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- <text id=91TT1776>
- <title>
- Aug. 12, 1991: Moscow Summit:Tag-Team Diplomacy
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 12, 1991 Busybodies & Crybabies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 24
- MOSCOW SUMMIT
- Tag-Team Diplomacy
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Bush helps Gorbachev in the Ukraine, and the Soviet leader returns
- the favor on the Middle East
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL S. SERRILL -- Reported by Michael Duffy with Bush,
- J.F.O. McAllister/Washington and Robert Slater/ Jerusalem
- </p>
- <p> Last week's Moscow summit had been billed as the final
- act of the cold war. But within hours after Air Force One
- touched down at Sheremetyevo Airport, it was clear that the last
- vestiges of East-West tension had dissolved long before George
- Bush's arrival. In what both sides agreed was the friendliest
- U.S.-Soviet summit ever, Bush and Mikhail Gorbachev laughed and
- joked their way through the signing of the Strategic Arms
- Reduction Treaty (START), which will reduce the two superpowers'
- nuclear arsenals, and a series of other agreements covering
- everything from agriculture to the arts. Bush agreed to try to
- provide Moscow with additional economic and technical aid. He
- also did his part to keep Gorbachev's restive empire from flying
- apart by traveling to Kiev to warn the Ukrainian legislature
- against any adventures in "suicidal nationalism."
- </p>
- <p> As the Bush motorcade arrived in Kiev, the streets were
- crowded with nationalist spectators, many of them waving the
- blue-and-yellow flag of the once independent Ukrainian state.
- But he made it clear that the U.S. would not intervene in the
- disputes between the republics and Gorbachev's central
- government. "We will not try to pick winners and losers in
- political competitions between republics, or between republics
- and the center," said the President. "((That)) is your business,
- not the business of the U.S."
- </p>
- <p> But Bush's comments on Soviet internal politics were
- overshadowed by the hope that the new spirit of U.S.-Soviet
- cooperation might spread to the Middle East. Secretary of State
- James Baker, with some important help from Moscow, persuaded
- Israel to sit down with its Arab neighbors in face-to-face peace
- talks that could begin in October. Bush hailed the coming peace
- conference as a "historic opportunity" for a comprehensive
- Arab-Israeli settlement after 43 years of war and confrontation.
- </p>
- <p> Bush and Baker traveled to Moscow with every intention of
- bringing Israel to the table. Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria
- had already accepted Israel's long-standing demand for bilateral
- talks. But Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir had one last
- concern: the composition of the Palestinian delegation to the
- meetings. Israel rejects any participation in the talks by
- Yasser Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization. It also
- opposes the inclusion of any resident of East Jerusalem, a step
- that in Shamir's view might imply that the city's status as
- Israel's capital is open to negotiation.
- </p>
- <p> To overcome Shamir's qualms, Bush and Gorbachev staged a
- diplomatic squeeze play. Baker holed up in Moscow and spent
- hours on the telephone trying to bring Shamir around. When Bush
- and Gorbachev announced on Wednesday -- before any public
- announcement from Shamir -- that they would issue invitations
- to an October peace conference, it seemed like a classic bit of
- diplomatic arm twisting directed at the recalcitrant Israelis.
- Bush said he was sending Baker to Jerusalem immediately "to
- obtain Israel's reply."
- </p>
- <p> In fact, according to a senior Administration official,
- the announcement was a diplomatic charade: Shamir had agreed to
- attend the peace conference before Baker left Moscow. The
- Israeli leader's acquiescence was prompted in part by a Soviet
- promise to re-establish diplomatic relations, which were severed
- in 1967, if the talks get under way. Baker also assured him
- that the U.S. would not insist that Palestinians unacceptable
- to Shamir be included in the discussions.
- </p>
- <p> But even after Shamir agreed to take part in the talks, he
- insisted that Baker travel to Israel to get the word. That was
- another example of what some diplomats see as the one-upmanship
- that the two men have been engaging in since the Bush
- Administration began reviving the peace process in March. Upon
- arriving in Jerusalem, the Secretary spent 90 minutes huddled
- with Shamir before they announced at a joint press conference
- that Arab-Israeli talks would indeed convene. Peace in the
- Middle East, said Baker, was "no longer simply a dream."
