The Washington Post, November 6th, 1989
It is an almost paradisiacal portrait: along the sparkling, palm-tree-shaded beach of this coastal resort, Arabs and Israelis can be seen swimming, snorkling and tanning together, injecting a touch of sun into one of the world's most intractable conflicts. Of course, Paradise wouldn't have a fence. And only seven months after Israel finally gave up this strip of land at the edge of the Sinai peninsula to Egypt, barbed wire and iron march down to the waterfront on both sides of its five-star hotel complex, making Taba into its own tiny netherworld in Middle East politics. In theory, this should...
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