Carter predicts a full-scale mideast peace treaty within a year : diplomacy: the former president, who engineered the israeli-egyptian truce, feels vindicated. He says jordan is likely to reveal its intentions today.

Carter predicts a full-scale mideast peace treaty within a year : diplomacy: the former president, who engineered the israeli-egyptian truce, feels vindicated. He says jordan is likely to reveal its intentions today.

Play all audios:


WASHINGTON — A jubilant Jimmy Carter, once reviled by Jews as an Arab partisan in Middle East peace negotiations, predicted Monday that the historic Israeli-Palestinian accord signed earlier


in the day at a White House ceremony will be followed within a year by a full-scale peace treaty. The former President, who--along with former President George Bush--was an honored guest at


the White House, said in an interview that he expects Israel to sign peace agreements first with Jordan and subsequently with Syria and then Lebanon. For Carter, Monday’s ceremonies had a


special sweetness because they amounted to a rare moment of public vindication. It was 15 years ago this month that Carter, through determined diplomacy, brought about the Camp David Accords


that resulted in the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty--a critical first step in the long process that led to Monday’s astonishing agreement between Israel and the Palestine Liberation


Organization. In 1979, when Carter was struggling to bring Israel’s Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egypt’s President Anwar Sadat together, many Jews accused him of being partial to Egypt.


At that time, said Carter, the term “evenhanded” in Arab-Israeli negotiations was used as “an epithet among Jewish leaders.” But only because of his willingness to listen to both sides, he


said, was he able to persuade Sadat and Begin to sign the accord. Subsequent events have proven that an evenhanded approach was the proper one and have vindicated him and improved his


relations with both the Israelis and American Jews, he said. Carter smiled broadly as a crowd of 3,000 at the White House ceremony, including many Jewish and Arab representatives, gave him a


sustained ovation. Monday’s visit to the White House, in the company of his wife, Rosalynn, was his first since Ronald Reagan was inaugurated to succeed him in January, 1981. At President


Clinton’s invitation, the Carters spent Monday night in the White House. Bush, the only other former President at the ceremony, drew warm applause from the crowd and praise from Carter and


Clinton for his efforts in bringing about the 1991 Madrid peace conference. For the mostly unsmiling Bush, the event was as bittersweet as it was utterly sweet for Carter. The reception for


Carter was far more enthusiastic. And Clinton, who defeated Bush in a hard-fought campaign and had relatively little involvement in the peace process, presided over the heavily televised


event and stands to benefit politically from it. In a lengthy interview after Monday’s ceremony, Carter, who has remained in contact with Israeli and Arab leaders, said that Jordan is likely


to announce its peace intentions today, a timetable confirmed by U.S. officials. They said representatives of the Israeli and Jordanian governments will meet at the State Department to


initial an “Agenda for Peace” that will serve as a framework for a peace treaty. Although President Hafez Assad of Syria has not commented publicly on the Israeli-Palestinian accord, Carter


said that Assad “won’t want to be left out” or “known as the only Arab leader who doesn’t want peace.” Carter, who said he has been in “intense discussions” with the Syrian leader, described


Assad as “fairly moderate and constructive about what should be done about the Golan Heights,” which Israel captured from Syria in the 1967 Middle East War. He said that Syria is ready to


withdraw its troops “a greater distance” from that region than Israel will propose to withdraw its troops. The major issue in the negotiations between Israel and Syria is whether Israel will


withdraw its troops from the heights. Israel has indicated that it might be willing to return the territory to Syria, but only if Syria will discuss full peace. Carter, who has monitored


elections in six countries since leaving office in 1981, told reporters that he and his Carter Center in Atlanta probably will monitor elections for Palestinian leaders when they take place


in the Gaza Strip and West Bank. The center, he said, “is ready to play a role . . . to make sure proper elections are held.” Since 1989, Carter has monitored elections in Panama, Haiti,


Zambia, the Dominican Republic, Guyana and Paraguay. In the interview, Carter reflected on the long, difficult road remaining for peace in the Middle East but said he is optimistic that it


will come soon “because the people on both sides want it.” Recalling the tedious 13 days of negotiations in September, 1978, that resulted in the Camp David Accords, Carter praised the


courage of both Sadat and Begin but said that Begin was the more courageous because in signing the agreement, “he had to reverse the very things he said he would never do.” “He took a vow


that ‘May my right hand fall off if I ever dismantle a settlement,’ ” Carter said, but in essence agreed, with the approval of Israel’s Parliament, the Knesset, to dismantle an Israeli


settlement in the Sinai, which was returned to Egypt under the accords. Sadat’s decision was less wrenching. But while he was engaged in peace negotiations, he faced increasing opposition


from violent Muslim fundamentalists in Egypt. And three years after the accords were signed, extremists in Egypt’s army assassinated him. Begin remained active in Israeli affairs for years,


dying of heart failure in March, 1992. Carter said that while his own role in the Camp David Accords and the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty six months later cost him “a lot of support in the


Jewish community” in his 1980 reelection bid, it was not as damaging to him politically as his successful effort to push the Panama Canal Treaty through the Senate. Discussing recent peace


negotiations, Carter disclosed that he had known about the “basic tenets” of the Israeli-Palestinian accord since mid-June, when Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres briefed him at the


Global Conference on Human Rights in Vienna. Peres, he said, told him of Israel’s plans to withdraw its troops from the Gaza Strip. And 10 days ago, Carter said, PLO leader Yasser Arafat


flew to Paris to brief him on the pending agreement. They met in French President Francois Mitterrand’s office, he said, and Arafat told him that phraseology in the agreement they would sign


in Washington was “extracted verbatim from the Camp David Accords.” In his own dealings with Arafat, Carter said, he has found the PLO leader to be “a very moderate person struggling


against almost insurmountable odds to hold disparate groups of Palestinians together.” Arafat, he said, “no doubt was a moderating factor in the peace talks.” Carter, a onetime Georgia


peanut farmer, laughed when a reporter from the Middle East suggested that some Palestinians had thought they were offered only “peanuts” during his own peace negotiations. “I don’t care if


you denigrate Camp David,” he exclaimed, smiling, “but don’t denigrate peanuts.” MORE TO READ