Ahmed Jibril

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Ahmed Jibril (born 1928) is the founder and leader of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine - General Command (PFLP-GC), part of the left-wing, secular Palestinian rejectionist front, so-called because they reject proposals for a peaceful settlement with Israel.

Since its inception in 1968, the PFLP-GC has staged numerous attacks against Israeli and other targets, both military and civilian.

Jibril's son, Jihad Ahmed Jibril, who headed the PFLP-GC's military wing and was in line to replace Jibril as leader of the group, was killed by a car bomb in Beirut on May 20, 2002.

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Early life

Jibril was born in Jaffa, now in Israel, in 1928, but his family moved to Syria, where he was raised, and where he served as an army captain. He founded the Palestinian Liberation Front in 1959, then joined George Habash to found the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine in 1967, a communist armed movement opposed to the nationalism of Yasser Arafat's Fatah movement.

Break from the PFLP

Jibril broke away from the PFLP because of disputes between Habash and the Syrian government. Jibril has not wavered in his support of Syria, and his group remains based in Damascus.

Although for decades the PFLP-GC's ideology was almost identical to its parent groups the PFLP and PLO, Jibril never wavered from his belief that Palestine could only be liberated through military attrition. He joined Habash and other splinter groups in the so-called "rejectionist front," which opposed negotiations of any kind with the Israeli government. He launched a variety of inventive attacks, including the legendary "Night of the Hang-gliders" (1988) that earned him the eternal enmity of Israelis by embarrassing their border security.

Relationship with Islamist states

Jibril was also the first old-guard Palestinian militant to embrace the aid of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Hezbollah, and Islamic Jihad. Unlike George Habash, a Greek Orthodox Christian, Jibril was able, as a Muslim, to correlate Islamic radicalism and his Marxist ideology. By the early 1990s, with the rise of Hamas in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, Jibril had ceased to be a key threat to the Israelis.

Signature

The PFLP-GC maintained cells in several European cities, which carried out anti-American or anti-Israeli operations behalf of Syria, Libya, and Iran.

Samuel Katz's Israel vs. Jibril distinguishes the PFLP-GC and Jibril's strategy from the rest of the PLO by its emphasis on military training and equipment, and not on declarations and publicity stunts. This caused the group to fail to make a significant mark on the public debate. Since 1994's Oslo Accords, support for the PFLP-GC dwindled among doves, who flocked to Fatah's new Palestinian Authority, and among hawks, who mainly backed Hamas and the PFLP, which was more established in the West Bank.

On May 7, 2001, the Israeli Navy seized a Palestinian boat filled with heavy weapons in the port of Haifa. Jibril is believed to have been behind the shipment of weapons, which were bound for the Gaza Strip.

See also



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