Everybody Does It U) z z Binyamin Netar.yahu: Coming down hard. N o one can claim that there's been any lack of turmoil and recriminations flying between the Israeli government and the opposition during the 4 1/2 months since Binyamin Netanyahu became Israel's prime minister. But it wasn't until last week that what at first appeared as another tempest in a teapot burgeoned into a major po- litical scandal. It began with a blazing front-page headline in Ma'ariv that Maj. Gen. Oren Shahor — the coordinator of activ- ities in the territories, head of the negotiating team on Palestinian civil affairs — was caught "red handed" at a secret "middle-of-the-night" meeting with opposition head Shimon Peres. On the face of it, such contact wasn't a problem — as long as Maj. Gen. Shahor had obtained permission for it from his superiors. He has a number of those, in line with the various hats he wears. As a member of the general staff, he is subordinate to Chief of Staff Amnon Shahak. As coordinator of activities in the territories, he is directly responsible to Defense Minister Yitzhak Mordechai. And as the Israeli head of the subcommittee on civil affairs in negotiations with the Palestinians, he is an emissary of Prime Minister Netanyahu. The problem was that Maj. Gen. Shahor had received the requisite permission from none of them. Questioned by a reporter as he left Mr. Peres' house at 11:30 p.m. last ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT Wednesday, he said that his meeting with the former prime minister was a social one and later stressed that he had not divulged any secret information on the negotiations. But Mr. Netanyahu wasn't buying it. Instead, after consultation with Mr. Mordechai, the prime minister de- cided to suspend Maj. Gen. Shahor from the negotiations pending an investigation of the nature of his contacts with opposition leaders — it turned out that he has met with more than one. He was not suspended as coordinator of activities in the territories, though Mr. Netanyahu told the press that one of his associates wanted the general summarily sacked from the IDF. Maj. Gen. Shahor, for his part, has offered to undergo a lie-detector test to prove his version of events. The flap has filled the media for days. At one point, Mr. Netanyahu described the Shahor incident as "an ex- ception" whose "gravity must be understood. It is the op- position's right to be updated," he said, adding that he would respond to any request from Mr. Peres for infor- mation. "[But] here we are speaking of ... an officer who has held meetings with party leaders in secret, without reporting on them to his superiors, in the midst of sen- sitive negotiations in which safeguarding information is. essential to the success of the talks." But other, more veteran politicians have argued that informal meetings between generals and politicos have been the norm in Israel for decades. "Senior members of the political and military echelons meet all the time at friends' houses, at receptions, over the phone," Nachum Barnea, Yediot Acharonot's chief political commentator explained last week. 'The price is the leak of information. It is a negligible one considering the enormous benefit of such contact. This is the Israeli military's way of airing EVERYBODY page 110 109