Wednesday, September 11FROM THE RIVER TO THE SEA, PALESTINE WILL BE FREE

FORCES OF SHAME 1

NOVANEWS
Palestinian security forces walk a careful line
The Palestinian Authority’s reformed forces are more professional than ever. But maintaining legitimacy in eyes of their people despite Zionist limits on their authority is an ongoing battle.
By Edmund Sanders
Reporting from Jericho, West Bank – As the highest-ranking commander of nearly 8,000 Palestinian security troops, Maj. Gen. Diab Ali is accustomed to being top gun. But the salutes often stop when he leaves the military base and travels through the West Bank.
Experience has taught the general to leave his gun behind and trade the uniform for civilian clothes, lest some young Israeli checkpoint guard decide to hold him for questioning or block his way.
“It avoids problems,” said Ali, commander of the National Security Forces of the Palestinian Authority.
It’s a small — some might say demeaning — example of the challenges facing Palestinian security forces as they struggle to find a balance between operating under Israeli limits on their control in the West Bank and maintaining legitimacy in the eyes of their own people.
By most accounts, the recently reformed Palestinian security forces are more professional and disciplined than ever. Troops have won praise for restoring law and order to several West Bank cities, including Nablus and Hebron.
But after three years of U.S.-funded training and recruitment, the security forces are at a crossroads, Palestinian leaders say.
A shortage of weapons, money and authority, and continuing Israeli military incursions into areas that are supposed to be under Palestinian control, are threatening to turn public pride and confidence into distrust and derision, Palestinians say.
Ali said his forces have held up their part of the bargain by stopping suicide attacks and reducing violence against Israeli settlers.
Last month, Palestinian forces exposed a West Bank militant cell preparing to launch a rocket into Israel. A year ago, Palestinian troops tamped down West Bank demonstrations spurred by Israel’s 22-day assault on the Gaza Strip.
Israelis and international observers say that’s exactly the kind of work Palestinian security forces should be doing. But for some Palestinians, who still view Israel as the enemy, there’s a fine line between cooperation and collaboration. Already some critics dismiss the Palestinian forces as “Israeli subcontractors” or an “occupier’s army.”
“Israelis have turned us into the guards of their own kingdom,” said Abdul Sattar Kassem, a Palestinian political science professor at An Najah National University in Nablus.
Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, who says an independent security force is one of the linchpins of a future Palestinian state, warned that Palestinians are losing patience with Israel’s reluctance to hand over security responsibility. According to Fayyad, the current stalemate is putting “the whole enterprise at risk.”
Israelis acknowledge the improvement but say Palestinian forces are not yet ready to assume control of the West Bank. Without Israeli military support, they say, militants would overrun the authority’s forces, as they did in Gaza in 2007 when Hamas fighters seized the enclave.
“This has to be done gradually,” said Ilan Mizrahi, former head of Israel’s National Security Council and now a defense analyst. “The more we witness them improving and arresting radical elements, the more authority we will give them.”
Other Israelis, however, oppose turning over authority to Palestinians, noting that during the 2000 intifada, or uprising, Palestinian troops who had been given control over parts of the West Bank turned their guns against Israeli soldiers.
“It’s only a matter of time until they take the techniques and teaching that we are giving them now, and that the U.S. is paying for, and use them against us,” conservative Israeli lawmaker Danny Danon said. “History has taught us.”
Most agree that today’s Palestinian forces are better trained than the forces a decade ago, when rampant corruption within the authority meant many unpaid police officers resorted to crime.
After Palestinian Authority troops were chased out of Gaza nearly three years ago, the United States and European Union started investing in reform. Lt. Gen. Keith Dayton arrived to serve as the U.S. security coordinator for Israel and the Palestinian Authority. The U.S. has spent $186 million in training and infrastructure so far, with $100 million more budgeted for this year.
But Ali, who spent years in Lebanon fighting against Israel with the Palestine Liberation Organization, warned that the longer it takes for Israel to return full security autonomy to Palestinians, the more credibility his forces lose.
“It really embarrasses us,” he said.
Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

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