| “A MATTER of
time” is the code name being used by the Israeli army for the
renewed siege on Palestinian National Authority Chairman
Yasser Arafat’s compound in the West Bank city of Ramallah.
Israeli analysts said the name of the operation
apparently is meant that breaking Arafat, which would be
followed by his leaving the compound due to intense Israeli
pressure, was only a matter of time.
The Israeli army reimposed its siege on Arafat’s compound
and started demolishing buildings inside Thursday following
two suicide bombings inside Israel which killed eight people
and wounded more than 60 others.
After three days of demolition, during which most the
buildings in Arafat’s compound have been reduced to rubble,
the Israeli army withdrew its bulldozers, but the tight siege
on the compound remains in force.
Officially, Israel has not declared that it intends to
deport Arafat, and the Israeli army has said the purpose of
the operation in Ramallah is to capture wanted Palestinians
hiding inside the compound.
However, it is not the first time that Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon has played a double game when it comes
to the matter of forcing Arafat to leave Ramallah.
At a cabinet meeting preceeding the operation, Sharon
expressed his desire to see Arafat expelled. He refrained from
taking the action only after receiving warnings from his
intelligence officials, who said expelling Arafat would do
nothing but raising his prestige among the Palestinians nor in
the rest of the world.
Nevertheless, the question of Arafat’s expulsion is again
on the agenda and a decision on the matter is much closer.
The Israeli army presented Arafat with a condition it
knew he could not accept, the surrender of the wanted
Palestinians taking refuge in his offices.
The Israeli commanders in the field received orders “to
minimize the living space” at Arafat’s disposal.
Over the past three days, the Israeli army has destroyed
dozens of structures in the compound, which had already been
severely damaged. The only building now remaining standing in
the compound is the one which holds Arafat’s office.
“Arafat will be stuck in a stinking, dirty hole,” one
senior Israeli army official said, with no small amount of
satisfaction.
The Israeli officers in Ramallah said that “the Nativity
Church scenario (in the West Bank city of Bethlehem) would not
repeat itself here. We will not sit around the building for
weeks.”
The commanders have not been given detailed instructions
as to how this is to be achieved.
The troops have been ordered not to harm Arafat and not
to enter his office, but these instructions could change in
the event of another terror attack, the officers were quoted
as saying.
Israeli Defense Minister Binyamin Ben Eliezer, who spoke
over the weekend with Palestinian officials, including
Arafat’s deputy Mahmoud Abbas (also known as Abu Mazen), said
he was not overly impressed by their concern about Arafat’s
welfare.
Israeli Deputy Defense Minister Weizman Shiri said Arafat
was free to leave the country, but would not be allowed to
return.
“If he decides he wants to get out, we’ll give him a
lift,” Shiri told Army Radio, adding: “We’ll give him a
one-way ticket in a dignified way.”
Shiri did not say which country could be the likely
destination, but he said: “If he decides he wants to get out
we’ll find him a good place.”
These reports strengthened Ben Eliezer’s belief that this
time, the pressure must really be turned up on Arafat.
The defense minister believes that because of Arafat’s
weakened position, the siege will undermine him further
instead of strengthening him.
But it is hard for the defense minister to explain how to
realize the plan that is to make Arafat surrender and leave
the compound of his own volition.
“A Matter of Time?” Israeli media questioned the name of
the operation, stressing: “It may have been better to have
named it Russian roulette.”
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