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- <text id=89TT3245>
- <title>
- Dec. 11, 1989: Middle East:Stuck In The Stone Age
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Dec. 11, 1989 Building A New World
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 59
- MIDDLE EAST
- Still Stuck in the Stone Age
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As the Palestinian uprising enters its third year, both sides
- have reason to mourn
- </p>
- <p>By Jon D. Hull/Jerusalem
- </p>
- <p> Beatings. Mass arrests. Rubber, plastic and lead bullets.
- The Israeli army has deployed all these and more against the
- Palestinians in a futile effort to smash the revolt that
- erupted in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip on Dec. 9,
- 1987. In the two years since then, Israel's politicians have
- bickered endlessly and fruitlessly in the search for a solution.
- The intifadeh goes on, the deaths go on, the Arab-Israeli
- stalemate goes on.
- </p>
- <p> Back in 1987, few thought the revolt would last long enough
- to mark a first anniversary, let alone a second. Israeli
- leaders insisted the rebellion would be quickly crushed. But a
- second year without a settlement pays credit to the
- Palestinians' remarkable endurance and ingenuity. Armed with
- stones and Molotov cocktails, Arab youths have managed to
- confound the Israeli army, regain their tattered pride, and
- remind the world that Israel's "enlightened" occupation is a
- painful contradiction in terms. Yet many Palestinians fear their
- revolution has stalled. Mass demonstrations have given way to
- smaller skirmishes waged by a hard-core group of activists, and
- Israel has yet to concede so much as an inch of land. Meanwhile,
- the world's attention has been diverted by more dramatic events
- elsewhere. Frustrated and embittered, many Palestinians wonder
- whether they can afford the price necessary to reach a
- compromise.
- </p>
- <p> Since the first fusillade of stones and bullets two years
- ago, more than 750 Palestinians have been killed and tens of
- thousands wounded. Sixty have been expelled, and 6,000 remain
- imprisoned without trial. Israeli troops have sealed or
- demolished at least 400 homes. At the same time, the Jewish
- population in the territories has increased 12%, to nearly
- 80,000, not including East Jerusalem, and the government has
- quietly inaugurated six new settlements.
- </p>
- <p> Yet none of this has spelled defeat for the Palestinians.
- Ironically, the uprising's survival is assured by the army's
- harsh measures, which are drastic enough to guarantee hatred
- among Arabs but not to end the revolt. The methods Israel has
- refined to keep the intifadeh in check may be more responsible
- for Palestinian solidarity than the slogans of the Arab
- leadership, so that the uprising has been institutionalized as
- a self-perpetuating expression of pride and anger. But a growing
- number of Arab extremists argue that stones are no longer
- sufficient. "The only way we're going to get rid of the Israelis
- is with force," says a young activist from Nablus. "We have to
- make them suffer." So far, Palestinians have succeeded in
- killing 42 Jews, most of them civilians. The activist says
- several hundred more will have to die before Israel can be
- brought to the negotiating table.
- </p>
- <p> Palestinian guerrillas armed with automatic weapons offered
- a grim demonstration of that philosophy last month when they
- ambushed an Israeli patrol in the Gaza Strip and killed two
- soldiers. But stepped-up Palestinian violence will only beget
- more violence from Israel. Warned Brigadier General Zvi Poleg,
- who commands Israeli forces in Gaza: "The rules of the game
- change when lethal weapons are used against soldiers."
- </p>
- <p> That is precisely what worries Palestinian moderates, who
- fear that any escalation would jeopardize hard-won
- international sympathy. Already, the carefully nurtured image
- of a rebellion fought by children with stones has been tarnished
- by a gruesome turn to Arab-vs.-Arab bloodshed. At least 140
- Palestinians have been shot, beaten, stabbed or hacked to death
- by fellow Arabs. Most of the victims were charged with
- collaborating with the occupation.
