Three Power Resolution on Middle East i ts Snag with. Stalling Tactics of Arabs UNITED NATIONS, (JTA) Bitter delaying tactics by the Arab states stalled action by the United Nations Security Council on the three-power resolution submitted to the Council to settle the Syrian complaint against Israel over the Bnot Yaakov hydroelectric project on the Jordan River. Efforts of Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.. head of the United States delegation, to secure a vote on the resolution to permit adjourn- ment of the Council before Christmas week failed when the Lebanese insisted they had not had time to receive instructions from their government and were not in a position to vote. The resolution, introduced by the United States and co- sponsored by Britain and France, placed full authority for settlement of the Jordan River power project dispute in the hands of Major Gen. Vagn Bennike, UN Chief of Staff in Palestine, and instructed him to report back within 90 days on the measures taken to solve the dispute. The resolution gave no in- structions or made no recom- mendations to Gen. Bennike on resumption of work on the Jor- dan project by Israel beyond the general provision that he "ex- plore possibilities of reconciling the interests involved in this dispute including rights in the demilitarized zone and full sat- isfaction of existing irrigation rights at all seasons, and to take such steps as he may deem ap- propriate to effect a reconcilia- tion, having in view the develop- ment of the natural resources affected in a just and orderly manner for the general welfare." The resolution instructed the chief of staff "to maintain the demilitarized character of the zone" and called on both Israel and Syria "to comply with all his decisions and requests in the exercise of his authority under the armistice agreement." It re- quested the UN Secretary Gen- eral to provide experts, particu- larly hydraulic engineers, to give Gen. Bennike "the necessary data for a complete appreciation of the project in question and of its effect on the demilitarized zone. Statements by the spokes- men for the three sponsoring powers in submitting the resolution assumed almost as much importance as the reso- lution itself since the Israeli representative, Ambassador Abba S. Eban, stressed that the resolution and the clarify- ing speeches had to be con- sidered as an entity and the speeches should be considered as clarification of points in the resolution. UN Chief of Staff. He took the position that development pro- jects consistent with the armis- tice agreement which were "in the general interest" and did not infringe on the rights of others should be "encouraged." In the present case, he insist- ed; it was for the chief of staff to decide whether the Jordan project met these conditions. Sir Gladwyn Jebb, head of the British delegation, scolded Is- rael because the.. issue has had to come before the Security Council which was thus required to face, not the question wheth- er the canal was in itself a good and useful project, but "solely the question of the failure of one party of the Israel-Syrian armistice agreement to comply with a request on the part of the chairman of the Mixed Arm- istice Commission." The British spokesman took strong issue with the Syrian position that Syrian consent was needed for any project in the demilitarized zone. He said that he had not been convinced that the work could not pro- ceed without the consent of Syria. The present issue, he said, was whether the work was admissable under the armistice terms "as they stand." Henrie Hoppenot, spokesman for France, pointed out that in recent years; much larger rivers had not proved to be real mili- tary. barriers. It .would be "un- just," he said, if "fate and econ- omic development" were to be decided by such "war games" and if the Jordan were to be kept flowing, unused, between two banks more or less desert because of a lack of agreement. UN observers stressed three factors expressed or implicit in a resolution and the speeches of the sponsors; first, the Big Three rejected Syria's claim to a veto right over the project; secondly, acknowledgement by the Big Three that the Israeli Jordan project is a desirable project; and thirdly, the impli- cation that Gen. Bennike's negotiations will be centered mainly on securing an under- standing between himself and the Israel government. At a subsequent session, .Am- bassador Eban told the Council that continuation of work on the project would have a bene- ficial effect on the entire region. He emphasized that Syria's com- plaint against this project aimed at strangling Israel's vital econ- omic interests. To deny Syria's complaint would do no harm to any indi- vidual in Syria or to Syria's economic development, he said. On the other hand, to uphold the Syrian complaint would Mean "deadly prejudice" to Is- rael's capacity for development and for improvement of its liv- ing standards, and would trans- form the armistice agreement- into something never intended." Talk Immigration with Canadian