Mahmoud Abbas: Palestine's future president – or yesterday's man?
Loading
Abbas has long been dogged by accusations that he is beholden to the interests of others – including Israel – rather than the Palestinian people. His credibility was dealt a major blow in 2009 when he backtracked after admitting he had agreed to delay a UN vote on a report accusing Israel and Hamas of war crimes after pressure from Israel and the United States.
He has also repeatedly expressed antisemitic sentiments, most recently in 2023 when he said in a speech that Adolf Hitler ordered the mass murder of Jews because of their 'social role' as moneylenders, rather than out of animosity to Judaism.
He has previously been denounced by Jewish groups as a Holocaust denier for his doctoral thesis on the Nazis and Zionism.
Out of Arafat's shadow
Before becoming Palestinian president in 2004, Abbas was something of an understudy to Yasser Arafat, long the uncontested head of the Palestinian cause, but he has never enjoyed the same status.
Born in Safad in Galilee in 1935, Abbas was the first generation of Palestinian exiles who saw colonial powers redraw the Middle East's borders. As a young teenager, he witnessed the 1948 Arab-Israeli War when half the 1.4 million Palestinian Arabs – including Abbas himself – fled or were driven from their land.
He is one of the few surviving founder members of Fatah, which emerged as the main political grouping within the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) after the 1967 Six-Day War.
After Israel captured and occupied the West Bank and Gaza in the 1967 war, Arafat's Fatah seized control of the PLO. The PLO's guerrilla campaign against Israel saw it forced out of Jordan and then Lebanon before ending up in Tunisia.
Loading
While the PLO achieved international notoriety with a string of hijackings and attacks – including the 1972 Olympic massacre in which 11 Israeli athletes were killed by militants linked to the organisation – Abbas himself often presented a more moderate face.
In 1977, he was among the first members of Fatah to call for talks with moderate Israelis, recalling to Time magazine in 2012: 'Because we took up arms, we were in a position to put them down with credibility'.
In 2016, The New York Times reported newly discovered Russian documents suggesting Abbas may have been recruited as a KGB agent – an accusation rejected by Palestinian officials.
The high point of Abbas' career came at the 1993 White House ceremony at which he and Israel's then-foreign minister Shimon Peres signed the Oslo Accords in the presence of US president Bill Clinton and Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin.
With hopes rising for a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza, under the accords, the PLO renounced violence and recognised Israel's right to exist. The creation of the Palestinian Authority (PA) appeared to be another step towards statehood, many Palestinians believed.
When the Palestinian leadership returned from exile to Gaza after Oslo, Abbas was upbeat, promising: 'I will live in Palestine.'
Most advocates of the two-state solution envisage a Palestinian state in the Gaza Strip and West Bank linked by a corridor through Israel. Later negotiations centred on the recognition of Jerusalem's Jewish neighbourhoods as the Israeli capital and recognition of its Arab neighbourhoods as the Palestinian capital.
But the peace talks faltered amid opposition from hardliners on both sides. The cycle of violence resumed and Abbas' cordial relations with Washington soured. The 1995 assassination of Rabin, who had overseen Oslo, by a religious Zionist, and the hair's-breadth election victory in 1996 of Benjamin Netanyahu, who had opposed the proposals, were further setbacks.
When Arafat died in 2004, Abbas won a presidential election the following year, but Fatah was then defeated in the 2006 parliamentary elections. A short-lived unity government collapsed, and civil war broke out in Gaza in July 2007, with Hamas routing Fatah, leaving Abbas controlling only the Palestinian-administered areas of the West Bank.
There have been no Palestinian elections since.
Hamas and Israel have fought repeated wars, culminating in the attacks on southern Israel on October 7, 2023, that ignited the current Gaza conflict.
Seeking to regain the initiative, Abbas has made unilateral moves to seek Palestinian statehood at the United Nations. In 2012, Palestine won 'non-member statehood' at the UN General Assembly, but Abbas has held little sway with successive American presidents, whose role is vital in Middle East diplomacy.
