ISRAEL High Noon At The Israel Corral There is a Wild West atmosphere in the post-war Middle East, and Jerusalem's gun shops are doing a brisk business. INA FRIEDMAN Special to The Jewish News W hatever optimism may have wafted through Israel at the close of the Gulf war has pretty much dissipated by now and been replaced by a sense of deja vu as the coun- try was hit by a new wave of Palestinian violence on both sides of the Green Line. In Israel proper the main modus operandi has been stabbings by individual Pa- lestinians; in the West Bank it has been firing at Israeli settlers from ambushes laid on deserted country roads. The combination of the two sent a ripple of near-hysteria through Israel this week, above all through the top echelons of the government and its security arms. As a result, a Wild West at- mosphere has invaded the Middle East — with the blessings of the government and none other than Israel's chief of police. During the six weeks of the Gulf war, the Palestin- ians were closed up tight in the territories and for the most part inside their homes. But almost as soon as the curfew was lifted and laborers began to trickle back to work in Israel, the violence resumed. The first victim had his throat cut in Jerusalem's Old City before Israelis were even allowed to dismantle their sealed rooms. The stabbing of four women in Jerusalem a week later, one day before the arrival of the American secretary of state, was dubbed "a message for Baker." Over this past week, hard- ly a day has gone by without a knifing somewhere in the country, augmented by two ambushes in the West Bank (the first taking the life of a 30-year-old Jewish settler). In the midst of the in- tifada's fourth year, Israel's police and army stand relatively helpless against Ina Friedman writes from Jerusalem. these acts of random and in- dividual terror. Blockades on the main roads are meant to ensure that only Palestinians with permits to work in Israel (granted after security checks) can cross the Green Line. But they have proven highly ineffective — partly because Israeli employers prefer to flout the regula- tions. The resulting frustration has spawned a list of sugges- tions for tightening security that range from increasing the number of deportations and sealing or destroying houses (the army's prescrip- tion throughout the intifada) to closing Israel to all Pales- tinians, regardless of the po- litical and economic conse- quences (the police). The government has ac- cepted neither approach as a sure-fire solution. Instead, it has sent defense minister and minister of police back "From now on we're all sheriffs with a license to kill at our own discretion. All this stems from the fact that the govern- ment doesn't know how to deal with the Intifada." — Yoel Marcus to the drawing board to work out a more promising pro- gram over the Passover holiday. One sign of the general chagrin is that on the polit- ical level, the suggestions for coping with the violence has made for some strange bedfellows. Two prominent doves (Labor's Chaim Ramon and Shinui's Amnon Rubinstein) have teamed up, so to speak, with ultra-right-winger Rehavam Ze'evi in ad- vocating that the territories be closed — though for very different reasons. The doves see it as the start of a process that will "gradually separate Israel from the territories" — to A young Israeli tries a handgun in a Jerusalem weapons store. their mutual benefit — whereas Mr. Ze'evi argued before the Cabinet that "all the workers from the ter- ritories are potential murderers." The Right itself is simi- larly divided between those who back the army's pro- posals, those who back the police, and those who were simply embarrassed by the police minister's half-frantic suggestion — which has since been withdrawn — that' all Palestinian bache- lors up to the age of 30 be summarily barred from Israel. ("In the next stage they'll bar the entry of red- headed, bald, tall, short ; lame and pot-bellied men," one columnist quipped.) At the beginning of the week, Geula Cohen of the Tehiya Party (on the Likud's right flank) complained that punishments should be meted out not only to Pales- tinians who steal into. Israel without work permits but to their Israeli employers. Indeed, in the middle of the week the police began arresting and interrogating Israeli contractors whose Pa- lestinian workers lacked the proper papers, and some were fined up to $900 for tri- fling with the law. But the biggest flap resulted from statements made by top-ranking police officers. First the com- mander of the Tel Aviv district proposed that any Arab spotted on a bus should be marched straight to the nearest police station and turned in. Since Palestinians belong on work sites during the day, and back in the territories at night, any found on public transport or simply on the street, he implied, is justifiably suspect of being up to no good. Then the chief of police himself invited the 300,000 Israelis who hold weapons licenses to tote their guns and use them whenever they deemed it necessary. "Anyone who feels that his life is in danger can and must shoot to defend himself' he said this week — prompting a howl of dismay from the press. "From now on we're all sheriffs with a license to kill at our own discretion," wrote Ha'aretz columnist Yoel Marcus, adding, "All this blather (the variety of measures broached for cop- ing with the knifings) stems from the regrettable fact that the government doesn't know how to deal with the intifada." The upsurge of sales in Israel's weapons shops seems to confirm that the citizenry perceives the police as being helpless, so that it's every man for himself. One store in Jerusalem is doing a brisk business in everything from handguns (mostly for men) to mace spray and "electric shockers," the latest hit for the ladies. Thirty-four-year-old Shlomo Gogek, who came into the shop for target prac- tice, has carried a gun for 10 years. But although he has never yet drawn it, he be- lieves that "every able- bodied person should carry one, too. If it will save one person's life, it'll be worth all the trouble." Itzik Mizrachi, the shop's owner, notes that sales first ._ at the start of the picked up Gulf crisis ("when the Pales- tinians believed they were going to take over the place") and got their second wind when it ended ("when they realized they were not"). "Everyone knows what should be done," he snaps, referring to the idea of "transferring" the Arabs out of Israel and the territories. "But they hide behind all kinds of qualms. There's no prime minister in Israel. There hasn't been one for years now." Others agree with that assessment, but for the op- posite reason. "The undermining of do- mestic security is the price we have to pay for Yitzhak Shamir's unwillingness to negotiate concessions in the territories," Mr. Marcus wrote in his popular column this week. "In the mean- while, when every Yankel, Itzik, and Yoske draws his gun, we'd all better hit the floor. They may be acting with sanction," he con- cludes, "but who knows whether they can aim?" ❑ THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 33