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A tiny but fiercely militant Islamic group, Palestine Islamic Jihad (PIJ) is made up of a handful of loosely affiliated factions, the largest of which was led by Dr. Fathi Shaqaqi until his assassination in 1995. Although PIJ has become well known for its violent tactics and its opposition to a negotiated peace with Israel, the group, headquartered in Syria, is relatively small and mysterious; it is said to receive financial assistance from Iran. Attacks by the group are sometimes claimed by its armed wing, al Quds Brigades.

Palestine Islamic Jihad was founded in Egypt in the late 1970s by three Palestinian students. Shaqaqi, Abdul Aziz Odeh, and Bashir Moussa, all Sunni Muslims who are said to have been inspired by the Shiite groups that came to power during Iran's Islamist revolution in 1978–1979. PIJ has focused primarily on terror attacks against Israel. Shaqaqi had publicly stated that PIJ shares a name and ideology with many other Islamic jihad groups (in Egypt, Lebanon, and Turkey, for example), though the groups have little contact with one another. Many of the groups, like PIJ, have material and ideological ties to Iran.

After the assassination of President Anwar Sadat of Egypt in 1981, the Egyptian government cracked down on Islamic terrorists. Shaqaqi, Odeh, and Moussa were expelled from the country and they returned to Palestine. During the 1980s, the group began organizing in territories occupied by Israel. PIJ carried out its first successful military operation in 1987, assassinating an Israeli military police captain. Shaqaqi and Odeh were later deported to Lebanon, after which they found refuge in Damascus, Syria, where they plotted multiple bombing attacks on Israeli military and civilian targets.

The PIJ strongly opposed the Arab-Israeli peace process and continued to attack Israel as negotiations intensified. In 1995 the PIJ blew up a military bus stop near Netanya, killing 19 in an attack that press reports said seemed timed to cause the maximum number of casualties. Just months later the group took responsibility for a suicide nail bomb in Tel Aviv that killed 13. In October 1995, on the evening before U.S. secretary of state Warren Christopher's trip to Damascus, assassins thought to be working for Israel's intelligence service Mossad gunned down Shaqaqi on the Mediterranean island of Malta.

After Shaqaqi's death, an academic working in the United States, Ramadan Abdullah al Shallah, became PIJ's new leader. Shallah left his post at the University of South Florida to take command of the group. According to the U.S. State Department, PIJ has never specifically attacked U.S. interests, despite a July 2000 public threat to carry out attacks if the U.S. embassy was moved from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. The PIJ has continued to work to stall the peace process, initiating several attacks against Israel, including suicide bombings and numerous rocket attacks. PIJ has worked increasingly closely with Hamas, sparking rumors in 2009 (which the group denied) that it might merge with the larger organization.

The Sami al Arian Case

The departure of Shallah in 1995 from the University of South Florida to lead PIJ caused tremendous controversy in the United States. Two years later, federal immigration agents arrested one of Shallah's Palestinian academic colleagues, Mazen al Najjar. While he was never charged with a crime, al Najjar was held in jail without bail for three-and-a-half years on secret evidence suggesting that he was a threat to national security. Finally, a judge ruled that his detention was unconstitutional, and he was released in late 2000, only to be arrested again in November 2001. He was finally deported to Lebanon in September 2002, because he had overstayed a visa that had been issued 20 years before. He later moved to Egypt.

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