THE DETROIT JEWISH'NEWS Jarring's London Mission Losing Steam (Direct JTA Teletype Wire to The Jewish News) . LONDON—The optimism which surrounded the renewed activity of United Nations peace envoy Am- bassador Gunnar V. Jarring ap- peared to be petering out Wednes- day and prospects for an immedi- ate break in the Arab-Israel im- passe seemed remote. Dr. Jarring met Tuesday night with British • Foreign Secretary Michael Stewart and earlier had a second round of discussions with Jordanian Foreign Minister Abdul ' Moneim Rifai. Dr. Jarring also conferred Tuesday with Ambas- - sador Gideon Rafael, director gen- eral . of Israel's foreign ministry. Nothing was disclosed of the talks with Rifai. The Jordanian diplomat afterwards would say only that "Present prospects are not without hope." The Daily Telegraph noted the length and obviously de- tailed nature of the Jarring- Rifai talks suggesting that the UN envoy might regard Jordan as the best channel for dealings with the Arab countries. Stewart was understood to have expressed his government's grow- ing concern over the continued closure of the Suez Canal and told Dr. Jarring that if there was no immediate progress toward a Mid- die East settlement, the problem Polish Communist Leader Urges End to Anti-Zionist Fight 'Fast as Possible' LONDON (JTA) -- A Polish Communist Party leader said Tues- day that the "fight against Zion- ism" was being "artifically main- tained" by some of the party or- ganizations and should be ended "as fast as possible," it was re- ported here in dispatches from Warsaw. The remark was attributed to Zenon Kliszko, the party's ideolo- gist, who spoke at the opening session of a meeting of the Polish Communist Party's central com- mittee. According to the reports, Klisz- ko charged that "some organiza- tions, -especially officials and clerks, maintain an atmosphere of anti-Zionism" that was "false and exaggerated." He also contended that "the Jews and the Zionists are being made identical" by those who are continuing the cam- paign. 'No Substitute for Phantorn Jet' (Continued from Page 1) missiles were viewed by the U.S. as a substitute for the 50 Phan- tom jets that were requested by Prime Minister Levi Eshkol dur-- ing his visit with President John- son last January. The administra- tion has since been under strong pressure from many Congressmen, and from political candidates to sell the Phantoms to Israel in view of the massive Soviet build-up of Egypt's air force. But the State Department is believed to have sought to defer the sale. Some -- -- observers in Washington said to- day that the State Department rec- . ommended to the • White House that a formula be found to bolster Israel's air defense but deny her the Phantoms whic,h could be used offensively. The Hawk is a purely defensive weapon. (Other sources speculated that the agreement to sell Israel addi- tional Hawk missiles would pave the way for the sale of the Phan- tom jets. After Eshkol's visit, Johnson promised Israel about 20 more A-4 Skyhawk fighter-bomb- ers. The U.S. has already' begun . the shipment of three –squadro-ns . of 48 Skyhawks under a sales agreement concluded • in '1966. Their delivery had been held Up by the June 1967 war. The presi- dent was said to have made no commitment on Israel's request for the faster, more modern ftan- toms. Officials have maintained that their sale remained • Under "sympathetic consideration."). (The London Telegraph reported from Amman Friday that the U.S. has just completed and publicized airflight to Jordan of arms and military equipment. Heavy equip- ment, including "dozens" of Patton tanks, artillery and anti-tank guns are being sent by sea and are expected at Aqaba later this month, the paper said. According to the Telegraph the shipments were not announced apparently at the requeSt of American authori- ties who are sensitive about re- entering the Middle East arms race and are worried about the reaction of the "Zionist lobby.") Kliszko is a close associate of Communist Party chief Wladislaw Gomulka. Observers saw in his re- marks an indictment of the methods used by Minister of In- terior Maj. Gen. . Miecyzslaw Moc- zar, Gomulka's chief rival, who is believed to have headed Po- land's four-month-old "anti-Zion- ist" campaign, the Warsaw re- ports said. But in addition to being part of the struggle for power within Poland's Communist hierarchy, Kliszko's call for termination of the anti-Zionist campaign was seen as in indication of the Warsaw regime's growing sen- sitivity to charges from abroad that the campaign was thinly disguised anti-Semitism. According to the Warsaw dis- patches, Kliszko charged that "an exceptionally harsh tariff (fine) is applied for petty transgressions of persons of Jewish. origin . . . transgressions of a type which are sometimes not sen in others." He said that "it is alien to our party to make a difference . . . according to criteria of nation or origin." He affirmed the party's opposition to Zionism but said Zionism's "social basis" in Poland is "narrow." The official Polish press agency, PAP, carried a ver- sion' Of the Kliszko „speech which quoted him as saying that the problem of Zionism has been "basically explained, and one can and has to take it off the agenda of party propaganda." would rapidly deteriorate. He re- portedly prelicted a renewal of the "angry Arab debate" in the security Council and New Arab demands for sanctions against Israel. The Times of London reported from Beirut Wednesday that America has delivered about 60 Patton tanks to Jordan at a time when the Jordanian army was be- coming increasingly critical of King Hussein's military policies and his refusal to buy arms from Soviet Russia although officers are complaining of shortages of- almost every type of military equipment. The Times of London said that America has been ship- ping tanks, artillery, ammunition and spare parts and other equip- ment to Jordan for the past two months. But the shipments are not being publicized, presumably to avert increased Israeli pressure for the American F-4 Phantom jets, the Times said. The paper estimated that J o r d an now has about 11 British Hunter planes. Dr. Jarring, it was believed, would meet with Kosygin in Stockholm where the Soviet leader was due on a state visit Thursday. He was expected to confer with Thant in Geneva where the latter has just open- ed a general conference of the UN Economic and Social Coun- cil. It was also reported here that Dr. Jarring was anxious to meet with President Johnson when he returns to New York. *witsitimosii* SLATKIN'S •1 DEXTER 11 CHEVROLET U at • "TOPS THEM ALL" FOR YOUR BEST DEAL 1 SEE US . KE 4-1400 a • 1st • 20811 W. 8 Mile Rd. a a Between Southfield & Telegraph "2 Minutes from Northland" a Friday, July 12, 1968-13 CHRISTMAS Is HERE NOW! 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