;•J Israel Beset by New Attacks (Continued from Page 1) The complaint was contained in a letter submitted by Ambassa- dor Michael S. Comay, Israel's permanent representative, to the president of the Security Council. Comay asked that the letter be circulated among Security Coun- cil members but did not ask for a meeting on the complaint. The letter described the incidents as "fresh instances of armed raids into Israel territory for the pur- pose of laying land mines on road- ways." The letter said that, on Dec. 9, two British Mark-2 type mines were discovered and deactivated on a track in the Lachish area which had been planted within 48 hours before their discovery not far from the Jordan border. "From leaflets found in the vi- cinity of each mine in Arabic and crude Hebrew, it appeared that the El Fatah organization claimed to be responsible," the letter stated. El Fatah is an Arab com- mando group. The letter said that the two instances were re- ported to and investigated by the Israel-Jordan Mixed Armistice Commission. - On Dec. 28 a similar mine was found and deactivated on a track parallel to the Syrian border, the letter reported, adding a com- plaint was lodged with the Israel- Syrian Mixed Armistice Commis- sion. The letter said UN mili- tary observers found footprints of one person leading from the site to the Syrian border. On Dec. 29 another Mark-2 mine was found on the same track near the site of the first mine. The letter stressed that "this type of mili- tary anti-tank mine is in regular use by the Syrian armed forces. The same type of mine was used in many previous incidents • re- ported to the Council." Members of the Council are fa- miliar with the pattern of ter- rorists and sabotage raids into Israel for the last two years and there can be no doubt about the danger to peace and security in the area constituted by this type of organized guerrilla activity from neighboring states into Is- rael territory," Ambassador Co- may said in his letter. He stress- ed that the Israeli government "takes a grave view of the re- sumption of these raids." Question, the UN' reported. This compared to 18 meetings on Southern Rhodesia, the second largest consumer of Security Coun- cil time. The UN defined the Pal estine Question as "com- plaints by Syria, Israel and Jor- dan regarding border incidents." * * * TEL AVIV (JTA)—The Israeli Army spokesman reported Tuesday a new act of Arab sabotage in the Upper Galilee near the Leba- nese border, where a tool shed was wrecked by an explosion. Israel warned Lebanon Wednesday it would be held re- sponsible for infiltrations into Israel of Arab saboteurs from Lebanese territory as Syrians opened fire Tuesday night on an Israeli patrol again. The warning was conveyed to the Lebanese representative on the Israeli-Lebanese Mixed Arm- istice Commission to which Israel complained. Tracks from the tool- shed led to the Lebanese village of Yarin, the DrIAC was told. The patrol returned the fire in the Huleh area in an exchange lasting five minutes. No casual- ties were reported. The Palestine Liberation Or- ganization on Treaties broadcast from Cairo that a terrorist bat- talion has been sent into Jordan to attack the palace of King Hus- sein and homes of his cabinet. The aim is to destroy the mon- archy and open a "liberation war" against Israel all along her fron- tiers, the broadcast said. The new unit was identified as the "Abdel Kader al Hussein Bri- gade" named after an Arab fa- natic who died in the 1947 war against the Jews. The announce- ment said the brigade was re- sponsible for three bombings on Monday in the Arab sector of Je- rusalem. An Israeli soldier was wound- ed Monday morning when Sy- rian troops entered Israeli ter- ritory in the Korazim area near Almagor north of Lake Tiberias and opened fire on Israeli posi- tions. Troops entered Israeli terri- tory at about 10 a.m. local time and began firing on the Israelis with recoilless guns, wounding one Israeli soldier. The Israelis returned the fire and subsequently "The "Palestine Question" filed a complaint with the Israel- was the biggest order of busi- Syrian Mixed Armistice Commis- ness in 1966 for the United Na- sion. tions Security Council, accord- Israeli and Syrian positions ex- ing to the UN statistical round- changed fire Sunday morning af- up of activities during the year. ter the Syrians opened machine- Twenty-eight of the Security gun and rifle fire on three Is- Council's 70 meetings in 1966 raeli tractors ploughing land near were devoted to the Palestine Haon settlement. The Syrians continued firing as the Israeli tractor drivers scurried for shelt- er in the muddy fields. Israeli units then opened fire on the Sy- rian positions to provide cover for the field workers. MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR Sparodic firing lasted during the early morning hours in the Haon area Sunday after which the Is- raelis continued their field work unhampered. The ploughing is essential in view of the seasonal rains which destroy unploughed fields on the slopes of hills. to 2 Israel entered the new year with predictions by qualified sources that the country was facing an uneasy year in 1967—a - continua- tion of a "grey area" of neither war nor peace but instead guer- rilla warfare. The sources said Israel's task would be to keep such warfare from escalating into large-scale conflicts by