home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=89TT0625>
- <title>
- Mar. 06, 1989: Middle East:Enter The Soviet Union
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Mar. 06, 1989 The Tower Fiasco
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 40
- Middle East
- Enter the Soviet Union
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Shevardnadze steps in where the U.S. hesitates to tread
- </p>
- <p> The timing was astute. While Washington chose to go slow on
- Middle East diplomacy, Moscow accelerated its activity. Last
- week Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze was on a
- ten-day sally through five countries, leaving deep tracks
- everywhere he touched down.
- </p>
- <p> At his first stop, in Syria, Shevardnadze unveiled a
- three-step proposal to convene an international Middle East
- peace conference under the auspices of the United Nations. He
- took the plan to Jordan and Egypt for an approving welcome. And
- before proceeding on to Iran and Iraq, Shevardnadze spent four
- days in Cairo for a bit of showmanship that could not help
- grabbing headlines: back-to-back meetings with Israeli Foreign
- Minister Moshe Arens and Palestine Liberation Organization
- Chairman Yasser Arafat.
- </p>
- <p> What fresh ideas was the new thinking Soviet Foreign
- Minister promoting? Not many. Shevardnadze's peace proposal was
- largely procedural, reiterating an idea that has been floating
- around the region for several years and is widely endorsed by
- most of the relevant parties, except Israel. But as a public
- relations ploy, the trip was effective. Shevardnadze amply
- demonstrated Moscow's intention to break Washington's monopoly
- as the peace broker in the Middle East. With his shrewd charm
- and flair for appearing to generate goodwill, Shevardnadze sent a
- new breeze through the Middle East -- a breeze that George Bush
- promised would come from the U.S. Indeed, while the Soviets were
- launching their most important Middle East diplomatic initiative
- in more than a decade, the Bush Administration was bogged down
- in a review of 28 foreign policy areas, including the Middle
- East.
- </p>
- <p> The contrast between Moscow's splash and Washington's
- plodding was reinforced by the rhetoric on both sides. While
- Shevardnadze warned that the Middle East "could be climbing the
- unpredictable ladder of nuclear escalation," Secretary of State
- James Baker asserted in a television interview, "I don't think
- it's (an area) that if it incubates further, it blows up."
- Somewhat testily, Bush also applied the brakes: "I don't want to
- be stampeded by the fact that the Soviet Foreign Minister takes
- a trip to the Middle East." Though he praised Shevardnadze's
- trip as a "good thing," the President reiterated that the Soviet
- role in the region "should be limited." Shevardnadze had a canny
- response: "This is very sad because it injects an element of
- rivalry that is unnecessary." Then, with a smile, he added,
- "This is my first critical remark about the President of the
- United States."
- </p>
- <p> The most dramatic moments of Shevardnadze's trip were saved
- for his 2 1/2-hour meeting with Arens. Building on a flirtation
- that began several years ago, the two Foreign Ministers made
- history by holding their meeting on Arab soil. They pledged to
- continue their bilateral courtship at a high diplomatic level,
- though they accomplished nothing concrete that would further
- the peace process. On specifics, they had little in common.
- Shevardnadze pressed Arens to drop Israel's opposition to an
- international peace conference and talk to the P.L.O. Arens
- replied by urging Shevardnadze to sign on to Jerusalem's
- preference for direct talks with the other Arabs, sponsored by
- the U.S. and the Soviet Union. Later, Shevardnadze warned that
- Moscow would not resume diplomatic ties with Israel until
- Jerusalem accepted an international forum. Arens said restoring
- relations was not a precondition, but Prime Minister Yitzhak
- Shamir insisted that normalization still must precede a larger
- Soviet role in Middle East diplomacy.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, the diplomatic flurry had other modest symbolic
- achievements: Arens met with President Hosni Mubarak, marking
- the first time since 1982 that an Egyptian leader has been
- willing to talk with a member of Israel's right-wing Likud bloc.
- That very act seemed to signal some thaw in the "cold peace"
- that prevails between the two countries. Shevardnadze's revival
- of the international-conference proposal skillfully shored up
- the Arab moderates who have long advocated it, and his presence
- in Cairo, the first visit by a Soviet Foreign Minister since
- 1975, invigorated long-dormant Soviet influence in Egypt.
- </p>
- <p> Ultimately, Moscow was probably the big winner from the
- trip. If Shevardnadze's journey actually did little to nudge
- the mired peace process, it helped the Soviets gain a larger
- role in the region. Even the Israelis seemed to accept their
- presence, despite long-standing fears that a higher Soviet
- profile could bring unwanted pressures to bear. Said Galia
- Golan, a professor at Hebrew University: "Israel is treating
- the Soviet Union as virtually a factor equal to the United
- States."
- </p>
- <p> More important, the Soviet initiative reinforced an emerging
- consensus in the Middle East that the conflict can no longer be
- ignored. "The postponements have ended," said a Cairo-based
- diplomat. "Now, either there will be progress toward peace or
- there will be a moment of truth that the gaps between the
- parties cannot be bridged."
- </p>
- <p> Nothing in last week's diplomacy suggested a way out of the
- substantive stalemate: how to bring both Israel and the
- Palestinians to the bargaining table. No one believes Moscow can
- single-handedly make peace. Any hope of overcoming that logjam
- still requires American influence. "The Arabs and the Soviets
- know that until the United States joins the game, there is no
- game," says a U.S. Administration official. Then perhaps
- Moscow's aggressiveness will spur the idling Bush
- Administration.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-