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- NATION, Page 20America AbroadHow to Move the ImmovableBy Strobe Talbott
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- Yitzhak Shamir personifies intransigence. Wherever he goes,
- even if it is just to his office in Jerusalem, he is attended by
- low expectations for Arab-Israeli diplomacy. Still, his visit to
- Washington next week could advance the cause of peace if his
- encounters with the American President, Congress and the Jewish
- community reinforce the message he has been getting back home:
- something has to give on the occupied territories.
-
- Shamir believes that Israel has a historic birthright to the
- lands it seized from Jordan in the 1967 War. After 21 years of
- Israeli rule and settlements in the West Bank, Palestinian Arabs
- still outnumber Jews there 16 to 1. For demographic reasons alone,
- it is hard to see how "Greater" Israel can remain a Jewish state
- and still be a true democracy. Nor is an Israel whose soldiers are
- ordered to break teenagers' bones the "light unto the nations" that
- its Zionist founders wanted.
-
- Not incidentally, those founders -- David Ben-Gurion and Chaim
- Weizmann -- detested the Stern Gang that was implicated in
- terrorist bombings and assassinations. Shamir was one of its most
- notorious members. If Israel refuses to budge on the West Bank, it
- could, over time, become just another Levantine war zone pretending
- to be a country, in which latter-day equivalents of the Stern Gang
- battle with the most extremist of the Palestinians.
-
- Like all other Administrations since 1967, the new leadership
- in Washington believes that Israel must at some point trade some
- of the West Bank for peace. The U.S. opened a dialogue with the
- P.L.O. last year because it hoped the organization was redefining
- the first two words of its name: the "Palestine" to be "liberated"
- is on the West Bank; it does not include pre-1967 Israel. As part
- of an eventual agreement, the U.S. is looking for reciprocal
- territorial concessions by Israel.
-
- But forcing the issue now will do no good and could do harm by
- giving Shamir an excuse to dig in his heels. Likud has consolidated
- its strength in recent local elections, so it would be folly to peg
- American diplomacy to the more pliable policies of the weakened
- Labor Party.
-
- Left to his own devices and instincts, Shamir would come to
- the U.S. with his jaw out, his dukes up and nothing in his pocket.
- The idea of a "Shamir initiative" sounds like a contradiction in
- terms. His preferred role is still that of defiant custodian of the
- status quo.
-
- But the status quo is untenable. That is the message Shamir
- has been getting not just from the Palestinian stone throwers but
- from their antagonists in the Israeli army as well. It is a
- reminder of the enduring humanism and idealism of the Zionist state
- that many of its warriors hate breaking bones and say so to their
- Prime Minister.
-
- So Shamir knows he needs to make a move, if only to escape the
- impression that he alone is standing still while events run beyond
- his control. He is expected to arrive with a proposal for elections
- among the Palestinians in the West Bank, followed by negotiations
- between those elected representatives and Israel. He wants to buy
- time by avoiding the question of whether Israeli withdrawal from
- -- and Arab sovereignty over -- the West Bank might someday be on
- the agenda of those negotiations. The Bush Administration will
- probably not insist that he bless the idea of territorial
- compromise in advance, but as his part of the bargain he had better
- not rule it out forever. That would probably be as much flexibility
- as the U.S. or the Arabs are likely to get out of this Israeli
- leader. But it might be enough to restart the diplomatic process;
- and perhaps that process will continue long enough for other
- Israeli statesmen to decide where it finally leads.