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- <text id=91TT1122>
- <title>
- May 27, 1991: Middle East:On The Bridge To Nowhere
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- May 27, 1991 Orlando
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 34
- MIDDLE EAST
- On the Bridge To Nowhere
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Why the U.S. is having so much trouble bringing Arabs and Israelis
- to the negotiating table
- </p>
- <p>By LISA BEYER--Reported by J.F.O. McAllister with Baker,
- Christopher Ogden/Washington and Robert Slater/Jerusalem
- </p>
- <p> Usually, busy diplomats travel from Amman to Jerusalem by
- air, but James Baker took the less traveled path last week and
- made the trip by road. With his two-hour drive, the Secretary
- of State wanted to underscore just how close the two
- adversaries are. But his stroll over the Allenby Bridge spanning
- the River Jordan, which marks the border, made the equally
- telling point that both sides are loath to come together. The
- two Jordanian officers who accompanied the Secretary midway
- across the bridge and the waiting Israeli escort spoke not a
- word to one another.
- </p>
- <p> Baker's lonely crossing was an apt symbol for his fourth
- peace mission to the Middle East since the end of the gulf war.
- The Secretary has logged 67,500 miles in two months trying to
- convince the Arabs and Israelis that they should just get
- together to talk, but his guests would not budge from positions
- that make a broadly based parley impossible. Israel would not
- agree to a United Nations presence at such a conference, while
- Syria said it would not attend without U.N. participation.
- Israel insisted that the U.S. and Soviet Union be present only
- for an opening assembly, then allow the Jewish state to
- negotiate individually with the Arab parties. Syria demanded
- that the third parties remain involved throughout, hoping this
- would make Israel more pliable.
- </p>
- <p> Baker's wanderings were not completely fruitless. He did
- manage to squeeze out of Israel an agreement that might finesse
- the problem of who would represent the Palestinians in talks.
- Israel has refused to sit down with Palestinians from East
- Jerusalem, which Israel annexed in 1967, or with those from the
- occupied territories who have ties with the Palestine Liberation
- Organization. But now the Israelis have acquiesced to a joint
- Jordanian-Palestinian delegation, giving rise to speculation
- that its members might include Palestinians living in Jordan who
- are originally from East Jerusalem or are linked to the P.L.O.
- </p>
- <p> Still, that breakthrough was an enormous letdown from the
- high hopes generated during the gulf war. Then, the
- conventional wisdom held that new alliances and new thinking
- might create an environment for making progress in settling the
- Arab-Israeli conflict. But as Baker's frustrations illustrate,
- no outside power can impose a solution; the bickering factions
- must want peace themselves. And the evident truth is that they
- don't, or at least not badly enough. "The only party willing to
- move is the Palestinians," says a senior Western diplomat in
- Washington, exaggerating only slightly. "And no one," he adds,
- "gives a damn what they want." Where the other major players
- stand:
- </p>
- <p> ISRAEL Confidence is the basis of Prime Minister Yitzhak
- Shamir's intransigence. Israel has the lands the Arabs want back--the West Bank, Gaza Strip and Golan Heights--and does not
- anticipate being forced to return them. Only a defeat in war
- would bring that about, and who would deliver it? Iraq,
- previously Israel's fiercest enemy, has been neutered. Syria can
- no longer rely on now impoverished Moscow to bankroll its
- military machine, which runs on Soviet technology that was shown
- to be inferior in the gulf war. Egypt, which made a separate
- peace with Israel in 1979, is not interested. And in any event,
- Israel has nuclear weapons, a tough and proven military and a
- close alliance with the world's remaining superpower.
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, Shamir enjoys the support of a majority of
- Israelis in holding on to the occupied territories, at least for
- the present. Iraq's Scud attacks on Israel during the war and
- Palestinian support for the bombardments heightened distrust of
- Arab intentions among Israelis. Even the opposition Labor Party
- seems reluctant to yield too much of the occupied lands; leader
- Shimon Peres suggested recently that he was not eager to give
- up the Golan Heights.
- </p>
- <p> SYRIA President Hafez Assad's behavior is motivated mostly
- by one aim: the return of the Golan Heights. Outclassed by the
- Israelis militarily, the Syrians believe that their best chance
- rests in having outsiders pressure the Jewish state to abide by
- U.N. Resolutions 242 and 338, which call on Israel to trade land
- for peace. Thus Damascus will not settle simply for a
- one-on-one session with Israel. At the same time, Assad is
- tempted by the opportunity he sees in Saddam's humiliation to
- take his old rival's place as the No. 1 radical Arab strongman.
- </p>
- <p> SAUDI ARABIA Grateful to the U.S. and the other allies for
- saving them from Saddam, the Saudis suggested in the midst of
- the crisis that they would adopt a new openness toward Israel.
- But now that the kingdom is safe again, the old hostility is
- back. It took a diplomatic bludgeoning by the U.S. to get the
- Saudis and the other gulf states to agree earlier this month to
- serve collectively as an observer to a Middle East conference
- and to participate in talks with Israel on regional issues like
- water distribution, economic development and arms control.
- Worried about a backlash by Saudi conservatives, King Fahd is
- hesitant to go any further. The Saudis want to keep the U.S.
- happy in case their security is threatened again. Given U.S.
- reliance on gulf oil, however, the Saudis also realize that they
- do not have to be servile to Washington.
- </p>
- <p> JORDAN U.S. officials think King Hussein badly wants to
- take part in the talks, in part to get back in Washington's
- good graces after leaning toward Saddam in the war. But last
- week the King refused to accept Baker's proposal for a parley
- for fear of incurring Assad's wrath. Asked whether he would
- attend a peace conference without Syria present, he replied, "I
- haven't said that." Would he attend if Syria did too? "I haven't
- said that, either."
- </p>
- <p> THE U.S. Faced with the Kurdish tragedy and Saddam's
- tenacious hold on power, the Bush Administration dearly needs
- a diplomatic victory. Certainly Baker does not appear to be
- preparing to quit anytime soon. On his way home last week, he
- stressed the positive accomplishments of his mission and said
- little to dampen expectations for more progress.
- </p>
- <p> Baker's strategy is to cajole, not push. If he makes no
- headway, there is the possibility of twisting arms. Leaning on
- Israel is the most obvious tactic, since Jerusalem receives more
- than $3 billion a year from Washington. But threatening
- Israel's lifeline would mean a vicious fight with both Congress,
- which is more pro-Israel than the Administration, and the
- powerful Israeli lobby in the U.S. What's more, Administration
- officials have learned from experience that the tougher they get
- with Shamir, the tougher he gets in return.
- </p>
- <p> Thus a more likely next move for Bush, should he decide a
- new approach is needed, would be to cut through the tiresome
- deliberations over procedure and call a conference of his own
- design in Washington. The invitations in effect would be a dare
- to the recipients to say no. Alternatively, the U.S. might focus
- its efforts just on mending bridges between the Palestinians and
- Jordanians and the Israelis. That would be a less ambitious
- project than working for a broader peace, but for that reason
- it is perhaps a more realistic one.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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