August/September 1996, Page 121
Facts For Your Files: A Chronology of U.S.-Middle East
Relations
Compiled by Janet McMahon
June 1: Following the election of Likud leader Binyamin
Netanyahu as Israels next prime minister, King Hussein of
Jordan told reporters he believed the peace process has every
possibility of continuing. This is an internal Israeli affair,
he added. It is nothing to worry about.
June 2: Israeli Prime Minister-elect Netanyahu called on
all the Arab leaders and all of our neighbors, our Palestinian
neighbors
to join us on the road to real peace with security.
Responding to questions about Israels new hard-line government,
Secretary of State Warren Christopher said the U.S. will have
to adapt our policy to the current situation.
Following a meeting in Geneva with the presidents of Bosnia, Croatia
and Serbia, Secretary of State Christopher said elections scheduled
for September would go ahead as planned, and that the U.S.-led Bosnian
peacekeeping mission would start conducting more visible and
proactive patrols to ensure greater freedom of movement and
possible apprehension of indicted war criminals.
June 3: Palestinian President Yasser Arafat called on Prime
Minister-elect Netanyahu to honor Israels commitment to withdraw
from the West Bank city of Hebron. In Cairo, following a meeting
with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, Syrian President Hafez Al-Assad
said he doubted talks with Israel would resume soon and that things
are not going ahead in a positive direction.
Bahrains minister of state for cabinet affairs and information,
Muhammad Mutawa, announced the arrest in May of 29 militants accused
of having been trained by Iran to overthrow the ruling Khalifa family
and install a Shii government. Mutawa also said Bahrain, while
not breaking relations with Iran, was recalling its ambassador from
Tehran.
June 4: Bahraini Interior Minister Mohammad bin Khalifa
al-Khalifa said an additional 44 suspects, 34 of whom had already
confessed, had been arrested in connection with an alleged Iranian
plot to overthrow the government.
June 6: Following the resignation of Turkish Prime Minister
Mesut Yilmaz and the resulting collapse of the coalition government
with former Prime Minister Tansu Ciller, Islamist Refah (Welfare)
Party leader Necmettin Erbakan demanded the right to form the next
government. Meanwhile, Ankara rejected a U.S. aid package after
the House of Representatives voted to condition it on Turkeys
policies toward neighboring Armenia.
June 8: Following a two-day meeting in Damascus, Presidents
Assad of Syria and Mubarak of Egypt and Crown Prince Abdullah of
Saudi Arabia announced that an Arab summit would be held June 21-23
in Cairo to discuss the implications of Binyamin Netanyahus
election as Israeli prime minister.
June 9: Croatian police arrested Zlatko Aleksovski, one
of nine Bosnian Croats indicted by the International War Crimes
Tribunal in The Hague.
At OPECs midyear meeting in Vienna, Gulf oil producers, along
with Indonesia and Libya, warned other OPEC members to abide by
production quotas when Iraqi oil begins to enter the market or face
a flood of oil, with a resulting possible price shock, from the
Gulf-state producers.
An appeals court in Abu Dhabi acquitted two and upheld the sentences
of eight former officials of the Bank of Credit & Commerce International
(BCCI) convicted of bank fraud.
June 10: Hezbollah guerrillas in southern Lebanon ambushed
an Israeli army patrol, killing five Israeli soldiers.
For the second time in two months, Palestinian police arrested
Gaza psychiatrist and human rights official Dr. Eyad el-Sarraj,
who has criticized the PNA for corruption and human rights violations.
June 12: The U.N. Security Council demanded that Iraq give
immediate, unconditional and unrestricted access to
all sites its inspectors wish to investigate, including three military
bases near Baghdad from which U.N. weapons inspectors recently had
been barred.
Defense Secretary William Perry said he will recommend that U.S.
ground troops remain in Bosnia beyond the December pull-out date
if NATO determines that a withdrawal would jeopardize peace.
The State Department said it would impose sanctions on China if
the M-11 missiles Beijing sold to Pakistan are deployed.
June 13: Hanan Ashrawi, former spokeswoman for Palestinian
peace negotiating teams, was reported to have accepted the position
of Palestines minister for international affairs.
Members of the international Peace Implementation Council, meeting
in Florence, agreed that Bosnian elections should take place in
September as scheduled, despite the fact that specific terms of
the Dayton accordincluding the return of refugees to their
homes, free travel throughout the country, establishment of a free
press, and the arrest of indicted war criminalshave yet to
be met. In Brussels, U.S. and NATO officials agreed to put off until
September a decision on the timetable for withdrawal from Bosnia.
June 14: Following intense U.S. lobbying to convince the
Bosnian government that the agreement would not give Bosnian Serbs
the status of a separate state, the Bosnian government and Bosnian
Serbs, along with their respective allies of Croatia and Serbia,
signed an accord to equalize the weapons strength of the recent
adversaries.
