Poisoning Arafat
By Uri Avnery
July 06,
2012
-- FOR ME, there was no surprise. From the very first day, I was
convinced that Yasser Arafat had been poisoned by Ariel Sharon.
I even wrote about it several times.
It was a simple logical conclusion.
It was a simple logical conclusion.
First, a
thorough medical examination in the French military hospital
where he died did not find any cause for his sudden collapse and
death. No traces of any life-threatening disease were found.
The rumors
distributed by the Israeli propaganda machine that Arafat had
AIDS were blatant lies. They were a continuation of the rumors
spread by the same machine that he was gay – all part of the
relentless demonization of the Palestinian leader, which went on
daily for decades.
When there
is no obvious cause of death, there must be a less obvious one.
Second, we
know by now that several secret services possess poisons that
leave no routinely detectable trace. These include the CIA, the
Russian FSB (successor of the KGB), and the Mossad.
Third,
opportunities were plentiful. Arafat’s security arrangements
were decidedly lax. He would embrace perfect strangers who
presented themselves as sympathizers of the Palestinian cause
and often seated them next to himself at meals.
Fourth,
there were plenty of people who aimed at killing him and had the
means to do so. The most obvious one was our prime minister,
Ariel Sharon. He had even talked about Arafat having "no
insurance policy" in 2004.
WHAT WAS
previously a logical probability has now become a certainty.
An
examination of his belongings commissioned by Aljazeera TV and
conducted by a highly respected Swiss scientific institute has
confirmed that Arafat was poisoned with Polonium, a deadly
radioactive substance that avoids detection unless one
specifically looks for it.
Two years
after Arafat’s death, the Russian dissident and former KGB/FSB
officer Alexander Litvinenko was murdered in London by Russian
agents using this poison. The cause was discovered by his
doctors by accident. It took him three weeks to die.
Closer to
home, in Amman, Hamas leader Khaled Mash’al was almost killed in
1997 by the Mossad, on orders of Prime Minister Binyamin
Netanyahu. The means was a poison that kills within days after
coming into contact with the skin. The assassination was bungled
and the victim’s life was saved when the Mossad was compelled,
after an ultimatum from King Hussein, to provide an antidote in
time.
If
Arafat’s widow, Suha, succeeds in getting his body exhumed from
the mausoleum in the Mukata’a in Ramallah, where it has become a
national symbol, the poison will undoubtably be found in his
body.
ARAFAT’S
LACK of proper security arrangements always astonished me.
Israeli Prime Ministers are tenfold better protected.
I
remonstrated with him several times. He shrugged it off. In this
respect, he was a fatalist. After his life was miraculously
preserved when his airplane made a crash landing in the Libyan
Desert and the people around him were killed, he was convinced
that Allah was protecting him.
(Though
the head of a secular movement with a clear secular program, he
himself was an observant Sunni Muslim, praying at the proper
times and abstaining from alcohol. He did not impose his piety
on his assistants.)
Once he
was interviewed in my presence in Ramallah. The journalists
asked him if he expected to see the creation of the Palestinian
state in his lifetime. His answer: “Both I and Uri Avnery will
see it in our life.” He was quite sure of this.
ARIEL
SHARON’S determination to kill Arafat was well known. Already
during the siege of Beirut in Lebanon War I, it was no secret
that agents were combing West Beirut for his whereabouts. To
Sharon’s great frustration, they did not find him.
Even after
Oslo, when Arafat came back to Palestine, Sharon did not let up.
When he became Prime Minister, my fear for Arafat’s life became
acute. When our army attacked Ramallah during “Operation
Defensive Shield” they broke into Arafat’s compound (Mukata’a is
Arabic for compound) and came within 10 meters of his rooms. I
saw them with my own eyes.
Twice
during the siege of many months my friends and I went to stay at
the Mukata’a for several days to serve as a human shield. When
Sharon was asked why he did not kill Arafat, he answered that
the presence of Israelis there made it impossible.
