IOA - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 20, 1997 NATION/WoRLD Clinton, Yeltsin to discuss NATO The Washington Post HELSINKI, Finland -- it all began innocently enough: an American- Ukrainian naval exercise planned for this summer off Ukraine's Black Sea coast -- not the first such maneuver and very likely not the last. But before the plans for Operation Sea Breeze have even been finalized, it has blown up into a serious point of friction in U.S.-Russian relations and a symbol of Moscow's deepening distrust of American intentions. President Boris Yeltsin and other Russian officials have seized on Sea Breeze, in which U.S.-led forces would land on Ukraine's strategically sensitive Crimean Peninsula, as evidence that Washington's soothing assurances of partnership and cooperation cannot be trusted. Washington insists the ficti- tious scenario for Sea Breeze - a humanitarian mission in relief of an earthquake and armed unrest - is entirely innocent. The Americans say the exercise is "in the-spirit of" NATO's Partnership for Peace plan and point out that the Russians were invited to participate, along with Britain, France, Germany, Itafy, Turkey and other European states. Whatever the case, the flap over Sea Breeze, which Russian officials say Yeltsin may - raise with President Clinton when the two meet in Helsinki starting tomorrow, has become emblematic of the rut of distrust and conflicting perceptions these days in U.S.-Russian relations. In their first face-to-face encounter in nearly a year, how Clinton and Yeltsin manage the atmospherics of that dis- trust may be just as important to the outcome of the summit as whatever substantive progress they make on a host gf security, arms control and eco- non,Ai _questions. On both sides there is a sense that the "Bill and Boris Show," a festival of friendship that has anchored Russian- Amrican relations through 10 summits in four years, may be headed for its rockiest stretch. "No, Yeltsin's not going to pound on the table,' said Igor Malashenko, a Russian television executive and infor- I I I ;, ; .. g ! - 'f -, ;<, . , , ' :~~ Netanyahu offers to wrap up peace pact in 6 months ;;;. y,: * f-V$. AP PHUO A police vehicle stands outside the presidential palace In Helsinki, Finland, yesterday, where President Clinton and Russian President Boris Yeltsin will be guests at an informal dinner hosted by Finnish President Ahtisaari today. mal public-relations adviser to Yeltsin. "But he could say very confidently that we're not going to accept what the Americans want just because they want it." Said Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, who tried without evident signs of progress to massage the issue this week with Russian Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov: "We know it will take time for the process of trust to catch up with the process of change." The Helsinki summit will address a handful of irritants that have festered in North Atlantic Treaty Organization, which plans this summer to invite Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic and possibly other countries to join. NATO expansion is, in fact, one of the very few issues on which Russian reformers, Communists and hard-line nationalists all agree. They are united not only in their con- viction that NATO's expansion would exclude Russia from the European club of nations and draw a new dividing line through the continent's heart. They also are in accord, albeit to varying degrees, in their growing dis- it will take trust of W e s t e r n proCess of intentions. To many h up with in Yeltsin's Kremlin and of c$hang. the Russian Russian - American relations in the past year: nuclear - w e a p o n s reductions, Moscow's ambition to join various clubs of lead- ing industri- a l i z e d We know time for the trust to catc the process Russia hosts for the event, scheduled for Aug. 26-31. Under that scenario, a separatist revolt by an unnamed "ethnically based party" is threatening the integrity of Ukraine. The separatists are backed by an unnamed "neighboring country." That scenario was rejected out of hand in Washington, where military planners realized it was political dyna- mite. They proposed an alternative scenario for Operation Sea Breeze, in which civil unrest by unidentified "armed factions" is triggered by an earthquake. The Ukrainian govern- ment then calls for a multinational peacekeeping force and humanitarian aid, and a U.S.-led naval convoy rush- es to the rescue to provide medicine, blankets and evacuation for the wounded. But it was already too late. The orig- inal, rejected plan was leaked to the Russians and set off loud alarm bells in Moscow, where it was painfully obvi- ous that the unnamed "ethnically based party" must be Crimean Russians who chafe under Ukrainian rule, and the "neighboring country" must be Russia itself. In other words, the Russians conclud- ed, Washington was actively planning a major naval exercise in which the main enemy was Russia. Not only that, but the exercise was scheduled to take place just weeks after a scheduled NATO meeting in Madrid this July, in which the alliance is expected to issue mem- bership invitations to former Soviet allies in central Europe. Netanyahu's verbal suggestion is met with suspicion