UN Anti-Israel Resolution Is Branded 'Unjust, One-Sided' by Eshkol; Egypt Is Charged With Using Jarring Mission for Propaganda Needs JERUSALEM (JTA) — Prime Minister Levi Eshkol criticized as "one-sided and unjust" the unani- mous vote Friday by the Security Council condemning Israel for its Aug. 4 air attack on terrorist bases near the Jordanian village of Salt. He told the Cabinet meeting that the Council resolution '.`cannot help to stop acts of terrorism perpe- trated against Israel which force her to resort to self-defense." He said it was regrettable that the Council did not consider itself duty-bound to condemn explicitly those responsible for terrorist pene- trations from Jordaian territoy in- to Israel to lay mines and commit "sabotage and murder." Such acts, he declared, "constitute not only a flagrant violation of the cease- fire but are also a continuation of aggression against Israel." He re- iterated that Israel had observed and would continue to fully ob- serve the cease-fire agreements on the basis of reciprocity and "strongly wished" that these agreements be kept by all sides "but like all states belonging to the family of nations, Israel will not lay her roads open to mining and her citizens to murder." Mr. Eshkol, who is acting Foreign Min- ister in the absence of Abba Eban, made his statement at the end of a short report on developments lead- ing to the Council session and the resolution. Foreign Ministry sources sim- ilarly assailed the Council resolu- tion but expressed satisfaction with the stands of the United - States, Canada, Britain and Den- mark whose delegates, in state- ments after the voting, referred to the terrorist attacks as one of the factors undermining the June 1967 cease-fire agreements. Am- bassador George Ball, the United States chief delegate, specifically BUKKS M O THE BEST FOR LESS AT RRI S BU InK 14500 W. 7 MILE AT LODGE X-WAY cited Jordanian support of such raids in expressing the hope that the latest Council resolution would serve to end all violations of the cease-fire. The resolution declared that Is- rael's attack near Salt was a "fla- grant violation" of the UN Charter and of the Security Council's reso- lutions dealing with the Middle East. It warned that if such at- tacks continued, the Council would "duly take account of the failure to comply with the present resolu- tion" and "would- have to consider further and more effective steps as envisaged in the Charter to ensure against repetition of such acts." The resolution deplored "all" vio- lent incidents in violation of the cease-fire" and considered "that all violations of the cease-fire should be prevented;"- an oblique refer- ence to Arab terrorist incursions against Israel a _ nd the only one in the resolution. Ainbassador Ball and most other Council members urged continued support for the peace-seeking mission of the UN's special envoy Dr. Gunnar V. Jar- ring and expressed hopes that the resolution would dampen hostilities in the Middle East and improve prospects for the Jarring mission's success. Ambassador Yosef Tekoah, Is- rael's chief representative, said that the two weeks of debate pre- ceding the resolution demonstrated continued Arab intransigence, bel- ligerence and the destructive Arab attitude toward Israel. He declared the resolution demonstrated again the inadequacy of the Council's handling of the problem and that Israel retained its "inalienable right" to defend itself against con- tinued Arab warfare. He stressed, however, that Israel would do its utmost to ensure maintenance of the cease-fire and expected the Arab states to do the same. He re- affirmed Israel's support of the Jarring mission. Ambassador Yakov Malik, the Soviet envoy said that his govern- ment supported the resolution be- cause unanimous approval could be a "tangible barrier" to Israeli "aggression." He assailed Israel for allegedly refusing to accept the Security Council's Nov. 22, 1967 resolution on the Middle East which, he claimed, the Arab states had accepted. (The New York Times in an editorial sharply criticized the resolution as a one-sided docu- ment "that can only make Am- bassador Jarring's task more dif- ficult." It described the resolu- tion "which virtually ignores Arab guerrilla actions in viola- tion of the cease-fire while cow- demning Israeli reactions" as Give Your Child an Exceptional Educational Experience at the SHOLE M ALEICHEM NURSERY . 19350 Greenfield at 7 Mile Happy Introduction to Jewish Learning • Spacious Indoor and Outdoor Facilities • Afternoon Program, 1:00 P.M.