From Oslo to Second Intifada Following the
Oslo Accords in 1993, the number of separate
Palestinian security forces, all under the exclusive control of President Arafat, had grown considerably. Based on the
1994 Cairo Agreement, "a strong police force" was formed which steadily grew far beyond the agreed numbers, to include soldiers and returnees from the diaspora. By 1996, the PA had more than 35,000 security officers on its payroll. Arafat ruled the forces in an authoritarian divide-to-rule manner, not devoid of corruption and nepotism.
National Security Council Under Israeli and international pressure, based on the 2003
Roadmap for peace, Arafat started to reorganise the PSS. On 30 April 2003, Arafat issued a presidential decree calling for the establishment of a National Security Council (NSC) to oversee the PNA's security services. Abbas would become acting
Interior Minister in
his new government. On 11 September, Arafat announced the formation of the 14-member Council that would supervise all the security organs, with him as chairman. Like his predecessor, the newly appointed Prime Minister
Ahmed Qurei disagreed with Arafat about the appointment of the Interior Minister. On 8 November 2003, Prime Minister Qurei and President Arafat, after having resolved disputes over the choice of the new Interior Minister, agreed to divide the security responsibilities between the government and the National Security Council. The NSC (headed by Arafat) became responsible for security affairs, while the Interior Minister would be in charge of non-security administrative and civilian affairs. along with the Finance Minister
Salam Fayyad and the heads of the security agencies. Eventually, Arafat's close associate
Hakam Balawi became the new Interior Minister in
Qurei's Government, which was approved on 12 November 2003. However, the National Security Council remained aineffective, as Arafat continued to control the security branches directly.
Three branches Again under international pressure, on 17 July 2004 Arafat announced further changes to the PSS, reducing the eight separate security divisions to three branches, after 6 people were kidnapped in Gaza. The three branches were:
National Security Forces, Internal Security Forces and General Intelligence. Yasser Arafat withdrew the controversial nomination of Moussa Arafat, but the latter remained head of the general security branch in the Gaza Strip. The three branches were: • National Security Forces – under the leadership of the Minister of National Security and under the command of the Commander-in-Chief. • Interior (Internal Security Forces) – under the leadership of the
Minister of the Interior and under the command of the Director-General of Internal Security. • General Intelligence – affiliated with the President, under the leadership of the Head of the service. Nasser Yousef was named head of the three branches. With the reform, Yousef's responsibilities, who was appointed Interior Minister two months earlier, were considerably expanded. Rashid Abu Shbak was named the new head of the
Palestinian Preventive Security Service. From September 2005, the NSC was headed by the President and the Prime Minister. Other members were the PLO's Negotiations Affairs Department (NAD), the Secretary General of the Presidency, the Interior Minister, the Minister of Civil Affairs, the Minister of Finance, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and the National Security Advisor. A Judicial Police subject to the Public Prosecution's Attorney-General already existed in 1995 since the Oslo Accords.
2006–2007 internal power struggle Hamas won the
parliamentary elections of January 2006 and formed a
Hamas-led government in March, leading to a power struggle over the security services with the Fatah Abbas presidency. It appears, President Abbas tried to remove the Fatah-dominated security organizations from the control of the Government, and, with the support of Western governments, restore the old structure of the security sector as it had existed under Arafat. In March 2006,
Said Seyam (member of
Hamas) became the new
PA Interior Minister, replacing
Nasser Yousef. However, already on 20 February media reported that President Abbas had named the Fatah-affiliated Rashid Abu Shbak head of the internal security in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. The outgoing Interior Minister Nasser Yousef denied the reports. On 6 April 2006, one week after Hamas had formed government, Abbas appointed the Fatah-affiliated Rashid Abu Shbak head of the three security agencies, including the
Preventive Security,
Civil Police and
Civil Defence (Public Security). Abu Shbak said he was authorized to hire and fire officers in the three security branches. Though Seyam would technically be Abu Shbak's boss, any dispute between the two would be resolved in the Abbas-headed National Security Council. Also, in April 2006, Abbas created under his own control a new Public Administration for the crossing points and borders. The
Presidential Guard was expanded and provided with rapid-intervention capabilities. which was made up of members of its own military wing, the
Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades. The first men were deployed on 17 May 2006. However, on 8 June 2006, Abu Samhadana, as leader of the PRC, was assassinated by Israeli forces. In January 2007, Abbas outlawed the Interior Ministry's Executive Force. The Ministry resisted Abbas' order that by then 6,000 members of Executive Force be incorporated into the security apparatus loyal to the president's Fatah movement. Instead, Hamas announced plans to double the size of its force to 12,000 men. Executive Force, as well as Hamas' armed wing
Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades, took part in the
Hamas takeover of Gaza in June 2007. On 18 June 2007, Abbas dissolved the Hamas-led PA Government and the National Security Council.
Budget and strength In 2013, the PA's security budget was almost $1 billion, comprising 28 percent of the total budget. The large defense budget has been criticized because it is seen as part of the internal oppression system, as well as maintaining the crumbling Fatah movement's hegemony and the status quo with Israel. Some 65,000 of the PA's civil servants (41%) were registered as defense workers; 34,000 were not Hamas government employees in Gaza. As of November 2014, there were about 17,000 military employees in Gaza, including policemen, who were hired by Hamas since June 2007. They were still considered illegitimate by the
Palestinian unity government of 2014 and therefore not paid. As of January 2005, the number of Palestinian Authority security forces was, according to
Associated Press, about 30,000. The division was as follows: •
Palestinian National Security Forces (Palestinian border police, military intelligence, military police and the elite Force 17 presidential security unit): about 15,000 members • General Intelligence (collecting information and security for Palestinian diplomatic missions abroad): about 5,000 members in Gaza •
Palestinian Civil Police Force (Gaza's police force and preventive security agency meant to fight internal crime, at the time under responsibility of the
Interior Minister): about 10,000 members ==Tasks==