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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: LindyBill who wrote (34720)7/20/2002 4:20:51 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
Mideast Road Map Needed


LA TIMES EDITORIAL
July 19, 2002


Terrorist attacks in Jerusalem last month killed 26 Israelis and sent the army back into the occupied territories, where it kept Palestinians under virtual house arrest. The soldiers and tanks enforced a relative peace for a few weeks, but an armed attack in a settlement in the occupied West Bank and suicide bombers in Tel Aviv have shattered the tense calm. The terrorism proves again the impossibility of preventing every attack. It underlines the need for a believable path toward a long-term political settlement.

On Tuesday, Palestinian gunmen attacked a bus outside the West Bank enclave of Emmanuel, home to devoutly observant Jews. The armor plating installed on buses there after a similar attack outside Emmanuel last December provided little protection. The terrorists were able to kill eight settlers by throwing grenades into the vehicle and firing through tiny windows and the unarmored roof. On Wednesday, a double suicide bombing in Tel Aviv killed the bombers and three others.

Israel's defense minister insists that the attacks point up the need for the army to extend its West Bank stay, now nearly four weeks long. The army says it has already prevented many attacks, but military analysts say forces are stretched too thin to stop attacks, chase militants and guard about 200,000 settlers in the occupied territories. The last four weeks also have deepened the misery of Palestinians who view Israelis as usurpers of their land. About 800,000 Palestinians have lived under nearly around-the-clock curfews, allowed to leave their homes only for several hours every few days to buy supplies. That increases the number of Palestinians who applaud the suicide bombers. Yasser Arafat's Palestinian Authority again issued ritual denunciations of the bombings but again was unable or unwilling to stop them.

The Bush administration has vowed to have nothing to do with Arafat and has demanded new Palestinian leadership. However, Secretary of State Colin L. Powell said this week he would be "more than willing to consider" a ceremonial presidential role for Arafat. A Palestinian Authority aide said Arafat was weighing the appointment of a prime minister to handle the day-to-day affairs of the government after elections scheduled for January. U.S. allies continue to insist that it's up to the Palestinians, not Washington, to choose Palestinian leaders.

Before Arab foreign ministers met with President Bush on Thursday, Egypt's top diplomat said Washington needed to demand more of Israel and not just keep hammering the Palestinian Authority. Bush's June 24 speech called for security for Israel and a change in Palestinian leadership. What it did not offer was a road map to the Palestinian state that the administration said it supported.

Israel does need to be secure and free from terror. But without a more specific outline of their future, Palestinians will continue to believe they are being offered pie in the sky, not a realistic vision for a state of their own.

latimes.com



To: LindyBill who wrote (34720)7/20/2002 12:57:07 PM
From: jcky  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 281500
 
This is just one step closer toward adopting a policy of ethnic cleansing by the Israelis. We can all see this coming, and it is unfortunate.

Message 17697475

U.S. Faults Israeli Deportation Proposal
Criticism of Plan Targeting Militants' Families Follows Bush Pledge on Palestinians

washingtonpost.com

By Karen DeYoung
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, July 20, 2002; Page A15

The Bush administration yesterday sharply criticized an Israeli proposal to deport the families of Palestinian militants, saying that "taking punitive actions against innocent people will not solve Israel's security problems."

State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said the administration would raise the issue with the Israeli government, which yesterday demolished the homes of the families of two Palestinians allegedly responsible for two attacks against Israeli civilians this week and arrested a number of family members.

The criticism came in the wake of what Arab diplomats who met Thursday with President Bush described as his strong commitment to move forward quickly on plans for Palestinian security reform, withdrawal of Israeli troops to their September 2000 positions, preparations for Palestinian elections, ideally by January, and final statehood within three years.

Within Israel and the Palestinian areas, the Middle East conflict appeared more frozen than ever. But among those working on the outside, energetic rhetoric and news of well-developed plans gave at least an appearance of progress.

