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- <text id=94TT1449>
- <title>
- Oct. 24, 1994: Israel:Murderers of Peace
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 24, 1994 Boom for Whom?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ISRAEL, Page 40
- Murderers of Peace
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Islamic foes want the kidnapping of an Israeli soldier--and
- its tragic outcome--to kill peace negotiations
- </p>
- <p>By Lisa Beyer/Jerusalem--with reporting by Jamil Hamad and Robert Slater/Jerusalem and
- Ann M. Simmons with Christopher
- </p>
- <p> It ought to have been a wonderful day for Yitzhak Rabin and
- Yasser Arafat. On Friday the Israeli and Palestinian leaders,
- along with Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, were named
- the recipients of this year's Nobel Peace Prize, the highest
- trophy politicians can hope for. Yet there was no jubilation
- in Tel Aviv or Gaza City. The honor had been spoiled by tortured
- and ultimately fruitless attempts by both Palestinians and Israelis
- to avoid a tragedy. The poignance and pitilessness of lives
- well below the heights of power had overshadowed political priorities,
- and the 13-month effort to implement peace was thrown into its
- worst crisis.
- </p>
- <p> The drama began on an unseasonably balmy Sunday afternoon as
- Nahshon Waxman, 19, a corporal in the Israeli army, was heading
- for his girlfriend's house. Hitchhiking in central Israel, he
- was picked up by activists from the militant Islamic movement
- Hamas. Two days later they named their ransom: the release from
- Israeli jails of their spiritual leader Sheik Ahmed Yassin and
- 200 other Palestinian and Lebanese prisoners. Waxman was hardly
- the first Israeli to be taken hostage. Fundamentalists from
- the West Bank and Gaza Strip have seized nine others during
- the past five years, killing all of them. But there was a difference
- this time. The kidnappers had distributed a wrenching videotape
- of a terrified Waxman asking the government to meet his captors'
- demands. On tape the youth looked dazed and frightened. "I ask
- you to do all you can so I get out of here alive," Waxman said.
- Behind him stood a hooded Hamas gunman who put his hand on the
- Israeli's shoulder. "If my parents are watching me, I am all
- right now." But, he added, "if their prisoners are not released,
- they will kill me."
- </p>
- <p> The image provoked an unusually fiery and emotional response
- in Israel. On Thursday 50,000 worshippers gathered at Jerusalem's
- Western Wall to pray for the young man's safety. Waxman's mother
- Esther, an English teacher who emigrated to Israel in 1969 from
- New York City, reminded Washington that Nahshon held dual citizenship
- and pleaded for the U.S. to "get my son released." Even Sheik
- Yassin, the incarcerated and quadriplegic spiritual leader of
- Hamas, declared on Israeli television, "Killing him is not useful,
- and our religion orders us to take care of him and his life."
- </p>
- <p> Another event had contributed to the outpouring of Israeli sentiment.
- The kidnapping occurred on the same day that two Hamas gunmen,
- armed with assault rifles, rampaged through a popular restaurant
- district in Jerusalem, mortally wounding two patrons and injuring
- another 13 before being shot down by Israeli police. The attack
- struck at the core of Israelis' sense of personal security because
- it took place in one of Jerusalem's principal fun spots.
- </p>
- <p> Rabin was already frustrated by persistent militant attacks
- despite Israel's withdrawal from the self-rule zones in the
- Gaza Strip and Jericho last May. Islamic extremists, who oppose
- Arafat's peace agreement with Israel and hope to sabotage it
- through violence, are concentrated in the Strip and use the
- newly autonomous area as a sanctuary. Says a Hamas activist
- in Gaza City: "Before, the Israeli army would chase our fighters,
- besiege their hideouts and catch them. Now those fighting the
- jihad can attack and then go back to their homes." Arafat's
- administration has been reluctant to confront the militants
- because these groups enjoy widespread approval among Palestinians
- for their anti-Israel exploits. One of Arafat's Cabinet members
- confides that his boss "has avoided the real job of cleaning
- up the extremists in Gaza."
