupation than suicide bombs inside the Jewish state."
Today, the fedayeen have been eclipsed politically by the Palestinian National Authority (PNA), which consists of the major factions of the PLO, and militarily by Islamist groups, particularly Hamas. Already strained relations between Hamas and the PNA collapsed entirely when the former took over the Gaza Strip in 2007. Although the fedayeen are leftist and secular, during the 2008–2009 Israel–Gaza conflict, fedayeen groups fought alongside and in coordination with Hamas even though a number of the factions were previously sworn enemies of them. The al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, an armed faction loyal to the Fatah-controlled PNA, undermined Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas by lobbing rockets into southern Israel in concert with rivals Hamas and the Islamic Jihad. According to researcher Maha Azzam, this symbolized the disintegration of Fatah and the division between the grassroots organization and the current leadership. The PFLP and the Popular Resistance Committees also joined in the fighting.
To rival the PNA and increase Palestinian fedayeen cooperation, a Damascus-based coalition composed of representatives of Hamas, Islamic Jihad, the PFLP, as-Sa'iqa, the Palestinian Popular Struggle Front, the Revolutionary Communist Party, and other anti-PNA factions within the PLO, such as Fatah al-Intifada, was established during the Gaza War in 2009.
Philosophical grounding and objectives
The objectives of the fedayeen were articulated in the statements and literature they produced, which were consistent with reference to the aim of destroying Zionism. In 1970, the stated aim of the fedayeen was establishing Palestine as "a secular, democratic, nonsectarian state." Bard O'Neill writes that for some fedayeen groups, the secular aspect of the struggle was "merely a slogan for assuaging world opinion," while others strove "to give the concept meaningful content." Prior to 1974, the fedayeen position was that Jews who renounced Zionism could remain in the Palestinian state to be created. After 1974, the issue became less clear and there were suggestions that only those Jews who were in Palestine prior to "the Zionist invasion", alternatively placed at 1947 or 1917, would be able to remain.
Bard O'Neill also wrote that the fedayeen attempted to study and borrow from all of the revolutionary models available, but that their publications and statements show a particular affinity for the Cuban, Algerian, Vietnamese, and Chinese experiences.
Infighting and breakaway movements
During the post-Six-Day War era, individual fedayeen movements quarreled over issues about the recognition of Israel, alliances with various Arab states, and ideologies. A faction led by Nayef Hawatmeh and Yasser Abed Rabbo split from PFLP in 1974, because they preferred a Maoist and non-Nasserist approach. This new movement became known as the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP). In 1974, the PNC approved the Ten Point Program (drawn up by Arafat and his advisers), and proposed a compromise with the Israelis. The Program called for a Palestinian national authority over every part of "liberated Palestinian territory", which referred to areas captured by Arab forces in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War (present-day West Bank and Gaza Strip). Perceived by some Palestinians as overtures to the United States and concessions to Israel, the program fostered internal discontent, and prompted several of the PLO factions, such as the PFLP, DFLP, as-Sa'iqa, the Arab Liberation Front and the Palestine Liberation Front, among others, to form a breakaway movement which came to be known as the Rejectionist Front.
During the Lebanese Civil War (1975–1990), the PLO aligned itself with the Communist and Nasserist Lebanese National Movement. Although they were initially backed by Syrian president Hafez al-Assad, when he switched sides in the conflict, the smaller pro-Syrian factions within the Palestinian fedayeen camp, namely as-Sa'iqa and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine - General Command fought against Arafat's Fatah-led PLO. In 1988, after Arafat and al-Assad partially reconciled, Arafat loyalists in the refugee camps of Bourj al-Barajneh and Shatila attempted to force out Fatah al-Intifada—a pro-Syrian Fatah breakaway movement formed by Said al-Muragha in 1983. Instead, al-Muragha's forces overran Arafat loyalists from both camps after bitter fighting in which Fatah al-Intifada received backing from the Lebanese Amal militia.
The PLO and other Palestinian armed movements became increasingly divided after the Oslo Accords in 1993. They were rejected by the PFLP, DFLP, Hamas, and twenty other factions, as well as Palestinian intellectuals, refugees outside of the Palestinian territories, and the local leadership of the territories. The Rejectionist fedayeen factions formed a common front with the Islamists, culminating in the creation of the Alliance of Palestinian Forces. This new alliance failed to act as a cohesive unit, but revealed the sharp divisions among the PLO, with the fedayeen finding themselves aligning with Palestinian Islamists for the first time. Disintegration within the PLO's main body Fatah increased as Farouk Qaddoumi—in charge of foreign affairs—voiced his opposition to negotiations with Israel. Members of the PLO-Executive Committee, poet Mahmoud Darwish and refugee leader Shafiq al-Hout resigned from their posts in response to the PLO's acceptance of Oslo's terms.