Under Abbas' leadership, US and European money flowed into the West Bank to build up security forces, which he has used to crack down on militant activity and dissent.
But Abbas has previously accused Western governments of undermining him by failing to recognise a Palestinian state and failing to hold Israel to account. He has cut an isolated figure as regional allies the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco have signed diplomatic deals with Israel.
'Having contributed to achievements that place our people at the forefront of history,' he warned as far back as 1994, 'I remain deeply concerned that we could get swept away by history, lose control, and suffer an unrecoverable setback.'
Abbas has been seen less and less in recent years, with repeated hospital visits adding to concerns about his ability to lead the Palestinian government through political turbulence.
And despite being back in the spotlight, as one of the world's oldest leaders, he appears to recognise that time is not on his side.
In April this year, Abbas officially named Hussein al-Sheikh, secretary general of the PLO's executive committee, as vice president, making him his likely successor as leader. Whether al-Sheikh could ever succeed in the role – and finally deliver Palestinian statehood – is another matter.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sky News AU
an hour ago
- Sky News AU
Israel's Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich announces controversial plan for West Bank settlement to ‘bury' Palestinian statehood
Israel's Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has mapped out plans for the West Bank which his office has described as 'burying the idea of a Palestinian state' Mr Smotrich on Thursday (local time) announced a scheme for a planned Israeli settlement which has previously been delayed, lashing out at countries over their Palestinian statehood stances as stood at the development site. The Israeli minister claimed both Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump had agreed the revived E1 settlement plans. "Whoever in the world is trying to recognise a Palestinian state today will receive our answer on the ground. Not with documents nor with decisions or statements, but with facts. Facts of houses, facts of neighbourhoods," Mr Smotrich said at the site of the proposal in Maale Adumim. It comes after Australia became the latest country in a handful of Western nations including France, the United Kingdom and Canada in signalling their intentions to recognise a Palestinian state. A US State Department spokesperson said in response to his comments that Washington's primary focus continued to be ending the war in Gaza. "A stable West Bank keeps Israel secure and is in line with this administration's goal to achieve peace in the region," the spokesperson said, referring reporters to the Israeli government for further information. Mr Smotrich's spokesperson said in a statement headlined "Burying the idea of a Palestinian state," that the minister had approved the settlement scheme. The plan would see 3,401 houses constructed for Israeli settlers between an existing settlement in the West Bank and Jerusalem. The idea for settlement at Maale Adumim was stalled by Israel in 2012 and again revived plans in 2020, with the US and European allies having considered the proposal a threat to any future peace deal with Palestinians. Palestinian authorities allies and campaign groups condemned the plans, calling it illegal. The United Nations has urged Israel to reverse its decision to start work on the settlement. "It would put an end to prospects of a two-state solution," UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric told reporters. "Settlements go against international law … (and) further entrench the occupation." Australia, as well New Zealand, Canada and the United Kingdom and Norway imposed sanctions on Mr Smotrich fellow Israeli politician Itamar Ben-Gvir for 'for inciting violence against Palestinians in the West Bank' a joint statement in June said. With Reuters

Sky News AU
2 hours ago
- Sky News AU
'Ambassador to another country': Prime Minister Anthony Albanese slams Trump administration after 'disgust' over Palestinian statehood call
A war of words has erupted between Prime Minister Anthony and the Trump administration, with Mr Albanese lashing out after his government's Palestinian statehood call was branded a 'gift' to Hamas. US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee on Thursday blasted Australia on the government's intention to recognise the state of Palestine, revealing the sentiment of 'disgust' by the Trump administration over the move. 'I think the timing has been very hurtful to any prospects of negotiating some settlement in Gaza with Hamas. They basically walked away. This is a gift to them, and it's unfortunate,' Mr Huckabee told ABC's 7.30 programme. Responding to the US diplomat's comments on Friday morning, the Prime Minister said Mr Huckabee was an 'ambassador of a country, not Australia, to another country. Not Australia, Israel'. 'My job is to represent Australia's interests and Australians have been disgusted by what they see on their TV every night,' he told ABC Radio Melbourne radio. 'They were disgusted by the terrorist actions of Hamas on October 7, the slaughter of innocent Israelis, the taking of hostages, and the ongoing holding of those hostages have outraged Australians. 'But Australians have also seen the death of tens of thousands of people, when you have children starving, when you have children losing their lives with families queuing for food and water, then that provokes, not surprisingly, a human reaction.' The exchange of remarks between Mr Albanese and the Trump administration comes amid ongoing scrutiny of the Prime Minister's announcement on Monday, which Mr Huckabee in his interview said was viewed as a 'disappointing' move by the US. The Trump administration's discussions on the matter had involved US President Donald Trump US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Mr Huckabee said. "There's an enormous level of disappointment and some disgust,' Mr Huckabee said. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio earlier this week deemed the Albanese government's action to recognise Palestine "largely meaningless". "It's largely meaningless, right?" Mr Rubio said in an interview overnight when pressed on the stance of countries ahead of the UN General Assembly. "It's symbolic, and they're doing it primarily for one reason, and that is their internal politics, their domestic politics." Australia's call on Palestinian statehood follows in the foot steps of other countries including France, the United Kingdom and Canada who have outlined their intentions to recognise a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly.

