Middle East Update

Middle East Update

A review of the Middle East Crisis is in order. For starters, some

of you may want to review my pieces on Jerusalem by accessing

the archives (8/3 & 8/10). I won”t go through a lot of the history

here and I will continue to use “Week in Review” for more current

commentary. But it is interesting to look at the two protagonists.

Population

–Israel – 6.1 million

–Palestine – 3.1 million…there are also 3.9 million refugees

scattered throughout the Middle East

Armed Forces

–Israel – 173,000 active duty soldiers

–Palestinian National Authority – 30,000 armed police are

allowed under previous agreements. However, many experts

believe the figure is now closer to 40,000. The police are the

only Palestinians who are to have arms. The best estimate today,

though, is that the Palestinians have about 80,000 guns. In other

words, a true war between the two could be ugly. Let alone if

other combatants enter the fray.

Economy

–Israel – GDP of $97 billion. Per capita income of $17,500.

–Palestine – $5 billion. Per capita income of $1,575.

The Palestinians are essentially divided into two areas; the West

Bank and the Gaza Strip.

The West Bank, about the size of Delaware, has a population of 2

million Palestinians with 200,000 Jewish settlers. The West Bank

was captured from Jordan in 1967.

The Gaza Strip is about twice the size of Washington, D.C. Of

the 1.1 million Palestinians here, some 35% live in squalid refugee

camps. [Actually, almost all 3 million Palestinians live in awful

conditions.] There are still about 4,000 Jewish settlers in Gaza.

Gaza is also home to the highest birth rate in the world and 50%

of the population is younger than 15. You can make the same

sort of statement about the West Bank.

Under the Oslo Accords of 1993, autonomy of the West Bank

and Gaza were granted to the PLO (this is to occur over time). It

was then that the Palestinian National Authority was created with

Yasser Arafat as its first elected leader.

Arafat now has to decide whether to declare an independent

Palestinian state, a move which he has postponed a few times

under political pressure from moderate Arab states like Egypt.

Should he do so in the future (the next deadline is November 15),

you would have a situation where the state would consist of the

West Bank and Gaza, 25 miles apart. And through its military

power, as well as simple checkpoints, Israel could keep the two

lands separate.

Unemployment is sky high in the Palestinian population. As I

have commented in previous columns here as well as Week in

Reviews, the chief culprit for this is Arafat and his corrupt

Palestinian Authority which has squandered hundreds of millions

in economic development aid. And part of the reason for the

recent violence is the fact that many of the Palestinians are just as

upset at their own failed leadership as they are at the Israelis.

This is how the process can take on a life of its own.

And the Palestinian economy is directly tied to Israel in that a vast

majority of the decent jobs, like day laboring, are there, where the

pay is far greater, for instance, in the construction trade than it is

in Palestine.

After the recent Camp David peace process, including the

disastrous follow-up meeting, President Clinton noted that Israeli

Prime Minister Barak had offered an unprecedented compromise,

90% of the West Bank for a Palestinian state and Palestinian

sovereignty over the Muslim and Christian quarters of the Old

City of Jerusalem. But thus far, Arafat has chosen to provoke

Israel rather than accept or make a counteroffer.

Basically, the main sticking point remains Jerusalem. The Temple

Mount is the holiest place of Judaism, the site where King

Solomon built the first of two temples some 3,000 years ago. But

the Muslims believe the Prophet Mohammed ascended to heaven

from this spot as well. [Again, see earlier pieces on the history of

Jerusalem for more details.]

You would think that compromise would be simple. Give the

Israelis control over the Jewish Quarter of the Old City, the

Western Wall and other Jewish neighborhoods. The Palestinians

could be granted control of Muslim and Christian Quarters. The

Temple Mount could then be shared, preferably under some sort

of U.N. arrangement.

But many of the Muslim religious leaders today are calling for

“complete sovereignty over every speck of dirt in Jerusalem.”

At times like these it”s time for others to step forward and lead,

namely Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. And it would appear

that it is with Egypt that the U.S. has the most leverage. After

all, we have granted them some $30 billion in aid since 1978! It”s

pay back time, Hosni!

Actually, you may have noticed that after each summit, Arafat

immediately seeks Mubarak”s advice and counsel. Arafat listens

to Mubarak. But Mubarak is obviously concerned about how

appeasement would look to the more radical Muslim elements.

And when you have terrorists like Hezbollah (“The Party of

God,” which operates mostly in Lebanon) and Hamas, you can

see why Mubarak is intimidated.

As for Jordan, newly crowned King Abdullah is a valiant man,

following in the footsteps of his great father, King Hussein. [I

need to mention that I greatly admired Hussein and always

forgave him for his support of Saddam during the Gulf War. He

was only trying to survive.] But Abdullah has a huge Palestinian

problem of his own in that hundreds of thousands of Palestinian

refugees live within Jordan”s borders. The history of the nation is

such that Jordan could explode at any moment itself. Yet

Abdullah knows his future is tied to the West and massive

economic assistance.

Finally, there is Saudi Arabia. Crown Prince Abdullah, the ailing

King Fahd”s half-brother and de-facto leader, has issued

contradictory statements throughout the current crisis. He seems

eager to appease radical elements in his own society as a means

of keeping the peace. But he is also too smart to understand that

a wider conflict in the Middle East would be a disaster for all

involved. Saudi Arabia needs peace…and stable oil prices…to

continue its own economic reform program. They have serious

problems; chief of which is the fact that their population is

booming and only 40,000 of 110,000 coming into the job market

each year are finding work. You know where the other 70,000

end up, in the arms of the radicals and terrorists. They have no

other option.

There”s your updated player scorecard.

Source for the statistics, Lee Hockstader / Washington Post.

Brian Trumbore