A VOICE FOR ARAFAT?
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP90-00965R000301890050-9
Release Decision:
RIFPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
1
Document Creation Date:
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 25, 2012
Sequence Number:
50
Case Number:
Publication Date:
October 16, 1985
Content Type:
OPEN SOURCE
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Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/25: CIA-RDP90-00965R000301890050-9
ARTICLE APPyrARED
ON PAGE 41? 2-3
WASHINGTON POST
16 October 1985
- Rowland Evans and Robert Novak
A Voice for Arafat?
Following the euphoria over capture of four
Palestinian hijackers, influential figures in and
outside the administration are pressing Presi-
dent Reagan to deny the Palestine Liberation
Organization and Yasser Arafat any voice in
negotiating West Bank peace as a poor-rela-
tion partner of Jordan's King Hussein.
The most powerful move to sever all PLO
participation in West Bank peace talks is Is-
rael's. The most formidable weapon is Israel's
new claim to unimpeachable intelligence Der-
sonalk linking ? to terrorist oneratiops.
The pro-Israel here and its staunch afties
in Congress are quietly aiding Israel's efforts
to write Arafat out of any Mideast peace ne-
gotiations, even if that strands King Hussein.
Reagan has not yet decided whether or
when to follow the Israeli lead. Asked recently
about Arafat's direct complicity, national se-
curity adviser Robert McFarlane said it had
not been "established." But the emotional
tenor of anti-Arafat rhetoric the past few days
will play into the hands of Israeli Prime Minis-
ter Shimon Peres when he arrives here this
week to play his anti-Arafat trump card.
The force of American public opinion now
running against Arafat helps explain the un-
precedented reversal at the United Nations
Monday, postponing Arafat's long-scheduled
speech there this week. "If there had been an
actual vote on delaying it," a key U.S. diplo-
mat at the United Nations told us, "it would
have gone against the United States by prob-
ably 120 to one, the one being us." There was
no vote; U.S. Ambassador Vernon Walters ar-
ranged the switch with diplomatic quietude
and no floor debate.
If the PLO chairman had appeared on the
podium of the United Nations as planned, the
president would have felt obliged to cancel his
own speech there next week. The flow of anti-
Arafat sentiment in the United States is strong
enough to embarrass Reagan politically if he
had followed the Palestinian leader in the
United Nations.
Israel's claim to have bagged an intelligence
windfall implicating Arafat in the hijacking of
the Achille 1..auro will be Exhibit One when
Peres enters the Oval Office late this week.
One Israeli official credits this intelligeielf.
with demonstrating "absolute, complete and
irrefutable moot that Arafat knew about this
operation before it was to begin." The proof
has yet to be produced here.
Israeli intelligence showed precision accuracy
a week earlier when the s Tunis headquar-
ters was bombed exactly 30 minutes after the
start of a secret, top-level meeting scheduled to
last 90 minutes, with Arafat in the chair. What
Israel did not know was that Arafat had suddenly
been called to a meeting with the Tunisian prime
minister and had gone there without disclosing
his destination to anyone.
If Peres, with backing from the pro-Israel
lobby and congressional bloc, persuades Rea-
gan that Arafat is personally accountable for
PLO terrorism, the president may find it hard
to continue his support for King Hussein's
West Bank peace formula: a Jordanian-Pales-
tinian delegation, including PLO-connected
members, to negotiate with Israel.
Israel's target is to bury that formula. If
Peres achieves that, it would complicate what
little remains of the president's chance to find
a peaceful solution on the West Bank. The
complication is fundamental: the Arab world
long ago designated Arafat's PLO as sole rep-
resentative of the Palestinian people. Without
some PLO membership in the Jordan-Palestin-
ian delegation, Hussein foresees meaningless
negotiations. The product of those talks?if
there were one?would appear to have no
standing on the West Bank.
Beyond the PLO and the Palestinians, more-
over, the United States might find the Arab
world mobilized against it if the Israeli case
against Arafat and the PLO is sold to Reagan.
Also against it, at least publicly, would be such
U.S. allies as Portugal, Greece, Spain and Aus-
tria, all having diplomatic relations with the
PLO.
But with today's anti-PLO, anti-Arafat emo-
timed -climate, political problems with foreign
states may count less than normal. Serious
strains have developed with at least four pro-
U.S. countries long counted as allies: Egypt,
Tunisia, Itily (which is now in a parliamentary
crisis over the freeing of Mohammed Abbas),
and Morocco. Moroccan King Hassan was due
on a high-level visit here yesterday but can-
celled at the last minute because of growing
anti-Americanism in the Arab world.
The recent pattern of Reagan's Mideast di-
plomacy shows why Peres thinks he can per-
suade the president to erase Arafat and the
PLO from the West Bank blackboard. If he is
wrong, the cause will not be Peres' failure so
much as Hussein's retention of Reagan's true
loyalty. That is one constant in a Mideast
where Israel's sway continues to enlarge.
,o1986, News America Syndicate
Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/25: CIA-RDP90-00965R000301890050-9