June 16: Israeli Prime Minister-elect Binyamin Netanyahu
issued his Guidelines of the Government of Israel, which
included continued Israeli occupation of the Golan Heights, opposition
to a Palestinian state, the strengthening of Jewish settlements
in the West Bank, and Jerusalem as Israels eternal capital.
June 17: As Prime Minister-elect Netanyahu continued negotiations
with right-wing and religious parties on establishing a coalition
government, the newly elected Israeli Knesset was sworn in and addressed
by outgoing Prime Minister Shimon Peres.
June 18: After agreeing to create a new cabinet position
for fellow Likud member Ariel Sharon as minister of national infrastructure,
Prime Minister Netanyahus cabinet was endorsed by the Knesset.
Appointments included David Levy as foreign minister, Dan Meridor
as minister of finance, Rafael Eitan as minister of agriculture
and environment, Binyamin Begin as minister of science, and New
Immigrant Party founder Natan Sharansky as minister of commerce
and industry. Three posts in the 20-member cabinet went to the National
Religious Party, two to the New Immigrant Party, two to Shas, and
one to Third Way.
June 21: The Pentagon announced that at least one Iraqi
weapons storage site destroyed by U.S. troops in the week following
the end of the Gulf war contained two highly toxic chemical agents.
June 22: Twenty-two Arab leaders, representing all the Arab
League states except Iraq, convened in Cairo for their first summit
meeting in six years. In his opening remarks, Egyptian President
Mubarak called on Israel to abide by the Oslo accords and the principle
of land for peace.
Iraqi officials handed over to U.N. chief arms inspector Rolf Ekeus
what it said were the complete files on its banned nonconventional
weapons program and signed an agreement with the U.N. pledging immediate,
unconditional and unrestricted access to all suspect sites.
Only days after the House of Representatives passed legislation
tightening the economic embargo on Iran, President Clinton told
the Arabic-language Al Sharq Al Awsat newspaper published
in London that the U.S. was prepared at any time to have a
full and frank dialogue with the Rafsanjani government.
June 23: The Arab summits final communiqu³ called
on Israel to withdraw from all occupied Palestinian land and from
the Golan Heights, and to agree to East Jerusalem as the capital
of an independent state. Israels failure to adhere to the
principle of land for peace would compel all the Arab states
to reconsider steps taken in the context of the peace process vis-â-vis
Israel, the communiqué concluded. In response, Israeli
Prime Minister Netanyahu called the statement an attempt to
dictate
prior conditions that undermine the security of Israel.
U.S. officials said Libya had halted construction on an underground
chemical weapons plant.
June 25: In Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, a massive truck bomb
exploded outside an apartment complex housing U.S. military personnel,
killing 19 Americans and wounding some 250 people of several nationalities.
In Jerusalem, Secretary of State Christopher held his first meeting
with newly elected Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu.
Irans Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Maleki called President
Clintons offer of a full and frank dialogue with
Tehran not sincere and contradictory.
June 26: Secretary of State Christopher, who flew to Saudi
Arabia from Israel, and Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal
said the previous days truck bombing would not damage the
close military ties between their two countries.
Palestinian guerrillas killed three Israeli soldiers in an ambush
in the West Bank town of Naaran, near Jericho.
President Clinton certified Bosnia as eligible to receive millions
of dollars in U.S. reconstruction aid and a military train-and-equip
program, despite the reported continuing presence of Iranian fighters
in the former Yugoslav republic.
June 27: At the G-7 economic summit in Lyon, France, President
Clinton urged the worlds industrial countries to focus on
terrorism.
In the first such meeting, two representatives of the new Israeli
government met with PNA President Arafat in Gaza.
June 28: Turkeys Islamist Refah Party leader, Necmettin
Erbakan, after forming a coalition government with former Prime
Minister Tansu Ciller, was named prime minister of Turkey.
Bosnian Serb leader and indicted war criminal Radovan Karadzic
presided at his Serbian Democratic Party congress.
June 29: As Radovan Karadzic was re-elected leader of the
ruling Bosnian Serb party, world leaders at the G-7 economic summit
warned Serbia that, if it did not use its influence to pressure
the Bosnian Serb leader to resign from public office, economic sanctions
might be reimposed.
Presenting his new cabinet to the Turkish parliament, Islamist
Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan called for a middle course between
East and West and for free market reforms, earlier having paid tribute
to Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern-day secular Turkey.
June 30: Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic announced
that, while not resigning, he was turning over his presidency to
Biljana Plavsic, who told Belgrade television that Karadzic remains
president, and I am a vice president.
In what was seen as a preview for Bosnian elections scheduled for
Sept. 14, municipal elections to establish a single city council
were held in the divided Croat-Muslim city of Mostar. |