EDITORIAL
Shaky, Hopeful Mideast Step
August 20 2002
Israel's agreement Sunday to withdraw troops from the West Bank city of
Bethlehem and parts of the Gaza Strip in exchange for a Palestinian crackdown
on militants has produced a limited, shaky cease-fire. It could, however,
open the way to a broader halt in the two years of violence that has killed
nearly 600 Israelis in mostly suicide bombings and 1,500 Palestinians
in targeted assassinations and army assaults.
The most obvious stumbling block is the refusal of radical Palestinian
groups such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad to stop their terror attacks no
matter what the Palestinian Authority agrees to. Palestinian leader Yasser
Arafat's security forces must make serious, visible efforts to stop terrorists
from killing Israelis. Israel must fulfill its promise to end the hardships
imposed by nearly around-the-clock curfews that have devastated the Palestinians'
economy and their quality of life.
The agreement between Israel's defense minister, Binyamin Ben-Eliezer,
and the Palestinian Authority's interior minister, Abdel Razak Yehiyeh,
was the first notable accord between the two sides in months and the first
negotiated without mediation by the United States or other referees.
The first Israeli pullbacks Monday coincided with reports that Abu Nidal,
a breakaway Palestinian terrorist whose Revolutionary Council of Fatah
has killed hundreds of people, was found dead of gunshot wounds in Iraq.
Abu Nidal's victims included both Israelis and aides to Arafat, a reminder
that Palestinians do not constitute a monolithic group. Last week, for
instance, an Arafat aide criticized Hamas for blocking a unified Palestinian
front against suicide attacks and for rejecting coexistence with Israel.
If Palestinian security forces can reduce the violence, Israeli troops
are expected to withdraw from other occupied West Bank territories. Egypt,
Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Gulf states allied with the Palestinians should
help train security forces to collect intelligence and arrest terrorists
before they attack.
The Bush administration, which has strongly backed Israel and has also
proclaimed its support for an eventual Palestinian state, has a role as
well. CIA Director George J. Tenet outlined plans for a cease-fire more
than a year ago, but it never took hold. Tenet met with Palestinian officials
in Washington this month. He and other U.S. experts can help keep negotiations
going, but it's up to Israel and the Palestinians to do the early work,
to provide a first, tenuous thread of trust.
Copyright
2002 Los Angeles Times
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