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Does Soviet 'New Thinking' Apply in the Mideast?


Article # : 16164 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 6 / 1989  3,615 Words
Author : Avigdor Haselkorn
Avigdor Haselkorn is a senior analyst for Analytical Assessments Corporation.

       The 10-day, five-nation tour of the Middle East conducted by Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze beginning February 17, 1989, scored several firsts for the USSR. It was the first time in 15 years that a Soviet foreign minister had visited the region. For the first time, a Soviet foreign minister traveled to Jordan. Shevardnadze was the first Soviet foreign minister in 70 years to go to Iran. There he was accorded an unprecedented audience with Aytollah Ruhollah Khomeini. Equally important, for the first time, the Soviet Union seemed to be accepted by Arabs and Israelis alike as an "honest broker." Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Arens hurried to Cairo for a meeting with his Soviet counterpart on ways to resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict.
       
        In summing up the visit, Shevardnadze underscored its achievements. In an interview with Pravda on March 2, 1989, he listed several "questions" concerning Soviet relations with regional countries that were "successfully resolved." These include:
       
        The complete normalization of relations with Egypt. A
        turnaround and changes in the climate and nature of ties
        with neighboring Iran. The deepening of contacts with
        countries with which we have a tradition of cooperation
        --Syria and Iraq. A first visit to Jordan. New moves in the
        dialogue with Israel--a country with which we have no
        diplomatic relations but with which we must talk for the
        sake of peace and security in the Near East. Finally, our
        support for the position of the PLO leaders, who have taken
        outstanding and original steps for the sake of the same
        lofty aim.
       
        However, within days of the visit, Arens leveled strong criticism at Shevardnadze. He was particularly concerned over the reference the Soviet official made to "sanctions" against Israel during a speech to Egypt's People's Assembly. According to Arens, this smacked of Brezhnev, if not Bulganin, rather than Mikhail Gorbachev's "new thinking." Further, the Israeli official questioned Shevardnadze's assertion that the USSR wants to renew relations with Israel, but only under circumstances that would not anger the Arab world. "If this is the Soviet stance," said Arens, "and if they do not wish
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