YEAR IN REVIEW 5748 YEAR IN REVIEW • and succinctly: "The question that I must ask you," he wrote, "is what do you see as the alternative?" Not one of Israel's critics, he continued, has provided an answer, adding that the choice is not between quelling the riots and sitting down to negotiate, but between restoring calm or allowing the violence to continue and spread. The Shultz Initiative The issue of whom Israel can talk to in the pursuit of peace dominated Mideast events. U.S. AN ARAB SUMMIT was held in November in Amman, and amid claims of strengthened Arab unity, the clear winner was Syria's Hafez Assad (at left), who made up with Iraqi president Sadam Hussein (right). Assad was rewarded with $2 billion in aid from his fellow Arab leaders. FOREST FIRES became a form of protest for the Palestinians, who managed to destroy thousands of acres of Israeli land. ABU JIHAD, the PLO's No. 2 man, was assasinated at his home in Tunis in April, and Palestinians reacted with grief and anger. Israel neither confirmed nor denied that it was responsible for the killing. SHULTZ SHUTTLES were a common sight this year, with the American secretary of state traveling to the Mideast several times in an effort, ultimately futile, to achieve a breakthrough on peace talks. TRAGEDY IN BEITA took place during Passover when a skirmish between a group of young Israeli hikers and Arab villagers led to the death of 14-year-old Tirza Porat, the first Jewish civilian fatality of the uprisings. Secretary of State George Shultz, whose increased interest in the Mideast resulted in numerous trips to the region and an effort to forge a negotiating breakthrough, eventually devised a plan. The Shultz formula called for an international opening to peace talks, largely ceremonial, that would be followed by an interim agreement involving elec- tions in the West Bank and Gaza as a prelude to Palestinian autonomy in the territories. The negotiations would then move on to determine the final status of the territories, with an exchange of peace for territories. A key element was that the Arab delegation would be comprised of Palestinian Arabs from the West Bank and Gaza as well as Jordanians ap- pointed by King Hussein. In Washington, 30 U.S. senators, including a number of Israel's strongest supporters, endorsed the initiative, calling on Israeli Prime Minister Shamir to accept the principle of exchanging land for peace. In the Mideast, though, only Egypt endorsed the plan, since she had nothing to lose. Syria, Jordan, the PLO were all opposed. So was Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, who came to Washington in March to make his case. The visit had all the makings of a showdown and there was grave con- cern that Israel would suffer in the eyes of the Ad- ministration, if Shamir appeared unwilling to take political risks for peace. Without rejecting the Shultz plan outright, the embattled Israeli leader argued that land-for-peace was not the issue. Rather, he told an enthusiastic crowd of 3,000 UJA Young Leadership delegates in Washington, the issue was the Arab motive for seek- ing territory in Judea, Samaria and Gaza. "I am astounded at some people's short memory," he said. "Did we have peace when we did not have these ter- ritories?" Shamir asserted that Israel's decision was "a matter of life and death — of our very existence," and that "only those who shed their blood can decide what risks to take in the pursuit of peace." That argument made sense to many Jews in this country, but angered others who felt that American Jews had a right to voice their concerns to Israel and that, besides, Shamir spoke for only half of the Israeli government. Indeed, the rift in the unity coalition between Likud's Shamir and Labor's Shimon Peres, the Foreign Minister, deteriorated further this year. When George Shultz came to the Mideast to shuttle between Jerusalem and Arab THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 121