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>From LA Times

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http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-
000024107apr04.story?coll=la%2Dheadlines%2Dworld%2Dmanual

THE MIDDLE EAST

Europe Sees a Tinderbox in Its Streets

Conflict: Spate of anti- Semitic attacks has officials worried about roxy fighting
between Jewish and Arab groups.

By CAROL J. WILLIAMS
TIMES STAFF WRITER

April 4 2002

BERLIN -- With synagogues ablaze in France, firebombs defacing Jewish property in
Belgium and Orthodox Jews under attack on the streets of Berlin, Europeans have
been given notice that the raging violence in the Middle East threatens their own
peace and security.

Germany, France and the Benelux countries are home to vibrant Jewish
communities and large groups of Arab immigrants who are increasingly at risk of
becoming proxy combatants in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as Western countries
appear helpless to intervene.

European Union leaders, meeting in emergency session in Luxembourg on
Wednesday, called for a continental initiative to dispatch mediators to a blood-
soaked region where U.S. diplomats have so far failed to ease the violence. But the
vague plan being hashed out was clearly hobbled by the pressure to be evenhanded
while condemning Israel's campaign against the Palestinians. In France, scene of the
worst anti-Semitic outbursts in Europe during the last week, Prime Minister Lionel
Jospin deployed 1,100 national guard troops to bolster security around Jewish
religious sites and prevent attacks by emboldened vandals. President Jacques
Chirac condemned the recent attacks on synagogues, cemeteries and kosher food
shops as criminal acts "unworthy of France."

"Passions that flare up in the Middle East must not flare up here," Jospin warned.
"Even if we have the largest Jewish community in Europe and one of the largest
Arab-Muslim communities on the European continent, we must not import this
violence."

Chirac urged EU colleagues at the Luxembourg meeting to send a delegation to
pressure Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Palestinian Authority President
Yasser Arafat to defuse the conflict.

But the EU foreign ministers did more to expose their uncertainty over how to
intervene than to draft a coherent strategy for easing tensions.

While agreeing to send EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana and Spanish Foreign
Minister Josep Pique to the region, the European diplomats mostly criticized U.S.
efforts at containing the violence as ineffective and too tolerant of the Israeli
crackdown on Palestinians.

European leaders have been much more vocal than their U.S. allies in criticizing
Sharon's attempts to isolate and exile Arafat.

"It is clear [U.S.] mediation efforts have failed and we need new mediation,"
European Commission President Romano Prodi told journalists.

But Prodi also made it clear that the EU was unwilling to use its clout as Israel's 
most
important trade partner to pressure Sharon into withdrawing forces from Palestinian
territories. Neutral Switzerland, by contrast, warned that it was reconsidering
economic and military cooperation with Israel in view of what it sees as the
systematic violation of Palestinian human rights.

The Mideast flare-up is believed to be spurring attacks on Jewish targets in Europe,
including an incident in the Belgian city of Antwerp on Wednesday in which
unidentified attackers hurled two Molotov cocktails at a synagogue. The vandals
caused little damage and no injuries.

On Sunday night, two visiting U.S. Orthodox Jews were beaten on Berlin's
fashionable Kurfuerstendamm shopping street. On Tuesday, vandals painted a
swastika on a Jewish memorial in Berlin, and others managed to lob a firebomb into
the Charlottenburg Jewish cemetery on Saturday despite a heavy police presence
there and at all other Jewish religious sites in the city.

"The events in the Middle East have given right-wing extremists the impression they
can lash out because they think there is now greater sympathy" for their acts against
Jewish people and property, said Henning Riecke, an analyst with the German
Foreign Policy Society. "They think they are taking advantage of an opportunity."

Ali Maarouf, a spokesman for a coalition of more than three dozen Arab groups in
Berlin, expressed concern that the recent outbursts of anti-Semitic violence could
discredit the rightful aspirations of the Palestinian people and weaken international
resolve to come to their aid.

"Such attacks are damaging to our just fight against the occupation in the Middle
East and against the worst attacks of Israel for a long time," Maarouf told the 
Berliner
Zeitung daily. "By such actions, the public is being distracted from the main problem."

Germany is host to the fastest-growing Jewish community outside Israel, with
immigrants from Eastern Europe swelling the ranks from barely 30,000 a decade ago
to more than 100,000 today. But refugees and asylum seekers from Arab countries
outnumber them tenfold.

A strong pro-Palestinian bias was clearly visible over the weekend when thousands
who gathered for traditional Easter human rights demonstrations demanded that
Israel withdraw from Ramallah and other Palestinian cities and condemned U.S.
tolerance of Sharon's retaliatory offensive following a spate of Palestinian suicide
bombings.

German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer has warned fellow Europeans that unless
the clashes are halted, the Mideast violence threatens "a destabilization of the entire
region" and dangerous spillover into Europe's ethnically diverse and volatile cities.

"The aggravation of the crisis in the Middle East risks opening a wound that could
infect the whole world," Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said during a visit 
to
Moscow on Wednesday. "All efforts must be made to open negotiations in which
Europe and Russia could have a greater role and contribute to finding a peaceful
solution. . . . There is the risk that the Israeli-Palestinian crisis could evolve 
into a
conflict of all Islam against the West."

The risks of parallel conflicts on the continent were clear at Paris' Orly Airport on
Tuesday when pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian demonstrators brandished fists and
hurled insults at each other while awaiting the return of French activists expelled 
from
Israel for visiting Arafat at his besieged offices in Ramallah. Police had to be
summoned to separate the protesters.

Sentiment against the Israeli offensive is strong here in Germany. Fischer warned
that Arafat should be granted freedom of movement and allowed to meet with foreign
mediators, and Swedish Prime Minister Goran Persson said Arafat is still key to
finding a negotiated solution. French Foreign Minister Hubert Vedrine denounced
Sharon's approach as an "obsessive focus on Arafat, as though he was the organizer
of everything."

The EU's Solana has suggested that both Sharon and Arafat step down to allow
more coolheaded leaders to be heard.

"Neither is a saint, and sometimes I'm inclined to think that perhaps a new
generation of persons in Israel and Palestine could in the 21st century come up with
a solution to the conflict," he told a Spanish radio interviewer.

Other political analysts and politicians warn that Israel is squandering its moral
capital in its assault on Palestinian cities and towns.

"Many Jews living outside the Jewish state have begun to wonder if the price of
combating these terrorists is worth paying," British lawmaker Gerald Kaufman, a
Jewish member of Prime Minister Tony Blair's Labor Party, noted in a recent
commentary. "They are beginning to wonder whether the country they have toiled in
and fought wars to defend . . . is so degrading itself as to be a very different land
from the one they have loved."

More than 1,200 Palestinians and 400 Israelis have been killed since Palestinians
began their revolt against Israeli rule in September 2000. The uprising has triggered
a series of escalations, with the latest and most intensive Israeli military crackdown
following Palestinian suicide bombings that have killed dozens during the Passover
holiday.

Maria De Cristofaro of The Times' Rome Bureau, Achrene Sicakyuz in Paris and
Janet Stobart in London contributed to this report.

If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at latimes.com/archives.
For information about reprinting this article, go to www.lats.com/rights.
End<{{{

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