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eration , appeared to increase the likelihood that the Clinton administration wo uld prevail in its attempts to cut it short . The `` nation-building '' has cost $ 1.5 billion so far but yielded few results . `` Of course , it looks bad , '' said a senior U.N. diplomat here speaking of this latest postponement . The tal ks , originally scheduled for April but postponed four times , were supposed to prepare a full-fledged national reconciliation conference to choose a new govern ment . Somalia has been without any government since dictator Mohamed Siad Barre was overthrown in January 1991 and the country descended into anarchy . Diploma ts had called these talks the Somali factional leaders ' last chance to reach a compromise and set up a government before the Security Council voted to shorten the mandate of the U.N. mission to just six more weeks . But antagonists Ali Mah di Mohamed , the country 's self-styled `` interim president , '' and Gen. Moham ed Farah Aideed , the strongman of South Mogadishu , did not show up . WASHINGTON Federal prosecutors plan to seek an indictment Tuesday against House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dan Rostenkowski , D-Ill. , unless he makes a last minute offer for a plea agreement , sources familiar with the case said Mo nday . By Monday afternoon , Rostenkowski still had not accepted a deal and sour ces said that barring an immediate overture by the influential lawmaker the wait ing was over . `` The government is ready to go , '' one source familiar with th e negotiations said . Other sources said that the government 's case was already set for presentation to a grand jury . Tuesday is the `` day '' another source said . After more than two weeks of discussing the possibility of a plea bargain , Rostenkowski last week declined to accept a deal in which he would plead guil ty to a felony and spend a limited amount of time in jail , sources said . U.S. Attorney Eric H . Holder Jr. gave Rostenkowski until over the holiday weekend to ponder his fate . Options for Rostenkowski appear to have run out , as has his tenure as chairman of Ways and Means , a committee that puts him in the forefron t on President Clinton 's health-care legislation as well as major trade , welfa re and tax bills . If the grand jury returns an indictment punishable by at leas t two years in prison , under normal procedures of the House Democratic Caucus , Rostenkowski would have to step down from the committee chairmanship . A plea b argain would give him a slight chance of retaining his chairmanship . Caucus rul es do not require a member convicted of criminal charges to resign from office o r leadership positions , although such members are likely to face an ethics inve stigation and disciplinary actions . House Republicans have indicated that they would seek to have Rostenkowski removed from the chairmanship if a plea agreemen t is struck . Federal prosecutors have outlined a broad case against Rostenkowsk i of conspiracy to defraud the government in what has been described as `` kitch en sink '' approach alleging abuses of official accounts for postage , leased au tomobiles , office space , supplies and personnel . Rostenkowski has publicly de nied all the allegations . The FBI has investigated whether several so-called `` ghost employees '' in Rostenkowski 's Chicago office received pay for work neve r down . The probe also examined whether Rostenkowski purchased personal and gif t items through his expense account at the House Stationary Store . In addition , the prosecution 's case also reportedly examines whether government leased car s were used primarily for personal use rather than official business and if Rost enkowski and other lawmakers traded postage vouchers and stamps for thousands of dollars . Rostenkowski , completing his 36th year in Congress , entered plea di scussions in an effort to reduce or eliminate any prison sentence while avoiding a lengthy legal battle . He also wanted to try to retain his chairmanship . The talks broke down as the government remained adamant that Rostenkowski must do j ail time and plead guilty to a felony that is reflective of the breadth of the o verall allegations against him . Rostenkowski is said to be frustrated that the government 's case originates from the initial investigation into the so-called House Post Office scam . He views those initial allegations as bogus and general ly believes that the subsequent questions of wrongdoing are petty . Should he be indicted , the stage will be set for one of the more acrimonious and lengthy le gal battles in recent memory , said sources , including one who described the re sulting litigation in terms of `` nuclear war . '' JERICHO , West Bank A Palestinian official , just arrived with the new police f orce from Jordan , waxed eloquent on the telephone last week to his wife back ho me about life in Jericho . `` It 's like heaven , '' gushed Abu Yassin . `` Psyc hologically , it is poetry to be in my homeland . `` But we are living in hell , '' he admitted to her . `` The weather is very bad . There is no bed I sleep on the floor . And to eat , I have to go out to pick fruit from the banana fields . '' Such is the mix of emotions and complications that has marked the start of Palestinian autonomy in Jericho and the Gaza Strip . The first 10 days after Isr aeli withdrawal have served up a salad of close calls , doomsday predictions , a ngry threats and cautious