Mideast

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CHRISTOPHER

page 65

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Subject to prior sale. Rebates apply where applicable.

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Option to purchase at lease end at predetermined price. Lessee resp. for excess wear & tear. Subject to 4% use lax. To gel Ill. x pyrnts. x 48.

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643-7660

sent — embraced positions
more radical and rigid than
those of the "outside PLO."
The proverbial fuse in the
blowup between the "insid-
ers" and "outsiders" was the
draft of a "joint declaration
of principles" that the
American mediators have
been trying to sell to the
Palestinians for months.
Designed to break the
impasse in the talks, the
document was meant to be a
compromise on the terms of
autonomy for the Pales-
tinians. But the latter were
piqued by the fact that it
made no reference to the
geographical jurisdiction of
their self-governing authori-
ty (they wanted it to extend
over all the territory cap-
tured in 1967) or to the sta-
tus of east Jerusalem
(which the Israelis will not
discuss until the second
phase of talks, on the final
settlement).
Worse yet, in Palestinian
eyes, the American paper
called the West Bank, Gaza
Strip, and east Jerusalem
"disputed" rather than
"occupied" territory. Noth-
ing in their proposal was set
in concrete, the Americans
noted, and the Palestinians
were invited to negotiate its
details. But the latter were
so miffed by the document's
"pro-Israeli bias" that they
were pleased by Chairman
Arafat's initial order not to
accept it even as a rough
basis for negotiation.
Last week, however —
under pressure from the
Arab governments involved
in the peace process and
mindful of the American
promise to urge Saudi
Arabia and other oil states
to resume the flow of funds
to the bankrupt PLO in
return for progress in the
talks — Chairman Arafat
reversed himself. At the last
minute he ordered the dele-
gation to present Mr.
Christopher with a counter-
proposal (drawn up by
senior PLO official Mah-
moud Abbas and Egyptian
Foreign Minister Amro
Moussa) that yielded on the
main issues which had
stymied the talks.
The Palestinians would
not insist, for example, that
Israeli settlements in the
territories fall under the
jurisdiction of the autonomy
regime, or that the status of
Jerusalem be immediately
discussed. It was over this
flip-flop maneuver, as well
as their right to have a say
in decisions, rather than
merely "serve as the mail-
man," that the leading nego-
tiators were threatening to
resign.

It escaped no one's atten-
tion, of course, that a revolt
— contrived, perhaps — by
the remaining members of
the delegation would leave
Israel and the United States
with the choice of either
despairing of the talks with
the Palestinians or negotiat-
ing directly with the PLO-
Tunis (which the Pales-
tinians have been pushing
for all along).
Movement in the latter
direction seemed to advance
last week when word leaked
out that Israel's Environ-
ment Minister Yossi Sarid,
of the left-wing Meretz
Party, had held talks in
Cairo last month with
Chairman Arafat's close
political adviser Nabil
Sha'ath.
Yet hardly was the ink
dry on that headline before
both sides were reminded
that a shift to high-level
contacts was not the only
possibility awaiting them if
the "Madrid format" were to
fail.
Late last week, as Mr.
Christopher was winding up
his visit, three Israeli sol-
diers were killed in two
actions perpetrated by
Hamas gunmen in the West
Bank, threatening to start
the cycle of violence and
retaliation all over again.
Israel exercised immedi-
ate restraint. But that won't
hold for long if it appears
that the moderate, prag-
matic, mainstream Pales-
tinians have stopped talking
— however briefly —
because they can't resolve
their differences among
themselves.

❑

Hamas Study
Is Revised

Washington (JTA) — The
Library of Congress will
rename and revise a con-
troversial report formerly
titled "Hamas: Freedom
Fighters or Terrorists?"
Joseph Ross, director of the
library's Congressional
Research Service, which
issued the May 14 report on
the Islamic extremist
movement, said that "an
update and revision of the
report on Hamas is currently
nearing completion."
In an Aug. 4 letter to Rep.
Charles Schumer,D-N.Y.,
Mr. Ross said that
"developments have oc-
curred since the report was
issued and new facts have
come to our attention. The
title has been changed. ❑

