They say he repeatedly misjudged the political 
                        wind until his disastrous support for Iraq in the 1991 
                        Gulf War cost him the backing of wealthy Gulf oil states 
                        and forced him to the negotiating table and an unequal 
                        accommodation with Israel. 
                      His “peace of the brave”, 
                        finally accepting Israel’s right to exist within 
                        borders it established on much of historic Palestine in 
                        1948, split the PLO. 
                      It also put him firmly at odds with Islamic 
                        militants who were to form the most potent opposition 
                        to the Oslo peace deals. Many Israelis found it hard to 
                        believe Arafat could change into a man of peace, a perception 
                        that hardened during the most recent Palestinian uprising 
                        when Islamic militants killed hundreds of Israelis in 
                        suicide bombings and other attacks. 
                      In recent months Arafat faced unprecedented 
                        Palestinian unrest, including kidnappings and clashes 
                        in Gaza, as rivals vied for power in his greatest internal 
                        challenge in a decade. 
                      To many Palestinians, his administration 
                        turned a blind eye to corruption, misrule and human rights 
                        abuses by the entourage that returned with him from exile. 
                        
                      Arafat never groomed a successor, either 
                        as chairman of the PLO or as president of the self-rule 
                        Palestinian Authority. When forced to appoint a prime 
                        minister under international pressure to share responsibilities 
                        and carry out reforms, he guarded his powers jealously. 
                        
                      The first prime minister, Mahmoud Abbas, 
                        quit after four months. The second, Ahmed Qorie, battled 
                        Arafat for control of the security forces. reuters