- </p>
- <p> Rabin insisted that his information made it clear that Waxman
- was being held in Gaza, over which Arafat was responsible. And
- so the Israeli Prime Minister made the kidnapping an issue of
- Arafat's authority and good faith and held the Palestinian leader
- "completely responsible" for the soldier's well-being. A further
- expansion of Palestinian self-rule, he said, rested on Waxman's
- safe release. Even as Israel's leader congratulated his Palestinian
- counterpart on the Nobel Prize, he issued a warning: "If there
- will not be security, there will also not be peace."
- </p>
- <p> Rabin warned that Waxman's death would have "the gravest possible
- effect" on future Israeli-Palestinian relations: Israeli government
- officials suggested they might freeze plans to expand Palestinian
- authority in the West Bank. To highlight the threat, Rabin withdrew
- his delegation from talks in Cairo aimed at broadening self-rule.
- This was a marked departure for the Israeli leader, who previously
- had insisted on keeping negotiations going despite violence
- between the parties. U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher
- joined in pressuring Arafat, not only in the name of peace but
- for the sake of an American life. Arafat was motivated himself
- by a sense that the hostage taking was intended by Hamas to
- embarrass him.
- </p>
- <p> Launching an unprecedented search for the captive soldier, the
- Palestinian chief mobilized virtually his entire 9,500-strong
- security force in the Gaza Strip, setting up new roadblocks,
- searching hideouts and rounding up 300 Hamas activists. But
- they were shaking the wrong tree. On Friday morning the Israelis
- received intelligence that the captive was in a house in Bir-Nabala,
- in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, just three miles north of
- his parents' home in Ramot, a Jerusalem suburb. Throughout the
- day, Rabin said later, the Israelis considered a tentative Hamas
- proposal to exchange Waxman for Sheik Yassin, whom the government
- has considered freeing anyway because of his failing health.
- According to Rabin, the offer was never made firm by Hamas,
- but the militants did agree to extend their deadline by 24 hours.
- </p>
- <p> And then, at about 8 p.m., an hour before the original deadline
- was to expire, Israeli special forces attacked the house in
- Bir-Nabala, blowing open the doors with explosives and charging
- inside. One Israeli soldier died in the fire fight and 12 were
- injured. Three kidnappers were killed and another was captured,
- along with an alleged accessory. According to Israeli officials,
- Waxman was found inside the house, bound in chains and shot
- by his captors at point-blank range in the neck and chest. Army
- sources believe Waxman was executed during the siege or just
- before, perhaps after the gunmen saw the special forces approach.
- </p>
- <p> At a press conference later that night, Rabin continued to press
- his point that Arafat must assume responsibility for controlling
- Hamas violence. "We know the activities of these murderers were
- directed from Gaza," Rabin said. "The peace process depends
- upon how well the Palestinian authority prevents the Gaza Strip
- from becoming a haven for terrorists."
- </p>
- <p> Even Arafat's own ministers acknowledge that the Palestinian
- authority could do more to rein in Hamas. Said one: "We have
- functioned in a way that gives the Israelis a reason not to
- trust us and Hamas no reason to fear us." Still, the failure
- of Israel's efforts to save Waxman underscores how difficult
- that chore is. Despite its superior firepower, an extensive
- intelligence network and a willingness to use draconian measures,
- the Israeli army was never able to subdue Hamas in the Gaza
- Strip. Now it expects Arafat's far less sophisticated force
- to achieve that goal.
- </p>
- <p> Arafat is also burdened with heavy political considerations.
- "Already people feel that the Palestinian authority has become
- an instrument of the Israelis," says Ghassan Khatib, who monitors
- Palestinian public opinion. An all-out assault on Hamas would
- jeopardize its credibility further. "Is a Palestinian civil
- war the price of Israel's concept of peace?" the East Jerusalem
- newspaper An-Nahar asked in an editorial on Friday.
- </p>
- <p> Nevertheless, though the drama ended fatally for Waxman, the
- story's other hostage--the delicate negotiations between Israel
- and the Palestinians--may yet survive. In the end, Rabin's
- test for Arafat did not materialize: Waxman had not been imprisoned
- within the Gaza Strip. In the aftermath of the saga, progress
- toward a full peace may be slowed as Israel insists that Arafat
- crack down generally on Palestinian extremists. The process
- was shaken, but, despite the tragedy, it was no longer imperiled.
- At least until the next test comes.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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