Mixed Reaction Sharon's acceptance of the road map re-starts peace jitters. SHARON LUCKERMAN Staff Writer IED Tugman Bais Chabad Torah Center said that this peace plan is "a non-starter." He visits Israel often and supports the settlements, "Unless the Arabs and PLO are willing to disman- tle Hamas and other terrorist organizations — and I don't see that happening — Bush's plan is simply wishful thinking without looking at reality," Rabbi Silberberg said. The critical component of dismantling terrorist groups, he added, would only lead to civil war among the Palestinian factions, not peace for Israel. Rabbi Silberberg believes that Sharon was forced into this agreement. "He can't say no to the king of the world, President Bush. And I believe that Bush is a friend of Israel's. Bush doesn't feel this can work either," the rabbi said. "But he has to try something." Rabbi Silberberg added that the Middle East situa- tion would change only when a grassroots group emerges in the Arab community against the hatred of Jews and of Israel. "When dealing with the suicide mentality, you can't negotiate peace," said the rabbi. "And you can't compromise security for false hopes of peace." On the other hand, University of Michigan- Dearborn political science professor Ronald Stockton believes this peace plan — like those that came before it at Oslo and especially Taba — has great potential if it generates a sense of fairness and justice resident George W. Bush, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas once again dare to travel on the road toward peace. The U.S-backed plan known as the road map has many concerned over the outcome. Can this plan succeed in ways previous ones have not? Have the two sides learned from past negotia- tions? Has the overthrow of Iraq's Saddam Hussein presented a unique opportunity for peace in the Middle East? Or is our hope for peace blinding us to the reality of terrorism and ultimately placing Israel in a more dangerous position? Community members with a range of perspectives were interviewed for their reaction to the current Middle East plan. First announced by President Bush in early March, the road map, in simple terms, calls for an end to violence, the right of Israel to exist in peace, the confrontation of terror organizations, the dismantling of Israeli settlements created since March 2001, and the creation of a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza in 2005. Israeli and Palestinian leaders have agreed to meet with President Bush on Wednesday, June 4, in Aqaba, Jordan, to discuss this plan, which is spon- sored by the European Union, Russia, the United Nations and the United States. Wayne State University Professor Edith Covensky of Bloomfield Hills represents a mid- dle-ground stance among commu- nity reactions to the plan. She teaches in WSU's Near Eastern Covensky Stockton Tanter Gale Shapiro and Asian Studies Department. "I was pleased to see that Sharon is taking a positive response to the on both sides. road map plan, which surprised me and many of his "Israel's army has to pull back to Israel, and colleagues," said Covensky, a former sergeant in the Palestinian extremists have to be contained," said Israeli army. Stockton. "There has to be this two-track strategy of She added that Israel can not isolate itself. pursuing political negotiations and security issues. "Sharon is trying to look forward to the future And they must not allow extremist actions to hold generation," she said, adding that for the first time, political negotiations hostage." Sharon said that Israel should not be occupiers over He said a good sign for peace was that both sides 3.5 million Palestinians. seem exhausted by the bloodletting that has occurred "Sharon said that a Palestinian state is not the over the past two years. dream of my life, but that we have to look forward Problems, of course, will emerge. In the short to the future generation," Covensky said. term, Stockton said, Sharon has strong opposition With the fall of Iraq, Israel seized the moment, she from within his own party and his cabinet. On the said. "It's a bold move. For the first time, Sharon Palestinian side, their security forces have been acted as a visionary, and that's the kind of politician destroyed, which leaves Hamas in a strong military we need today." position. Terror's Hold "The Palestinian security forces have to be com- pletely reconstructed" to deal with the terrorists, he At another end of the spectrum, Rabbi Elimelech said, but it's a trap if one thinks they can defeat Silberberg of the West Bloomfield-based Sara 5/30 2003 12 Hamas militarily. "Hamas has to be undermined by the existence of a non-violent alternative that will cause Palestinians to turn away from it," he said. "Sharon's approach over the past two years has been to destroy Hamas. Not only has that not worked, but it's been counter- productive." Terror Vs. Peace Allan Gale of the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit disagreed that the Palestinian security forces have been completely destroyed. And the Ha'aretz newspaper says the CIA is helping to rebuild the Palestinian security forces to fight terror, he said. Gale teeters between wanting peace and not want- ing to whitewash his fears of past attempts. He is reminded of how Yasser Arafat and the Palestine Liberation Organization acted in the past when Israel, seeking peace, allowed the Palestinians to build up an army to fill the power vacuum several years ago. "In the fall of 2002," Gale said, "those weapons [borne out of peace] were turned against the Israelis." Radical groups like Hamas and the Al-Agra Martyrs Brigades [associated with Arafat's Fatah fac- tion] still exist, he added. "Again, Israel is being asked to step out, withdraw its troops and allow the Palestinians to fill the power vacuum." Yet Gale said the new peace process, though not perfect, is much more delicate and slow-moving. The plan has promise because the United States is behind it. 'America keeps Israel's interest in mind and Israel feels more comfortable and takes risks when America is in the picture," Gale said. "Jimmy Carter brought Egypt and Israel together; Bill Clinton was involved in the Oslo process and the Jordanian treaty with Israel. Things happen in the Middle East when U.S. presi- dents take an interest in it." One important element to secure peace is a democratic Palestine, said Dr. Raymond Silberberg Tanter, University of Michigan professor emeritus and former national security adviser to President Ronald Reagan. "Only in the context of a democratic Palestine will it be possible for a road map to peace to be success- ful," said Tanter, currently an adjunct scholar at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. "Because democracies rarely fight each other, democratic peace should be the outcome of negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians." Tanter, who has taught at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, added that once the peace plan is begun by its sponsors, the Palestinians and Israelis must ultimately be able to shape it themselves. "The road map is not a divinely revealed set of pre- scriptions equivalent to the Ten Commandments Moses received at Mt. Sinai," Tanter said. "While it is not appropriate to amend the commandments, it might make sense for the parties themselves to nego- tiate amendments to the road map ... Indeed, it is MIXED REACTION on page 16