
Interview with Sami Al Arian's terrorist boss, former USF Professor Shallah
Palestinian Islamic Jihad Secretary General on
'Martyrdom Operations,' Fatah, Egypt
GMP20030108000062 London Al-Hayah in Arabic 07 Jan 03
p 10
[Part I of interview with Secretary General of Islamic
Jihad Movement Dr. Ramadan Abdullah Shallah, by
Ghassan Sharbal, date and place not given: "Shallah:
Jihad Launched First Martyrdom Operation in Palestine
in 1993"]
[FBIS Translated Text]
A car with drawn curtains fetched me from the
hotel. I did not ask the young driver what the address
was to which we were going. These are the rules of the
game that the journalist learns to follow when he
wants to meet the wanted. After that, I found myself
in a flat in which everybody was a guest of its absent
owner.
It was midnight. The Palestinian leaders like
to stay late at night. Sometimes they force their
opponents to stay awake in fear of what the
approaching daylight might bring; such ambiguous signs
that move in twisted roads before the world wakes up
to a fatal bang.
The man opened the A'ras book of poetry by
the poet Mahmud Darwish and started reading.
The man continued to read for a long time.
Darwish has a special place in his heart. He considers
Darwish "the most important Arab poet after
Mutanabbi." What he read was beautiful and
captivating. Darwish is a terrorist par excellence who
sneaks into the dictionary, blows himself up with it,
and at the same time washes the words and mixes up
their meanings and connections, and then he returns
with the fragments and broken pieces in the form of
images and symbols in unprecedented festivity.
Fearing that the attractiveness of the poetry
might overwhelm the aim of the interview, I joked with
the poetry reader to provoke him: "Doctor, where does
all this tenderness come from, as you are the one who
sends off dozens of would-be martyrs?" He interrupted
me to explain the situation, the interview began, and
it continued for several sessions.
Dr. Ramadan Abdullah Shallah is the secretary
general of the Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine.
He is now in the center of the storm. In November
2002, after the Hebron operation, which was
implemented by the Al-Quds Brigades, the military wing
of Islamic Jihad, and in which 12 Israeli soldiers
were killed, Prime Minister Ari'el Sharon ordered the
intelligence services to put the name of Shallah at
the head of the wanted list. During the period in
which this interview was conducted last month, Israel
announced the arrest of two Islamic Jihad members on
charges of gathering information and preparing for an
attack against the helicopter that Sharon uses to move
around the country. Naturally we asked Shallah about
this; he answered: "So far, we have no details, but
Sharon should know that if he behaves like a gangster
who fires threats of liquidation and assassination,
then he should expect anything from the Palestinian
people." In reply to a question about whether
targeting Sharon had anything to do with the threats
he [Sharon] had addressed to Shallah, he said: "It is
customary that the Israeli aggressive behavior
determines many of the resistance's methods of work. I
do not find it surprising that the fighters would
think of striking at any target, even Sharon." It
seemed clear that Shallah did not want to say anything
that could be used against the two detained young men.
There were numerous sessions; Dr. Shallah was
patient enough to answer the questions of the series
entitled "He Reminisces". He talked about the first
shot in the martyrdom operations by Islamic Jihad, the
would-be martyrs, and their spiritual and technical
training. He talked about the birth of the movement.
He revealed new information about the assassination of
his mentor and predecessor, Fathi al-Shiqaqi, in Malta
[1995] during his return from a trip to Libya during
which he used a Libyan passport in the name of Ibrahim
al-Shawish. Shallah held Mosad responsible for the
assassination of Shiqaqi, but he did not hesitate to
blame the Libyan institutions that insisted on the
personal attendance of Shiqaqi, asked him to delay his
return, and were responsible for his protection during
the trip.
The Islamic Jihad secretary general talked about
11 September [2001] and his stance towards the killing
of civilians there. He denied having any relations
with Usama Bin Ladin. However, he revealed that Ayman
al-Zawahiri had sent him a message of reproach after
reading an interview that Shallah gave to sister
Al-Wasat and in which he talked about the Jews in
Palestine.
