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AMERICAN
CANCER
SOCIEW '
Shamir Shifts Burden
Of Peace Onto Arabs
WOLF BLITZER
Capitol Correspondent
B
y proposing Palestin-
ian elections on the
West Bank and Gaza
and managing to win U.S.
support for the idea, Prime
Minister Yitzhak Shamir has
cleverly shifted the diplo-
matic pressure away from
Israel and on to the Arab
states and the Palestinians.
He has, at least for the time
being, derailed talk of an in-
ternational conference and
bought some time in avoiding
a serious confrontation with
the Bush administration.
• Ibp U.S. officials are at-
tempting to win Arab back-
ing for the election proposal.
While aware of the enormous
problems in getting Israel
and the Palestinians to agree
on the specific arrangements
for the elections, the
Americans still sense there is
an opening for success.
An official said that with
the lowest common denomi-
nator proposal "Shamir
bought six months."
But the Americans are will-
ing to go through the mo-
tions. Indeed, some well-
placed U.S. officials suspect
that the Palestinian position,
as expressed by Yassir
Arafat's wing of the Palestine
. Liberation Organization, may
be somewhat more flexible
than meets the eye.
Whether Shamir and his
aides like it or not, U.S. of-
ficials are convinced that no
elections in the territories are
possible without the tacit en-
dorsement of the PLO. Arafat
and his supporters — both in-
side and outside the ter-
ritories — could easily derail
any move toward the ballot
box.
For elections to take place,
U.S. officials said, the PLO
chairman is going to have to
support the idea.
"There are the faint begin-
nings of an Israeli-Palestinian
negotiation here to be carried
out by public pronounce-
ments, through the medium
of the United States and
perhaps by other means,"
read a recent Washington Post
editorial. "It is not much, but
it is all that seems to be stir-
ring, now that could provide
relief from the raw test of
wills taking place on the West
Bank in Israel's
`neighborhood: "
Bush and Baker, by all ac-
counts, are sensitive to
Israel's concerns. They want
to see strengthened U.S.-Is-
raeli ties. But Israeli officials
and others also agree that the
president and the secretary of
state are not as intrinsically
supportive of Israel as were
their predecessors.
"There wasn't a whole lot of
warmth there," one Israeli
participant commented. "It's
not the same as it was with
[Former Secretary of State
George] Shultz."
Former U.N. Ambassador
Jeane Kirkpatrick, writing in
Arafat and his
supporters, both
inside and outside
the territories,
could easily derail
any move toward
the ballot box.
her Los Angeles Times syn-
dicated column the other day,
criticized the Bush ad-
ministration for so far not be-
ing supportive enough of
Israel. "So far," she said, "the
Bush administration has not
encouraged Arab rulers to
make peace with Israel, nor
to establish diplomatic rela-
tions nor has it adopted any
other measures that might
give the JeWish state con-
fidence in the reliability of its
neighbors.
"Still, the Bush administra-
tion has offered support for
the idea of elections on the
West Bank and Gaza, and
that is powerful evidence that
the President and the Secre-
tary of State understand that
legitimacy comes neither
from international diplomacy
nor from UN resolutions, but
from the consent of the
governed." 0
Arab Group's
Petition Denied
wo
Washington (JTA) — The
Bush administration formal-
ly has rejected an Arab-
American group's petition
challenging a trade benefit
that the United States ex- II
tends to Israel.
However, the United States
will require identifying labels
on goods from the West Bank,
so they will not be given the
trade preferences accorded
goods made in Israel proper.
Israel was "found to meet
the program's eligibility stan-
dards and will continue to be
eligible" for benefits under
the 12-year-old Generalized
System of Preferences pro-
gram, said U.S. Trade