Middle East: Candidate Perers Meets the Arabs
MIDDLE EAST
His not-so-secret talks stir up a fuss on the eve of Haig's visit
Shimon Peres' El Al 707 jetliner was touching down at Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion Airport when the controversy erupted. Israeli television reported that Peres had made a detour during a trip to Western Europe for a "secret" get-together with Morocco's King Hassan, and that he had also met with a Jordanian envoy.* Secret diplomacy with the Arabs may not be new for Israel, but the country is just three months away from elections, and Labor Party Leader Peres is Prime Minister Menachem Begin's principal challenger. Stormed a Begin aide: "Never before has an opposition leader conducted negotiations with a head of state at war with Israel. This opposition no longer values loyalty to the state."
Peres, who holds a comfortable lead over Begin in the polls, dismissed the partisan clamor. Without confirming the reports, he hinted that the meetings had indeed taken place. The purpose: to impress the Arabs that a Labor government would push for Palestinian autonomy in the West Bank and Gaza. Said Peres: "We must see with whom we can come to terms and with whom we cannot. I don't need anyone's approval for this."
As early as last October, Peres began sending word through intermediaries to King Hussein that all peace-related issuesincluding the highly sensitive question of Jerusalemwould be negotiable under a Labor government. He especially wanted to sound out the Jordanians on the possibility of a compromise in the West Bankthe so-called Jordanian optionwhich Hussein has repeatedly rejected. Under the plan, Israel would hand over all but 30% of the area to a joint Jordanian-Palestinian state under Jordan's control. Peres' finding: Jordan might go along, but would not discuss details.
Peres' not-so-secret maneuvering was not without irony. Only three weeks earlier, Abba Eban and other Labor Party members had rebuked former Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan for revealing in his recently published memoirs the substance of talks Dayan held with Arab leaders in 1977. Eban argued that such disclosures jeopardized future Arab-Israeli secret negotiations.
Labor may have had a more compelling reason for coming down hard on the soldier-statesman: Dayan's independent candidacy, likely to be announced this week, might win as many as 15 to 20 of the 120 Knesset seats. That would make him a potent spoiler, able to force coalition terms on either Labor or Likud. It would also put him, for example, in a position to press for his version of Palestinian autonomy. Dead set against territorial compromise with Jordan, he envisions self-rule for West Bank and Gaza Palestinians, but favors maintaining Israeli troops and settlements in the occupied territories. Says Dayan of Labor's Jordanian option: "It's totally unrealistic that Hussein would agree to such an idea."
Indeed, with all the publicity in Israel, Jordan seemed cool to further contacts. When Peres publicly sought to draw Saudi Arabia into negotiations over the future of Jerusalem, he was unceremoniously rebuffed by Riyadh.
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