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Putting Pressure
On Mr. Arafat
JAMES D. BESSER WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT
y
assir Arafaes spotty record
of living up to his promis-
es is becoming a hotter po-
litical issue by the day.
Several weeks ago, the Zionist
Organization of America (ZOA)
took the initiative by creating a
Peace Accord Monitoring Group
in Congress, a body specifically
focusing on the question of Mr.
Arafat's violations. The ZOA ef-
fort lined up some 31 members
in the House and 15 senators.
This week, the group announced
new co-chairs on the Senate side
— Sen. Men Specter, R-Pa., and
Sen. Richard C. Shelby, D-Al.
The ZOA pitch played well on
Capitol Hill, where Israel's new
embrace of the PLO has always
been regarded with skepticism
— and where possible American
aid to the Palestinian group is a
political hot button.
"Concerns are growing in Con-
gress over the PLO's numerous
and serious violations of these ac-
cords," said ZOA president Mor-
ton Klein. "'They're worried that
Morton Klein
But in the past week, the sig-
nals have become a little clearer.
Last week, the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee
(AIPAC) issued an unusual pub-
lic statement criticizing the re-
cent State Department report
card on the PLO.
That report "did not hold the
PLO to the appropriate standard,
in terms of its failure to condemn
terrorist groups like Hamas," said
AIPAC executive director Neal
Sher. "And when Arafat has
made statements against the vi-
Officials in
Jerusalem wanted
to avoid new
debates.
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Men Specter
if these violations continue, it will
endanger the peace process. They
feel that this is the time to speak
out —before more territory is giv-
en away."
Lawmakers, he said, are par-
ticularly concerned that taxpay-
er dollars "don't go to an
organization that has not trans-
formed itself from the terrorist
organization it always was."
Last month, a number of ma-
jor pro-Israel groups stood on the
sidelines, in part because of
mixed signals from officials in
Jerusalem who wanted to avoid
disruptive new debates as Israel
and the PLO began implement-
ing their deal for limited Pales-
tinian self-rule.
olence, it was like pulling teeth
to extract them."
The big pro-Israel lobbying
group emphasized its continuing
support for the peace process; sev-
eral Washington sources sug-
gested that the timing of AIPAC's
announcement was related to the
Israeli government's decision that
a little more pressure on the PLO
might actually boost the negoti-
ations.
One Israel official expressed
satisfaction with the AIPAC
statement. The PLO, this source
said, has been trying to expand
the limits of the Gaza-Jericho
agreement. A little nudge from
Congress might help convince
them that there isn't as much
wiggle room as Mr. Arafat be-
lieved, the official said.
Meanwhile, Rep. Ben Gilman,
R-N .Y. , and Rep. Howard
Berman, D- Calif., were gather-
ing signatures for a letter to Sec-
retary of State Warren
Christopher saying much the
same thing.