The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 21, 1995 - 7 Ex-Communist's victory the result 0Iseizing chances Peace talks continue despite difficulties Los Angeles Times WARSAW, Poland - At a meeting with journalists not long ago, Aleksander Kwasniewski was asked by an'Anierican what role President Lech Walesa should play in Poland if Walesa lof Sunday's election. Relaxed and =smiling, legs crossed casually beneath the table, Kwasniewski answered confidently in English. "The role of ex-presidents in the United States is very impressive;Iwould like&tV study such examples," he said. "Ex-presidents can be very useful, and sometimes an ex- presitient is much more useful than when he was presi- denty.," The reply got a laugh, but when a loca television jourtalist asked Kwasniewski to re- peat it in Polish, he refused. Walesa -'Nw I will have to translate you for Polish viewers," the reporter protested. "Yes, but they will see that I can speak English," Kwasniewski re- sponded. Kwasniewski,.41, the former Com- munist whom Poles elected over Walesa on :1unday to be their next president, never misses a chance to shine, no mat- terh:W small it may seem. His election -victty-justsixyearsafterthe Polish United Workers' Party, or PZPR, Poland's Communist Party, ceased to News Analysis_ exist - is the culmination of two de- cades of exploiting every opportunity - good, bad and indifferent. From his college days in the 1970s as a new member of the PZPR to his role in the 1989 round-table talks that brought democracy to Poland, Kwasniewski has displayed a remark- able political savvy that has allowed him to survive- and ultimately master - opposing forces of history. "He is a brilliant man, the most in- telligent politician among the young generation in Poland," said Mieczyslaw Rakowski, prime minis- ter in the last Communist government who served as Kwasniewski's politi- cal mentor under communism. "There are opportunities in politics in every step you take, and Kwasniewski is a politician who takes into account all possibilities." Down and out in 1989, having lost his first democratic election to an un- known organ player, Kwasniewski ral- liedhis newly created party of reformed ex-Communists and quickly worked a political miracle. Within two years the Democratic Left Alliance, a coalition of leftist par- ties dominated by his Social Democ- racy of the Republic of Poland, had become the second-largest entity in Parliament. At first ostracized by Soli- darity-bred parties, Kwasniewski later was courted by fractious Solidarity Los Angeles Times DAYTON, Ohio - ignoring their own deadline, U.S. mediators kept the leaders of Bosnia's warring factions talking yesterday despite indications that the 20-day-old Balkan peace con- ference is heading for failure. A senior Bosnian government offi- cial said there was more than a 99- percent likelihood that the negotiations will end without an agreement to end Europe's bloodiest war in a half-cen- tury. The official said that the talks came tantalizingly close to agreement but then unraveled because of excessive territo- rial demands by the Bosnian Serbs. A Serb representative agreed that the talks were near collapse. He blamed the Croats. By early evening, the Serb delegation was loading baggage on its aircraft, ap- parently in preparation for leaving Wright- Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton. U.S. State Department spokesman Nicholas Burns insisted that the talks were continuing and that success was still a possibility, although far from guaranteed. Burns dismissedthe activities around the Serb aircraft as diplomatic theater. "It looked like the jet was being fu- eled, but President (Slobodan) Milosevic was there negotiating," Burns said. Nevertheless, Bums said that if the Dayton talks fail, the United States, the European Union and Russia will look for ways to restart the peace process. "There will be options to continue the talks elsewhere," he said. As has been the case throughout the 20- day conference, the sticking point yester- day was division ofthe territory of Bosnia- Herzegovina between the Muslim-Croat federation and the Bosnian Serbs. The sides agreed in September to give 51 percent of the territory to the federation and 49 percent to the Serbs but there was no decision at that time on how to split the territory within those guidelines. Confusion swirled around the talks more than eight hours after expiration of a 10 a.m. deadline, which Secretary of State Warren Christopher imposed Sunday. By setting the deadline, Christopher touched off a marathon