Here is the text of the first episode:
[Sharbal] What do you feel when you see an
Israeli bus full of Israeli soldiers being blown up by
a Palestinian? What comes to your mind then?
[Shallah] This scene recalls to my mind the other
side of the picture, which is the massacres and
killings committed by these soldiers every day against
our Palestinian people. Also, if those killed in the
bus were soldiers, then I would feel proud of our
people's ability to defend themselves and to inflict
pain on this enemy who inflicts pain on us every day.
[Sharbal] What if those killed were civilians?
[Shallah] I wish you asked me about my feelings
when I see a massacre, such as the one that happened
in Burayj during the Id. Are their corpses the only
sacred ones for which we should weep and feel pain?
[Sharbal] What are the characteristics that a
would-be martyr should have?
[Shallah] He has to be willing to be a martyr.
[Sharbal] Does the would-be martyr undergo
specific courses or isolation periods, during which he
reads the Koran and gets ready to carry out a mission
of this size?
[Shallah] The truth is that we do not have
factories to breed would-be martyrs. In the West, when
they exaggerate the conditions and rites to which the
would-be martyrs are subjected, they work according to
the Western perspective of building character. What
happens in the West is that they construct an
artificial entity for a normal character in order to
fulfill self-ambitions. A person must learn this and
that in order to respond to the demand in the job
market; he must behave in a certain way to get that
position. This is the life in the West.
In general, there are two types of training for
the fighters: Spiritual and moral training through
religious mobilization and education, and operational
training related to the mission for which the
individual is chosen. The person who goes out on an
operation of engagement with the army differs from the
person who goes out to blow himself up with an
explosive belt; the one who targets a military
position differs from the one who targets a bus; and
so on.
[Sharbal] How are the individuals chosen for the
operations?
[Shallah] They volunteer. No one is forced to go.
The suitable person is selected from the volunteers
and from those who are on the waiting list.
[Sharbal] Are there specific instructions that
are given to them?
[Shallah] There are instructions concerning the
mission, and they vary from one mission to another.
[Sharbal] Do they have the freedom to change the
plan given to them?
[Shallah] At the end of the day, the matter
concerns the life of the person and his soul. We do
not want the young man to be killed for nothing. He
has to be committed to the success of the mission that
he goes to implement, but if problems or emergencies
occur, then he has the right to behave according to
the circumstances he faces.
[Sharbal] Does this include blowing himself up if
he felt that he might be arrested?
[Shallah] It could; but the instructions are that
the blowing up should not be carried out without
ensuring that the enemy will suffer losses and
casualties. In some cases, this has happened; in
others, the aim was achieved accurately according to
plan, and even more, as it happened in Hebron, Megido,
and Karkur. In some cases, the would-be martyrs were
arrested before the implementation; in one case it
happened because the would-be martyr refused to strike
at a civilian bus. The would-be martyr, Zaydan Zaydan
from Janin, went to carry out an operation in Haifa.
He was standing at the bus stop carrying a briefcase
full of explosives, a bus containing civilian
passengers arrived, he did not get into the bus, he
moved away to look for another target, and policemen
noticed him and they fired at him. He was wounded and
detained. He could have got into the bus and blown it
up.
[Sharbal] Do you know any of the would-be
martyrs?
[Shallah] The majority of the would-be martyrs
are from the younger generation. I do not know them
personally, but I know their leaders, those who send
out the would-be martyrs.
[Sharbal] Such as whom?
[Shallah] Such as martyr Mahmud al-Khawaja, the
commander of the military wing of the Islamic Jihad
Movement in Gaza who sent the two martyrs Anwar Sukkar
and Salah Shakir to carry out the Bayt Lid operation
in which 22 Israeli soldiers were killed. Mahmud was a
student at the Islamic University in Gaza and was one
of the first young men to join the movement in Gaza in
1982. He was the president of the student group of the
movement at the Islamic University. He was a young man
of strong physique and will. He became the commander
of the movement's military wing; after that, the enemy
assassinated him on 22 June 1995, about four months
before the assassination of Dr. Fathi Shiqaqi. There
are others, such as martyrs Mahmud Tawalibah, Iyad
Sawalihah, and Iyad Hardan; brothers Thabit al-Mardawi
and Ali al-Safuri who are prisoners; and other
commanders of Al-Quds Brigades. I know them and I used
to talk to them, but I have not met them in person.
