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- <text id=92TT0476>
- <title>
- Mar. 02, 1992: Vengeance Is Mine
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Mar. 02, 1992 The Angry Voter
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MIDDLE EAST, Page 32
- Vengeance Is Mine
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Israel hits back hard at Lebanon's Shi`ites. Getting tough could
- help Shamir, but will it hurt the peace talks?
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by Lisa Beyer/Jerusalem and J.F.O.
- McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Peace talks or no, the Middle East is once again showing
- its true color: the blood red of vengeance. The escalation of
- violence began Feb. 14 when Arab guerrillas infiltrated an
- Israeli army camp and hacked three soldiers to death. Two days
- later in southern Lebanon, Israeli Apache helicopters fired
- three missiles on the motorcade of Sheik Abbas Musawi, leader
- of the Iranian-backed Hizballah. The long-planned strike killed
- not only Musawi but also his wife and six-year-old son. From
- there, hostilities spiraled rapidly. Hizballah launched scores
- of Katyusha rockets into Israel's self-declared security zone
- in southern Lebanon and into the Galilee panhandle of Israel
- proper. The Jewish state fired back on about 20 Lebanese
- villages, then sent a column of armored vehicles beyond the
- security zone toward two Hizballah strongholds, Kafra and Yater,
- where eight U.N. peacekeepers were wounded in the cross fire.
- </p>
- <p> While no one could say when the dismally familiar spiral
- of violence might end, Jerusalem maintained repeatedly from the
- start that its attacking forces were limited in number and that
- their mission would be short. On Friday the troops were pulled
- back to the security zone, but officials promised they would
- return if Hizballah did not halt its rocket attacks.
- </p>
- <p> Much to Washington's relief, Israel's actions seemed to
- have no disruptive impact on the Middle East peace process. On
- the day of Musawi's killing, both Lebanon and Syria announced
- that they would attend the third round of talks convening this
- week in Washington, an indication of how little support
- Hizballah enjoys in the Arab world. Even after Israel's attack
- on Kafra and Yater, no parties pulled out. Only the
- Palestinians, incensed by Israel's recent detention of two of
- their delegates, threatened not to show--then reversed course.
- </p>
- <p> In taking out Musawi, Israel's leaders knew that they
- risked diplomatic opprobrium--as well as retaliation from
- Hizballah. So why did they hit him? Before Musawi took command
- of Hizballah in mid-1991, he was a member of its military
- command, which Israel holds responsible for such atrocities as
- the 1983 bombing of the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut. Still,
- Israel entertained hopes that he might pursue a more moderate
- course, since he had close ties to Iran's more pragmatic
- leaders. But attacks by his militia on Israeli targets only
- increased. After two previous failed attempts on his life, the
- Israelis hit him last week because he was there, just where they
- knew he would be when he publicized his plans to attend a
- memorial service in the village of Jibshit. "There is a
- legitimate principle called settling an account," says Yossi
- Peled, former head of Israel's northern command. "That means
- eliminating the person who made the decisions to take innocent
- lives."
- </p>
- <p> Although the assassination was planned for months, the
- timing proved especially appealing. The raid on the Israeli army
- camp two days earlier was carried out most probably by
- Palestinians, not Lebanese Shi`ites, but it provided the guise
- of a provocation. The easy infiltration of the army camp
- humiliated the military and spurred it to demonstrate its
- competence. Since the U.S. hostages once held by Hizballah were
- free, there was little concern about a serious outcry from
- Washington. (Beyond deploring the "rising cycle of violence,"
- the U.S. State Department warned of the increased danger of
- terrorist attacks against Americans in the region.) And Israel's
- concerns for its missing airman, Ron Arad, who fell into
- Hizballah's hands after a 1986 Israeli raid, have shifted; he
- is now believed to be dead or held by different captors.
- </p>
- <p> Then there were electoral considerations, never far from
- any Israeli politician's mind. Coming into the week, the ruling
- Likud bloc and the Labor Party were both preparing to name
- leaders to run for Prime Minister in national elections on June
- 23. For Likud, Sunday's assault on Musawi was a well-timed
- reminder to voters that it is implacably committed to the
- country's physical security. As expected, Prime Minister Yitzhak
- Shamir got the nod from his bloc. In Israel's first primary
- ever, Labor members elected Yitzhak Rabin to replace Shimon
- Peres.
- </p>
- <p> Now Shamir faces a far stiffer battle in June. He could
- have depicted Peres as a left-winger who would negotiate away
- too much. But Rabin is a hero of the 1967 Six-Day War who, as
- Defense Minister from 1984 to '90, reinforced his tough image
- by employing harsh tactics to quell the Palestinian intifadeh.
- While he advocates trading parts of the occupied territories for
- peace and opposes the expansion of Jewish settlements in those
- areas, no Israeli mistakes him for a dove. Rabin will try to
- convince voters that he alone can achieve peace, and he is
- expected to make so strong a showing that he may force a new
- national unity government.
- </p>
- <p> In the interim, Shamir will need to keep the peace process
- percolating so Labor cannot blame him for its failure. At the
- same time, he will not want the bargaining to proceed to any
- yea-or-nay decision that might antagonize Likud's far-right-wing
- voters. After last week's show of force in Lebanon, he can
- probably afford the appearance of a little give-and-take. As
- disheartening as the renewed hostilities are, perhaps they will
- underscore for negotiators how acute the need is to achieve a
- lasting peace.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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