- </p>
- <p> The Palestinians most hated by their neighbors are those
- who brandish Israeli-provided weapons. In the West Bank village
- of Ya`bad everyone knows -- and shuns -- three Palestinian
- brothers who watch over the community with binoculars, Uzis and
- walkie-talkies. Says a resident: "These traitors carry out the
- army's job, beating people, destroying property and shooting in
- the air day and night just to scare us." Intifadeh leaders have
- made such blatant collaboration a capital offense. Other victims
- are accused of offending Islamic factions by trafficking in
- drugs and sex. And some are the victims of personal vendettas
- or tribal rivalries: the label of collaborator provides a
- convenient cover for settling scores.
- </p>
- <p> To many Israelis, these killings are proof that the
- uprising is merely a brutish expression of Palestinian
- hostility. But that attitude ignores the fundamental
- accomplishments of the intifadeh. Two years of prime-time revolt
- have wrought an extraordinary shift in international, and
- especially U.S., public opinion, convincing many of Israel's
- supporters that the Jewish nation's continued rule over 1.7
- million Arabs is dangerous and absurd. And after decades of
- serving as pawns for larger powers, the Palestinians in the
- West Bank and Gaza have taken control of the Arab struggle
- against Israel, forcing the rest of the Arab world to play
- catch-up. Jordan's King Hussein took his cue last year by
- revoking his claim to the West Bank. Last December P.L.O.
- Chairman Yasser Arafat made capital out of the uprising by
- renouncing terrorism and recognizing Israel's right to exist.
- </p>
- <p> Arafat's excruciating conversion earned the P.L.O. a
- dialogue with Washington, but brought on nightmares in
- Jerusalem. Pressure mounted from the Bush Administration and
- American Jews, and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir finally
- countered with an initiative last spring that calls for
- elections among Palestinians in the territories. Representatives
- chosen there would negotiate a period of autonomy with Israel,
- to be followed by the promise of talks on a final settlement.
- </p>
- <p> Jerusalem has been in the middle of a game of hot potato
- ever since. The main obstacle: how to assemble a Palestinian
- delegation that gives Arafat a voice but allows Israel to
- pretend that the P.L.O. is not party to negotiations. So far,
- no formula has been found. While the U.S. is growing impatient
- with Shamir's delaying tactics, President Bush appears unwilling
- to expend his political capital by pressuring Shamir. Privately,
- many U.S. officials have concluded that Shamir is incapable of
- compromise.
- </p>
- <p> Most Israelis have grown inured to the disturbances. Except
- for annual stints in the reserves, few ever come into contact
- with the violence. "We've simply got used to the intifadeh,"
- says Joseph Alpher, deputy head of the Jaffee Center for
- Strategic Studies in Tel Aviv. "The hardships are not
- unbearable." But the insidious effects are profound, and may
- eventually force Israel to choose between the territorial claims
- of its more extreme politicians and sheer self-preservation.
- </p>
- <p> Israeli moderates warn that the occupation is corrupting
- both the army and society. Says Israeli author David Grossman,
- whose 1988 book, The Yellow Wind, limned the destructive effect
- on Israel's soul of the continued occupation of the West Bank:
- "We are training our youngsters to be cruel and brutal. They
- bring that back home."
- </p>
- <p> Israel's growing number of hard-liners remain unsatisfied
- with what they see as the army's insufficiently tough approach.
- Complains Noam Arnon, a spokesman for settlers in Hebron: "This
- is a war, but the army treats it like a minor disturbance."
- Yuval Ne'eman, a right-wing Knesset member and advocate of
- annexation, accuses the government of outright appeasement.
- "We're moving in the direction of giving up land," he says. "The
- Arabs have brought Mr. Shamir to his knees."
- </p>
- <p> Few Palestinians would agree. Without some movement in the
- peace process, they may soon conclude that further violence is
- the only way to force a political breakthrough. Says Grossman:
- "I'm afraid things will have to get much worse before they
- improve. I'm afraid it will have to become a violent crisis."
- That would suit both Arab and Jewish extremists just fine.
- Israeli hawks have been waiting for an excuse to pull out the
- heavy artillery, and Arab radicals are eager to renew their holy
- war. As the intifadeh enters its third year, both sides seem
- poised for nothing more than further bloodshed.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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