Tactics
Until 1968, fedayeen tactics consisted largely of hit-and-run raids on Israeli military targets. A commitment to "armed struggle" was incorporated into PLO Charter in clauses that stated: "Armed struggle is the only way to liberate Palestine" and "Commando action constitutes the nucleus of the Palestinian popular liberation war."
Preceding the Six-Day War in 1967, the fedayeen carried out several campaigns of sabotage against Israeli infrastructure. Common acts of this included the consistent mining of water and irrigation pipelines along the Jordan River and its tributaries, as well as the Lebanese-Israeli border and in various locations in the Galilee. Other acts of sabotage involved bombing bridges, mining roads, ambushing cars and vandalizing (sometimes destroying) houses. After the Six-Day War, these incidents steadily decreased with the exception of the bombing of a complex of oil pipelines sourcing from the Haifa refinery in 1969.
The IDFs counterinsurgency tactics, which from 1967 onwards regularly included the use of home demolitions, curfews, deportations, and other forms of collective punishment, effectively precluded the ability of the Palestinian fedayeen to create internal bases from which to wage "a people's war". The tendency among many captured guerrillas to collaborate with the Israeli authorities, providing information that led to the destruction of numerous "terrorist cells", also contributed to the failure to establish bases in the territories occupied by Israel. The fedayeen were compelled to establish external bases, resulting in frictions with their host countries which led to conflicts (such as Black September), diverting them from their primary objective of "bleeding Israel".
Airplane hijackings
The tactic of exporting their struggle against Israel beyond the Middle East was first adopted by the Palestinian fedayeen in 1968. According to John Follain, it was Wadie Haddad of the PFLP who, unconvinced with the effectiveness of raids on military targets, masterminded the first hijacking of a civilian passenger plane by Palestinian fedayeen in July 1968. Two commandos forced an El Al Boeing 747 en route from Rome to Tel Aviv to land in Algiers, renaming the flight "Palestinian Liberation 007". While publicly proclaiming that it would not negotiate with terrorists, the Israelis did negotiate. The passengers were released unharmed in exchange for the release of sixteen Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. The first hijacking of an American airliner was conducted by the PFLP on 29 August 1969. Robert D. Kumamoto describes the hijacking as a response to an American veto of a United Nations Security Council resolution censuring Israel for its March 1969 aerial attacks on Jordanian villages suspected of harbouring fedayeen, and for the impending delivery of American Phantom jets to Israel. The flight, en route to Tel Aviv from Rome, was forced to land in Damascus where, Leila Khaled, one of the two fedayeen to hijack the plane proclaimed that, "this hijacking is one of the operational aspects of our war against Zionism and all who support it, including the United States ... it was a perfectly normal thing to do, the sort of thing all freedom fighters must tackle." Most of the passengers and crew were released immediately after the plane landed. Six Israeli passengers were taken hostage and held for questioning by Syria. Four women among them were released after two days, and the two men were released after a week of intensive negotiations between all the parties involved. Of this PFLP hijacking and those that followed at Dawson's field, Kumamoto writes: "The PFLP hijackers had seized no armies, mountaintops, or cities. Theirs was not necessarily a war of arms; it was a war of words – a war of propaganda, the exploitation of violence to attract world attention. In that regard, the Dawson's Field episode was a publicity goldmine."
George Habash, leader of the PFLP, explained his view of the efficacy of hijacking as a tactic in a 1970 interview, stating, "When we hijack a plane it has more effect than if we killed a hundred Israelis in battle." Habash also stated that after decades of being ignored, "At least the world is talking about us now." The hijacking attempts did indeed continue. On 8 May 1972, a Sabena Airlines 707 was forced to land in Tel Aviv after it was commandeered by four Black September commandos who demanded the release of 317 fedayeen fighters being held in Israeli jails. While the Red Cross was negotiating, Israeli paratroopers disguised as mechanics stormed the plane, shot and killed two of hijackers and captured the remaining two after a gunfight that injured five passengers and two paratroopers.
