Roth Furs. PRICED A LOT LESS THAN YOU'D EXPECT. A LOT CLOSER THAN You THINK. Mideast Tapping Into The Water Issue A Jaffee Center study says Israel should hold onto water resources in the West Bank and Gaza. INA FRIEDMAN ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT erusalem — Water, a com- would have disastrous conse- modity most of us take quences for the country's water quite for granted, is in economy. (A Syrian attempt to such short supply in some do so in 1965 was countered by parts of the Middle East that, Israeli artillery fire.) more than being just a vital re- Israel also shares a number source, it's considered a strate- of aquifers with what will soon gic asset. Those who have it become the Palestinian au- wield power, actual or potential. tonomous region. One is the So it's hardly surprising that source of well water for the water is, or will be, high on the three northern valleys (Jezreel, agenda of almost every forum Harod, and Beth Shean) that in the Middle East peace talks: comprise Israel's bread basket. the bilateral talks between Is- Another supplies part of rael and each of its neighbors; Jerusalem and the surround- and the multilateral talks, ing Jewish settlements. A third where the focus is on the is the source of drinking water preservation and development for Tel Aviv and environs, the of shared resources, from the very heartland of metropolitan Jordan River to the Dead and Israel. The question now is who Red seas. will control these jointly ex- Each front has its own set of ploited resources and how much problems and scenarios. Among the more sensitive negotiations on water rights, however, will be between Israel and the Pales- tinians, if only because they must often draw on the same reserves. In fact, water is already a bone of con- tention between the sides: the Palestinians have been com- plaining for The Beit Shean reservoir. years that Is- rael's Civil Administration in water will each community the territories has allocated up have the right to draw. to 200 percent more water to Is- That, in turn, has inspired an raelis living in the West Bank interesting debate over how and Gaza than to Palestinian best to approach the water is- consumers. Now they will have sue: as chiefly a strategic ques- to jointly decide how to divide tion or as essentially an up the limited water on which economic one. both peoples depend. The question arose after the The tricky thing about water publication, in the Hebrew dai- is that it has no respect for na- ly Ha'aretz, of the gist of a re- tional frontiers. Rivers that port prepared for the Jaffee shape the very character of one Center for Strategic Studies at nation (like the Nile) may orig- Tel Aviv University by water inate in another; the sources of experts Yehoshua Schwartz well water (groundwater re- and Aharon Zohar, in coopera- serves or aquifers) may extend tion with Tahal (Israel's Water across borders and be drawn Planning Company). The most upon by more than one country. intriguing thing about the re- Israel is a classic example in port is that two successive agri- both these instances. culture ministers tried to have The sources of the Jordan, it suppressed, albeit for very dif- which feeds the Sea of Galilee ferent reasons. (Israel's main national reser- According to Ha'aretz defense voir), are on the Golan Heights editor Ze'ev Schiff, who broke and in Lebanon, and any at- the story, former Agriculture tempt to dam or divert them Minister Rafael Eitan insisted j A special gift for those special occasions. An elegant fur from the respected furrier, Roth Furs. Our selection is of the highest quality. And our prices are a lot less than you ever imagined. Right now, savings of $1000 or more are no more than 20 minutes. See us today. It's well worth the drive. 4 0 @Furs, inc. 313-656-3700 335 Main Street- Downtown Rochester Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10 am-6 pm, Thurs. 10am-9 pm miL MANN West Bloomfield • On the Boardwalk 6893 Orchard Lake Rd. • Just South of Maple • 626-3362 Downtown Birmingham 136 N. Woodward • Just North of Maple • 647-0550 Mon.-Wed. & Sat. 10-7; Thurs. & Fri. 10-9; Sun. 12-5 that it be shelved because it pm- posed lines of withdrawal from the West Bank, which was anathema to his political out- look and that of the Shamir gov- ernment. His successor, Labor's Ya'akov Tzur, has tried to keep it under wraps because he be- lieves it reveals tactical posi- tions that Israel might employ in its negotiations. Either way, the crux of the report is now in the public do- main, and its conclusion is that Israel should do everything in its power to hold on to its exist- ing water assets in both the West Bank and the Golan Heights. If pressed to make con- cessions, it should comply only in return for sig- nificant political benefits plus guarantees of re- liable supplies of imported water from Turkey, Egypt, and per- haps Lebanon and/or financing for des a- li- nization facili- ties. In making its decision, howev- er, Israel should take into consid- eration the de- gree to which it has already be- come dependent upon the shared reserves. The West Bank uses just 7 percent of the water from the central mountain aquifer, for example, while Israel uses all the rest. Clearly, then, the safest so- lution, from Jerusalem's stand- point, is to insist upon redrawing the borders to incor- porate the main aquifers into sovereign Israeli territory. Offsetting this approach are the findings of a study con- ducted by Zvi Eckstein and Yu- val Nachtom of Tel Aviv University, together with Dan Zakkai of the Bank of Israel, that treats water as an eco- nomic resource, rather than a strategic one. "If we strip the problem of the visceral fears about water," writes Ha'aretz economic editor Nehemiah Stressler, "we'll find that what we have is an eco- nomic problem: how to reach an effective distribution of re- sources." ❑