Save The Temple Mount Philadelpia he Temple Mount in Jerusalem — holiest spot on earth for Jews and ranking up there in sanctity also for Christians and Muslims — may soon come partly crashing down. Despite appearances, the 35-acre Temple Mount plateau is not a natural formation but a man-made esplanade built centuries ago by stacking one large brick-like rock atop another. The wall on one side might cave in due to the fact that the Palestinian Authority (PA.) has had administra- tive control over the Temple Mount since the mid-1990s and since then has made many structural changes, all aimed at increasing Muslim claims to the site. In particular, the P.A. converted a long-disused space at the southern end, known as Solomon's Stables, into a mosque. In the process, it took down some supports. These alterations weakened the southern wall so that 227 square yards of the wall now bulge out as much as 28 inches. The P.A. professes no concern. "This bulge is under our monitoring since T Daniel Pipes is director of the Middle East Forum and author of Militant Islam Reaches America. E-mail: pipes@MEForum.org the 1970s" and has neither grown nor shifted in 30 years, says Adnan Husseini, director of the Islamic reli- gious authority (called the Wagf) that oversees the Temple Mount. "It is sta- ble," he says. "We don't feel that there is any dangerous situation." Knowledgeable Israelis beg to differ. Already back in 2001, the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) warned that if not treated, the bulge would cause the Temple Mount "irreversible damage." Today, their warnings are alarmed. That wall is "in danger of collapse," says Shuka Dorfman, head of the IAA. It certainly "will fall if nothing is done about it," says Giora Solar, formerly of the Getty Conservation Institute. "It could collapse," says Jerusalem's Mayor Ehud Olmert. The wall "will collapse," warns Eilat Mazar, an archaeologist at Hebrew University. "The central issue at pres- ent is whether it will collapse on the heads of thousands of people who are praying there, or whether it will be done in a controlled manner." The moment of truth might come in November. That's the Ramadan holiday, when thousands of Muslim worshippers will aggregate in the mosque at Solomon's Stables. Their weight and movement could cause the southern wall to give way, causing yard-long rocks to come cas- in Jerusalem — Ottoman, cading down on them, possi- British, Jordanian, Israeli — bly killing many. endorses the status quo, per- Judging by prior incidents mits precedent to hold sway, in Jerusalem — the arson at and stays out of the city's al-Aqsa Mosque in 1969, the many and hugely intractable opening of a tunnel in 1996 religious disputes. — this disaster would lead at Thus, when Israel captured least to wide-scale fighting in DA NIEL the Temple Mount in 1967, it Jerusalem and a heated inter- permitted the Waqf to remain PIP ES national crisis. If things really in charge there. The P.A. has Spe cial went wrong, it could precipi- exploited that deference of 35 Comm entary tate a wave of violence in • years ago to increase Muslim Europe and a full-blown claims to the Temple Mount, Arab-Israeli war. It could also compli- notably by building the new mosque cate the war on Iraq, obstruct the war at Solomon's Stables. That the Waqf on terrorism, and jump the price of denies any structural problems means oil and gas. At worst, it could unleash the Israeli authorities just tip-toe away. an end-of-days messianism (belief that But they cannot afford to any the Messiah is coming) in three longer. At issue is not some squabble monotheistic religions, with unfore- over who gets to sweep which church seeable consequences. step or who gets which hours in a The structural integrity of this sanctuary; this is a disaster in the m k- ancient wall is, in short, very serious ing. As the Jerusalem Post correctly edi- business. torializes, that the government of And yet successive Israeli govern- Israel has abdicated its responsibilities ments, both Labor and Likud, have is "nothing less than scandalous" and abdicated their role, turning a deaf ear it must now, however belatedly, "final- to the increasingly anxious predictions. ly assert its full sovereignty over the Their insouciance has two main causes. area." First, memories of 1969 and 1996 Governments around the world, are enough to make any Israeli leader Jewish organizations and others with want to stay.away from Jerusalem holy influence over the Israeli prime minister places. Second, it is a well-established should get him to attend to the wall tradition that the governing authority before it and much else crashes. ❑ a Has The Arab World Changed? Washington, D.C. he Jordanian foreign minis- ter came to Washington the other day to say that "the Arab world" has changed • its attitude toward Israel and has adopted a peace proposal that "addresses the needs of every Israeli citizen." Marwan Muasher said, "We give Israel everything they've ever want- ed," including collective security measures, normalized diplomatic and trade relations, a compromise on the refugee issue and an end-of-conflict agreement promising no future claims. Unfortunately, he suggested, Israel is unwilling to accept "this vision." T Douglas M. Bloomfield is a political analyst and former executive director of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. E-mail: dmb@his.com Muasher, his country's first ambas- sador to Jerusalem and most recent envoy to Washington, was speaking to the Council on Foreign Relations. Similar messages have been delivered by a parade of Arab leaders making pilgrimages to Crawford, Texas; Camp David, Md., and Washington, D.C. The problem is that what they say here is not what they're saying at home. Jordan is, for the most part, a rare exception. When its King Abdullah II speaks abroad about making peace with Israel, the message is broadcast in full to the Hashemite Kingdom. It's hard to take the peace plan . adopted at the Arab League summit in Beirut last March very seriously in light of the fact that Arab leaders are doing nothing to sell peace with Israel to their own people. On the contrary, most of the Arab populations have been told little if anything about the plan's contents. And the state-controlled The man who takes credit media continue to fan the for this peace initiative, flames of hatred against Jews, Saudi Crown Prince Israel and America, reports Abdullah, refuses to discuss the Anti-Defamation League, it or anything else with any which has been monitoring Israeli and won't permit any such things for years. contact between his govern- "If anything, it has inten- ment and the Zionists. That sified," said Stacy Burdett of DOUGLAS M. raises serious questions BLOOMFIELD about his seriousness and ADL's Washington office. "We've documented ongo- Special reinforces those who insist ing anti-Semitic, anti-Israel it is not a plan for peace Commentary and anti-American incite- with Israel but a PR ploy to ment in the Arab press, improve relations with especially in Egypt and Saudi Washington. Arabia." The Arab media are filled with No Friends stories blaming Israel for 9-11, sug- gesting it was a Zionist plot to dis- One of the most popular Arab credit Islam. Palestinian suicide themes is the comparison of Israelis bombers are glorified in the media, to Nazis, along with Holocaust on wall posters and bumper stickers denial. In Egypt, Syria and Iraq, the and in the mosques. Saudi telethons press likes to compare President have raised money for the bombers' George W. Bush to Nazi Germany families. BLOOMFIELD on page 33 trN 10/4 2002 31