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- <text id=93TT0280>
- <title>
- Sep. 27, 1993: Caution:Speed Bumps Ahead
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Sep. 27, 1993 Attack Of The Video Games
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MIDDLE EAST, Page 30
- Caution: Speed Bumps Ahead
- </hdr><body>
- <p>To proceed down the road to peace, Israelis and Palestinians
- still need to resolve differences
- </p>
- <p>By LISA BEYER/JERUSALEM--With reporting by Ron Ben-Yishai/Tel Aviv and Lara Marlowe/Amman
- </p>
- <p> Oded Ben-Ami, a senior aide to Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin,
- allowed himself a sweet moment of repose the other day. Fresh
- from Washington, Ben-Ami relaxed with his family during the
- Jewish New Year, but he had no illusions about the new way of
- life awaiting Israelis and Palestinians. Both sides have to
- fill in the blanks of their agreement in principle and figure
- out precisely how to transfer most government functions in the
- West Bank and Gaza Strip from the occupier to the occupied.
- "The game remains a puzzle of fitting hundreds of small details
- together," he said. "You don't have enough pages in your magazine
- to list them all."
- </p>
- <p> Two lifelong enemies have undertaken a new relationship before
- making sure they know how to live it. Says a Rabin confidant:
- "We wanted to nail each other down at the lowest common denominator,
- make it public and from there build the layers that will lead
- to a settlement on the ground." That leaves a host of urgent
- issues to resolve if the first stage of the pact is to be implemented
- as planned in the next two to four months. "They range from
- questions of security to issues of regulating the tomato trade,"
- says Ephraim Sneh, a Labor Party Knesset member. Among the most
- immediate issues:
- </p>
- <p> SETTING BOUNDARIES
- </p>
- <p> The agreement stipulates that Israel will begin turning over
- responsibility for the Gaza Strip and the Jericho area in the
- West Bank to the Palestinians by mid-November and complete the
- task within two months. The Gaza Strip is a well-defined beachfront
- rectangle of 140 sq. mi. But what, exactly, is the Jericho area?
- The municipal bounds of the city encompass only 10 sq. mi.,
- but the Jericho district, as defined by Jordanian law that was
- in effect before Israel's 1967 conquest, comprises 146 sq. mi.
- The Palestinians want the autonomous zone to contain much of
- that territory, including the wood-planked Allenby bridge, one
- of two border crossings into Jordan. The Israelis insist that
- the boundaries should be more circumscribed and that they should
- continue to control the bridge.
- </p>
- <p> RETURNEES
- </p>
- <p> The agreement allows an unspecified number of Palestinians to
- return to the territories, which were taken by Israel during
- the 1967 war. By Israeli count, 200,000 people were displaced
- by the war; P.L.O. officials speak of more than 800,000, a number
- that includes the descendants of the original refugees. To pacify
- their respective constituencies, both sides are taking extreme
- positions on how many exiles can come back. Israeli Foreign
- Minister Shimon Peres has suggested the absurdly small figure
- of 5,000, while P.L.O. officials have said they would wave in
- the whole 800,000. That would increase the Palestinian population
- in the territories by one-third and bring in many individuals
- deemed security risks by Israel. In reality, both sides recognize
- that the main constraint on the number of returnees is economic:
- the West Bank and Gaza Strip are impoverished and cannot afford
- to absorb a gigantic influx of newcomers. During the secret
- negotiations in Oslo, both sides informally batted around the
- figure of 200,000 returnees.
- </p>
- <p> ARAFAT'S SAFETY
- </p>
- <p> Among those who will return will be senior members of the exiled
- P.L.O. leadership, which will administer self-rule until free
- elections are held for a Palestinian council within nine months.
- According to a P.L.O. official, the negotiators in Oslo discussed
- allowing the entire executive committee of the P.L.O. to relocate
- to the territories. Although Israeli officials won't say so
- explicitly, P.L.O. Chairman Yasser Arafat will surely be among
- them. "It is not that he can come tomorrow," says Israeli Deputy
- Foreign Minister Yossi Beilin. "That still should be discussed."
