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Jeremy Corbyn’s meeting with an official from the PFLP-GC signalled his rejection of two states

The fact the future Labour leader met representatives of Palestinian rejectionist factions is further evidence of his fundamentalism on the issue, writes Colin Shindler

November 26, 2019 11:19
Jeremy Corbyn and others at the meeting
2 min read

The remarkable revelation that Jeremy Corbyn — as part of a Palestine Return Centre (PRC) mission to Beirut in 2011 — met representatives of Palestinian rejectionist factions is further evidence of his fundamentalism when it comes to the Israel-Palestine conflict.

It meant that he had no qualms sitting with those opposed to the PLO, those who refused any negotiation with even the Israeli peace camp, but who instead enthusiastically endorsed a Greater Palestine at the expense of a two-state solution.

The PRC itself is close to the Muslim Brotherhood and was opposed to the Oslo Accords agreed by Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin. In a statement after the meeting, Mr Corbyn implicitly rebuked those who differentiated between different Palestinian factions as facilitating “a classic colonial divide and rule tactic”. As with Seumas Milne, what matters is Palestinian resistance to Israel and not the political colouring of those who resist — even if reactionary and antisemitic.

One of those whom Mr Corbyn met in February 2011 was a representative of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine — General Command (PFLP-GC), which originally split from the left wing PFLP in 1968 because it preferred emphasis on eye-catching acts of violence rather than on intellectual discourse and Marxist dialectic.