whiffs of optimism . Palestinian autonomy has gotten o ff to a predictably rocky start . There is little sign so far of a Palestinian g overnment to replace the civil administration that left with the Israeli army . The last Israeli paycheck to civil servants here runs out Tuesday , and no one h as stepped in to pick up the payroll . Palestinian soldiers-turned-police still are trickling in from scattered bases in the Middle East , but they have no supp lies and little equipment . They have to borrow gas from Israel to put in their patrol jeeps , donated from the United States . Officers declared it unseemly fo r their men to take handouts of food from local residents , but they had no othe r provisions . The Israeli army started slipping combat rations to the new arriv als . Yasser Arafat was still in Tunis , Tunisia , trying to appoint a national council . Other Palestinian figures balked at joining him and sharing blame for the mess . Surprisingly , it is Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin who finds c heer amid this gloom . It is `` a good start .. . a good chance for the future , '' he said last week on a tour of the Gaza Strip . `` Things were carried out i n a much better way than I thought . `` I had deep fears about .. . the way thin gs would take shape , '' he said . But `` on the Palestinian side , a real effor t was made to coordinate and understand . '' The prime minister may have been pr acticing a little damage control . Public opinion polls showed a sharp dive in I sraeli support last week for continuing the five-year autonomy process ; 63 perc ent said stop now , according to one poll . ( Begin optional trim ) Israeli news papers worked themselves into a froth over the first mishaps involving Palestini an police . Last Monday , a Palestinian soldier shot out the tires of an Israeli who ignored a checkpoint . On Tuesday , the new officers improperly arrested th ree armed Israelis . On Wednesday , a Palestinian private stopped at gunpoint an Israeli general . News photos showed Israeli and Palestinian soldiers faced off with guns , a hair-trigger away from disaster . But the disaster did not happen . Nor did other dire predictions that autonomy would bring civil war among Pale stinian factions , or a revolt in other areas , or a slew of fresh terrorist inc idents . In all , last week , things were relatively quiet . ( End optional trim ) In a background briefing to Israeli reporters , top Israeli army chiefs went out of their way to compliment the Palestinian police . The crisp-uniformed Pale stinians look smarter than the determinedly sloppy Israeli soldiers , admitted a senior Israeli officer . And `` when an Israeli brigade replaces another , it i s much less organized than what we have seen so far from the Palestinians , '' h e said . But flattery and understanding could not hide obvious shortcomings in t he Palestinian takeover . Although they have had eight months to plan their tran sition , the Palestinians have arrived with no mechanism to continue government services . Israel 's civil administration said that it spent about $ 70 million a year on government services to the Gaza Strip and Jericho . With the additiona l cost of police salaries , the Palestinians may need three times that amount . `` The Palestinian national authority is in financial straits , '' lamented the Arabic daily Al-Quds . `` Before the end of this month it has to have $ 20 milli on in Gaza and Jericho . '' The Palestinians protest that international donors s o far are deadbeats and have not backed up their pledges with cash . In part , t he donor countries are wary of handing over money to the historically corrupt PL O ; in part they prefer financing concrete projects over daily expense vouchers . `` They are insisting on specific projects that they can put a plaque on , pra ising the donors . There is no money for operating expenses , '' acknowledged on e Israeli official . ( Optional Add End ) The Israelis do not acknowledge any re sponsibility for the situation . For 27 years , Israel silenced , imprisoned or deported emerging leaders of the Palestinian people . As for facilities , Israel this month left behind equipment ranging from computers to telephones in some o ffices , but stripped others bare . Israel , too , has been less than faithful t o its signature , Palestinians complain . Israel has released fewer than 1,000 o f the 5,000 prisoners it had promised to free promptly after May 4 . VATICAN CITY In a stern veto , Pope John Paul II reasserted a ban against women priests Monday , ordering Catholics to end internal debate and obey historic te achings . In a righteous , authoritarian apostolic letter addressed to his bisho ps , Pope John Paul marked his first day back in the office after four weeks in a hospital for a broken leg . His resounding `` no '' to any possibility of a gr eater religious role for Catholic women in their church was the second time in a week that the Vatican has crossed swords with assertive Catholic women . Before returning to the Vatican Friday , Pope John Paul accepted an English translatio n of the church 's new catechism that women 's groups have denounced as sexist f or its language . Monday 's 1,000-word letter , `` On Reserving Priestly Ordinat ion To Men Alone , '' is remarkable for its bluntness and the absolute authority that Pope John Paul asserts `` in order that all doubt may be removed regarding a matter of great importance . `` I declare that the Church has