Mahmoud Abbas, also called Abu Mazen, (born 1935, Safed, Palestine [now in Israel]), Palestinian leader. Abbas earned a law degree from the University of Damascus and, several decades later, a doctorate in history from the Institute of Oriental Studies in Moscow. In the late 1950s he was recruited by Yasser Arafat to become one of the original members of Fatah, which spearheaded the Palestinian armed struggle and dominated the Palestine Liberation Organization. In the 1990s Abbas shaped Palestinian negotiating strategy in peace talks that led in 1993 to the Oslo Accords, in which Israel and the Palestinians extended to each other mutual recognition and which called for Israel to cede some authority over the West Bank and Gaza Strip to the Palestinians. He briefly served as prime minister of the Palestinian Authority (PA) in 2003 and was elected its president in 2005, succeeding Arafat. When Hamas established exclusive control in the Gaza Strip in 2007, Abbas took control of the West Bank by presidential decree and remained in power after his term expired in 2009. After peace talks with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert failed, Abbas oversaw efforts to expand UN recognition, which culminated in 2012 with the Palestinian mission to the UN being designated a “nonmember observer state.” In 2015 Abbas told the UN General Assembly that Palestinians were no longer bound by the Oslo Accords, accusing Israel of having violated the agreement. Relations between Abbas’s PA and the U.S. soured during Donald Trump’s administration. In 2021 Abbas announced elections and then, a few months later, delayed them indefinitely.
Mahmoud Abbas Article
Mahmoud Abbas summary
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president Summary
President, in government, the officer in whom the chief executive power of a nation is vested. The president of a republic is the head of state, but the actual power of the president varies from country to country; in the United States, Africa, and Latin America the presidential office is charged
prime minister Summary
Prime minister, the head of government in a country with a parliamentary or semipresidential political system. In such systems, the prime minister—literally the “first,” or most important, minister—must be able to command a continuous majority in the legislature (usually the lower house in a
Fatah Summary
Fatah, political and military organization of Arab Palestinians, founded in the late 1950s by Yassir Arafat and Khalil al-Wazir (Abu Jihad) with the aim of wresting Palestine from Israeli control by waging low-intensity guerrilla warfare. In the late 1980s it began seeking a two-state solution
Palestine Liberation Organization Summary
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), umbrella political organization claiming to represent the world’s Palestinians—those Arabs, and their descendants, who lived in mandated Palestine before the creation there of the State of Israel in 1948. It was formed in 1964 to centralize the leadership of