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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=89TT1852>
<title>
July 17, 1989: Israel:Power, Not Peace
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
July 17, 1989 Death By Gun
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 66
ISRAEL
Power, Not Peace
</hdr><body>
<p>Bowing to the hard line, Shamir saves his job but not his
diplomacy
</p>
<p>By Jill Smolowe
</p>
<p> Extremism was in the ascendancy again last week in the
Middle East. Capitulating to the hard-line right of his Likud
bloc, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir fettered his own
plan for elections in the occupied territories with stiff
conditions that seem to doom the peace initiative. Almost before
the players could grasp the political implications, a fanatic
Palestinian wrenched an Israeli bus over a cliff, killing 14
passengers in what was described as an act of vengeance. Those
civilian deaths will only harden hearts against thoughts of
peace. Once again the small steps being taken toward peace were
shoved rudely backward.
</p>
<p> Shamir's initiative was never more than a tentative move
toward starting a dialogue between the Israelis and the
Palestinians. It offered Arabs in the occupied territories the
chance to elect representatives to negotiate with Israel a
transitional period of self-rule -- a possible beginning if
Palestinians were willing to take it. But under the terms of the
initiative, the Palestinian representatives could have no overt
connection with the Palestine Liberation Organization. Not
surprisingly, no Palestinians rushed to embrace the scheme.
Still, coaxed by the U.S., the P.L.O. was giving the plan
serious consideration.
</p>
<p> Last week those hopes lay in rubble. Rather than risk
losing power, Shamir chose to scuttle his peace diplomacy. He
sidestepped a challenge to his leadership by embracing four
conditions laid down by hard-line Industry and Trade Minister
Ariel Sharon and his allies and plainly designed to be
unacceptable to the Palestinians. Most indigestible was a
restriction barring the 140,000 Arab residents of East Jerusalem
from participating in the proposed elections. Shamir also agreed
that Israel would not return any of the occupied territories to
"foreign sovereignty," that the construction of Jewish
settlements in the West Bank and Gaza would continue and that
the proposed elections could not take place until the
19-month-old intifadeh ended. Ironically, Shamir has espoused
these same positions many times. But he had hoped to keep them
in the background while he maneuvered to keep on top of the
pressures for peace.
</p>
<p> Shamir's move jeopardized his fragile coalition with the
rival Labor Party and threatened to strain relations with a
Bush Administration eager to get peace talks under way. Charging
that Likud had "put heavy handcuffs on the peace process,"
Finance Minister Shimon Peres fumed, "Shamir can agree to
Sharon's dictates, but the Labor Party will not." Party
politicians pressed their leaders to bolt the coalition and
force new elections. But Labor's popular appeal is dwindling,
so the party leadership is expected to give the wounded peace
plan one more chance.
</p>
<p> Bush Administration officials felt betrayed by Shamir's
action. "These are the kinds of (conditions) that fall under the
heading of deal breakers," said a senior staff member. But U.S.
officials feared that any outspoken criticism of Israel would
only boomerang and said they intended to continue working with
the plan.
</p>
<p> That won't be easy. Arab officials all but pronounced the
plan dead in its tracks. In Tunis, P.L.O spokesman Ahmed
Abdul-Rahman said Shamir's conditions represent a "complete
rejection of American and Palestinian efforts to bring about
peace." P.L.O. Chairman Yasser Arafat did not comment publicly,
but he was known to be concerned that Shamir's intransigence
might trigger a fresh wave of violence in the occupied
territories and cede the upper hand to radical elements within
the P.L.O. who oppose Arafat's attempts to promote more moderate
policies.
</p>
<p> The one clear victor last week was Sharon. By forcing
Shamir to adopt the killer amendments, Sharon committed Likud
to a position that leaves virtually no room for negotiation,
just as he intended. He had denounced Shamir's proposal as "the
most dangerous plan ever suggested by a government," warning
that it would lead to the formation of a Palestinian state.
Sharon's assault on the peace plan also served to boost his own
leadership ambitions.
</p>
<p> Shamir tried unconvincingly to put a positive gloss on
events. "These matters contain nothing new," he said of the
amendments. "We did not alter one iota of the peace initiative."
Yet Shamir's labored efforts at spin control could neither
disguise the fact that he had sacrificed his fledgling peace
plan to his own political survival nor hide the painful truth
that as long as that is his primary aim, Shamir will be
vulnerable to right-wing pressure.
</p>
<p> But shattered diplomacy and a growing domestic political
crisis were swiftly overshadowed by the violence endemic to the
divided Holy Land. Only 18 hours after Shamir's announcement,
an Arab fundamentalist from Gaza whose family had been wounded
by Israeli soldiers grabbed the wheel of an Israeli bus as it
traveled along the Tel Aviv-Jerusalem highway. Shouting "Allah
Akbar!" ("God is great!"), he sent the bus hurtling down a
495-ft. ravine. The fiery plunge killed 14 people and wounded
an additional 27. It was the worst single attack against
Israelis since the start of the uprising. "This is a shocking
disaster," Shamir said, "the fruit of a disgusting mind full of
hatred."
</p>
<p> As outrage mounted, Israelis seemed all but to forget their
political woes. The violent act sent a chilling reminder to all
that the road to peace is mined with dangers -- and for the
moment provided Shamir with a temporary respite from the fallout
of his political pusillanimity.
</p>
<p>--Robert Slater/Jerusalem
</p>
</body></article>
</text>