The tactics employed by the Black September group in subsequent operations differed sharply from the other "run-of-the-mill PLO attacks of the day". The unprecedented level of violence evident in multiple international attacks between 1971 and 1972 included the Sabena airliner hijacking (mentioned above), the assassination of the Jordanian Prime Minister in Cairo, the Massacre at Lod airport, and the Munich Olympics massacre. In The Dynamics of Armed Struggle, J. Bowyer Bell contends that "armed struggle" is a message to the enemy that they are "doomed by history" and that operations are "violent message units" designed to "accelerate history" to this end. Bell argues that despite the apparent failure of the Munich operation which collapsed into chaos, murder, and gun battles, the basic fedayeen intention was achieved since, "The West was appalled and wanted to know the rationale of the terrorists, the Israelis were outraged and punished, many of the Palestinians were encouraged by the visibility and ignored the killings, and the rebels felt that they had acted, helped history along." He notes the opposite was true for the 1976 hijacking of an Air France flight redirected to Uganda where the Israelis scored an "enormous tactical victory" in Operation Entebbe. While their death as martyrs had been foreseen, the fedayeen had not expected to die as villains, "bested by a display of Zionist skill."
Affiliations with other guerrilla groups
Several fedayeen groups maintained contacts with a number of other guerrilla groups worldwide. The IRA for example had long held ties with Palestinians, and volunteers trained at fedayeen bases in Lebanon. In 1977, Palestinian fedayeen from Fatah helped arrange for the delivery of a sizable arms shipment to the Provos by way of Cyprus, but it was intercepted by the Belgian authorities.
The PFLP and the DFLP established connections with revolutionary groups such as the Red Army Faction of West Germany, the Action Directe of France, the Red Brigades of Italy, the Japanese Red Army and the Tupamaros of Uruguay. These groups, especially the Japanese Red Army participated in many of the PFLP's operations including hijackings and the Lod Airport massacre. The Red Army Faction joined the PFLP in the hijackings of two airplanes that landed in Entebbe Airport.
See also
- Egypt–Israel peace treaty
- History of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict
- Israeli casualties of war
- Israeli–Palestinian peace process
- Occupation of the Gaza Strip by Egypt
- Palestinian casualties of war
- Palestinian immigration (Israel)
- Palestinian political violence
- Reprisal operations (Israel)
References
- ^ François Burgat (2003). Face to Face With Political Islam. I.B.Tauris. p. 117. ISBN 978-1-86064-213-5.
- ^ Beverley Milton-Edwards (1996). Islamic Politics in Palestine. I.B.Tauris. pp. 94–95. ISBN 978-1-86064-475-7.
- Milton Glaser and Mirko Ilic (2005). The Design of Dissent. Rockport Publishers. ISBN 978-1-59253-117-2.
- ^ Bard E. O'Neill (1991). "The Intifada in the Context of Armed Struggle". In Robert Owen Freedman (ed.). The Intifada: Its Impact on Israel, the Arab World, and the Superpowers. University Press of Florida. pp. 64–66. ISBN 978-0-8130-1040-3.
- ^ Almog, 2003, p. 20.
- Kameel B. Nasr (1996). Arab and Israeli Terrorism: The Causes and Effects of Political Violence, 1936–1993. McFarland. pp. 40–. ISBN 978-0-7864-3105-2.
Fedayeen to attack...almost always against civilians
- Isaac Alteras (1993). Eisenhower and Israel: U.S.-Israeli Relations, 1953–1960. University Press of Florida. pp. 192–. ISBN 978-0-8130-1205-6. Archived from the original on 19 December 2023. Retrieved 1 December 2018.
the removal of the Egyptian blockade of the Straits of Tiran at the entrance of the Gulf of Aqaba. The blockade closed Israel's sea lane to East Africa and the Far East, hindering the development of Israel's southern port of Eilat and its hinterland, the Nege. Another important objective of the Israeli war plan was the elimination of the terrorist bases in the Gaza Strip, from which daily fedayeen incursions into Israel made life unbearable for its southern population. And last but not least, the concentration of the Egyptian forces in the Sinai Peninsula, armed with the newly acquired weapons from the Soviet bloc, prepared for an attack on Israel. Here, Ben-Gurion believed, was a time bomb that had to be defused before it was too late. Reaching the Suez Canal did not figure at all in Israel's war objectives.
- Facts On File, Incorporated. Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Africa and the Middle East.
- ^ Alain Gresh and Dominique Vidal (2004). The New A-Z of the Middle East. I.B.Tauris. p. 232. ISBN 978-1-86064-326-2.
- "Dictionaries". Sakhr. Retrieved 2008-01-06.
- Tony Rea and John Wright (1993). The Arab-Israeli Conflict. Oxford University Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-19-917170-5.