no authority wh atsoever to confer priestly ordination on women , and that this judgment is to b e definitively held for all the Church 's faithful , '' Pope John Paul writes in the letter . Fundamentals of their faith make it impossible to ordain women as priests , the pope tells his bishops , noting that Christ `` acted in a complete ly free and sovereign manner '' in selecting only men as his apostles the first priests . Still , Pope John Paul laments , despite an all-male priesthood unbrok en across two millennia , `` in some places it is nonetheless considered open to debate . '' No more , in the pope 's view . An accompanying Vatican commentary said the letter `` confirms a certainty which has been constantly held and lived by the church . '' As such , the pope 's views are not to be regarded as new , or an opinion , or a matter of discipline , `` but as certainly true . '' `` The refore , since it does not belong to matters freely open to dispute , it always requires the full and unconditional assent of the faithful , and to teach the co ntrary is equivalent to leading consciences into error , '' his commentary says . Pope John Paul , 74 , who has been increasingly outspoken in recent months , w ill host a private meeting at the Vatican Thursday with President Clinton , who may get a papal lecture for his support for abortion . In a debate the Vatican n o longer wants to hear among Catholics , advocates of women priests say Christ ' s choice of disciples was determined by customs and laws of the time , not becau se he sought a unisex ministry . ( Optional Add End ) Pope John Paul 's vigorous restatement of the ban may have been prompted in part by the ordination of the Church of England 's first women priests in March , an innovation that effective ly scuttled reunification talks between the two churches . Thousands of Anglican s and hundreds of Anglican priests have turned to Catholicism . The Vatican is a ccepting even married Anglican priests as converts and priests despite its own b an on married priests . Lobbying among Catholic activists for women priests has increased since the Anglican ordinations , a Vatican official noted . Pope John Paul has now fired an unanswerable broadside in response . `` The pope clearly i ntends for the ban to stick , because he comes right up to the brink of infallib ility with this teaching . Still , it is not infallible , and therefore it is op en to possible change by some later pope , '' said one senior theologian . Under Catholic dogma , popes are infallible in matters of faith and morals when the s ay they are giving infallible teachings . WASHINGTON The stubbornness of dictatorships has become one of the Clinton admi nistration 's chief foreign-policy vexations . Leaders in Haiti , China , and mo st recently North Korea , have found a way to thumb their noses at top U.S. dipl omatic priorities . Haiti 's corrupt military regime showed no sign last week of buckling under to newly tightened U.S.-inspired economic sanctions aimed at for cing the return of elected President Jean Bertrand Aristide . A clique of elderl y Chinese generals and Communist Party bosses successfully called Washington 's bluff by ignoring the threat of new tariffs on exports to the United States unle ss they improved their human-rights record . Then North Korea 's communist regim e on Friday appeared to rule out critical international inspections of spent fue l rods at a nuclear reactor north of its capital , giving every indication the c ountry will never allow the outside world to perform inspections needed to learn how much plutonium it may have accumulated for nuclear arms . These dismal resu lts of earnest U.S. diplomacy have not been flattering to America 's self-image as a world leader , and if President Clinton 's recent comments are any indicati on , they are provoking some re-examination not only of his expectations for U.S . foreign policy but also the administration 's often blunt and demanding style of dealing with recalcitrant foreign leaders . As one senior U.S. official expla ined , when Clinton arrived at the White House , he shared a popular notion that foreign relations is an extension of domestic U.S. business relations a matter of rules and regulations in which the threat to sue , or impose legal sanctions , is a vital negotiating tool . Clinton had criticized President George Bush for `` coddling dictators , '' for example , and indicated he supported pursuing pu nitive measures such as economic sanctions if other nations did not comply with U.S. demands . Recalling a statement by Dean Acheson that sanctions are essentia lly a declaration of war without the willingness to use force , the senior offic ial said Clinton had a misplaced faith that they could be used to alter other na tions ' internal priorities , without the direct compulsion of a military attack . `` Sanctions did not get ( General Manuel ) Noriega out of Panama '' in 1989 and they did not force the Iraqi military to withdraw from Kuwait in 1991 , the official said , calling America 's persistent faith in sanctions `` pathetic . ' ' But several officials said the frustrating experience of the last few months a ppears to have humbled the president 's ambitions . At a White House news confer ence on Thursday , Clinton not only rejected future threats of higher tariffs on trade with China , he also counseled a more patient style of diplomacy , noting that `` a great society , so large and with such built-in habits , does not