[Sharbal] Was Mahmud Tawalibah the commander of
Al-Quds Brigades in Janin?
[Shallah] He was the commander in the camp. The
enemy accused him of sending out 17 would-be martyrs
from Janin region alone.
[Sharbal] Was that true?
[Shallah] Yes, that was true. However, not all of
them carried out their operations. Four of them were
arrested before they could carry out the operations,
including his brother Murad Tawalibah. When Murad's
operation failed, Mahmud was sad and said: 'I myself
prepared the bomb, I put in sufficient explosives and
triggers, but I do not know what went wrong.'
[Sharbal] He said that about his brother?
[Shallah] Yes. When the battle of Janin occurred
and some people advised him to escape with his life
because the enemy was coming to kill him, he said to
those around him: 'Previously, I used to send out
others to become martyrs; now is the time to decide to
be a martyr myself.' He fought until he was martyred
during the heroic odyssey of Janin.
[Sharbal] What are the ages of the would-be
martyrs? Is it true that you have sent out 13-year-old
boys?
[Shallah] This is Zionist propaganda. The
youngest martyr was Ahmad Daraghimah from Janin, who
was 17 years old. There are martyrs in their twenties
and thirties. Martyrs Dawud Abu-Duway from Bethlehem
was 45 years old and he left a family including seven
children.
[Sharbal] Why did you not send a younger man?
[Shallah] The brothers in the military wing said
that he insisted on going. He targeted the Hilton
Hotel in Jerusalem, in which Israeli Public Security
Minister Uzi Landau and other ministers were guests,
but he blew himself up at the door when the police
challenged him.
[Sharbal] Was he targeting the security minister?
[Shallah] If not, why had he targeted the hotel;
he could have blown himself up in the street and
killed a large number of Israelis.
[Sharbal] Is there a competition between you and
HAMAS over who kills more Israelis?
[Shallah] There is a competition among all
factions in the arena of struggle and resistance, but
it is not over killing. We are not bloodthirsty and we
do not kill others for the sake of killing. We do not
enjoy killing. We are defending our rights and
ourselves. We did not occupy a land that belonged to
the Jews and we did not destroy their homeland. They
killed us, dispersed us, and established their entity
over our ruins.
[Sharbal] But does a competition over carrying
out operations exist among the factions?
[Shallah] This has been going on for a long time
in the Palestinian arena, and we hope to get rid of
it.
[Sharbal] Was the Hebron operation a reply to the
Cairo dialogue between Fatah and HAMAS?
[Shallah] Certainly not. An operation of this
size and kind needs a long time to plan and prepare
and it cannot be done at the push of a button.
[Sharbal] Many people ask the question: Why do
HAMAS and Islamic Jihad not unite into a single
movement?
[Shallah] Unity is good. However, sometimes
multiplicity and diversity are required; they could
serve the battle and confuse the enemy. The
multiplicity of headlines, despite its negative
aspects, helps to absorb the energies of our people.
If someone does not like to work within this
framework, then rather than staying at home he could
go and join the resistance within another framework.
[Sharbal] Even if this framework was not Islamic?
[Shallah] Even if it was not Islamic. Our people,
like any people in the world, include all the colors
of the political and ideological spectrum. We do not
restrain anybody.
[Sharbal] But could not multiplicity in an arena,
such as the Palestinian one, introduce and encourage
conflicts?
[Shallah] It is the responsibility of the
reasonable and loyal members of every faction to work
towards avoiding this. To have competition -- that is,
competition in doing good deeds and in Jihad -- this
is legitimate; God says: "For this let the strivers
strive" [Koran verse]. As for having disputes, this is
unacceptable and prohibited: "Do not engage in
disputes with one another, lest you lose courage and
become insignificant" [Koran verse].