The Australian
4 hours ago
- The Australian
UN report: Pro-govt forces committed mass killings in Syria's coast
A UN human-rights commission probing sectarian violence in Syria found that pro-government forces committed systematic and widespread crimes against civilians earlier this year, but uncovered no evidence that the country's new government orchestrated the attacks. The 66-page report, released Thursday by the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic, focused on violence against Syria's Alawite communities along the Mediterranean coast in March. The report extensively detailed abuses including murder, torture and abductions amid clashes that erupted between gunmen loyal to the deposed Assad regime and state security forces and militias allied with the government. Hundreds of Alawites were killed as the violence swiftly descended into sectarian revenge attacks that forced tens of thousands to flee their homes. It was some of the worst violence since Assad was overthrown by a rebel coalition in December. The U.N. report documented how armed groups went door to door in a number of locations to identify Alawite men. The men were separated from their families and then taken outside to be shot. Alawite women and children were also killed, the report found. Bodies were left in the streets for days, it said. The commission identified several armed groups aligned with Syria's government whose fighters allegedly perpetrated many atrocities. It also found that atrocities were committed by pro-Assad forces and said more needed to be done to bring those responsible to justice. 'The scale and brutality of the violence documented in our report is deeply disturbing,' said Paulo Sérgio Pinheiro, who chaired the commission. 'While dozens of alleged perpetrators of violations have reportedly since been arrested, the scale of the violence documented in our report warrants expanding such efforts.' Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad Hasan Al-Shaibani welcomed the report and said, 'We take serious note of the alleged violations committed during that period.' The United Nations-backed commission said it continued to receive reports of ongoing killings, abductions and arbitrary arrests of members of the Alawite community. The Alawites are a religious minority to which former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad belongs. They sometimes occupied prime slots in the deposed regime but also suffered subjugation by the Assads along with Syria's other ethnic and religious minorities. Questions around the new Sunni Islamist government's involvement in the killings or its inability to protect the Alawites deepened a sense of mistrust among Syria's minorities at a time when the new leaders are struggling to consolidate their control and unify the country. Sectarian clashes erupted last month in southern Syria between ethnic Druze and Arab Bedouin. Druze accused government forces of colluding with the Bedouin. The area remains tense. Syria's government has vowed to hold perpetrators of sectarian violence accountable. Last month, a government investigatory committee reported that it had preliminarily found 298 people from military factions and 265 linked to armed militias with ties to the Assad regime who committed sectarian attacks. On Thursday, the U.N. commission welcomed the government's actions but stressed that more needs to be done to bring justice and prevent future attacks. Dow Jones The Wall Street Journal Far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich says construction plan 'finally buries the idea,' as Australia, France, UK prepare to recognise statehood. The Wall Street Journal Europe's largest wave of prisoner exchanges since World War II was set in motion when a Ukrainian soldier reached into the pocket of a dead Russian officer and found a phone.