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January 15, 1993 - Image 28

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-01-15

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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Tough Guys: Israeli officials do not expect movement in the peace talks be-•.1
fore the spring, after President Clinton has had a chance to settle in. The
toughest negotiations are with the Palestinians.

he said this to reporters in Wash-
ington, between meetings with
Bush and Clinton administration
officials.
Pressure, after all, can be ap-
plied to either or both sides. Is-
rael would like the Palestinians
to stick solely to the issue of in-
terim autonomy, while the Pales-
tinians want Israel to give them
indications that once the five-year
autonomy period were over, there
would be a change in sovereign-
ty in the West Bank and Gaza. If
the Clinton administration were
to intervene on this major stick-
ing point, who knows toward
which side they would lean?
Likewise with the Syrians:
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
has offered to make some unde-
fined territorial compromise on
the Golan Heights in exchange
for peace, while Syrian President
Hafez Assad has insisted on the
return of every inch of the Golan
before peace can be made. If the
Clinton administration were to
"mediate," to offer compromise
proposals, Israel could find itself
with a new, totally untenable def-
inition of territorial compromise,
this one put forward not by Syr-
ia, but by its closest ally.

Still, one might think that Is-
rael would almost be willing to
countenance some sort of direct
American intervention in the
talks, because the negotiations
appear to be utterly deadlocked.
But they don't appear this way
to the Rabin administration; the .4
prime minister predicted recent-
ly that Israel would make peace
with at least one Arab partner 4
this year, and this optimism is
shared by his foreign policy lieu- 4
tenants.
Mr. Rabinovitch said he be-
heves an agreement on the prin-
ciples of peace with Syria, if not
a hard, final treaty, could be
signed in a matter of months. At - 1
present, he said, Israel is waiting
to hear President Assad's decla-
ration on the nature of the peace .4
he has in mind.
"There are no deep-seated
problems between Israel and
Jordan and Lebanon, and there
is plenty of good will with regard
to terminating the state of hos-
tilities," Mr. Rabinovitch added.
But, he said, "Lebanon and Jor-
dan will have to wait," because
Lebanon cannot move without
Syria's approval, and Jordan's
King Hussein has always waited

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