in online This Week Analysis ) JN Digest Selected news and feature stories from the Detroit Jewish News. vvvvvv.detroitjewishnews.cominews ) Back In Time Look for Alexis P. Rubin's "This Month in Jewish History" for October. vvwvv.detroitjewishnews.com Carrot And Stick With road map in tatters, Sharon begins imposing unilateral solution. LESLIE SUSSER ) What's Eating Harry Kirsbaum? wvvvv.denoitjewishnews.com/opinion jewishecom ) America's Near-invisible Wounded On www.jewish.com , a trip to Walter Reed Army Hospital reveals the number of soldiers who need medical care is far larger than the gov- ernment lets on. ) Naches in the NBA Skeptics who doubt that interfaith harmony can flourish where you least expect it need only go to an Atlanta Hawks game. Read about it on www.jewish.com . jn advertisers online www.detroltjewishnews.com/advertisers Ira Kaufman Chapel... www.irakaufman.com GIFTS DetailsArt.com www.detailsart.com PARTIES Patti's Parties ... www.pattisparties.invitations.com 10/31 2003 24 For online advertising, call 248-354-6060 Jewish Telegraphic Agency • Jerusalem n the nearly two months since Mahmoud Abbas resigned as Palestinian Authority prime min- ister, the United States has stepped back from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In the meantime, Israel has adopted a two-pronged policy, taking bold unilat- eral moves while encouraging Abbas' successor to form a government with which Israel can negotiate. In the hiatus following Abbas' depar- ture, the Israeli government has approved the route of the controversial security fence separating Israel from the West Bank, hinted at plans for a second, eastern fence that would cut off the Jordan Valley from the West Bank, stepped up anti-terror military activity and called for bids to build over 300 apartments in disputed areas. The policy cuts two ways: It begins to impose an Israeli vision of a weakened and truncated Palestinian entity, and it puts pressure on the Palestinians to start negotiating in earnest before that vision becomes a reality. On Oct. 1, Israel's cabinet approved a -route for the security fence that — if all the planned sections eventually are joined — would include sizable tracts of the West Bank on the Israeli side. Moreover, in an Israeli television inter- view last week, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon intimated that, despite American objections to the main fence's route, he was contemplating a second, eastern fence along the Jordan Valley. That would have major implications: If both fences are built, the entire West Bank would be fenced in and the Palestinians would get no more than 60 percent of the land. Analysts who argue that this reflects Sharon's bottom line were quick to point out that, taken together, the route of the two fences is very close to the borders Sharon envisaged for the West Bank in his 1989 autobiography, Warrior. Commenting on the TV interview, a senior Israeli official confirmed that Sharon's intention was to keep the entire Jordan Valley under Israeli control, maintaining that plans for the eastern fence had been approved in principle I but that there was no budget for it yet. In the aftermath of Abbas' resignation in September, Sharon also stepped up Israel's anti-terrorist campaign. Ground forces blew up tunnels in Rafah used to smuggle arms from Egypt to the Gaza Strip, destroying dozens of houses in the process. In addition, special units killed or detained terrorist leaders in the West Bank, and Israeli fighter planes and heli- copters ran operations over Gaza, where a number of civilians were killed and wounded along with the targeted terror- ists. the West Bank settlement of Karnei Shomron and in Givat Ze'ev, a Jerusalem neighborhood beyond the pre-1967 border. Palestinian leaders accused Israel of trying to torpedo the road map. This time, the United States was less circumspect in its response, describing the Israeli move as "a provocation" and threatening to deduct the settlement . activity's cost from the $9 billion it has promised Israel in loan guarantees. However, at the same time as he has increased pressure on the Palestinians, Sharon has been making overtures to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon at his Jerusalem office this week. The American response was remark- ably low-key, especially after the Oct. 15 Palestinian bombing of a U.S. diplomat- ic convoy in the Gaza Strip that killed three Americans. U.S. spokesmen said only that Israel should take into account the consequences of its military actions — a sign of American assent, if not endorsement. New Settlements In late October, Israel made yet another unilateral move: Despite its commit- ment to a total freeze on, settlement building under the road-map peace plan, the Housing Ministry called for bids for the construction of 333 apartments in Ahmed Karia, who replaced Abbas and has been heading an emergency cabinet appointed by P.A. President Yasser Arafat. Sharon's bureau chief, Dov Weisglass, is scheduled to meet leading Palestinians soon, including Finance Minister Salam Fayad, to explore ways of taking the road map forward. Maj. Gen. Amos Gilad, head of the Israel Defense Ministry's new political department, plans to hold preliminary talks with Karia confidants on security matters. Moreover, partly to ease what the army calls an "explosive pressure cooker" situation in Palestinian areas and partly to encourage Karia, Sharon and Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz have decided to ease some of the restrictions