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- WORLD, Page 54MIDDLE EASTFinally Face to Face
-
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- Hostile exchanges open the Arab-Israeli peace conference, but
- the rat-a-tat is sound bites and speeches, not guns
-
- By GEORGE J. CHURCH -- Reported by Lisa Beyer, Dean Fischer and
- J.F.O. McAllister/Madrid
-
-
- Outside the conference hall there were a few grudging
- handshakes among advisers, but also shouted epithets like
- "terrorist!" and "murderer!" In formal sessions Arab,
- Palestinian and Israeli delegates would rarely even look one
- another in the eye as they denounced each other and laid their
- cases before the world, but nobody walked out. At the end of
- three days it was uncertain, in the most literal sense, where
- the talks were going: the delegates concluded the opening phase
- by quarreling bitterly about whether they should continue
- meeting in Madrid or move to some different venue.
-
- This is a peace conference?
-
- Absolutely, and already one for the history books. No
- amount of confrontational rhetoric could obscure the simple fact
- that Israelis, Palestinians and other Arabs, sworn blood
- enemies for more than four decades, were sitting around a table,
- talking. The speechmaking in the tapestry-hung Hall of Columns
- of the Royal Palace in Madrid that opened the Middle East peace
- conference was, like a wedding or a baptism, a solemn rite
- symbolizing a new beginning. Come what may, the Mideast crisis,
- perhaps the longest-running and most envenomed in the world, had
- passed the point where the antagonists would not even talk.
-
- Which is not to say that negotiations will succeed. The
- participants were talking to the U.S., the world, their own
- constituents, far more than to each other. If the conference
- started out about as well as could be expected, that is in part
- because everyone involved has learned to expect little.
- President Bush warned that no agreement could be foreseen in "a
- day or a week or a month or even a year." Meanwhile there would
- be snags, deadlocks, perhaps even temporary breakdowns.
-
- So it was not surprising that both the Israelis and their
- adversaries began with statements that largely restated old
- grudges. Substantive discussions will come later -- maybe; the
- opening was devoted to public relations posturing and symbolism.
- The Arabs and Israelis were there only because Bush and U.S.
- Secretary of State James Baker had seen to it that they could
- not afford to be absent. Boycotting the talks would have given
- the boycotters a black eye in world opinion. Attending allowed
- them to play to the biggest audience ever.
-
- Rival spin doctors advised more than 5,000 journalists how
- every word and gesture ought to be interpreted. Every part of
- the arrangements was calculated to make, or avoid, some
- symbolic point: no flags were allowed at the negotiating table,
- because the Israelis would not sit in the same room with a
- Palestine Liberation Organization banner.
-
- On the outside chance the peace talks do break up, it will
- probably be over a symbolic point. Last week's opening was
- supposed to be followed on Sunday by bilateral negotiations in
- Madrid between Israel and each of three enemies: Syria, a
- Palestinian-Jordanian delegation and Lebanon. But the Israelis
- demanded that the talks be moved to the Middle East. By bringing
- Arab negotiators to Jerusalem, and then sending its own
- diplomats to Arab capitals, Israel hopes to achieve undeniable
- acknowledgment that its neighbors recognize it in fact, if not
- officially, as a genuine nation. For exactly that reason, the
- Arabs are resisting. A possible compromise discussed at week's
- end was to move the talks to another European city, Cairo or
- Washington.
-
- The main participants played their hands with varying
- degrees of skill and clumsiness last week:
-
- -- THE U.S. scored a considerable victory by getting the
- talks started at all, dramatizing its unchallenged status as the
- world's sole remaining superpower. Bush did not need to make
- that point; Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev did it for him.
- The Soviet Union -- "a country that exists only outside its
- borders," in the cruel summation of an American official -- is
- nominally co-chairman of the conference, and its participation
- enabled some Arabs to claim that they were not just knuckling
- under to the U.S. But Gorbachev made it clear that Moscow would
- now fade into the background and pretty much go along with
- whatever the U.S. wants.
-
- The delicate U.S. task is to keep the talks moving without
- getting trapped into so direct a role that it would seem to be
- arm-twisting one side or the other. Bush and Baker tiptoed
- through that minefield adroitly enough last week. The President
- reassured a wary Israeli delegation by speaking of "territorial
- compromise" instead of "land for peace," a formula that Israelis
- loathe. He also backed the Israeli view that the conference
- should lead not just to nonbelligerency but to "real peace."
- Explained Bush: "I mean treaties. Security. Diplomatic
- relations. Economic relations. Trade. Investment. Cultural
- exchange. Even tourism." At the same time, he responded to an
- Arab concern by calling for everyone to "avoid unilateral acts"
- that might "prejudice" the peace process. Translation: Israel,
- stop building those settlements in the occupied territories.
-
- The U.S. went home praying that its strategy of putting
- the volatile elements together in a room would in time produce
- enough chemical heat to generate compromise -- but not enough
- to cause an explosion. Baker closed the round by sharply chiding
- delegates for failing to look to the future, but judging when
- and how to step in to bridge gaps will be the real test of the
- Administration's success.
-
- -- ISRAEL bowed to American decisions that elevated the
- Palestinians to near equal status, giving the Jordanian-
- Palestinian delegation two of everything: two conference rooms,
- two briefings, even two speeches at the sessions. Those
- concessions allowed Israel to soften its image of intransigence.
-
- Then Israel's Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir blew it, big.
- He has always vowed never to give up an inch of territory, and
- he did not change that stance; he devoted half of his 34-minute
- speech to a recitation of the oppression of Jews through
- centuries and indeed millenniums. There was little in his speech
- to suggest a willingness to compromise, and he followed up on
- Friday with a bitter blast at Syria's brutality and tyranny. But
- Shamir was playing less to world opinion than expressing deep
- convictions that also work for him politically back home. He had
- appeased Israeli peaceniks by attending the conference while
- reassuring his hard-line supporters that he remains unbending
- on issues that count.
-
- -- SYRIA was quite as intransigent. Foreign Minister
- Farouk al-Sharaa told the conference that Israel must give up
- "every inch" of the lands conquered in 1967. The next day he
- directed a ferocious personal diatribe at Shamir. The Syrians
- came across as bellicose tough guys who seemed to have no idea
- how to play to a worldwide audience -- and maybe didn't care.
- They only had to please an audience of one: Hafez Assad.
-
- -- THE PALESTINIANS were big winners. Instead of the
- unshaven face of Yasser Arafat, they presented an image of
- intelligence, professionalism and sensitivity. They sounded the
- most conciliatory notes and made the first substantive
- concession, explicitly saying they will now accept the limited
- self-rule they spurned when it was offered as part of the Camp
- David agreement.
-
- Haidar Abdul-Shafi, head of the Palestinian delegation,
- easily trumped Shamir. Though the substance of his talk was in
- many ways just as unyielding, its tone was mild, not
- complaining or self-righteous. He too was playing a public
- relations game, appealing to the Israeli peace movement and
- worldwide sympathizers.
-
- More than public relations is involved in making peace, of
- course. The differences are real, the anxieties and fears -- and
- ancient hostility -- genuine. But paradoxically, p.r. may offer
- some hope. If both sides figured that they could not afford to
- stay away from this conference, they might calculate that they
- also cannot afford to let it break down, and thus they might be
- drawn to offer concessions -- minimal and grudging, to be sure
- -- to keep it going. Maybe not. But if in the Middle East it is
- always wise to prepare for the worst, it is equally necessary to
- expect the unexpected.
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