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- <text id=92TT0219>
- <title>
- Feb. 03, 1992: Middle East:Seething over Settlements
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Feb. 03, 1992 The Fraying Of America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 26
- MIDDLE EAST
- Seething over Settlements
- </hdr><body>
- <p>While Palestinians and Jews shoot it out in the occupied
- territories, U.S. and Israeli politicians slug it out on the
- problem of loan guarantees
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by Lisa Beyer/Jerusalem and J.F.O.
- McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> When violence erupts in the occupied territories, asking
- who started it rarely serves a useful purpose. More pertinent
- is what new hatreds have been etched in blood, and will kindle
- new violence.
- </p>
- <p> Take the Palestinian attack two weeks ago on a bus bound
- from Jerusalem to the West Bank Jewish settlement of Shiloh.
- Dov Weiner, 11, was returning home from therapy for a gunshot
- wound in his shoulder sustained during an October bus attack.
- In the gunfire on Jan. 14, the boy was hit again, this time in
- the leg. Later that night, Jewish men drove to the home of Riad
- Malki, a Palestinian hard-liner, pelted the house with stones,
- broke several windows and spray-painted Stars of David on all
- the entrances. Although Malki's house is under Israeli
- surveillance, the army did not intervene. Neither did the
- Israeli police, who waited until morning to answer Malki's call
- for help.
- </p>
- <p> The spiraling violence between Jewish settlers and
- Palestinians in the West Bank reflects how much the question of
- Israeli settlements in the occupied territories goes beyond
- political abstraction: it is an issue that cuts to the very
- dignity and survival of both Arabs and Jews. For them, the
- looming battle between Jerusalem and Washington over $10 billion
- in U.S. loan guarantees to Israel to help settle Soviet Jewish
- immigrants is a symbol not only of where the Bush
- Administration's sympathies lie but also of what the occupied
- territories' future is likely to be.
- </p>
- <p> If the diplomatic tussle lives up to pre-bout rhetoric,
- either the U.S.-Israeli friendship or the Middle East peace
- process could suffer a knockdown. Last September the Bush
- Administration hinted strongly that the loan guarantees might
- be linked to limits on settlement construction. President Bush
- has not budged since. Last week Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak
- Shamir answered by pledging to keep building, declaring that "no
- power in the world can prevent us from carrying on." In
- response, the Palestinian delegation to the U.S.-sponsored peace
- talks threatened to boycott the negotiations if the guarantees
- were granted unconditionally.
- </p>
- <p> Small wonder that some U.S. analysts see a bruising battle
- ahead. But both Bush and Shamir are running for re-election this
- year, and neither relishes the prospect of a fight with an ally
- who can sway domestic voters from afar. Members of Congress,
- who must approve the guarantees, know they will suffer
- electoral consequences if the decision pits their loyalty to
- Israel against their commitment to the peace process. So in
- Washington, if not in the Middle East, compromise appears to be
- at hand.
- </p>
- <p> There may have been a step in that direction in a meeting
- last Friday between Secretary of State James Baker and Zalman
- Shoval, Israel's ambassador to the U.S. Baker reportedly
- proposed to condition the loan guarantees on Israel's agreement
- not to begin any new construction in the territories. Officials
- in Washington refused to confirm the reports, insisting that the
- Baker-Shoval meeting was just the first of a series and that no
- deal was likely for at least another month.
- </p>
- <p> But such an offer might be one that Shamir could live
- with. It would still permit Israel to complete the significant
- amount of housing it has under construction. At least 12,000
- units of housing are estimated to be in the building stage in
- the territories, enough to shelter 60,000 new settlers. "It's
- not exactly what we wanted," says an Israeli official, "but
- it's not as bad as it looked in September."
- </p>
- <p> Shamir can ill afford to do without the loan guarantees.
- About 400,000 Soviet Jewish immigrants have arrived since 1989,
- and an additional million are expected in the next five years,
- swelling the population by more than 20% and costing the
- government an estimated $26.5 billion. Israel's Finance Ministry
- predicts that U.S. failure to deliver on the guarantees would
- drive up unemployment from 11% to 16.2%. Ideologue though Shamir
- may be, he is a pragmatist who knows when he must deal. Says
- his spokesman Ehud Gol: "We are asking, after all, and they are
- giving."
- </p>
- <p> But because Baker's reported proposal would fail to cap
- Israeli growth in the territories, it is being met with a
- grimace from the Palestinians. Their leadership knows that the
- current peace talks are the only means by which Palestinians may
- achieve a measure of self-rule. But any perception that the U.S.
- will subsidize Israel's settlement plans could lead the
- Palestinians to drag their feet in the peace process and subject
- those who favor the talks to criticism from rejectionist Arabs.
- </p>
- <p> Even before the Baker-Shoval meeting last week, the
- Palestinians had threatened to withdraw from the talks. But
- Hanan Mikhail-Ashrawi, spokeswoman for the Palestinian peace
- negotiators, made it clear that if the guarantees were
- conditioned to "eliminate entirely any possibility of these
- funds being subsidies to occupation and settlements," the
- Palestinians would continue to negotiate. They are unlikely to
- be satisfied by the proposal that Baker reportedly made. "It is
- permission to put 10,000 obstacles on the road to peace," says
- Saeb Erakat, a member of the Palestinian negotiating team.
- </p>
- <p> There is also the larger question of what is to become of
- the more than 170 Jewish settlements already in place in the
- West Bank and Gaza Strip. Quite a few of those have been
- erected or expanded since the Bush Administration launched its
- peace initiative last March. According to Peace Now, Israel's
- leading movement for reconciliation with the Arabs, the Shamir
- government pumped $1.1 billion into settlement expansion in
- 1991, adding 13,650 new housing units. Two opposition members
- of the Knesset recently presented documents showing that over
- the past 18 months, the Housing Ministry, intent on sealing
- Israel's claim to the territories forever, added more than
- 18,000 new homes in the West Bank alone, at a cost of $1.5
- billion.
- </p>
- <p> While politicians search their souls about the loan
- guarantees, Palestinian and Israeli hard-liners, ever eager to
- sabotage the peace process, press their opposing claims to the
- territories. Palestinians, who regard the sudden flowering of
- new settlements as a direct provocation, are meeting it with
- increased calls to armed action. Attacks on Israeli targets
- using firearms or explosives have risen from 179 in 1988, the
- first full year of the intifadeh, to 447 in 1991.
- </p>
- <p> Militant Israelis have also adopted provocative tactics.
- In October settlers moved overnight into Silwan, a strictly
- Arab neighborhood in East Jerusalem, and occupied several
- houses. Accounts vary as to how many Arabs they evicted. The
- settlers' activities were temporarily restrained by an Israeli
- court, but in December they returned with the government's
- sanction. One Arab family now unhappily shares its home with
- settlers.
- </p>
- <p> All over the West Bank, well-armed Jewish settlers are
- becoming a law unto themselves, stalking the countryside with
- guns, shooting up Arab homes and smashing cars. President Chaim
- Herzog has warned that vigilante attacks "could create a most
- dangerous situation in the future." Last week the army announced
- that it would increase its estimated 4,000-troop force in the
- territories by 20% to combat Palestinian violence. Yet the
- Israeli army continues largely to turn a blind eye to the
- settlers' miscreant activities.
- </p>
- <p> In the past, such cycles of violence would have provoked
- frustration, even despair, among would-be American peace
- brokers. But Bush has staked a large measure of his political
- prestige on the continued progress of Middle East peace. To keep
- the parties talking, he must find a way around the contentious
- issue of the loan guarantees--and ultimately, the settlements
- themselves.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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