January 1990, Page 28
Facts for Your Files: A Chronology of US-Mideast Relations
Compiled by Janet McMahon
Nov. 1: Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto survived
a parliamentary no confidence motion, with the opposition falling
12 votes short of the needed total.
The Iranian parliament adopted a law authorizing the arrest and
trial of Americans charged with acting against Iranian interests
anywhere in the world. It was a response to a previous US Justice
Department ruling authorizing the FBI to arrest and try suspected
terrorists without the permission of the countries where they were
seized.
The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the killing of Mohammad
Ali Marzouki, 70, the only remaining Saudi Embassy official in Lebanon.
Nov. 4: Lebanese Maronite General Michel Aoun declared the
Lebanese parliament dissolved in an effort to prevent the election
of a new president and ratification of an Arab League-endorsed peace
plan proposed by Lebanese deputies in Taif, Saudi Arabia.
Former Interior Minister Ali Akbar Mohtashemi, one of Iran's most
militant Islamic revolutionaries, called for a mass demonstration
to mark the 10th anniversary of the seizure of the American Embassy.
Turnout was estimated at 10,000 to 15,000, in contrast to the hundreds
of thousands who participated in previous rallies.
Nov. 5: The Israeli Inner Cabinet formally approved US Secretary
of State Baker's fivepoint peace plan, with the "assumptions"
that the US will assure that participation in peace talks is limited
to non-PLO residents of the occupied territories, that Palestinian
participants will be approved by Israel, and that the talks will
be limited to the Israeli election plan for the territories.
The Lebanese Parliament met in a remote village in the north of
the country to ratify the Arab-sponsored peace plan and elect Rene
Moawad, a Maronite Christian, as the country's new president.
Nov. 6: PLO officials, following executive committee meetings
in Cairo, reserved the right to decide on the composition of the
Palestinian delegation to peace talks with Israel.
Nov. 7: The US vetoed a United Nations Security Council
resolution calling on Israel to "lift its siege " of the
occupied territories. The Security Council's 14 other members voted
in favor of the resolution.
Two Israeli soldiers participating in joint military operations
with the US were killed, and two others wounded, in an artillery
explosion at the Army Proving Ground in Yuma, Arizona.
Nov. 8: Jordan held its first election in 22 years, with
an estimated 61 percent of the country's voters participating. Muslim
Brotherhood candidates and their fundamentalist allies won at least
32 of the 80 parliamentary seats.
US Secretary of State James Baker, while praising Israel's acceptance
of Palestinian elections in the occupied territories in principle,
rejected the conditions attached to that acceptance.
Nov. 9: At its annual meeting in Baltimore, Maryland, the
US Catholic Conference of Bishops unanimously adopted a resolution
calling for an independent Palestinian homeland within the context
of Israel's right to secure borders.
Nov. 13: Selim al-Hoss, a Sunni Muslim and US-educated
economist who has been serving as prime minister of Lebanon, was
named to the same post by newly-elected President Rene Moawad.
Nov. 15: Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir described
his White House meetings with President Bush, Secretary of State
Baker and Defense Secretary Cheney as harmonious, because "the
discussions were not conducted in a way that we had to take decisions
today." Shamir told reporters that he had not been given the
assurances Israel requested as part of its acceptance of Baker's
five-point peace plan.
Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip celebrated the first
anniversary of the declaration of the state of Palestine, while
Israeli forces imposed a curfew on more than a million residents
of the occupied territories.
Nov. 17: Following a two-month absence from Lebanon, US
Ambassador John McCarthy presented his credentials to President
Rene Moawad at the latter's ancestral home in the mountains of northern
Lebanon. McCarthy than departed Lebanon for consultations in Washington.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz proposed the establishment of
a joint committee with Iran to try to negotiate a final peace settlement
to the Iran-Iraq war.
Nov. 22: Lebanese President Rene Moawad was assassinated
after 17 days in office. There was no claim of responsibility for
the killing of Moawad along with fourteen others, including 10 of
his bodyguards and four Syrian soldiers, by a bomb detonated by
remote control as the President's motorcade returned from an observance
of Lebanese Independence Day.
Nov. 23: Israeli planes attacked two bases of the Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine, General Command located in
the Syrian-controlled Bekaa Valley.
Nov. 24: The Lebanese Parliament elected Maronite Christian
deputy and businessman Elias Hrawi to succeed Rene Moawad as president.
Hrawi, whose candidacy was supported by Syria, retained Selim al-Hoss
as prime minister.
Nov. 25: As assassinated Lebanese President Rene Moawad
was buried, his successor Elias Hrawi declared the cabinet of Christian
General Michel Aoun dissolved and named a new government. Businesses
in Muslim and Christian areas of the country closed in a nationwide
day of mourning.
Nov. 27: The US warned that it would stop funding its share
of UN headquarters operations in New York if the General Assembly
raises the status of the PLO from "non-state observer"
to a proposed "State of Palestine. "
Syrian tanks moved to within two miles of Christian General Michel
Aoun's stronghold in the Lebanese Presidential Palace in Baabda,
as the standoff between the rebellious general and the newly elected
government of Lebanon took on military overtones.
Nov. 28: PLO officials and Arab diplomats based in Paris
reported that Abu Nidal, leader of the terrorist Fatah Revolutionary
Council, which broke away from the PLO in 1973, has been placed
under house arrest in Libya.
Nov. 29: At the request of the PLO, Arab foreign ministers
met in Tunis to reaffirm their countries' commitment to the PLO
as a central player in Middle East diplomacy. The PLO reportedly
has been under pressure from the US and Egypt to accept Secretary
of State Baker's peace plan, including the determination by Egypt,
Israel and the US of a Palestinian delegation.
Nov. 30: At the United Nations, a group of Arab states formally
introduced a resolution calling on the General Assembly to recognize
the PLO as the representative of a Palestinian state. |