MP rael had not, however, signed any undertaking to renounce the legitimate development projects on which its future depends. He said he was in a position to state that, if it had ever been "hinted or suggest- ed" in 1949 that agreement to demilitarize the area meant renunciation of power and ir- rigation schemes dependent on that area, Israel would never have signed the agree- ment. Mr. Eban pointed out that the Jordan River was "completely non-Syrian." There was no precedent in the history of in- ternational litigation for a "veto" such as Syria sought, over a river that did not touch its bor- ders. The Israel diplomat called the Huleh case a parallel to this one, and said that if Syria's claims had been upheld, the Huleh marshes could not now be under-going drainage. He argued that the principles in- volved in the Huleh case applied to other development schemes as well. Mr. Eban denied an allegation by Sir Gladwyn Jebb that Israel had "ignored" Gen. Bennike's order to suspend work on the Jordan River project. The Israeli diplomat quoted from. a letter by Foreign Minister Moshe Sharett to the UN truce chief offering temporary suspension of the .. work. At no stage, Mr. Eban underlined, had there been any difficulty from Israel over a temporary cessation of work. • The chief of the Israel delega- tion said his government was convinced that the hydroelectric project, so important to Israel, was reconcilable with every legi- timate private interest. The Syrian delegate, Farid Zeineddine took great pains to draw a distinction between the resolution as presented by the U.S., Britain and France and the three speeches of the spon- sors. He sharply attacked the United. States, but not by name, for permitting tax-exempt con- tributions to Zionists funds. The Syrian delegate was called to or- der by the Council chairman and told to speak on the point in question. David Ben-Gurion An Apostrophe By N. E. ARONSTAM, M.D. Ben Touster, (right), president of BIAS, the Hebrew Immi- grant Aid Society of America, and Jack Shundman, (center), presi- dent of the Toronto Branch of JIAS, confer with Col. David A. Croll, QC111P, Jewish member of the Canadian Parliament, follow- ing the Toronto-JIAS annual meeting, at which Touster was the principal speaker. Col. Croll assured Touster that the Canadian government intends to make it as easy as possible for Canadian friends and relatives to bring their European kin to the Dominion. Touster told the JIAS meeting that in the post-wax era Canada, with less than a tenth of the population of the United States, ab- sorbed about 20 per cent of all the Jews who immigrated to North America. Putting Two and Two Together By RINNA GROSSMAN An American Jewish Press Feature It all happened very quietly— especially in view of the fact that it happened in a geographic area where changes of govern- ment or of leadership are usually as turbulent as the desert winds. It was all very un-Middle East- ern. And organized. And even efficient. David Ben-Gurion stopped being Prime Minister and De- fense Minister of the State of Israel—at his own fervent re- quest—and went off this week to live in a tiny prefabricated house in an isolated communal settlement somewhere in the Negev wilderness. Moshe Sha- rett stopped being "just" a Foreign Minister and assumed the august and frightening job of being Israel's premier as well. Both issued statements and said nice things about each other. The man-iri-the- street in Israel said nice things about both of them. Life went on surprisingly as usual. This is one of the things that makes it so hard to believe that Israel is located so very close to Syria or Egypt or Jor- dan or even Iran where law and order are unknown on such occasions. - Things will be different in Is- rael now. Not basically—because Israel is whatever one and a half million Jews in Israel and the dreams of several more in the Diaspora make it—and not even the acts of one perkn. But Da- vid Ben-Gurion is one kind of man and Moshe Sharett is an- The Syrian delegate sharply other and this is a good and dissented. He asserted that there suitable moment to put two and were considerable variations in two together and try to find out the statements by the three how the difference in their per- delegations and only the resolu- sonalities can possibly alter Is- tion itself, not the speeches, was rael's immediate future. to be the subject of vote. Israel had undertaken to * * * In introducing the resolution, keep its armed forces out of cease. Mr. Lodge stressed the American the dimilitariZed zone, and May the God of Israel grant thee DAVID-BEN GURION—so many things to so many people. To viewpoint that final decision in would respect that undertak- nascent strength Zionists, whoever they are and the matter must rest with the ing, Mr. Eban continued. Is- • To labor valiantly once again wherever they live, he is the man For Israel Rediviva. who dreamed a dream and had had the guts to make it into a glowing reality—even though all Report U. S. Favors the auguries were against him. Hebrew as It Is