However, I
believe that this was only a pretext. It was the US that forbade
it. The Americans feared, quite rightly, that an open
assassination would cause the whole Arab and Muslim world to
explode in anti-American fury. I cannot prove it, but I am sure
that Sharon was told by Washington: “On no condition are you
allowed to kill him in a way that can be traced to you. If you
can do it without leaving a trace, go ahead.”
(Just as
the US Secretary of State told Sharon in 1982 that on no
condition was he allowed to attack Lebanon, unless there was a
clear and internationally recognized provocation. Which was
promptly provided.)
In an
eerie coincidence, Sharon himself was felled by a stroke soon
after Arafat's death, and has lived in a coma ever since.)
THE DAY
Aljazeera’s conclusions were published this week happened to be
the 30th anniversary of my first meeting with Arafat, which for
him was the first meeting with an Israeli.
It was at
the height of the battle of Beirut. To get to him, I had to
cross the lines of four belligerents – the Israeli army, the
Christian Lebanese Phalange militia, the Lebanese army and the
PLO forces.
I spoke
with Arafat for two hours. There, in the middle of a war, when
he could expect to find his death at any moment, we talked about
Israeli-Palestinian peace, and even a federation of Israel and
Palestine, perhaps to be joined by Jordan.
The
meeting, which was announced by Arafat’s office, caused a
worldwide sensation. My account of the conversation was
published in several leading newspapers.
On my way
home, I heard on the radio that four cabinet ministers were
demanding that I be put on trial for treason. The government of
Menachem Begin instructed the Attorney General to open a
criminal investigation. However, after several weeks, the AG
determined that I had not broken any law. (The law was duly
changed soon afterwards.)
IN THE
many meetings I held with Arafat since then, I became totally
convinced that he was an effective and trustworthy partner for
peace.
I slowly
began to understand how this father of the modern Palestinian
liberation movement, considered an arch-terrorist by Israel and
the US, became the leader of the Palestinian peace effort. Few
people in history have been privileged to lead two successive
revolutions in their lifetime.
When
Arafat started his work, Palestine had disappeared from the map
and from world consciousness. By using the “armed struggle”
(alias “terrorism”)’ he succeeded in putting Palestine back on
the world’s agenda.
His change
of orientation occurred right after the 1973 war. That war, it
will be remembered, started with stunning Arab successes and
ended with a rout of the Egyptian and Syrian armies. Arafat, an
engineer by profession, drew the logical conclusion: if the
Arabs could not win an armed confrontation even in such ideal
circumstances, other means had to be found
His
decision to start peace negotiations with Israel went totally
against the grain of the Palestinian National Movement, which
considered Israel as a foreign invader. It took Arafat a full 15
years to convince his own people to accept his line, using all
his wiles, tactical deftness and powers of persuasion. In the
1988 meeting of the Palestinian parliament-in-exile, the
National Council, his concept was adopted: a Palestinian state
side-by-side with Israel in part of the country. This state,
with its capital in East Jerusalem and its borders based on the
Green Line has been, since then, the fixed and unchangeable
goal; the legacy of Arafat to his successors.
Not by
accident, my contacts with Arafat, first indirectly through his
assistants and then directly, started at the same time: 1974. I
helped him to establish contact with the Israeli leadership, and
especially with Yitzhak Rabin. This led to the 1993 Oslo
agreement – which was killed by the assassination of Rabin.
When asked
if he had an Israeli friend, Arafat named me. This was based on
his belief that I had risked my life when I went to see him in
Beirut. On my part, I was grateful for his trust in me when he
met me there, at a time when hundreds of Sharon’s agents were
looking for him.
But beyond
personal considerations, Arafat was the man who was able to make
peace with Israel, willing to do so, and – more important - to
get his people, including the Islamists, to accept it. This
would have put an end to the settlement enterprise.
That’s why
he was poisoned.
Uri Avnery is an
Israeli author and activist.
www.avnery-news.co.il
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