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Palestinian leader Yasir Arafat gave the name Al 'Asifa, or “The Storm” to the military wing of his Fatah movement at its founding in 1957. In the early days of Al Fatah, Arafat signed communiqués and leaflets calling for “armed revolution” with the name Al 'Asifa.

Calling for an armed struggle for Palestine carried out by Palestinians themselves, Al Fatah launched its first raid into Israel in 1965, claiming responsibility under the name Al 'Asifa.

As Al Fatah emerged further from the underground and gained leadership of the Palestine Liberation Organization, the group gradually stopped making distinctions between Al Fatah and Al 'Asifa. Some Arafat biographers have claimed that Al 'Asifa was merely the cover name that Al Fatah used to launch its first operations, and that at its beginning Al Fatah had no separate military wing.

Al 'Asifa made international headlines when Sabri al-Banna (also known as Abu Nidal) split from Arafat and the Fatah movement in the early 1970s. Al-Banna condemned Al Fatah's work for political settlement between Israel and the Palestinians, and is said to have been expelled from the organization for plotting to assassinate Arafat. In what many see as a move to prove himself to be the legitimate representative of the true Fatah ideology, al-Banna gave institutions in his organization names identical to those in Al Fatah. He called his military operations wing Al 'Asifa. Al-Banna's operatives often claimed responsibility for violent acts under the name Al 'Asifa.

Further Reading

Aburish, Said K.Arafat: From Defender to Dictator. New York: Bloomsbury, 1998.
Hart, Alan. Arafat, a Political Biography. London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1994.
Wallach, Janet, and JohnWallach. Arafat: In the Eyes of the Beholder. Rev. and updated ed. Secaucus, NJ: Carol Publishing Group, 1997.
Williams, Christian. “Abu Nidal Targets Backers of Mideast Compromise.” Washington PostFebruary 5, 1984.
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