A U.S. team designated by CIA Director George J. Tenet is expected to arrive in the occupied territories within the next two weeks for an assessment of the Palestinian security apparatus following Israel's destruction of much of its infrastructure and arrest of a number of its personnel, an administration source said.

The team plans to discuss proposals for streamlining Palestinian forces with the new Palestinian Authority interior minister, Abdel Razak Yehiyeh, and then "go into the street" to assess Palestinian needs and capabilities, the source said.

Yehiyeh was one of two Palestinian officials, along with new Finance Minister Salam Fayad, who Secretary of State Colin L. Powell said were "trying to work on the transformation . . . seem to be acting with authority and . . . might start to fill the role" of providing able leadership. Talk of meetings with them appeared to mark the end of U.S. unwillingness to deal with members of the current Palestinian Authority, although there were no indications of a change in the administration's refusal to deal with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.

The CIA team's assessment will form the basis for implementing plans that administration and Arab officials said are already agreed to by the United States, Egypt and Jordan to restructure the security force and train new and existing police and security officers who have been vetted for corruption and terrorist connections. Money for implementation is expected to come from Saudi Arabia.

"The security work is well underway, almost completed in terms of creating a structure, concepts and a command structure," Jordanian Foreign Minister Marwan Muasher said yesterday. Muasher, who attended the meeting with Bush along with his counterparts from Saudi Arabia and Egypt, said the Palestinians had been consulted and were in agreement. "I think the Palestinians understand perfectly that they need to move effectively on security," he said.

"As security improves, we would expect Israel to withdraw" to the military positions it occupied when the current round of conflict began on Sept. 28, 2000, Boucher said. Israeli troops now occupy virtually every Palestinian population center on the West Bank, and maintain a system of checkpoints, security cordons and curfews in the rest of the territory. Israeli forces have also cordoned off the Gaza Strip and conducted military attacks against suspected terrorist installations inside its borders.

Under the plan, Israeli forces would gradually withdraw from pacified areas, restoring to Palestinian control 20 percent of the West Bank and two-thirds of the Gaza Strip, and be replaced by the newly structured Palestinian security forces.

Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said yesterday that "we tell the Palestinians, 'In any place that you can impose order, the IDF [Israeli Defense Force] will leave.' We have no calendared goals, but we want to withdraw as soon as possible."

Plans for progress in other areas depend on the security component working well and quickly. The Bush administration and the Arabs, along with the European Union, United Nations and Russia, are committed to a rapid resolution of the humanitarian crisis in the occupied territories, where up to half of the 3.3 million Palestinian population is believed to be verging on serious malnutrition. Under the occupation, many Palestinians are prohibited from leaving their homes to go to work or shop, and transport for relief provisions has been made difficult, if not impossible.

At the same time, preparations for elections, projected to take place by January under a new constitution, cannot go forward under current conditions. "We're certainly aware that many of the parties have raised this issue and understand that to have an open election, people have to be able to move around," Boucher said. "They have to be able to campaign. In order to achieve that, we need to improve the security."

After this week's attacks, Israel canceled plans to hold preliminary meetings with Palestinian financial and security officials. Announcement of the deportation proposal, and the demolitions and arrests, brought belligerent statements from leaders of militant Palestinian groups and promises of more violence.

Even the security planning presented a chicken-and-egg conundrum whose resolution was difficult to foresee. While Israel said it would not withdraw until the new, approved Palestinian force was ready, Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Maher said Thursday that his government would not begin training a new Palestinian police until Israel withdrew.

And although yesterday's U.S. criticism of Israel was unusual in its directness, it was unclear how and how far Bush would push Israel to achieve the movement the Arab foreign ministers said he is committed to.

The White House was noticeably quiet on the issue yesterday, declining to comment publicly on the conclusions drawn by the Arabs. Its only comment came from Bush spokesman Ari Fleischer, who repeated Thursday's assessment that "it was a very good meeting, a very positive meeting. And the president emphasized the responsibility of all parties in the region to live up to their commitments -- the Arab nations, the Israelis and the Palestinians."

© 2002 The Washington Post Company