cha nge overnight . '' He compared the challenge of improving human rights there to the reduction of `` crime and violence '' in U.S. society a goal that would take years to accomplish . Clinton had struck a similar theme of the limits of U.S. influence in a May 25 speech to the U.S. . Naval Academy 's graduating class , w here he noted that many of the world 's `` most tearing conflicts .. . will rare ly submit to instant solutions . '' Noting that the resolution of the Cold War t ook decades , he said `` we must often be willing to pay the price of time , som etimes the most painful price of all . '' In addition to lowering expectations a bout quick results , Clinton also seemed last week to be pointing the way to a l ess confrontational style of diplomacy . Revealing what could be taken as a pers onal epiphany of sorts about the limits of U.S. powers of moral suasion , he sai d that `` no nation likes to feel that every decision it makes for the good , to do something that 's right , that makes progress , is being made ... only becau se of external pressure from someone else . '' Clinton was trying to explain why China had rebuffed Washington 's insistent entreaties to treat its people more like the United States treats its citizens . But several U.S. officials said the y believe the lesson may also be relevant to Haiti and North Korea , which also have repeatedly ignored urgings that they respect U.S.-defined `` norms '' of in ternational behavior . The officials suggested that in both cases , Washington h as backed itself into a corner by using or threatening to use sanctions unlikely to produce instant policy shifts . The officials said Clinton might have unders tood the magnitude of the challenge earlier had he listened to U.S. intelligence experts instead of the strains of popular opinion supporting tough demands and blunt threats . A number of classified studies reported last winter , for exampl e , that the Chinese leadership was beset by worry about growing internal unrest , officials said . The studies also said key Chinese officials were jockeying f or power , anticipating the death of aged leader Deng Xioaping , and would be un likely to risk supporting any liberalization . They also reported that Chinese l eaders were not taking seriously Washington 's threat of higher trade tariffs ev en though the threat was not lifted until last week . A U.S. intelligence commun ity report similarly predicted last fall correctly , it seems that North Korea w ould not accede to demands for nuclear-related inspections that would reveal the size of its stockpile of plutonium , a key ingredient of nuclear arms . Other U .S. intelligence reports have expressed skepticism that the economic embargo of Haiti would prompt its military rulers to resign soon . In its dealings with bot h of these stubborn dictatorships , the Clinton administration might soon be fac ed with the same choice it faced last week with China : to continue to pursue a policy that has not worked , or to face up to a further humbling of American for eign-policy ambitions . VLADIVOSTOK , Russia The sun was still high and the day was warm , so by the ti me he reached the top step , the Rev. Myron Effing was sweating and puffing . He had taken visitors up some splintering outdoor wooden stairs , up a hillside st rewn with garbage and weeds , past flimsy lean-tos with laundry billowing from c lotheslines , and finally to a simple , solid red-brick building overlooking a s quare . `` Here it is , '' said the 53-year-old Roman Catholic priest , a little out of breath . `` It 's our pride right now , our joy . '' The object of Effin g 's affection was a church with a history as tragic and grim and , now , as ful l of hope as Russia 's own history in this century . For 58 years , it was not a place of worship , but an archive of the Soviet state . It was in the state 's hands for so long that people forgot it had ever been a church at all , and some bureaucrats even disputed it , despite abundant evidence and explicit testimony to prove it . The Communists had built a radio tower to jam foreign broadcasts atop a higher hill nearby , as if to remind those below that the party 's author ity was loftier even than God 's . Then last New Year 's Eve , after a two-year struggle , Effing reclaimed the building from the government and proclaimed that the Church of the Most Holy Mother of God and the Roman Catholic Church had ret urned to Vladivostok , at last . But as Effing knew better than anyone , that me ant the real work was only about to start . It is the lone Catholic church in th is boom town of 700,000 people , and these days it is very much Effing 's church his work in progress , his personal crusade . A native of Indiana , Effing had spent much of his adult life teaching in seminaries in the American Midwest and recruiting young men for the priesthood . In 1986 , he went to Guam and spent fo ur years there as rector of a seminary . He returned to the United States in 199 0 as a university chaplain in California , but before long , he said , he grew t ired of church politics there . His aim was to find a place where there were no other priests , and Russia seemed like ideal virgin territory . He appealed to t he bishop of Novosibirsk in western Siberia the nearest diocesan seat to Vladivo stok , though it is four time zones away . The bishop had no idea whether any Ca Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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