-3:30 P.M. • Monday Thru Friday, 3 or 5 Day Week • 3 to 5 Year Olds • United Hebrew Schools Transportation Available QUALIFIED TEACHERS STATE LICENSED CALL 342-7440 - for information and application "an exercise in futility — and worse." "As long as Arab guer- rillas can cross cease-fire lines to blow up installations and kill Israeli citizens without so much as a slap on the wrist from the world community, the Israelis are certain to take the law into their own hands and strike back," the Times said.) * * * WASHINGTON (JTA) — The Washington Post reported in a dis- patch from Paris which cited con- fidential information from Egyp- tian Foreign Ministry sources that Egypt was seeking to keep the mediation mission of United Na- tions Middle East envoy Gunnar V. Jarring alive but only for prop- aganda purposes and to prevent an actual peaceful settlement. The report, filed by correspond- ent Alfred Friendly, said that Egypt feared that if the Jarring mission failed, Palestinian Arabs in the occupied West Bank might come to terms with Israel. The Post published what it described as a complete account of a staff meeting held last May at the Egyp- tian foreign minsitry offices in Cairo, addressed by Egyptian For- eign Minister Mahmoud Riad at which a basic Egyptian strategy was outlined aimed at mobilizing world opinion to force the United States to end its support of Israel. According to Friendly, Egypt announced acceptance of the Nov. 22, 1967, Security Council resolu- tion for a Middle East settlement as part of its efforts to portray Israel as the aggressor. Riad pur- portedly told the staff meeting that Egypt's diplomatic goal was to isolate Israel, identify Israel as the aggressor and force the United States to pressure Israel to with- draw from all occupied Arab ter- ritories. The dispatch quoted Riad as saying he was convinced that the purported Egyptian effort could succeed, and that Norway and Sweden allegedly had been convinced by Egyptian arguments that Egypt could not trust any peace treaty with Israel. * * JERUSALEM (JTA)—The Unit- ed Nations peace envoy, Dr. Gun- nar V. Jarring, resumed his rounds of Middle Eastern capitals and came here Wednesday to confer with Foreign Minister Abba Eban after visits to Cairo, Amman and Beirut. Eban is expected to ask Dr. Jarring what replies he had received from the Arab states re- garding their interpretations of the formula for "a just and lasting peace" contained in the Security Council's Nov. 22, 1967, resolu- tion which established the Jarring mission. Eban Met with United States Ambassador Walworth Barbour for talks that diplomatic sources described as a comprehensive exchange of views on the situa- tion in general and the mission of Jarring in particular. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (JTA) —Reports from Cairo that Egypti- an diplomats were offering pro- posals to end 20 years of Arab self-proclaimed belligerency to- ward Israel were dismissed here by Israel's United Nations envoy as only another example of "prop- aganda games of words." Al Gomhouria, a Cairo political newspaper, declared M o n d a y that the Western press had pub- lished "false reports on conces- sions made by the Arabs" to Israel. A dispatch from Cairo in the New York Times of Aug. 12 quoted "well-informed Arab diplomats" as having said that Egypt was willing to accept a Middle East settlement that included internationalization of the Gaza Strip, an end to de- mands for the repatriation of Pal- estinian refugees and a completely demilitarized Sinai Peninsula. State Dept. Aides Meet Jordan Envoy for Talks WASHINGTON (JTA)—The Jor- danian ambassador to the United States, Abdul Hamid Sharaf, met with two State Department offi- cials, Undersecretary for Political Affairs Eugene V. Rostow, and Assistant Secretary for Interna- tional Affairs Joseph J. Sisco. Observers speculated that the meeting with State Department officials was asked by Ambassador Sharaf to discuss United States ac- ceptance of a tough Security Coun- cil resolution calling for condem- nation of Israel for its Aug. 4 air attack in Jordan. United States support of a Security Council reso- lution has so far rested on the question of whether or not it would be "reasonably balanced" — one calling for an end to assaults and aggression. 14—Friday, August 23, 1968 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS PIONEER WOMEN TOURS Reservations Now Being Taken_ 1ST CLASS TOURS TO: ISRAEL — 10 DAYS Departures Dec. 21, '68 and Feb. 15, '69 ISRAEL — 22 DAYS Departs Feb. 6, '69 MEXICO - - 16 DAYS Departs Feb. 22, '69 - $54900 199" '589" OTHER TOURS AVAILABLE PIONEER WOMEN OFFICE — DI 1-0722 or Chana Michlin, UN 4-3629 CONGREGATION BETH HILLEL 19371 GREENFIELD SUNDAY SCHOOL WITH FULL CURRICULUM WILL BEGIN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 8th AT THE ROOSEVELT SCHOOL-10 MILE and GREENFIELD OAK PARK We welcome your registration at our office Monday, Tuesday and Thursday from 9 to 1 or call BR 3-0570 For Further Information. TICKET SALE 'FOR THE HIGH HOLIDAYS WILL BEGIN SUNDAY, SEPT. 1, and MONDAY, SEPT. 2 from 10 A.M. to 2 P.M.—AND ALL CONSECUTIVE SUNDAYS. 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