making it clear to Syria and to Egypt that continu- ing sabotage might touch off the full-scale war which Egypt, ac- cording to its declared policy, does not want now. This was un- derstood to mean that Israel must find means of bringing Egypt to HURRY WHILE THEY LAST! restrain Syrian support of infil- trator raids into Israel. OAK PARK SHOPPING CENTER The same sources also indi- 9 MILE & COOLIDGE cated they believed that King Hussein's regime in Jordan had a Open Every Sunday 10.3 good chance of surviving in spite of his many troubles, including Sy- JACK'S IN OAK PARK ANNUAL SALE! Up 1/ UT Off • • • • • • Winter Jackets Sport Coats Suits Shirts Sweaters Slacks rian hostility. the El Fatah, and Shukairy's Palestine Liberation Army. They said that Israel's raid on Nov. 13 on Jordan had forced Shukairy to act prema- turely against the king and gave King Hussein a chance to hit him severely. Arab Legion troops in Jordan reportedly have fought Shukairy commandoes and have clashed with Syrian infiltrators sent into Jordan on sabotage mis- sions. The sources repeated Israel's stand that any change in the status quo in Jordan would be dangerous to Israel and that this was the reason for Israeli con- cern and close attention to de- velopments in Jordan. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, January 6, 1967 15 - troops in Jordan near the Israel frontier. The contents of this new note were not known, but it is known that the King of Jordan is not anxious to have foreign Arab troops in his coutnry. The king had made it a condition that Egypt must order the United Na- tions Emergency Force — which stands in Egypt at the border with Israel—out of Egyptian territory before Jordan will admit foreign Arab troops into its territory. This, it is assumed here, Egypt will hardly do. 4,000 Jews in Peru The Jewish community of Peru, which dates back to the middle of the 19th Century, now numbers some 4,000, the vast majority of AHMED SHUKAIRY Meanwhile, General Yitzhak whom live in the capital city of Rabin, starting his fourth year Syrian border is now heavily Lima. as Israel's chief of staff, said here that Israel's military guarded by Jordanian border po- strength had been increased lice because of the open incite- IF YOU TURN THE "enormously" during the three ment by the leftist Syrian govern- ment against the Jordanian ruler, years of his service. He indi- accusing him of preventing Arabs cated that he had considerable UPSIDE DOWN YOU WON'T from fighting Israel. doubts about the utility of FIND A FINER WINE THAN The reorganized Jordanian gov- fences and electronic devices to ernment sent a new note to the protect Israel's borders from Arab League in Cairo on the de- Arab saboteurs. cision taken at the Arab Defense "We did not come to Israel to meeting earlier this Milan Wineries,. Detroit, Mich. live behind barbed wire," he said Council in an interview with Yediot month to station Iraqi and Saudi Ahronot, an evening newspaper, "The adoption by Israel of such a ghetto policy would just en- courage the Arab saboteurs," he declared. The strength of such fences, he stated, "depends on how strongly they are guarded." His views were echoed by in- formed sources here who said that Israel was planning to erect barbed wire fences but only in places where they would buttress other means of defense. Gen. Rabin reiterated that Sy- ria and Egypt held the key to fu- ture activities of the El Fatah commando raiders and of mem- bers of Shukairy's Palestine Lib- eration Army. He said Israel must make it clear that such in- cursions should not occur unless Syria and Egypt sought a military confrontation. The General described Israel's Nov. 13 raid on Jordan as a dem- onstration that Israel would not tolerate acts of Arab sabotage. If more such acts occur, he added, Israel would decide on appropriate measures regardless of "outer pressures." *TifS'il Chairman of U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee Seeks Israel Views JERUSALEM (JTA) — United States Senator Stuart Symington of Missouri, chairman of the Sen- ate 'Armed Services Committee, left here Monday morning after an 18-hour visit during which he met with Prime Minister Levi Eshkol, Foreign Minister Abba Eban and former Chief of Staff Moshe Dayan, now a member of Ben-Gurion's Israel Workers fac- tion in the Knesset. Sen. Symington arrived here Sunday from Jordan as part of a tour of the Middle East after a visit to Vietnam. His talks with Eshkol and Eban dealt with the situation in the Middle East and Israel's views on American pro- posals to use electronic devices for sealing the border with Jor- dan. Ahmed Sukairy's Palestine Arabs to Direct Commando Operations in Israel LONDON (JTA)—The Palestine Liberation Organization—which is bent on overthrowing King Hus- sein of Jordan and on "march- ing" on Israel—is preparing to go underground in Jordan both for the purpose of bringing about the downfall of Hussein and direct- ing commando operations in Is- rael, it was reported from Beirut. The PLO members are all Arab refugees. At the same time it was re- ported from Amman, capital of Jordan, that three Syrian soldiers crossed the border into Jordan and shot a Jordanian security guard to death. The Jordanian- ..t, ne of those days when your phone means so much Whoops! The folks. And earlier than expected. 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