- </p>
- <p> One brake on Arafat's homecoming is the problem of securing
- his safety. Palestinian radicals have threatened to kill him,
- and a former chief rabbi of Israel has blessed his murder. P.L.O.
- sources in the territories say Arafat plans to move between
- two headquarters, one in Jericho and one in the Gaza Strip,
- a 70-mile trip by road through central Israel. The agreement
- guarantees safe passage, but for Arafat, "safe" would probably
- necessitate a military convoy. A Palestinian force that size
- would irritate the Israelis, while an Israeli contingent would
- humiliate the P.L.O. Arafat might commute by helicopter, but
- the Israelis are very particular about whom they allow in their
- airspace, since the tiny country's military installations are
- clearly visible from the sky.
- </p>
- <p> PALESTINIAN POLICE
- </p>
- <p> While Palestinians have long run their own schools, hospitals
- and social services, they have not had an independent security
- force in the territories since the 1967 war. Before they can
- begin, the two sides must negotiate the terms of the "strong"
- Palestinian police force called for in the agreement. Israeli
- security officials say the Palestinian cops will probably be
- armed with pistols, rifles and light machine guns. The P.L.O.
- would like to have armored personnel carriers and spotter helicopters
- as well. "We will give them everything they need to maintain
- security and keep power," says Nissim Zvilli, secretary-general
- of the Labor Party, "but nobody is going to build a Palestinian
- army."
- </p>
- <p> The force will be made up of Palestinians from the territories
- plus exiled Palestinians from two units of Arafat's Palestine
- Liberation Army: the Badr Brigade in Jordan and the Ain Jalud
- Brigade in Egypt. The P.L.O. began training these fighters as
- policemen three months ago, and 1,200 of them have already completed
- the course. In his office in Amman, Jordan, General Hamed Qudsiyah,
- head of the Badr Brigade, sits with maps of Jericho on his desk,
- planning for the deployment of his men there within 10 weeks
- -- before Arafat's first visit, he says.
- </p>
- <p> The Palestinian force will be relatively small while it polices
- Gaza and Jericho. But over the next nine months, its turf will
- expand into the entire West Bank as the Israeli army withdraws
- from populated areas and Palestinian autonomy spreads. Faisal
- Husseini, the chief Palestinian peace negotiator, has said police
- should eventually total 30,000 officers. But Israel's principle
- is that there should be the same proportion of Palestinian police
- to civilians as there is in Israel, which would make for a force
- of about 6,000.
- </p>
- <p> Coordinating this new constabulary with Israeli security personnel
- will be extremely delicate. The Jewish settlements in the territories
- will continue to be protected by Israeli forces. The government
- does not intend to turn them into military camps, but they will
- become increasingly fortified: the army suggests adding electrified
- fences and land mines to prevent infiltration.
- </p>
- <p> It will be even harder to protect Israelis traveling in the
- territories. The army proposes keeping the roads, including
- wide shoulders on each side, under Israeli control. Finances
- permitting, electrified fences would be erected on either side
- of the highways to prevent guerrillas from ambushing passing
- Israeli cars, recognizable by their yellow license plates. Since
- Palestinians use the same roads, one idea under discussion is
- to have joint Israeli-Palestinian units patrol them.
- </p>
- <p> Then there is the issue of hot pursuit: What happens if the
- Israelis chase a suspected miscreant into a Palestinian-controlled
- area? Would the Palestinian police allow the Israelis to continue,
- take up the chase themselves or sit idly by? As'ad Abdul-Rahman,
- a member of the P.L.O.'s Central Council, says, "I believe the
- P.L.O. would go so far as arresting and handing over Palestinians
- who do violence."
- </p>
- <p> Once these mechanisms are worked out, negotiators will have
- to decide whether the Arabs of East Jerusalem will be able to
- stand for election to the Palestinian council scheduled in nine
- months and what the legislative limits of that body will be.
- For the 22 months that the peace talks made no visible progress,
- issues like these seemed impossible to resolve; now that the
- psychological barriers are down, such issues appear manageable
- -- as long as both sides are prepared to settle for less than
- they want.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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