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Arab Nationalist Movement حركة القوميين العرب | |
|---|---|
| Abbreviation | ANM, MAN |
| General Secretary | George Habash |
| Founders | |
| Founded | 1951 |
| Dissolved | 1970 |
| Succeeded by | Arab Socialist Action Party |
| Ideology | |
| Political position | Left-wing |
TheArab Nationalist Movement (Arabic:حركة القوميين العرب,Harakat al-Qawmiyyin al-Arab), also known as theMovement of Arab Nationalists and theHarakiyyin, was apan-Arabnationalist organization influential in much of theArab world, particularly within thePalestinian movement. It was first established in the 1950s byGeorge Habash with the primary focus on Arab unity.[2]
The Arab Nationalist Movement had its origins in a student group led byGeorge Habash at theAmerican University of Beirut which emerged in the 1950s.[3] Because Habash thought that the reclaiming ofPalestine was a community effort, the dissemination of a unitedArab identity was critical for collective action following the establishment of the newState of Israel in 1948.[4] In 1948 Habash along with other students namely,Hani al-Hindi,Wadie Haddad, Ahmad al-Khatib, Saleh Shibel, Hamed al-Juburi and others scholars united due to their similar ideologies and partook in a student political movement which later expanded into what was known as the Al-Kata'ib al-fida' al-'Arabi in 1949.[5]
The main focus was Arab unity, avenging the loss of Palestine, and anti-colonialism toward theBritish. They soon realized it was not working as they had assumed. Around 1951, they proceeded to launch apolitical movement instead which developed into the Arab Nationalist Movement (ANM).[3] The ANM was influenced strongly by events that occurred in the timeframe of 1961–1973 in theMiddle East, especially thebreakup of theUnited Arab Republic (UAR) in 1961, the 1967Six-Day War and theYom Kippur War.[4] Among its primary political competitors in the mid-twentieth century was theBa'ath Party.[6]
The ANM was based strongly on the influence of the Arab nationalist ideology ofConstantin Zureiq who was known as the father ofArab nationalism and advocated forsecularism.[4] This ideology placed emphasis on the formation of a nationally conscious intellectual elite which would play avanguard role in a revolution of Arab consciousness, leading to Arab unity and social progress. ThisArab nationalist approach meant an uncompromising hostility toWesternimperialism in general, and Israel in particular, as the movement took a lead in the formation ofanti-Zionist doctrine. Ideologically, the ANM committed tosocialism and secularism with later on the idea ofMarxism. The ideology of socialism, however, was progressive.Gamal Abdel Nasser was the main advocate for a socialist ideology in the ANM, where he diffused the idea of “recovering Palestine.”[5]
The Marxist ideology arose later on, as to begin there was a negative view and connotation towards this ideology stemming from the support of theSoviet Union to thepartition. It was only in 1951, after a few years of reading and learning about the unification movement and revolution that the ideology diffused and was implemented into the ANM.[4]
The group formed branches in variousArab states, and adopted the name Arab Nationalist Movement in 1958. Some political divergence arose within the movement. Many, especially in Syria and Iraq, became close to localNasserist movements, and indeed turned into the main pillar of Nasserism in some parts of the Levant.[5] However, another faction moved towardsMarxism, including Habash andNayef Hawatmeh, which brought them into conflict with Gamal Abdel Nasser and increasingly led them to place a heavier emphasis on socialism than pan-Arab nationalism.[7] In addition, the differing systems of government in the Arab countries forced the ANM branch organizations to adapt to local conditions, and it became increasingly difficult to find common ground. This subsequently resulted in a failure in the revolutionary process of the Arab Nationalist Movement.[3]
The break-up of theUnited Arab Republic contributed to the internal fracturing of the ANM.[6] Their failure was also propelled by the defeat of Egypt in the 1967Six-Day War, which had led to the discrediting of Nasserism, and forced the ANM to play down its uniting, pan-Arab creed. The final blow to the ANM had come in 1967–69, after a series of conferences. Nasserism was denounced by Arab Nationalists due to failure of the Nasser revolution to aid in the unity and regain of Palestinian territory, which was the ANM's main goals since the beginning.[3] The failure of the ANM resulted in the creation of other parties, also created by Habash such as thePFLP which later became a strong force for Palestinian liberation and Arab unity.[7]
TheBahraini ANM cadres initially joined thePopular Front for the Liberation of the Occupied Arabian Gulf. In 1974 the Bahraini sector of PFLOAG was converted into thePopular Front for the Liberation of Bahrain. Today the Popular Front has given birth toNational Democratic Action Society, a prominent secular opposition party in country.