Spoken in Israel Today Israel-Arab Talks To the State Departments of the Western World he is an By SHUSHANNAH SPECTOR and Rabbi JOSEPH ZEITLIN WASHINGTON, (JTA) — A enigma. — and an intransigent Editor's Note: This special American Jewsh Press Feature is another in the State Department official said one at that. A man who could series of easy lessons for self-study of Hebrew. The complete book, "Hebrew on behalf of Secretary Dulles be counted on wherever democ- Made Easy," is available from Miss Shushannah Spector, 904 S. Miami Ave., Fla.; 51 .50 a copy. that the Department hopes racy or Israel were concerned— the Israel action invoking the but upon whom no levers of pub- Sir, I want everything of do- Va-`ado-ni, 'a-ni ro-zeh 'et Israel -Jordan armistice lic _ and could. be applied. To ha-kol m mestic make agreement to force a face-to- newspapermen nd to his own ha'-a-re? face conference with Jordan information service, he is a man Ka-rnah 'o-lah ha-bul-zah? What is the price of the "will bring about positive re- with little understanding and blouse? sults." less appreciation of the role of "We will contribute to this the press—and certainly not of The blouse costs one Israeli Ha-Caul-zah 'o-lah be-lai" 'a-hat end as best we can," Dur- Lira publicity. To the Pentagons—all ward V. Sandifer, Deputy As- over the world—he is the man What does it all amount to? Mah hu' sach ha-kol? sistant Secretary of State for who created an army, and a Zeh ya-lsar United Nations Affairs, said It is expensive tough, efficient little army, out in a letter to Rep. Samuel N. of a peculiar vision blended with Ya-kar yo-ter mi•clai It is too expensive Freidel, a Maryland Demo- a fine sense of what's what in crat, written on behalf of the world of today. To scholars, Hu' mo-cher be-si-to-nut He sells wholesale Secretary Dulles. particularly of the classics, he is an insatiably curious colleague— Mosheh, today I bought a Mo-sheh, ha-yom me-zi-ah bargain with profound insight into the Where are you going from Le--'an ho-loch 20 — DETROIT JEWISH NEWS beauties of distant cultures and mi-polx? here? Friday, December 25, 1953 a special sensitivity about his nriN tIr 14? t1n91/ For five fruitful and glorious years • Thou hast indefatigably lent thy efforts In behalf of thy beloved land, And like the Prophets of old Thou hast retraced thy steps Unto the Negev: There to contemplate, aye, to dream, To rest and to gather renewed vigor For thy country's Future. It marks but an interregnum, Just a pause, but never a sur- own old-new nation and its place in history. An astounding, dogged, once - in-many-decades kind of person and the State of Israel might never have been established without him — and certainly it would not have sur- vived its first precarious months. Israelis—of all and any parties„ are glad that B.G. will not be far away in the future — and many think that it is well that the "Great Change" took place while he is here to supervise and watch and comment. * MOSHE SHARETT—part and parcel of the very fabric of Is- rael. Almost native-born. The only man ' who could possibly have been Israel's first foreign Minister — and not because he speaks eight languages well and is infinitely polished and suave— but because he is a man with a razor-keen mind, and a sense of international values — and a unique ability to grasp a situa- tion, stare at it for a While and sum it up—quickly, accurately, brilliantly. A man with a. better eye for public relations and a better ear for publicity. Not a visionary, nor a bulldog. But a man who can wisely and well steer Israel through the next harassed, awkward years. Per- haps better, in his own way, than B.G. whose irascible, impatient statements often required appli- cations of elaborate, soothing treatments afterwards. * * * MOSHE S H A R E T T will be Premier during Israel's adoles- cent years—as a nation's growth is measured. Every one took it for granted. First B.G. and then Sharett. It could hardly be other- wise. These two, so very different from each other, and so comple- mentary to each other, were in themselves symbolic of a great deal, and Israel is fortunate to have them both at the same time. B.G. and his wife are now living on the land. Not exactly like other settlers, maybe. Any- how, not yet. But B.G. is happy. More than •anything else, he wants to share, somehow, in the great reclamation of the Negev. When the Cadillac purred its readiness to take off—B.G, had only one thing to say by way of farewell. He said it with great feeling "good bye, Tel-Aviv, send your sons to colonize the land." - Anyhow, the carpers and the critics had their innings quietly. The whole thing was over quick- ly. The big black Cadillac brought Mr. and Mrs. Ben- Gurion to Sdeh Boker where they will live and then drove through Israel back to Jerusalem . to drive Mr. Sharett on official bus- Mess. No revolutions. No mobs. Noth- ing much except perhaps a na- tion-wide sense of relief that The Change was over. And even more fortunate that the shift is only one of personalities and not politics or parties„