day of negotia- tions that lasted for 22 1/2 hours, end- ing at 5:30 a.m. yesterday when ex- hausted bargainers knocked off for a couple of hours for a nap and a shower. ~~ell a/ CRJNIk AP PHOTO Poland's newly elected President Aleksander Kwasnieski prepares for his first televised speech yesterday. He defeated incumbent President Lech Walesa on Sunday, 52 to 46 percent. governments that could not muster enough votes of their own to pass im- portant legislation. In 1993, his party finished first in parliamentary elections and took the reins of government with the help of a junior partner. On Sunday, Kwas- niewski completed the sweep, collect- ing the votes of nearly 10 million Poles to defeat Walesa, the father of the anti- Communist revolution in Poland. "It is his greatpersonal success," said Janusz Lewandowski, a college col- league of Kwasniewski. Amir says he assas sinated Rabin for Israel AP PHOTO Albanian protesters rally outside the Balkan peace conference. Albania was excluded from taking part in the talks. The talks resumed about 8 a.m. Burns insisted Sunday that the dead- line was a firm one and that the U.S. sponsors would make a public :an- nouncement at 10 a.m. yesterday 're- gardless of the situation at the time&,f agreement was reached, he said, the treaty would be initialed. If not, del- egates would explain the reasons for their failure. A senior U.S. official admitted yes- terday things were never that cut-an- dried. The official said the deadline was a negotiating ploy, designed to force the factions into making painful deci- sions. The official said the deadline "con- centrated the minds and the energies 1f the delegations. If there hadn't beery a deadline, they wouldn't have gone uiil 5:30 a.m., I can tell you that." But by nightfall yesterday, Burnss id the mediators had decided to keep the talks going as long as there was a chance for success. "Each of these three countries seeais to want peace,"'Burns said. "As lonWAs there is a chance to make peace, we l11 be there with them." Los Angeles Times . JFRUSALEM - Yigal Amir, the unrepentant killer of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, appeared in court for a second time yesterday, asserting that he had-pulled the fatal trigger on behalf of the' ehtire nation of Israel. A'riving under heavy guard, Amir waved to his parents, who had not seen him since the Nov. 4 assassination at a Tel Aviv peace rally, and gestured to his-crying mother as if to ask why she wa iiitears. Looking smug and at times disdainful, the 25-year-old law student told le court that he would serve as his owr, nttnrnev he1nz 1 no one n n l represent him better than he could. At the same time, the country watched in amazement for a second day as the political right wing went on the offen- sive against the se-F curity establishment a that apparently had infiltrated the ex- tremists' ranks be- fore the.assassina- tion, but failed to prevent it. Amir Opposition leaders accused the La- bor government of having used its se- cret service in a campaign to smear the right. In court, confessed killer Amir was asked by reporters how he had felt dur- ing his re-enactment of the crime last week when he passed by the mass of memorial candles left by mourners be- neath Rabin's picture in the square now named for the slain prime minister. "It reminded me of all those attacks (by Arab terrorists) ... These were the victims of peace. The country is full of such memorials, and I said to myself, 'Finally, justice has been done,"' Amir said. He repeated his earlier claim that he had acted alone in the assassination but added the new twist: "Perhaps physi- cally I acted alone, but it was not only my finger that pulled the trigger but the entire nation which for 2,000 years dreamed about this country and spilled its blood for it." Amir had said previously that he killed Rabin because the prime minister was going to turn over Jewish land to the Palestinians under the 1993 peace accord between Rabin and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. -e I a/ I I I 31 YEAR OLD attractive professional male seeks an attractive Muslim female 20 to 30 years old for a long term serious relationship. Please, respond to P.O. Box 4053 Mount Pleasant, M48804. pts FISH DOCTOR'S- Everything for your aquarium! Next to Putt-Putt Golf on Washtenaw. 434-1030. " : the - " * " Class if icds Support Planned Parenthood. YNMESIIVt In I6WNG9144ft18*K I -- - -^ r , HL7LIKE A . Rg~EL.-NUT rLATTE. EXCA)SE ME? w6 DXS FLEW FtAS ! V3S FLEW FLA5 1 r- .. 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