In Egypt, an ANM branch was formed after fifteen ANM members arrived in Cairo after being expelled from theAmerican University of Beirut in the year 1955.[8] The influence of the ANM started being particularly important especially with the emergence of Egyptian president Nasser in the mid-1950s. His opposition to the 1955Baghdad Pact, hisanti-Western stance, his decision to nationalize theSuez Canal and the subsequenttripartite invasion of Egypt in October 1956 made Gamal Abdel Nasser become a very popular figure in the pan-Arab movement.[8] This pushed the ANM to shape its policy and strategy in order to merge into Nasser's Egyptian branch of theArab Socialist Union. By the 1950s, Nasser's self-proclaimed leadership over the Arab nationalist movement put Egypt as the Arab nation ready to unite with its fellow Arabs.[9]
Arab nationalism became the predominant radical, on the whole anti-Western, ideology in the country, which was by nature the most important Arab state and served as a bridge between the Western and the Arab worlds in the 1950s. Nasser played a crucial role in the spreading of nationalist ideas shared by the ANM, as he led a nationalistic attack against Western military alliances in 1955, starting to mobilize Arab public sentiment.[2]
His contribution was so influential, that when Egypt was defeated at the end of the Six-Day War, the consequences on the pan-Arab sentiment were dramatic. By the time the Egyptian troops withdrew in December 1967, this debilitating war had alienated many Egyptians from the ideal of Arab nationalism, cementing an isolationist impulse not to get mired in the quicksand of Arab politics.[2]
Similar events led to the growth of the ANM inIraq. In the aftermath of theoverthrow ofAbdul-Karim Qasim in 1963, theIraqi branch of the Ba'ath Party had established a government which collapsed in disorder and was replaced inNovember that year by a more broadly-based pan-Arab government underAbdul Salam Arif. The ANM again played a major role in Iraqi politics, close to the Nasserist elements in Arif's government. After the Nasserists lost influence and withdrew from the government in July 1964, the ANM continued to collaborate with them and in September that year attempted a coup. In 1964, the ANM merged into the IraqiArab Socialist Union.
InJordan, the ANM influenced the political landscape and led to the foundation of nationalistic organizations in the country in the 1950s and 1960s. In fact,George Habash and his group of activists allegedly absorbed other groups with similar ideologies inLebanon,Syria, and also Jordan.[8] During the years up to 1956, Haddad left Beirut to spread Arab nationalist ideas in Jordan, where Palestinians teamed up with Jordanians to give birth to the Jordanian National Movement (JNM).[9] Ideas of Arab nationalism easily spread in Jordan, especially as means to channel strong sentiments against theHashemites' government. The JNM presented its ideals as the “new”, opposite to the “old” Hashemite-Western national structure, calling for Arab nationalism and raising awareness among the population calling them to action. Jordanian and Palestinian people cooperated in the Movement, in order for it to become a large umbrella for opposition activities, especially after Jordan united with theWest Bank in 1950.[9]
Many branches of nationalistic and anti-imperial movements in theMiddle East developed in Jordan during the 1950s, namely the JNM, theCommunist Party, theBa'ath Party, the National Front, the Movement of Arab Nationalists, and theNational Socialist Party (NSP).[9] Moreover, Mahmud al-Mu'ayta and Shahir Abu Shahut established the Free Officers’ Movement within theArab Legion, composed of young Arab officers aligning themselves ideologically with the Ba'ath Party.[9] This movement took some important aspects of the ANM political ideology, such as the rejection of any compromise with Israel and the belief in an act of revenge laying in Arab unity.[4]
Between 1951 and 1953, Habash and Haddad set up a medical clinic inAmman and started treatingrefugees and the poor of the city for free.[9] At the same time, they launched literacy campaigns, with doctors, teachers and students speaking in political clubs around Jordan to spread their message.[9]
Following the influence of the ANM, in July 1954, The National Socialist Party (NSP) was founded, composed of moderate leftist, mostly Jordanian, politicians.