- Yahya R. Kamalipour (1995). The U.S. Media and the Middle East: Image and Perception. Greenwood Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-313-29279-8.
- Mohammed El-Nawawy (2002). The Israeli-Egyptian Peace Process in the Reporting of Western Journalists. Inc NetLibrary. p. 49. ISBN 978-1-56750-545-0. Mohammed al-Nawaway uses Zaharna translation of fedayeen as "freedom fighters" in his book The Israeli-Egyptian Peace Process in the Reporting of Western Journalists (2002).
- Edmund Jan Osmanczyk (2002). Encyclopedia of the United Nations and International Agreements. Taylor & Francis. p. 702. ISBN 978-0-415-93921-8.
- ^ Martin Gilbert (2005). The Routledge Atlas of the Arab-Israeli Conflict. Routledge. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-415-35901-6.
- Robert McNamara (2003). Britain, Nasser and the Balance of Power in the Middle East 1952–1967. Routledge. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-7146-5397-6.
- "There is strong evidence from Arab, British, American, UN and even Israeli sources to suggest that for the first six years after the war, the Arab governments were opposed to infiltration and tried to curb it...The Lebanese...effectively sealed the border with Israel. The Syrian authorities also exercised strict control over their border with Israel, and infiltration was rarer. The Egyptian authorities...pursued a consistent policy of curbing infiltration until 1955...Secret Jordanian documents captured by the Israeli army during the June 1967 war...reveal strenuous efforts on the part of the Jordanian military and civilian authorities...to keep from crossing ." – Shlaim, The Iron Wall pp. 84–85, ISBN 978-0-14-028870-4
- As an Israel Foreign Ministry official stated: For years the army has been informing the Ministry and the outside world that infiltration is being sponsored, inspired, guided, or at least utilised by the Legion or other powers that be. However...when asked ...some clear documentary proof of the Legion's complicity ...no clear answer came from the army. Finally Fati told Leo and myself, on two separate occasions, that no proof could be given because no proof existed. Furthermore, Fati told me that having personally made a detail study of infiltration, he had arrived at the conclusion that Jordanians and especially the Legion were doing their best to prevent infiltration, which was a natural decentralised and sporadic movement. In fact, listening to Fati or his colleagues these days, one could almost mistake them for British Foreign Office ." Benny Morris (1993) Israel's Border Wars, 1949–1956: Arab Infiltration, Israeli Retaliation, and the Countdown to the Suez War Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-829262-3 P 67
- UN Doc S/1459 of 20 February 1950 a report on the activities of the Mixed Armistice Commissions
- Yezid Sayigh (1999) Armed Struggle and the Search for State: The Palestinian National Movement 1949–1993. Oxford University Press ISBN 978-0-19-829643-0 p 61
- "Records show that until the Gaza raid, the Egyptian military authorities had a consistent and firm policy of curbing infiltration...into Israel...and that it was only following the raid that a new policy was put in place, that of organizing the fedayeen units and turning them into an official instrument of warfare against Israel." – Shlaim, pp. 128–129. However, official policy and actual actions were not always consistent – whether due to incompetence or deliberately turning a blind eye to Palestinian actions, both in Jordan and in Egypt. In fact, during this period there were some 7,850 infiltrations and border incidents on the Jordanian border (including incidents in which Jordanian troops sniped into Israeli areas, conducted intelligence forays or, in one case tried to block the Israeli road leading to the southern Israeli town of Eilat) – how many of these actions by Jordanian troops were local initiatives and how many were officially sanctioned is not clear. On the Egyptian border there were in this period approximately 3,000 infiltrations and incidents, the vast majority along the Gaza section of that border. These too were virtually all Palestinian in origin, but also included an undetermined number of shooting incidents initiated by Egyptian troops – usually against Israeli border patrols. Carta's Atlas of Israel Volume 2: The First Years 1948–1961 (Hebrew)
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Fedayeen to attack...almost always against civilians
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- ^ John Follain (1998). Jackal: The Complete Story of the Legendary Terrorist, Carlos the Jackal. Arcade Publishing. pp. 20–21. ISBN 978-1-55970-466-3.
- ^ Ruth Margolies Beitler (2004). The Path to Mass Rebellion: An Analysis of Two Intifadas. Lexington Books. pp. 56–57. ISBN 978-0-7391-0709-6.
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Further reading
- Orna Almog (2003). Britain, Israel and the United States, 1955–1958: Beyond Suez. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-7146-5246-7.
- Michael Curtis (1971). People and Politics in the Middle East. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 978-0-87855-500-0.