It wants recognition, legitimacy and demanding detailed answers — security in the region, an end to the about the future borders of the Jew- decades of suspicion, hatred, hostili- ish state. In the real world, Israel will prob- ty and war. It wants urgently to convert at ably have to return territories on at least some of its swords into plow- least some fronts and cede a large shares, to transform a chunk of its measure of control on others. The land most likely to be relin- military expenditure into civilian quished is the Golan Heights, a pro- development. It wants normal economic and cess that will be accompanied by the trade relations with its neighbors sort of iron-clad demilitarization and the free movement of people agreements and international guar- across recognized international antees that accompanied the return frontiers. It wants to stop being of the Sinai Desert to Egypt. Like the Sinai experience, the re- measure of consensus within Israel Sparta and become Athens — all turn of the Golan is likely to be a this at no further territorial cost. that this strategically vital territory bitter affair, encountering impas- In a perfect world, Israel would should not be relinquished and there sioned resistance from the 15,000 like continued control, if not actual was little dissent when former Jewish settlers who have made their Prime Minister Menachem Begin sovereignty, over the West Bank homes in the area. and Gaza; unquestioned rule over an extended Israeli law over the ter- But unlike the full-blown peace ritory, one step short of outright undivided Jerusalem; control over treaty it received from Egypt in re- the Golan Heights. annexation, 10 years ago. turn for its pain and concessions, Is- But conditions at the various con- Israel's opening offer regarding rael will probably also have to settle ference tables in Madrid will be far the Golan Heights is likely to be a for something less from Syria, per- from perfect. Like it or not, the Arab request for a long-term lease of the haps an "understanding" of non- parties, supported by the United land while a semblance of mutual belligerency. States and the Soviet Union, will be trust and confidence is established. In the West Bank and Gaza Strip, The remainder of the territories asking searching questions and that were occupied by Israel in the Six Day War present difficulties and problems of a far more awesome quality. By far the most complicated is that of east Jerusalem, which was formally annexed by Israel two months after its capture in 1967 and which is now regarded as the "indivisible, eternal capital of Isra- el." So firmly does Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir cleave to Israel's sovereignty over Jerusalem that he has refused to permit Palestinian residents of the city to attend any stage of the peace talks and has threatened to pull out of the process if Jerusalem became a subject for negotiation. The West Bank (Judea and Sam- aria) and the Gaza Strip are only slightly less complicated. Israel has not only ruled out any concessions in these territories but it has re- jected a request from Washington to freeze its settlement activities, a decision which has jeopardized the $10 billion loan guarantee. Instead, Israel is proposing a re- turn to the 1978 Camp David Ac- cords, which offer the Palestinians "full autonomy" — the freedom to run their own daily affairs with Is- raeli security forces in place — and the promise of negotiations over the final status of the territories to start after a three-year period. What is on the Israeli wish list? What does it want out of the negoti- The intifada was a major political success for the Palestinians ations? before turning inward, with Arabs killing Arabs. It wants peace with its neighbors. Israel Wants Peace, But Not At Any Price The land most likely to be relinquished is the Golan Heights, with east Jerusalem the firmest territory in Israeli hands. HELEN DAVIS Foreign Correspondent sk Israeli officials what they are prepared to give in exchange for peace and they invariably reply: "Peace?' While they politely decline to share future negotiating positions and strategies with the media, their tough opening postures are clear. The Israelis will, in fact, be fight- ing on two fronts — political and strategic — when they confront their adversaries in Madrid on Tuesday at a peace conference to be co-sponsored by the United States and the Soviet Union. Israel's quarrel with the Palestin- ians over the future of the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and Jerusalem is essentially political, but the de- bate over the Golan Heights goes to the heart of Israel's purely strategic concerns. The Golan Heights present both the easiest and hardest problem to unknot — easiest because the moun- tain area does not possess the pow- erful historic or religious connota- tions embedded in the rest of the oc- cupied territories; hardest because it offers a significant strategic ad- vantage to Syria, Israel's most seri- ous military adversary. The windswept piece of real estate commands an uninterrupted view across Israel's breadbasket, the fer- tile Galilee valley, whose in- habitants served as live targets for Syrian snipers before it was con- quered by Israel during the Six Day War of 1967. There has always been a broad THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 27