by Palestinian officials Los Angeles Times JERUSALEM -' Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has made an informal offer to Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat to try to conclude a final peace agreement within six months, bypassing the remaining steps of their interim accords. But the verbal proposal, conveyed to the Palestinian leader this week by Jordan's King Hussein, was greeted with suspicion at Arafat's Gaza City head- quarters. Palestinian officials said they believed Israel was attempting to press ahead with negotiations to avoid obliga- tions dictated by their existing peace deals, known as the Oslo agreements. "I think (Netanyahu) is trying to tell us he doesn't want the Oslo accords any more," said Saeb Erekat, a top Palestinian negotiator. "He's trying to change the terms of reference for the peace process." The proposal came late yesterday night amid deep mutual distrust and anger between Israel and the Palestinians, one day after Israel broke ground on a controversial new neigh- borhood in historically Arab East Jerusalem. Palestinians say the con- struction of 6,500 homes for Jews can- not help but impede talks on the future status of the Holy City. Despite warnings of violence, work proceeded peacefully yesterday. The Israeli Supreme Court turned down requests by Israeli peace activists and Arab landowners to halt the construc- tion. And demonstrations in two West Bank communities were quiet. Netanyahu first floated the idea for accelerated talks with the Palestinians in a speech to Israeli lawmakers last fall. But he was roundly criticized by former Prime -Minister Shimon Peres, who accused him of employing delay- ing tactics and of being insincere in his approach to the peace negotiations. In the current proposal, Netanyahu told the Palestinians - through Hussein - that he would try to com- plete "final status" talks on the West Bank and Gaza Strip two years earlier than planned, according to a source in his office. The offer would involve bypassing implementation of the interim Israeli- Palestinian agreements, including three scheduled troop withdrawals from the West Bank, and moving directly to di cussions of the last and most sensitiv issues between them: refugees, Jewish settlements, borders and Jerusalem. "The idea is that since every step of the way seems to create less confidence and more irritation between us, it might be best to just sit down and try to dis- cuss the final status and see where we get," an Israeli official said. But the Palestinians' "quick dismissa of the suggestion underscored the pr found distrust that has developed since Netanyahu and his right-religious coali- tion came to power-in June, ousting the Palestinians' Labor Party peace partners. The new partners have managed to reach several agreements of their own; including the accord in January to with- draw Israeli troops from Hebron. But each step along the way has been ardu- ous. Under a timetable laid out in a addendum to the Hebron agreement Israel was to have completed the first of three scheduled troop withdrawals from the West Bank by March 7. But the Palestinians, angered by a planned pull- out that fell short of expectations, refused to accept the hand-over. The other two withdrawals are to be com- pleted by mid-1998. Negotiators were also scheduled to resume the final status talks o Monday, but neither side showed u* apparently because of tensions over the construction plans. Those negotiations are scheduled to end in 1999. Israeli and Palestinian sources said the proposal to accelerate the peace process was conveyed to Arafat soon after Hussein met with Netanyahu Sunday in Jerusalem. Netanyahu promised that in the event of failure, he would return to the interim negotia- tions, the Israeli official said. Erekat, who had met Tuesday with Israeli Cabinet Secretary Dani Naveh to discuss the offer, said he could find nothing positive in it. Yevgeny Primakov n Foreign Minister parliament, Washington's determina- tion to alliance closer G'. nations, limits on conventional weapons in Europe. Most of all, what the Americans want at the two-day Helsinki summit is some progress toward a deal under which Moscow will accept the West's plans to expand its main security umbrella, NATO, into the territories of former Soviet allies in central Europe. So far, almost every serious foreign- policy figure in Moscow has spoken out vehemently against the expansion of the extend its main military to Russia's borders is proof that the West is more interested in taking advan- tage of Moscow's current weakness than in helping in a time of need. Given that mindset, reports of Operation Sea Breeze have done noth- ing but inflame the paranoia and bad blood in Moscow. As far as is known, the genesis of the outcry over Sea Breeze was an early scenario drawn up by the Ukrainian Vote [ ichigan Party MSA electio March Madn CI I: ., miik i M i s Dear Fellow Students, Ins, ess. all. Daily. < . Today is the last day to vote in MSA elections. Here's why you should vote for the Michigan Party: We cover it The Michigan icreased Student Pilgh a~ ; a 0I c u . S Improving Campus Safely Group Funding on an average of $20,000 a year ting to lower the cost of education Setting a student on city council ..