This newly active and animated political debate in Jordan posed a threat to the political leadership, especially because of the opposition movements' connections withNasser's ideology and with other organizations in Arab states, such as the ANM.[9]
InKuwait the ANM branch was reconstituted as the Progressive Democrats, a political party still in existence.
InLebanon the Hawatmeh wing (which had in majority in the Lebanon branch) reconstituted itself as theOrganization of Lebanese Socialists in 1968, and in later merged withSocialist Lebanon to form theCommunist Action Organization in Lebanon, which was active during theLebanese Civil War and in theHezbollah-led resistance toIsrael's occupation of the Lebanese south (1982–2000). The Habash loyalists formed theArab Socialist Action Party – Lebanon.
In 1964 the ANM branch inOman participated in the formation of theDhofar Liberation Front (DLF). The ANM as a whole supported theDhofar Rebellion. NLFD later transformed into thePopular Front for the Liberation of the Occupied Arabian Gulf (PFLOAG), later thePopular Front for the Liberation of Oman (PFLO). This group led an insurgency in Dhofar for several years in the 1960s and early 1970s, driving government forces from large swaths of territory. It was eventually defeated in the early 1970s bySultanQaboos, backed byBritish andIranian forces. After resistance inside Oman was broken in 1975, the group remained as a minor military and political force based in the sympathetic neighboring state ofSouth Yemen, which had backed the Dhofar rebellion, until the 1980s.
TheMarxist–Leninist elements in the ANM reconstituted its Palestinian branch in the mid-1960s as thePalestinian National Liberation Front. In December 1967 NFLP unified with two other Palestinian factions, Heroes of Return (abtal al-awda) andAhmed Jibril'sPalestinian Liberation Front (PLF). Together they formed thePopular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), under Habash's leadership.
In early 1968, aMaoist faction headed by Hawatmeh broke away from PFLP to form theDemocratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP, initially PDFLP).
The PFLP and DFLP subsequently both spawned a number of breakaway factions, such as thePFLP-GC, thePLF and theFIDA. Many of these groups were active as a leftist hardline opposition within thePalestine Liberation Organization (PLO), and most participated in theRejectionist Front of 1974.
Even though the PFLP and DFLP remain very active in Palestinian politics and both have played a military role in theSecond Intifada, their political support is rather reduced, especially within the occupied territories. Partly, this is related to the decline of the Arab left in general, a trend related to changes in Arab political culture but also to the fall of theSoviet Union. But in addition to that, the specific circumstances of theoccupied territories have led to dual pressure from the radicalIslamist opposition ofHamas, on the one hand, and the patronage resources available toFatah through its control of thePalestinian Authority on the other.
TheSaudi branch gave birth to theArab Socialist Action Party – Arabian Peninsula, a Marxist-Nationalist faction aligned with thePFLP.
In 1962 the Syrian branch, until then a small group of intellectuals almost all of whom were Palestinian, reacted to the break-up of theUnited Arab Republic by establishing a mass-movement calling for immediate re-unification with Egypt. Membership quickly surged to several thousand, and the leadership participated in the firstBa'athist-led government established afterthe coup of 8 March 1963, though on a non-party basis. TheBa'ath Party and its allied officers almost immediately after the March coup began purging Nasserists from power, with dismissals, transfers and arrests during the spring of 1963; the ANM was viewed as one of the most serious threats, because of its numerical force and ideological appeal to the Ba'athist constituency. The Ba'ath-ANM tensions culminated in a Nasserist coup attempt led byJassem Alwan that was struck down in July, 1963, after which Nasserism and the ANM in particular was a spent force in Syria.
The ANM entered theArab Socialist Union, but both the Hawatmeh and Habash loyalists later reconstituted themselves as independent parties, and the ASU itself splintered repeatedly during the Syrian 1960s and early 1970s.
InSouth Yemen the local ANM branch was instrumental in forming theNational Liberation Front which would later become theYemeni Socialist Party (YSP), the leading political party in thePeople's Democratic Republic of Yemen. InNorth Yemen, the members of ANM broke away from the mother organization in June 1968, forming theRevolutionary Democratic Party of Yemen (which would eventually merge into the YSP).
After thereuniting of the two Yemens in 1990, the YSP became the major opposition party in theRepublic of Yemen.
[…] or through links with the emerging Marxist faction within the Arab Nationalists' Movement […]