In my opinion, if we liberate ourselves from the
sickness of fanatic partisanship, then we will be able
to preserve the balance and we will not stumble onto
the grave slippery slopes of hateful disputes in which
everyone claims to be the only one that is right on
the struggle stage or to be the guardian of resistance
or of Islam. The situation of the Palestinians, even
of the whole [Islamic] nation, does not allow for any
disputes. We need to look for the points of agreement
and to consolidate them in order to preserve the
national unity and close our ranks, because any
problem in all this will become a sledgehammer in the
hands of our enemy who is waging a war of annihilation
against us.
[Sharbal] It was announced recently that you have
joined the Cairo dialogue. What is the truth about
this?
[Shallah] If you mean the Cairo dialogue between
Fatah and HAMAS, then we have not participated in it
from the beginning, we were not invited to it, and it
has not been resumed; this is despite the fact that
domestically we are the ones who initiated the
dialogue among the factions. Indeed there were
meetings in which five factions participated; they
were HAMAS, Islamic Jihad, Fatah, the Popular Front
for the Liberation of Palestine [PFLP], and the
Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine
[DFLP]. As for our dialogue with the Egyptian
brothers: Yes, a meeting and contacts have taken
place; this is not new.
[Sharbal] Did you contact them, or have they
invited you?
[Shallah] They invited us and we accepted.
[Sharbal] To whom was the invitation addressed?
[Shallah] It was addressed to me personally, and
to the Islamic Jihad Movement. However, my personal
circumstances prevented me from going to Cairo; hence,
someone else went.
[Sharbal] Who addressed the invitation to you?
[Shallah] Senior government officials.
[Sharbal] Who, for instance?
[Shallah] There is no need to mention names;
however, rest assured that it was official Egyptians
of high rank in the state. The dialogue took place in
Cairo and not in some unknown place somewhere else in
the world.
[Sharbal] What was the subject of the dialogue?
[Shallah] Discussing the latest developments in
the Palestinian arena, the situation in the region,
future concepts, and their effect upon the Palestinian
arena.
[Sharbal] Did they ask you to stop the martyrdom
operations?
[Shallah] They proposed some ideas related to
calming the situation as a part of a comprehensive
dialogue about the management of the conflict with the
enemy during this stage.
[Sharbal] Did you agree to the calming of the
situation?
[Shallah] The explosive situation within
Palestine is not of our making so that we cannot be
asked to calm it. The enemy is setting on fire
everything under the feet of our people and we are
defending ourselves. We expressed our opinion of our
people's legitimate right to defend themselves in the
face of the continuous Zionist aggression.
[Sharbal] What was the result?
[Shallah] We agreed to continue the dialogue with
the brothers in Cairo without specifying a timetable
or dates, and we hope to resume it soon.
[Sharbal] Is not this step of yours a development
in the political stance of the Islamic Jihad Movement?
[Shallah] If you want to consider it so, then
this will be all right. At the end of the day, we are
a resistance movement that needs Arab support and aid
for our cause and struggle. As a resistance movement,
we have, praise be to God, enough self-confidence in
our weight in the Palestinian struggle to make us have
some kind of flexibility in our dealings with all the
sons of our nation, a flexibility that opens the way
for give-and-take between us and anyone concerned
about Palestine and Jerusalem, the first Qibla.
[Sharbal] How do you interpret the Egyptian
request addressed to you and HAMAS to calm or stop the
operations under these circumstances? What would that
be in exchange for?
[Shallah] We did not engage in a bargaining deal.
Any Arab or Muslim party concerned about Palestine has
the right to propose any ideas. Egypt's role and
historic presence in Palestinian affairs are well
known. The Egyptian brothers said what they wanted to
say and we listened. God says, "So give glad tidings
to My servants who listen to speech and follow the
best in it." We will follow what is good for and in
the interest of our people and our nation.
[Sharbal] Is it true that Islamic Jihad asked the
Egyptians to widen the circle of dialogue to include
other factions?
[Shallah] It is true. We asked for this.
[Sharbal] Such as whom?
[Shallah] Such as the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine, the Democratic Front for the
Liberation of Palestine, and the General Command. Of
course, HAMAS and Fatah have preceded us in the
dialogue.
