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- <text id=94TT1533>
- <title>
- Nov. 07, 1994: Middle East:Sorry, Still No Sale
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 07, 1994 Mad as Hell
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MIDDLE EAST, Page 40
- Sorry, Still No Sale
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> In his first venture into personal peacemaking, Clinton goes
- head to head with Assad and comes away without any visible signs
- of diplomatic progress
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Lisa Beyer/Jerusalem, Michael Duffy with Clinton,
- Dean Fischer/Amman and Lara Marlowe/Damascus
- </p>
- <p> The symbolism surrounding Bill Clinton's witness-for-peace
- visit to the Middle East was almost too perfect. At the desert
- border crossing where he met Jordan's King Hussein and Israel's
- Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin to co-sign their treaty of friendship,
- the table was set up on an asphalt strip in the middle of a
- minefield. An area had been paved and fenced in specifically
- for the ceremony. "Walk 15 yards beyond that barbed wire," a
- U.S. Secret Service agent warned onlookers, "and you won't be
- coming back."
- </p>
- <p> Another warning of danger outside the wire-rimmed islet of peace
- sounded in the north, where militiamen, presumably from the
- Muslim extremist group Hizballah, in Lebanon exchanged fire
- with Israeli troops. And in the Gaza Strip the Palestine Liberation
- Organization's leader Yasser Arafat, with whom Israel made peace
- last year, called a general strike. He was protesting a clause
- in the treaty that lends weight to Jordan's claim to protect
- Jerusalem's Muslim holy places.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's four-day, six-country tour, his first foray into the
- Middle East, taught him just how treacherous a terrain he had
- entered. He had hoped for a prime-time TV triumph to boost his
- party's midterm election chances when he seized upon the Israeli-Jordanian
- settlement to fly off to dramatic presidential appearances in
- Cairo, Amman, Damascus, Jerusalem, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia.
- He quickly discovered that the Middle East and its problems
- guarantee not only the world's attention but risks, surprises
- and, for every misstep, a potential explosion.
- </p>
- <p> The trip began joyously with the moving ceremony formalizing
- peace between Israel and Jordan. Hussein and Rabin were notably
- warm to each other and to Clinton, and their heartfelt words
- bespoke an authentic friendship and respect. That heady afternoon
- built expectations of more good news; Israel especially hoped
- the President could find a way to speed up its glacial negotiations
- over the Golan Heights. But Clinton immediately ran up against
- Syria's President Hafez Assad.
- </p>
- <p> Before going to Damascus to meet Assad, Clinton warned there
- would be no "dramatic breakthrough," explaining carefully that
- he hoped only to give the stalled negotiations a push forward.
- After his four hours of talks, Clinton claimed he had done that--at least in private. "We've made some progress today," he
- said, "the details of which I'm not at liberty to discuss."
- Though evidence of such progress was scant, Rabin politely agreed
- there was some. Syrians and Israelis alike told Clinton they
- wanted peace and would work to achieve it. That was slightly
- promising and probably about the best Clinton could have hoped
- for his first time around.
- </p>
- <p> Setting off from Washington on Tuesday, the Clintons flew first
- to Cairo. President Hosni Mubarak and his wife met them at the
- airport and then sat up talking until after 2 a.m. It was not
- just a social call; Mubarak played a pivotal role as counselor
- in the week's events. He had invited Arafat in for a chat and
- pressed him to make a public statement condemning the recent
- wave of terror attacks on Israel. When Arafat was later asked
- whether he backed peace or the extremists of Hamas, he duly
- said, "My choice is the peace, the peace of the brave." Clinton
- also asked Mubarak about the best approaches to use with Assad,
- and Mubarak later phoned Damascus to lay the groundwork for
- Clinton's arrival. "It's not just intelligence Mubarak provides,"
- said a U.S. official. "It's insight."
- </p>
- <p> After the treaty ceremony in the desert Wednesday, Clinton stopped
- briefly in Amman, where he told the Jordanian parliament, "You
- have sent a signal to the entire Arab world that peace is unstoppable."
- A test of that prediction came the next day in Damascus. Clinton
- was taking a chance on Assad, rewarding him up front with a
- telegenic official visit by a U.S. President, even though Syria
- is still listed by the State Department as a sponsor of terrorism.
- For his part, Clinton wanted to hear Assad offer public assurances
- that he opposes the kind of terror Hamas has been inflicting
- on Israel and that he favors a formal peace settlement of the
- sort Jordan and Egypt have signed.
- </p>
- <p> Senior members of the U.S. delegation even thought they had
- figured out how to elicit such statements. They invited onto
- the press plane an Israeli journalist who, at the news conference
- scheduled to be held in Assad's marble palace, could be expected
- to ask a leading question. The ploy backfired. When the journalist
- asked Assad whether he might ease Israeli fears by opening direct
- talks or visiting the country, Assad coldly turned aside the
- chance to offer reassurance, saying instead that one country's
- security concerns were no excuse for holding on to another country's
- territory.
- </p>
- <p> Assad was referring to the Golan Heights, which Israel captured
- in the 1967 war. He had told Clinton, he said, that Syria was
- ready to establish "peaceful, normal relations with Israel in
- return for Israel's full withdrawal from the Golan," as spelled
- out in several U.N. Security Council resolutions. That sounds
- like a simple swap, but Israel has not agreed to withdraw completely.
- Rabin wants to pull back in stages over several years, testing
- in the process whether Syria's idea of peace includes diplomatic
- relations, open borders, free trade and tourism.
- </p>
- <p> The Syrian leader also apparently outfoxed Clinton on the terrorism
- issue. U.S. officials say that in private talks Assad not only
- deplored terror attacks but twice promised to repeat his condemnation
- at the press conference, with specific reference to last month's
- bus bombing in Tel Aviv, which killed 23 people. But he failed
- to do so and even denied that terrorism had been discussed "as
- a separate topic." That forced the White House into a scramble
- to revise the impression. Flying out of Damascus, Clinton told
- reporters he regretted Assad did not "take the opportunity to
- say in public what he said to me in private about his deep regret
- about the loss of innocent lives and particularly the bus bombing."
- </p>
- <p> As Clinton headed home by way of Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, Israeli
- and American officials were also busy recalibrating their messages
- about progress in the Golan negotiations. To keep the tone positive,
- Israel's officials said they were encouraged by Assad's use
- at one point in his press conference of the formulation "full
- withdrawal for full peace." Clinton, meanwhile, was worried
- that he might have oversold his accomplishment. In what one
- of his aides called an effort to "modulate," Clinton began speaking
- of the possibility of progress, rather than actual progress.
- </p>
- <p> Rabin, who has been at this task for so many years, summed it
- up best: "This is the essence of the peacemaking process. Be
- patient." That advice certainly applies to the U.S. as well.
- Assad looks on the peace process partly as a way to improve
- his relations with Washington and insists he will negotiate
- with Israel only through the U.S. The Israelis, though stirred
- by Clinton's vow to "stand with you now and always," would prefer
- direct talks. In their absence, Israel welcomes the U.S. as
- middleman. "There is," Clinton said aboard Air Force One, "a
- very high level of confidence in the U.S. among all the parties."
- Secretary of State Warren Christopher is due back in the region
- in a few weeks for more shuttle diplomacy, and now that Clinton
- has stepped into the peace process, the parties hope he will
- stay in.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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