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- <text id=93TT2459>
- <title>
- Feb. 08, 1993: No Surrender
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 08, 1993 Cyberpunk
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MIDDLE EAST, Page 51
- No Surrender
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Neither Israel nor the Palestinians want to look like they're
- compromising. The U.S. is urging a tactical retreat.
- </p>
- <p>By LISA BEYER/JERUSALEM - With reporting by Bonnie Angelo/New
- York, Jamil Hamad/Jerusalem and J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Dr. Abdul Aziz Rantisi stood in a chilly rain before the
- assembled crowd of nearly 400 Palestinians who, like him, were
- banished by Israel to southern Lebanon seven weeks ago. Now,
- said Rantisi, the group's spokesman, the Israelis were inviting
- each of them to appeal in person for the right to return. Would
- they comply? he asked the exiles huddled on a hillside near
- their meager tent camp. Was there an alternative to their demand
- for unconditional repatriation? The answer came back crisp and
- loud: "No. No. No."
- </p>
- <p> That word reverberated through the deportation controversy
- last week. No, the Israeli High Court of Justice ruled, it
- would not reverse the government's decision to deport the Muslim
- fundamentalists who are accused of inciting violence in Israel
- and the occupied territories. No, the Palestine Liberation
- Organization said, it would no longer delay pressing its demand
- for sanctions against Israel at the United Nations. No, said
- Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, he would not give in and
- take back the exiles despite that threat.
- </p>
- <p> The stage was set for just the kind of showdown Washington
- had hoped to avoid: a fight in the U.N. Security Council that
- would strand the U.S. between the interests of its good friend
- Israel and the diplomatically important Arabs. If sanctions come
- to a vote, the Clinton Administration will have to choose
- between exposing Israel for the first time ever to U.N.
- discipline and offending the Arabs by wielding a veto that the
- U.S. has not used for 2 1/2 years--and pray that the results
- do not disrupt the Middle East peace talks. Playing the ace
- would be awkward at a time when Washington needs the U.N.
- imprimatur for its own course of discipline against Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> The Clinton team would love to put off the sanctions
- debate so Israel can devise a face-saving way out. But outspoken
- U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali got the
- Palestinians smelling blood. The Security Council, he advised,
- should use "whatever measures are required" to enforce the
- month-old resolution calling for the return of the deportees.
- The P.L.O., which has observer status at the U.N., is pushing
- hard among Arab and nonaligned members to bar Israel from
- international conferences on human rights. It also proposes
- barring nations from trading with Israeli companies that do
- business in the occupied territories.
- </p>
- <p> Although these penalties are relatively mild, Israeli
- officials are enraged at the very prospect of facing U.N.
- sanctions. "To put us in the same category as Iraq, Serbia and
- Libya--it's unacceptable," says Rabin's spokesman, Gad
- Ben-Ari. "We've not swallowed another country or massacred
- thousands of people or harbored terrorists who blew up a packed
- airplane." To block approval, Jerusalem has embarked on an
- intensive lobbying effort. Rabin took the unusual step of
- calling all ambassadors accredited to Israel to a late-night
- meeting at his office in Tel Aviv. There, they were served cold
- sodas and an hour and a half of the Prime Minister's
- disputations.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. ambassador, William Harrop, had an earlier,
- private hearing. Rabin has expressed confidence that the U.S.
- will protect Israel--but he wants to make sure. Israeli
- officials were on the phone intensively with Washington all
- week, and there was at least one personal conversation between
- Rabin and President Clinton. The Israelis tried to persuade the
- U.S. that a solution to the deportation crisis might yet be
- found in the appeals process set up by the court decision.
- </p>
- <p> Even if the deportees refuse to file entreaties, the
- Israelis said, they would automatically reconsider each of the
- 396 cases. In this way, maybe 10, 50, or, said an Israeli
- official, "even a majority" of the exiles could go home in short
- order. If that would not appease the Palestinians, the Israelis
- argued, at least it might create enough of an impression of
- progress to forestall serious action at the U.N.
- </p>
- <p> Although Washington would prefer Israel to send all the
- exiles home, the U.S. can accept a phased return as long as
- Israel gives it some cover by creating a process to review the
- cases. "No one should expect a dramatic breakthrough in which
- 396 people go home tomorrow," says a U.S. official. Creating his
- own version of "Read my lips," Rabin told visiting Spanish
- Foreign Minister Javier Solana, "Write this down. The
- [deportation] decision is irreversible."
- </p>
- <p> A large part of that stubbornness arises from Rabin's
- confidence that ultimately the U.S. will--as it always has--veto any U.N. punishment of Israel. The Palestinians also expect
- that. Says Sa'eb Erakat, a Palestinian delegate to the Middle
- East peace talks: "Anybody who thinks that Clinton will start
- his presidency off by imposing sanctions on Israel is crazy."
- </p>
- <p> Even though Israel would use up political capital in
- forcing Clinton's back to the wall, the strong chance of a U.S.
- veto sobers the exiled Palestinians scraping by on the southern
- slopes of Lebanon. Their spokesman, Rantisi, posed another
- question the other day during his hillside sermon. In urging the
- world "to prove who is the highest authority," he wanted to
- know, "is it Rabin and his Supreme Court or the U.N. Security
- Council?" It is neither, of course, but rather the world's
- single surviving superpower, which, however loath it may be to
- use it, still has the power to utter the most important "No."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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