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Golan settlers, said it is this sen-
timent that will foil the govern-
ment's plans. "We don't think
there's going to be an agreement
with Syria because the Israeli
voters won't allow it. Our goal is
to prevent the issue from being
decided before the (Oct. 29, 1996)
election," Mr. Heitner said.
Since late May, when Israel
and Syria announced they would
resume negotiations, and Prime
Minister Rabin said that one of
the Golan's 32 settlements might
be uprooted in the first stage of a
withdrawal, the Golan Jews have
been hosting right-wing politi-
cians on solidarity visits about
every other day. These gather-
ings and other demonstrations
will continue indefinitely, Mr.
Heitner said.
But he and his cohorts on the
Heights are afraid that if an
agreement with Syria is reached,
the 2-1 popular consensus
against relinquishing the Golan
might give way. "Rabin will try
to brainwash the people with
fear," Mr. Heitner predicted.
"He'll tell the voters: 'We've al-
ready reached an agreement with
Syria, and if you reject it in a ref-
erendum, the Syrians will go to
war against us! "
Peace Now leader Tsali
Reshefs only worry is that Israeli
and Syrian negotiators won't
reach a peace agreement. If one
is reached, he predicts, Israeli at-
titudes concerning the Golan will
undergo an "upheaval."
"If you look at the polls taken
here in the years before Anwar
Sadat's visit (in 1977), you'll see
that Israeli opinion against giv-
ing up the whole of the Sinai for
peace with Egypt wasn't 2-1, but
4-1.
"As long as there is no agree-
ment, Israelis feel there's no one
for us to talk to," continues Mr.
Reshef. "But the moment (Syri-
an President Hafez al-) Assad
demonstrates his readiness for
peace, there will be an upheaval
in public opinion. As soon as Ra-
bin and Assad are photographed
shaking hands, it will be a whole
new ballgame. The shift in pub-
lic opinion will be almost auto-
matic."
Until then, Mr. Reshef says, it
is too early to go out into the
streets. But if the handshake ma-
terializes, he adds, "Objective re-
ality will count for more than
which side has the biggest
demonstrations."
So there is a direct contradic-
tion between the analyses of the
right and the left on this matter.
The settlers are confident that
public opinion will stay the hand
of the government. The peace
camp believes the government,
with a peace treaty in its hand,
will sway the opinions of the peo-
ple. By most assessments, the
rough deadline for an Israeli-Syr-
ian agreement is Jan. 1, 1996 —
seven months to go to find out
who's right. El