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- <text id=94TT1121>
- <title>
- Aug. 08, 1994: Middle East:Waiting for the Holdout
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 08, 1994 Everybody's Hip (And That's Not Cool)
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MIDDLE EAST, Page 42
- Waiting for the Holdout
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Arab-Israeli friendship won't be permanent or secure without
- Assad's Syria
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Lisa Beyer/Jerusalem, Dean Fischer/Damascus and
- J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> For Syria, the new surge of peacemaking in the Middle East
- is mostly a spectator sport. When the exuberant Israeli-Jordanian
- summit took place in Washington last week, Syrians gathered
- in hushed groups to stare at their television sets as Jordan's
- King Hussein and Israel's Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin warmly
- pledged an end to a state of war and the beginning of an era
- of cooperation. Following so quickly on the return of Yasser
- Arafat and officials of his Palestine Liberation Organization
- to the Gaza Strip and Jericho, last week's handshake confirmed
- that the mood in the region is shifting strongly toward peace.
- </p>
- <p> Many other Arab states in North Africa and the Persian Gulf
- are showing interest in better relations with Israel, especially
- economic ties. The alluring outline of something like a common
- market is beginning to glimmer over the sands of the Middle
- East. Peace between Israel and most of its Arab neighbors now
- seems inevitable. But to be truly stable, the process must include
- Syria, the hostile power to Israel's north and the de facto
- ruler of Lebanon. The crucial next decision is up to Syrian
- President Hafez Assad, who sits brooding in Damascus as the
- self-proclaimed embodiment of Arab nationalism. Will he join
- the trend or try to resist it?
- </p>
- <p> Syria's participation is critical because of the country's friendly
- relations with the most implacable enemies of peace, the wielders
- of car bombs and plastic explosives, who were back in business
- last week attacking Jewish organizations. London was rocked
- by two blasts, one from a car bomb outside the Israeli embassy
- and a second at the headquarters of a Jewish charity. All told,
- 19 people were injured. The blasts came just a week after a
- truck bomb set off outside a Jewish community center in Buenos
- Aires killed at least 86 people. After the attacks in Britain,
- governments around the world went on the alert and threw up
- security cordons at Israeli embassies and offices.
- </p>
- <p> Israel blames the wave of violence on Iran and the Islamic radical
- groups it supports. But Assad's laissez-faire attitude toward
- them, especially Hizballah, the main militant organization based
- in Lebanon, makes it easier for them to operate. Discussing
- attacks on Israeli occupation forces in southern Lebanon by
- Hizballah last week, Rabin noted, "If you ask me if Syria can
- place limits on Hizballah's activities, I will say yes." But
- does Syria want to use this power? "My answer is: In a very
- limited way."
- </p>
- <p> Both Rabin and Secretary of State Warren Christopher felt certain
- Hizballah was, as the Secretary put it, "at the bottom of some
- of these" bombings of Israeli and Jewish targets. "Groups like
- Hizballah that wreak havoc and bloodshed," he said, "and Hizballah's
- sponsor, Iran," must not be allowed to prevail. If their goal
- is to halt the moves toward peace, they probably will not succeed.
- Car bombings and terrorist atrocities now seem irrelevant to
- a Middle East so close to an overall settlement.
- </p>
- <p> Assad is virtually impossible to read, and maintains a public
- silence about details of a settlement. Christopher, who is trying
- to facilitate a potential deal between Syria and Israel, is
- mildly optimistic. "I think there is the possibility of progress,"
- he said last week, "because both parties see it as in their
- interest." Israelis too are hopeful but reserve judgment. At
- a meeting with Bill Clinton in Geneva last January, Assad declared
- himself ready to make peace with Israel this year--a pledge
- he repeated by phone last week. Christopher heads back to the
- region soon to shuttle between Damascus and Jerusalem, which
- have broken off bilateral talks.
- </p>
- <p> The Syrians do not want to shake hands on a declaration of principles
- of the sort that stalled implementation of the Israeli-P.L.O.
- agreement for months. They want to settle on the specific terms
- of a treaty they can sit down and sign. In essence, it will
- probably be a straight swap: Israel will hand back Syria's Golan
- Heights, occupied since the 1967 war, and receive in return
- a real peace complete with diplomatic relations, an open border
- and trade.
- </p>
- <p> Though the deal is simple in outline, neither side wants to
- make the first concession. Syria insists that Israel agree in
- advance to total withdrawal from the Golan; only then will Damascus
- spell out what it means by the word peace. Jerusalem says it
- must hear the specific terms of a peace agreement first, and
- wants to pull back from the Golan Heights in stages stretched
- over several years. Christopher hopes he can craft a compromise
- three-year phased withdrawal and normalization procedure similar
- to Israel's 1979 agreement to give back Egypt's Sinai peninsula.
- </p>
- <p> Such a settlement may be in the works, but it won't happen overnight.
- U.S. officials expect it to come about only after months of
- repetitive and complex negotiations, which they hope to conclude
- before the end of the year. Luckily, that is just the sort of
- thing the dogged, lawyerly Christopher is good at. He will probably
- have to make multiple trips to the region, trying to persuade
- both Assad and Rabin that any compromise should not be taken
- as a sign of weakness.
- </p>
- <p> Assad's most obvious goals are to get back the Golan Heights
- and to attract enough aid and investment to modernize his economy.
- He must also accommodate the growing belief among Syrians that
- peace with Israel is inevitable. "Since the Gulf War," says
- Sadik al-Azm, a philosophy professor at the University of Damascus,
- "Syrians have developed a sense of stoic resignation to the
- new facts created in the world." Further, Assad is concerned
- about the future security of his regime. He may hope to maneuver
- himself into a pivotal role in regional affairs and build up
- an American and Israeli stake in his political survival.
- </p>
- <p> Officials in Jerusalem, as always, are determined to be cool
- and measured, but they admit they feel a new kind of vibration
- coming out of Damascus. "This is not the Assad we knew before,"
- says Uri Dromi, head of Israel's government press office.
- </p>
- <p> One important signal, he says--and on this he agrees with
- Clinton--was the fact that Syrian television twice broadcast
- those emotional scenes of Hussein and Rabin at the White House--uncut, uncensored and with Arabic subtitles. Assad, they
- believe, put them on the air because he is preparing his people
- to emerge from radical isolation and join the peace tide that
- is sweeping the Middle East.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-