Force 17 - Israel's new scapegoat
(Published on April 18, 2001 at
jmcc.org/media/reportonline)
by Yassin Musharbash
THE MONTH of April witnessed the entrance of a
new actor in the ongoing conflict between
Palestinians and Israelis - after almost every
significant exchange of fire between Palestinian
gunmen and Israeli soldiers in recent weeks, the
Israeli Defense Forces claimed the involvement of
the Palestinian security apparatus "Force 17."
If one leafs through the IDF's daily summary of
events on its homepage, this trend becomes
obvious. From the start of the Aqsa Intifada last
September until last month, Force 17 is only
mentioned three times. In the several weeks since,
the group has made more than half a dozen
appearances. Where shooting attacks on Israeli
military targets were once mainly attributed to
either Fateh's activist corps, the tanzeem, or
"Palestinian rioters," Force 17 has become the
target of choice.
But while Force 17 has taken on mythic
proportions in Israeli lexicon, the group is
otherwise little-known.
Force 17 was created in 1973 during the Palestine
Liberation Organization's exile in Lebanon.
Among its original tasks was the guarding of PLO
chairman Yasser Arafat, which accounts for the
fact that its most senior commanders - Faisal Abu
Sharakh in Gaza and Mahmud "Abu Awwad"
Damra in Ramallah - are very close to the
Palestinian leader.
After the PLO's return to Gaza in 1994, Force 17
officially disbanded to become part of the General
Security Services set up as the Palestinian
security umbrella, according to the Cairo-
Agreement of the same year. Most of its 5,000
members were then signed up with the
"Presidential Guard" or "Al Amn Al Ri'asah."
On the books, then, Force 17 no longer exists. But
some of the old cadres continue to operate under
the name Force 17, mainly manning checkpoints at
the borders of Palestinian-controlled areas and
intelligence work.
Israel often claims that Force 17 is solely
responsible for the Palestinian president's safety
and acts only according to his orders. But
Palestinians say this is wholly untrue.
"Force 17, like every other Palestinian security
body, is part of a proper chain of command," says
Marwan Kanafani, spokesperson of the
president's office.
Why then, has Force 17 become an Israeli target?
Certainly the Israeli government has not forgotten
that it was members of Force 17 that claimed the
killing of three Israeli citizens in Larnaka, Cyprus
in September 1985. But this does not fully explain
the revival of animosity.
"Israeli governments always create myths to
present a clear enemy on the Palestinian side,"
explains political analyst Saleh Abdel Jawwad of
Bir Zeit-University. "They began with 'the tanzim'
at the beginning of the Al Aqsa Intifada, and now
it is 'Force 17'."
Abdel Jawwad estimates that no more than
perhaps 10 people who happen to be members of
Force 17 are actually involved in attacks against
Israelis.
For its part, Israel claims that at least eight Israeli
citizens have died at the hands of Force 17
members. Mahmoud "Abu Awwad" Damra, the
man responsible for West Bank Force 17
operations and, according to TIME Magazine, at
the top of an Israeli assassination hitlist, laughs at
Israel's charges. "We know about all these
allegations. They are nothing but propaganda."
Then he adds, "We only act in self-defense, for
example, when Israeli special forces try to enter
Area A [under Palestinian security control]."
One can brush off comments like these as
propaganda meant to obscure the fact that
Palestinian gunmen have shot at Israeli targets.
But it is clear that Palestinians believe that Israel's
interest in Force 17 has multiple motives. On the
one hand, the Israeli government seems to be
deliberately exaggerating Force 17's involvement
in shooting attacks in order to charge that the
Palestinian Authority itself orders and directs
"terror." Israeli spokespeople have frequently
said that they consider Force 17 to be governed
by Arafat himself.
On the other hand, by drawing a picture of its
enemy as a well-trained "terrorist" force, the
Israeli army portrays itself as an army defending
itself in a war between equals.
Israeli military spokespeople often stress that it is
facing an "elite unit" in Force 17. But Damra says
that Force 17 members receive six to seven
months of training, as opposed to the usual three
months of other Palestinian security recruits. Of
500 applicants, some 200 are accepted to serve in
the unit. This weeding-out cannot compare to
Israel's rigorous training of special force
operatives.
"The Israelis are making a big effort to distract the
world's attention from the fact that the
Palestinians have every right in the world to resist
their aggression. They are a creating a scapegoat
in the form of Force 17," says Professor Riyad
Agha of Gaza's National Institute for Strategic
Studies.
The price paid by the Palestinian security
establishment for this Israeli tactic has been high.
Nearly 30 of its employees, among them at least 4
members of Force 17, have been killed over the
course of the Aqsa Intifada, half of them
assassinated by the Israeli military. In addition,
the Palestinian Authority security and civil
infrastructure has sustained heavy Israeli
bombing raids.
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