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Yasser Arafat

Palestinian president dead at 75

Hunted as a terrorist, hailed as a peacemaker, Yasser Arafat succeeded in forcing the Palestinian tragedy upon the world's conscience but failed to deliver the independent state his people yearned for.

A man of mystery and paradox, his four decades on the international stage were a saga of extraordinary reincarnations.

There was Arafat on the run from both Israeli and Arab armies; Arafat, reviled as godfather of the terrorism that blew up jetliners and killed Israeli Olympic athletes; Arafat addressing the United Nations, offering the gun or olive branch; Arafat in a bunker in bomb-torn Beirut, and in Oslo receiving the Nobel Peace Prize; Arafat welcomed by President Clinton, then shunned by President Bush.

There was Arafat the virtual president of Palestine, and finally, in a sense, Arafat back at square one -- besieged in his devastated West Bank headquarters by Israeli tanks and threatened once more with exile.

Arafat's last days were surrounded by confusion and high drama: rumors swirled about his condition as his 41-year-old wife, Suha, zealously guarded access to his bedside and publicly accused the Palestinian leadership of trying to usurp his powers. He had groomed no successor, nor was he known to have left any accounting for the vast sums of money he controlled.

His passing also closed a chapter of history: He was among the last of a breed of Arab leaders who came to prominence preaching revolution and secular socialism, only to see them overshadowed by the rise of radical Islam.

The danger is that with no clear-cut political heir to rally them, Palestinians may now fragment under local leaders scattered across the Mideast map.

Rarely seen without his keffiyeh, flowing down his shoulder to resemble a map of Palestine, Arafat became one of the world's most familiar figures after addressing the U.N. General Assembly in New York in 1974, wearing a holster and carrying a sprig. "Today I have come bearing an olive branch and a freedom fighter's gun," he said. "Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand."

To many Israelis the paunchy 5-foot 2-inch Palestinian was a demon bent on their annihilation. They saw him as the architect behind a string of attacks on airliners and airports, schools and buses that took hundreds of lives. The late Prime Minister Menachem Begin denounced him as "that despicable guy with hair on his face."

Yet a decade later that same man, his stubble gone white but still wearing olive-green uniform and keffiyeh, would stand on the White House lawn with Clinton and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and shake hands on a peace deal that formally recognized Israel's right to exist.

The agreement also granted the West Bank and Gaza Strip limited self-rule under a Palestinian Authority, and allowed Arafat to set foot on Palestinian land for the first time in at least 27 years. He shared the 1994 Nobel Peace Prize with Rabin and Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, and in 1996, in the Palestinians' first election, he was chosen to head the authority.

Many suspected Arafat of duplicity -- disavowing terrorism while orchestrating attacks behind front- groups; talking peace while allowing Palestinian media to spread hate propaganda; issuing murky statements phrased to accommodate the West without angering Arab hard-liners.

The peace process quickly became mired in mutual accusations of bad faith and treaty violations, Rabin was assassinated by a Jewish extremist, Islamic bombers blew up buses in Israeli cities, and more Jewish settlements went up on Palestinian land. The peace effort fell apart in 2000 and a new round of violence broke out that has killed some 4,000 lives, three-quarters of them Palestinian.

Israel and the United States placed much of the blame on Arafat, claiming he had missed his best chance of winning Palestinian statehood, and in his final years, even many of his own people privately whispered that Arafat had brought them little hope of a better life.

International pressure forced Arafat to share power with a prime minister in April 2003, but he fell out first with one, then another when he resisted giving up any real prerogatives.

Banking on his stature as a symbol of anti- Israel defiance, Arafat sidestepped street protests and riots this summer set off by disenchantment over corruption, lawlessness and a moribund economy. He made a rare acknowledgment of wrongdoing and promised change, but offered no specifics. And, although weakened, he held on to ultimate authority.

Meanwhile, he had been living for nearly three years in his battered, sandbagged headquarters in the West Bank town of Ramallah, hemmed in by Israeli armor while Israeli officials talked openly of exiling or even killing him.

Alongside such displays of fortitude, a streak of vanity was evident. He liked to be called "Mr. President," even when he had no country to preside over. He surrounded himself with trappings of statehood -- marching bands and motorcades -- long before he tackled Gaza City's garbage problem. A protruding lower lip made him look petulant when angry.

And there was mystery, not least about his birthplace: Cairo, Egypt, most sources agreed, yet the Palestinian Authority's Web site said Jerusalem and other sources said Gaza.

Yasser Arafat was born Rahman Abdel-Raouf Arafat Al-Qudwa on Aug. 4, 1929, the fifth of seven children of a prosperous Palestinian merchant killed in the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. A teenager during that war, he ran arms to his father and elder brother on the battlefield. He took the name Yasser, apparently in honor of a slain Palestinian rebel, but to many he would become known as Abu Ammar, his nom de guerre, or al-Khityar, the wise old man.

An Egyptian-educated engineer, he served in the Egyptian army, was a student activist, and later ran his own contracting firm in Kuwait. There he also founded Fatah, which would become the core group of the Palestine Liberation Organization.

The movement had already carried out sporadic attacks in Israel, but after the Arabs' humiliating six-day defeat in the 1967 war, Arafat saw a need for more spectacular action. "As long as the world saw Palestinians as no more than refugees standing in line for U.N. rations, it

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Yasser Arafat

August 24, 1929 - November 11, 2004

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