A leaked document has revealed that Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas approved a plan prepared by his intelligence services to cause chaos in the Gaza Strip. The document in question is a letter sent by intelligence chief Majed Faraj to Abbas briefing him about the plan, which was based on his coordination with intelligence officers in Gaza.
The letter was dated November last year and is written on a PA letterhead. One of the signatories is Faraj with what is believed to be Azzam Al-Ahmad's signature; he is the Fatah official responsible for reconciliation with Hamas.
According to the Palestinian news agency Safa, which was the first news outlet to publish the document, Faraj briefed Abbas on the details of his plan, telling him that it would be a "snowballing, precise" operation. His intelligence officials would form security cells to set fire to cars in order to convey a message of insecurity in Gaza. These cells would also target Hamas, other factions and civil institutions to "embarrass" the Islamic movement. They would also target leaders affiliated to the dismissed Fatah official Mohammed Dahlan, as well houses belonging to Fatah officials loyal to Abbas.
The second measure would use social media to publish inflammatory statements bearing names of different groups adopting such activities. The mass media loyal to Abbas would exaggerate the issue when they report the chaos in Gaza, blaming Hamas for what is going on.
The third measure would see Fatah contacting all Palestinian factions, including Islamic Jihad, to brief them about what is going on in the beleaguered territory.
All of what the letter reveals has already happened. The head of the unity government, Rami Hamadallah, cancelled a visit to Gaza when a series of explosions targeted the homes and cars of Fatah leaders last November; he claimed that Hamas was responsible.
Hamas has said previously that it has documents proving that Fatah is behind the chaos in the Gaza Strip. It revealed the letter and held a press conference on Saturday during which Fatah intelligence officers confessed their role in discrediting the Islamic movement.
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