[Sharbal] How do you take a decision in the
Islamic Jihad Movement, or what is the organizational
structure of the movement?
[Shallah] According to the statutes, there is a
General Congress, a General Shura Council, and a
secretary general. There are also local shura councils
from which organizational specialized committees stem.
Our organizational structure has enough flexibility
and adaptability to cope with the extraordinary and
domestic security circumstances of the movement and to
operate in an atmosphere of harmony and efficiency.
[Sharbal] How long is the term of the secretary
general?
[Shallah] Four years.
[Sharbal] Can he be re-elected?
[Shallah] Yes. There are no restrictions on the
number of terms he can serve.
[Sharbal] Then you are in your second term. Do
you wish to be re-elected?
[Shallah] The decision is up to the movement and
its grassroots. Whatever my position might be, I am a
soldier in the service of the homeland and Islam. If I
had a personal wish, then it would be to become a
martyr for the cause of God.
[Sharbal] Who carried out the first martyrdom
operation in Palestine?
[Shallah] Do you mean a blow-up martyrdom
operation or a fighter?
[Sharbal] I mean a blow-up operation by an
individual blowing himself up.
[Shallah] It was the Islamic Jihad Movement, when
martyr Anwar Aziz, from Jabalia in the Gaza Strip,
blew himself up in a booby-trapped car on 13 December
1993 in the midst of a convoy of Zionist soldiers in
Gaza.
[Sharbal] But HAMAS says that it was the first to
carry out a martyrdom operation?
[Shallah] I think that HAMAS is referring to the
operation by martyr Ra'id Zakarinah; however, this
operation took place on 6 April 1994.
[Sharbal] From where did you get the idea of the
martyrdom operations? Is it from Lebanon and
Hizballah?
[Shallah] Definitely the resistance in Lebanon
was the first struggle to carry out blowing-up
martyrdom operations, particularly when they carried
out the blowing up of the US Marines headquarters in
1983 and other operations.
[Sharbal] The Marines Headquarters operation is
attributed to Hizballah, but surely it did not exist
then?
[Shallah] Hizballah did not implement the
operation of blowing up the US Marines headquarters. A
resistance member called Abu-Zaynab whose identity was
not known until now did it.
[Sharbal] If the operations started in Lebanon
earlier, then why were they delayed in Palestine?
[Shallah] The martyrdom operations commenced
after the intifadah. During the years of the
intifadah, concentration was on popular action, but
the military action existed and the patriotic movement
and the Palestinian resistance factions had been
fighting for years. As for the Islamic Jihad Movement,
it started its military action in the mid-eighties.
[Sharbal] Could you say that the Islamic Jihad
Movement is not an elite movement anymore?
[Shallah] There are two sides to this phrase; one
is negative and the other is positive. The positive
side is that Islamic Jihad indeed is no longer a small
movement restricted to a group of intellectuals or
theoreticians. It is now a popular movement of
struggle that fights the Zionist occupation. It
includes all age groups and social classes. It
includes students, workers, peasants, merchants, and
school and university teachers. There is no
Palestinian village, camp, or suburb in which Islamic
Jihad is not represented. As far as the other side, or
the negative side, is concerned, the lessening of the
elite character of the movement does not mean a
lessening of perception, particularly as many of the
members of the first generation are leading the action
today. Dr. Muhammad al-Hindi, Shaykh Nafiz Azzam,
Shaykh Abdullah al-Shami, and many others are from the
first generation of the movement since the student
stage in Egypt.
[Sharbal] These names are in Gaza, which seems to
be the stronghold of the movement. What about the West
Bank? Where is the center of gravity of the movement
today -- is it in the West Bank, Gaza, or abroad?