- </p>
- <p> In a considerable understatement, Baker added that there
- was "some work" to be done to secure the cooperation of the
- Palestinians, who still insist that they will choose their own
- delegation without interference and that a representative of
- East Jerusalem must be included. With all the major Arab states,
- plus the Soviet Union and other European nations, ready to talk
- peace, the Palestinians may have no choice but to acquiesce to
- Shamir's formulation. Jordan's King Hussein has appealed to the
- P.L.O. not to raise problems over Palestinian representation.
- And Egyptian Foreign Minister Amre Moussa is seeking a possible
- compromise: Arab residents of East Jerusalem would be excluded
- from the first round of negotiations but included at a later
- stage.
- </p>
- <p> For Shamir, the agreement to attend the conference
- required only a slight shift in emphasis: he simply said yes,
- Israel would sit down at the peace parley provided the
- Palestinian delegation was acceptable, rather than no, it would
- not attend if the Palestinian group was not acceptable. Beyond
- that, the stone-faced Prime Minister gave away little. At
- meetings with his right-wing supporters, Shamir emphasized that
- he had not agreed to sacrifice -- or even discuss -- the status
- of Jerusalem and that there was no requirement for Israel to
- halt construction of new settlements in the territories or lift
- the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip by Israeli
- troops. "Trust me," Shamir told a gathering of Knesset members
- from the small rightist parties that hold his ruling Likud
- coalition together. "We won't withdraw one millimeter."
- </p>
- <p> U.S., Soviet and other organizers of the peace conference
- hope the negotiating process may serve to soften Shamir's
- intransigence. Their strategy is to coax the old enemies toward
- agreement on less contentious issues in the hope that the result
- will be a climate of trust that enables prog ress on more
- explosive issues. "You want to give this process time so that
- thinking can evolve," says a senior Administration official.
- "Different kinds of compromises become possible over time
- because people see things in different ways."
- </p>
- <p> The meetings will begin with a plenary session at which
- the U.S. and the Soviet Union will be co-hosts. The site has
- not been decided, but Washington, Geneva and Cairo have been
- mentioned as possibilities. Present will be Egypt, Israel,
- Lebanon, Syria and a joint Jordanian-Palestinian delegation. The
- European Community will participate, and the Gulf Cooperation
- Council, representing Saudi Arabia and other gulf states, will
- send an observer, as will the United Nations.
- </p>
- <p> After two days of opening ceremonies, the talks will break
- up into bilateral groups: Israeli-Syrian talks on the
- Israeli-occupied Golan Heights; Israeli-Jordanian-Palestinian
- discussions on the future of the West Bank and Gaza;
- Israeli-Lebanese negotiations over Israel's "security zone"
- along their common border. Simultaneously, multilateral working
- groups will tackle less contentious regional problems such as
- water, the environment and arms control.
- </p>
- <p> Given the extraordinary lineup of forces favoring the
- conference, it is likely that the remaining roadblocks to the
- talks will be knocked down. Whether the negotiators will be able
- to find any common ground once they sit down together is another
- matter. "Don't be surprised if the photo opportunity passes, and
- then the bilateral negotiations bog down very quickly," warns
- William Quandt, a Middle East expert at the Brookings
- Institution.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev's and Bush's tag-team diplomacy on the Middle
- East was just one consequence of what the Soviet leader
- described as a warm "feeling of solidarity" that has developed
- between the two men. Bush responded to Gorbachev's many
- compliments by toasting him as "a man I respect and admire" and
- by promising to seek most-favored-nation trading status for the
- Soviet Union. He even chided reporters for blaming the Soviet
- government "before you know what happened" in last week's
- killing of seven guards at a Lithuanian customs house
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev suggested that with START out of the way the
- superpowers were in a position to tackle other sources of
- international tension, like Yugoslavia and Central America.
- Certainly the agreement to hold talks in the Middle East was
- proof of the promise that East-West collaboration holds out to
- the world. Until Bush and Gorbachev teamed up, the two sides had
- so little to say to each other that they could not even agree
- to talk.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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