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Arafat died 20 years ago – what if he had lived?

I gained insight into his motivations when in July 2004 I secured what turned out to be his last television interview

November 7, 2024 10:34
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The grave of Yasser Arafat, inside the Muqataa, Arafat's office compound in the West Bank city of Ramallah, 14 November 2004 (Getty Images)
3 min read

Yasser Arafat died in a Paris military hospital 20 years ago this coming Monday. But huge questions still remain over whether he was a peace maker or a peace destroyer. Had he lived longer – he was 75 when he died – what difference might it have made to the current Middle East turmoil? Even the manner of his death – and who may have benefited from it – is still mired in controversy.

I gained insight into his actions and motivations when in July 2004 a Swedish reporter and I secured what turned out to be his last television interview, inside his compound in Ramallah, The Mukataa. It comprised an old part, built in the 1930s during the British Mandate as a military headquarters, a court and a prison, along with a new structure linked by bridge. As we went one floor up, Arafat greeted us and pointed upwards, saying he slept in a bedroom in the old part. It had holes in it, he said, inflicted by Israeli shells. He failed to mention that mostly he slept in the smart new bedroom constructed for him in the newer, untouched building alongside.

Even though then-prime minister Ariel Sharon had announced Israel’s intention to pull out its troops and settlers from all of Gaza, Arafat complained he had not been consulted. He contended that Sharon led “fanatic groups” that, he alleged, were trying to destroy the Oslo Agreement and the Rabin-Arafat-Clinton “peace of the brave”.

When asked mild questions about international efforts to isolate him or reduce his role as a negotiator, he snarled and asked my Swedish colleague if she was part of the conspiracy against him. The atmosphere became progressively more tense.