[Shallah] The strength of the movement is
distributed among the three axes you mentioned. The
movement exists in Gaza and, praise be to God, is
strong there. It also exists in the West Bank; the
proof of its strength there is the number of martyrs
who came out during this intifadah. Thirty-six martyrs
from Islamic Jihad carried out martyrdom operations
from the West Bank, not to mention those who have been
arrested and the other military operations. As for the
presence of our symbols and leaders, our movement in
the West Bank has pushed forward the best of its
cadres into this intifadah; many of them are either
martyrs or detained. For instance, Shaykh Riyad
Budayr, one of the founders of the Islamic Jihad
Movement in the West Bank and one of the first
acquaintances of the late Dr. Fathi al-Shiqaqi, was 55
years old and a well-known Islamic caller in Tulkarm.
When the Janin battle occurred this year [2002], he
went from Tulkarm, despite the siege and the curfew in
the Janin camp, and fought alongside his brothers and
was martyred in battle.
Anwar Hamran, Iyad Hardan, Mahmud Tawalibah,
Wa'il Assaf, As'ad Abu-Daqqah, Ayman Daraghimah,
Muhammad al-Anini, Ahmad As'ad Khalil, Muhammad
Bisharat, Khalid Zakarinah, and Iyad Sawalihah were
all commanders in the military wing of the Islamic
Jihad Movement, and all of them were martyred in this
intifadah. There are others who are detained, such as
Hajj Ali al-Safuri, Thabit al-Mardawi, Tariq
Izz-al-Din, Shaykh Abd-al-Halim Izz-al-Din from Janin,
Shaykh Muhammad Darwish from Hebron, Shaykh Sa'id
Nakhlah from Ramallah, brother Khalid al-Zawawi from
Nablus, brother Abd-al-Nasir Suways from Tulkarm, and
many others.
Many others are pursued by the Israeli
authorities, some of them are military personnel that
I do not want to expose, and others are politicians
such as Shaykh Abd-al-Hakim Musalamah from Ramallah
and Shaykh Bassam al-Sa'di from Janin who gave his
twin sons Abd-al-Karim and Ibrahim as martyrs in this
intifadah. They were twins in birth and twins in
martyrdom; the time difference between their
martyrdoms was less than two months. Shaykh Bassam's
mother and nephew were also martyred. All this
happened as he was pursued and hunted; he is a
45-year-old political cadre. This is in addition to
the women cadres, the most prominent of whom are
sister Itaf Aliyan in Bethlehem, sister Muna Qa'dan in
Janin, and others. As for our presence abroad, it is
symbolic and limited to the secretary general and a
part of the political leadership of the movement.
[Sharbal] When did the presence of the movement
abroad start?
[Shallah] After the exile of Dr. Fathi al-Shiqaqi
and some brothers to Lebanon during the first
intifadah in 1988.
[Sharbal] What is your relationship with Fatah or
the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades?
[Shallah] Our relationship with Fatah is good.
The situation is better with the Al-Aqsa Martyrs
Brigades because Fatah includes the policy that agrees
with Oslo, while the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades has
returned to the armed struggle.
[Sharbal] There is talk that the Islamic Jihad
Movement finances groups of or operations by the
Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades. What is the truth of this?
[Shallah] This is not true. We are an Islamic
Jihad Movement and not an Islamic bank. We have our
military organization and our fighters. In fact, we
are unable to respond to all the requirements of our
fighters or the financial requirements of our
organization.
[Sharbal] Some people say that you want to
implicate Fatah; hence, you carried out joint
operations with the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades.
[Shallah] This is called the conspiracy
interpretation of history. Nobody is implicating
Fatah. It is capable of implicating countries. People
act according to their convictions. The joint
operations were the fruit of principled relations and
true cooperation between the Al-Quds Brigades and
Al-Aqsa Brigades.
[Sharbal] Who controls the decisions of the
Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades?
[Shallah] What I know is that the Al-Aqsa Martyrs
Brigades are not a united organization under a single
leadership in Palestine. The Al-Aqsa Brigades are
separate groups dispersed in the cities, villages, and
camps. Here and there, contacts and coordination could
happen among the groups, according to the
circumstances in the field.
[Newspaper promises further installments of this
interview]
[Description of Source: London Al-Hayah in Arabic --
Influential Saudi-owned London daily providing
independent coverage of Arab and international issues;
commentaries occasionally critical of US policy]
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