The World: Th The Wyes Of Terror Murder and protest greeted Binyamin Netanyahu and Yassir Arafat shortly after they returned home. LARRY DERFNER Israel Correspondent Jerusalem t the White House last Friday, President Clinton noted that Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Yassir Arafat "are quite well aware that the enemies of peace will try to extract a price from both sides." The attempts weren't long in corn- ing, and they were successful. On Monday, Danny Vargas, a Kiryat Arba settler, was shot to death. The Palestinian police arrested Mr. Vargas' two Palestinian killers the next day in Hebron. Also on Monday, Mohammed Zalmout, a Palestinian, was found beat- en to death near a West Bank settle- ment. The main suspect in this killing is an unidentified Israeli terrorist — not a settler — with a record of attacks on Palestinians, and Israeli police are looking for him. The Wye River accord was intended to give the Palestinians land in the West Bank, and the Israelis security from terror. Yet the accord also refers to the danger of anti-Arab violence by Israelis. • The'Wye River Memorandum reads C... the Palestinian side agreed to take all measures necessary in order to pre- vent acts of terrorism, crime and hostil- ities directed against the Israeli side, against individuals falling under the Israeli side's authority and against their property, just as the Israeli side agreed to take all measures necessary in order to prevent acts of terrorism, crime and hostilities against their property." Israeli security officials have warned repeatedly that Jewish extremists may try to mount an attack on Arabs in an especially sensitive spot — like Jerusalem's Temple Mount or Hebron — to enflame Arabs and bring down the peace process. But while Jewish terror is a perilous threat — Baruch Goldstein's shooting spree in Hebron in 1994 killed 29 Arabs and also set off a wave of Hamas bus bombings — the threat of Palestinian terror is greater. Hamas is a large, organized terror organization that acts continually, and has considerable A It's a blessing your children You're a have given you grand- children. But you've got big responsibilities. Here's one: Give the parents a subscription to The Detroit Jewish News. They'll find lots of useful new ideas about raising children in a Jewish or interfaith household. The Jewish News is a "Book of Why" about the holidays, our heritage and the world we live in. The information a parent needs. Provide your kids with a great tool for life in the Jewish community. Give them a subscription to The Jewish News by mailing in the coupon below or by calling (248) 354 6620 today. See? Being a good grandparent is easy! . - I'd like to send a 52-week Jewish News gift subscription Plus 5 free issues of Style Magazine Plus a free JN SourceBook - a $12 value Please bill me Payment Enclosed Your Name Your Address Your City Phone. Mail to: Detroit Jewish News P.O. Box 2267, Southfield, MI 48037-2267 (248) 354-6620 or Fax (248) 354-1210 10/30 1998 Allow 2-3 weeks delivery of The Jewish News and 4-6 weeks delivery of the JN SourceBook. TRP998 Visa State MasterCard Zip , support among Palestinians. Jewish ter- qi- r o r, by contrast, is at most loosely orga- nized, sporadic and rejected by all but a tiny (if virulent) minority of Israelis. Much depends on public opinion among the 2.5 million Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza. Hamas tends to act when it believes the Palestinian "street" will applaud --when Palestinians feel they are not achieving their goals through negotiation, or when they feel badly done by Israel. "Palestinian frustration has been very high over the last two years, partly because of the freeze in the peace nego- tiations, but also because of the demoli- tion of Palestinian homes, expropria- tions of land, and expansion of settle- ments," said Dr. Menachem Klein, an expert on Palestinian affairs at Israel's Bar-Ilan University. Dr. Klein sensed that the Wye River Memorandum had brought favorable Palestinian response, which could dis- courage any Hamas terror attack that might threaten Palestinian gains. But Dr. Ghassan el-Khatib, director of the Jerusalem Media and Communications Center, is less opti- mistic. "For the Palestinians, this is just another agreement on paper, and they have seen that such agreements usually are not carried out," Dr. el-Khatib said. Hamas has failed to carry out its threats of a colossal attack, as Israeli and Palestinian security forces have arrested a number of terrorists and raided a secret explosives laboratory in Hebron. % If the peace process goes ahead, the Palestinians can for the first time travel freely between the West Bank and Gaza, and have an airport, a seaport and industrial park. In addition, fewer Israeli soldiers will be around them. All this should make the Palestinian public more optimistic, more of a mind that they have something to lose, and thus more opposed to Hamas terror. The one thing above all that could sour the Palestinians decisively on the Wye agreement, and in turn give Hamas a boost, would be the expan- sion of West Bank settlements, said Dr. el-Khatib. "To Palestinians, the peace process means ending the occu- pation, and the building of settle- ments means consolidating the occu- pation," he said. Expansion of settlements is what the Clinton administration calls a "unilater- al act," which, along with a declaration of a Palestinian state by Mr. Arafat, is something the agreement frowns upon. Altogether there are enough forces working to move the peace forward, but also enough forces to blow it up. Eli