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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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93
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jul_sep
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09279912.000
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1994-02-27
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<text>
<title>
(Sep. 27, 1993) History In A Handshake
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Sep. 27, 1993 Attack Of The Video Games
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
MIDDLE EAST, Page 26
History In A Handshake
</hdr><body>
<p>The world felt the weight of the moment as two enemies joined
in a profound statement of hope
</p>
<p>By HUGH SIDEY/WASHINGTON
</p>
<p> A jubilant but strange pledge of peace. No large armies lying
smashed and smoking in the far deserts. No victors, no vanquished.
This was a search for peace in quieted minds and hearts, though
no less perilous for that. Yet it was a profound statement of
hope, this singular coming together of Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser
Arafat on the broad green South Lawn of the White House, with
chrysanthemums in bloom and robins calling.
</p>
<p> History was sealed less with paper and pens than with a brief
handshake that was caught in the click of hundreds of cameras,
a scene beamed to millions of people in a world nurtured for
45 years on a diet of hate and death in the arid lands of Israelis
and Arabs. This, more than the Declaration of Principles, was
the affirmation of a new era that watchers could believe. The
parchment signed out on the lawn was a framework for interim
Palestinian self-government, and it was for the archives, a
document meant to bind Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization
to further constructive deliberation. It was the handshake between
the Israeli Prime Minister and the chairman of the P.L.O. that
mattered. Men, not papers, make peace.
</p>
<p> Bill Clinton felt the weight of the moment. He went to bed at
10 the night before, but woke at 3 a.m. to roam the White House
corridors as so many of his predecessors had done -- Johnson,
Nixon, Bush. They had paced away the dark hours contemplating
war, the enduring curse of Middle East policymaking. Clinton
read the Book of Joshua, hearing in his mind the trumpet blasts
that rent the walls of Jericho, wanting to be sure to make the
point in the ceremony that this time the trumpets "herald not
the destruction of that city but its new beginning." He wandered
into the kitchen "to see the morning light," and was worried
it might rain. At 6:30 someone made him fresh coffee. "I just
couldn't sleep," recalled Clinton. "My mind was so full of the
day."
</p>
<p> Nobody was sure the touch of hands would happen. No formal request
had been sent through diplomatic channels. Arafat wanted desperately
to come; Rabin didn't. Arafat wanted to show up on the lawn
with his holster holding his faithful Smith & Wesson and, with
a great flourish, to unstrap the gun and hand it to Clinton.
That was vetoed: too much theater even on that day. One hour
before the ceremony, the Israelis and the Palestinians both
threatened to boycott over trifles: then Rabin swallowed his
objections to Arafat's uniform and agreed the P.L.O. could be
named in the accord. Arafat and Rabin avoided each other at
the reception before the ceremony, but Clinton recalled that
as the three of them left the Blue Room, "they looked at each
other, really clearly in the eye, for the first time, and the
Prime Minister said, `You know we are going to have to work
very hard to make this work.' And Arafat said, `I know, and
I am prepared to do my part.' "
</p>
<p> From the moment he appeared silhouetted against the White House,
in sharp-pressed khakis and trademark kaffiyeh, Arafat couldn't
stop smiling. This was the arrival on the world stage he had
always dreamed of. Rabin was plainly of a different mind, uncomfortable
and stiff. His body language throughout the ceremony -- the
tics, the cocking of his head, the eyes cast toward the sky,
the ground, anywhere but Arafat -- gave away just how uneasy
he was.
</p>
<p> Time for a handshake was worked into the 26-page script meticulously
crafted by the White House and the State Department. The President
rehearsed with aides in the Oval Office minutes before he was
to step onto the sunny lawn, where 3,000 of the old warriors
and the new trustees of peace had been summoned. For four days
the diagram of the proceedings had been drawn and redrawn, the
seven chief figures moved like chessmen on their tiny stage,
chairs put in the blueprint, then withdrawn, until finally it
was agreed they all would stand to talk, sit to sign, stand
again. Clinton was to act as stage manager. He would reach for
the hand of Rabin at the crucial moment, turn next to shake
the hand of Arafat, then step back half a pace and enfold the
two in a wide and gentle extension of his arms with the expectation
that the weight of history would bring their two hands together.
It did. First Arafat reached out, then after what seemed like
endless minutes, Rabin responded. Simple, shattering.
</p>
<p> Oded Ben-Ami, a spokesman for Rabin, watched it in wonder. "It
was a handshake with someone who just a moment ago was the devil
in person," he said, "and from now on is your partner in negotiation."
The Lebanese daily L'Orient-Le Jour made a cooler but no less
momentous assessment: "A prodigious moment this handshake, soberly,
none too warmly exchanged between Rabin and Arafat, as if they
were crushed by the terrible responsibility that their historic
gesture condemned them to share." This is the stuff of modern
diplomatic power. It is impulsive and ephemeral and can vanish
with the morning mist, but it plants in the minds of millions
of people a solemn promise, making it harder for leaders to
go on defying logic and decency.
</p>
<p> The young people invited were suitably impressed, but for the
old it was something truly special. Clark Clifford, 86, still
recovering from heart surgery, glanced at the Oval Office and
thought of the day in 1948 when at the last minute word came
that "the Jewish State" would be called "Israel" and the documents
for recognition had to be altered by pen before Harry Truman
could sit down and firmly stroke his name. Present at the creation
-- and now at what Clifford thought could be a renewal for the
entire Middle East.
</p>
<p> Henry Kissinger, Secretary of State for both Richard Nixon and
Gerald Ford and so often a player in the Middle East game, seemed
subdued, even misty-eyed. He walked slowly, graying head bent.
"A stunning moment," he murmured. James Baker, Secretary of
State for George Bush, thought time had done its work as he
watched the tableau of peace. He had convened meetings, pushing
the old adversaries together at Madrid 23 months ago. Clinton
knew how much that legwork had counted. He reached through three
rows of people to make sure Arafat and Rabin shook hands with
Baker.
</p>
<p> It was a triumphant but curious time for Bill Clinton. He deserved
credit not for what he had done but for what he had not done.
This agreement was the work of others over decades. Clinton
stayed out of the way in the last act and let it happen naturally.
He did not posture or seek personal acclaim, but paid tribute
to those who had long carried the heavy burden. Such acts are
far too rare in the presidency, but they are just as much a
measure of honor. Bill Clinton enhanced himself as well as those
who had braved the road to the South Lawn by the courage of
his restraint.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>