Policy Focus no. 78
December 2007
Important paper to read-here is but a sample ... Despite functioning as a de facto state since its creation in 1994, the Palestinian Authority has long been crippled by what Palestinians refer to as "the four Fs": fawda (chaos), fitna (strife), falatan (lawlessness), and fassad (corruption). These conditions -- the principal manifestations of Palestinian state failure -- continue to define life in the PA-controlled West Bank and show signs of returning in Hamas-controlled Gaza. How did this state of affairs come to pass? And what can the Palestinians, Israel, and the international community do to avert the worst-case scenarios of outright collapse or civil war?
In this new Washington Institute Policy Focus, Michael Eisenstadt diagnoses the many longstanding ails that have kept the PA from governing effectively. The Palestinians face numerous obstacles to meaningful reform and stability, including Yasser Arafat's enduring legacy of corruption and unaccountability, economic decline, rapid population growth, a self-defeating strategy of armed struggle and culture of political violence, and the Israeli occupation. These problems have been exacerbated by -- and, in many cases, have given rise to -- additional obstacles such as Israeli security restrictions, international sanctions against Hamas, and continued interference from Iran and Syria. Failure to formulate a comprehensive, multilateral approach to overcoming these obstacles could have untold implications for the Palestinians, the regional security equation, and overall U.S. interests in the Middle East.
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THE AUTHOR
Michael Eisenstadt is a senior fellow and director of the Military and Security Studies Program at The Washington Institute. Prior to joining the Institute in 1989, he worked as a civilian military analyst with the U.S. Army. An officer in the Army Reserve, he served on active duty in 2001-2002 at U.S. Central Command and on the Joint Staff during Operation Enduring Freedom and the planning for Operation Iraqi Freedom. He is coeditor (with Patrick Clawson) of the Institute paper Deterring the Ayatollahs: Complications in Applying Cold War Strategy to Iran.
http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/templateC04.php?CID=285
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