US wants to train Fatah in West Bank
US State Department officials, looking to shift US Security Coordinator Lt.-Gen. Keith Dayton's work with Palestinian forces to the West Bank, have begun holding discussions with Congressional staff on how to restructure an $86 million funding program previously allocated to bolster Dayton's Gaza activities.
The earlier package was whittled down to $59m. before Congress signed off on it and would have gone largely to non-lethal equipment and training for the presidential guard to secure the Gaza border crossings and help Fatah leaders and institutions there. Now the US, caught off-guard by Hamas's speedy defeat of Fatah forces in Gaza, is scrambling for new ways to strengthen Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah and isolate Hamas in Gaza.
Strengthen Abbas? He's terminally weak. | "They have a great appetite to work with Abbas and [PA Prime Minister Salaam] Fayad," said one Democratic Congressional staffer. "But I don't think they've quite figured outÂ… what that cooperation looks like, where that money ought to go."
"They don't have good answers right now," he said.
I do. Not. One. Dime. Do not fund the Paleos until they realize that they're at the bottom and it's necessary to re-visit some cherished assumptions. | State Department Deputy Spokesman Tom Casey said last week that America was waiting to hear more about the new Abbas government's agenda before presenting an aid package for Dayton's security coordination program. "There are still a number of plans that the Abbas government is formulating and [the US] will be working with them as their plans develop to determine how best we can utilize this money," he said. "But we're still conducting consultations with them and internally amongst ourselves as to how to proceed."
One senior Western official said the Dayton team was staying, for now, essentially in the same configuration as before the Hamas takeover of Gaza. Dayton's team "continues to actively engage and is in place and prepared to continue with US efforts with Palestinians in the security field," he said.
The Democratic staffer cautioned that in the administration's eagerness to help Abbas, they might find themselves running afoul of Congressional barriers put in place to make sure no money ends up in terrorists' hands. "I'm a little concerned that they're going a little too fast. I'm worried that they might have obstacles down the road if they discover, as they have in the past, that there are bad guys on the [Palestinian security forces] payroll," he said, pointing to a tightening of laws governing money given to the Palestinians recently passed under the Palestinian Anti-Terrorism Act. "PATA wasn't set up to make it easy. It was set up to make it hard."
Critics of US efforts under Dayton were quick to point to the events in Gaza to question whether his mission should continue. "I see no evidence that [Dayton's mission] succeeded," said Shoshana Bryen of the Washington-based Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs of efforts to reform the Palestinian security forces and secure the Gaza crossings. "They simply didn't fight, they abandoned their posts," she said of the Fatah forces outgunned but not outnumbered by Hamas. She said, though, that the failure was larger than the battle in Gaza and stemmed from flawed American expectations that any US security coordinator could lead Fatah security services in a direction amenable to US and Israeli interests rather than their own.
More hand-wringing at the link. We're at fault and we're also indispensable. Wear a neck-brace to guard against whiplash. |
Posted by: Steve White 2007-07-02 |