Stabbing Attacks Put Palestine’s Abbas in Oslo Double Bind

Stabbing Attacks Put Palestine’s Abbas in Oslo Double Bind
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in the West Bank city of Ramallah, Nov. 24, 2015 (AP photo by Jacquelyn Martin).

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas could not have anticipated how quickly his threats to end cooperation with Israel would be tested after he declared the Oslo Accords dead in a defiant address at the United Nations in September. With violence spiking in the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem, the aging Palestinian leader is seeking to constrain attacks against Israel without losing more of his legitimacy among an increasingly angry Palestinian populace.

The upsurge in violence and reprisal attacks, with the latest this past Sunday, have left the Palestinian Authority (PA) with a dilemma: how to fulfill its commitments to maintain security and stability in its territory without alienating Palestinians furious over the rising Palestinian death toll. Even before the latest round of bloodshed began, public opinion was turning against the Western-backed authority; new polls by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research show that Palestinians living in the West Bank view the PA as a burden.

“I do think the PA has a real issue here,” says Hussein Ibish, a senior resident scholar for the Washington-based Arab Gulf States Institute. “They’re in a very difficult situation, and I don’t know what they can do to get out of it. It has a potential to get out of their control.”

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