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June 20, 1969 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1969-06-20

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

8—Friday, June 20, 1969



Nasser Uncompromising, Russia Threatening
,
Gromyko Attitude Calkd Deplorable by Ban

JERUSALEM (JTA)—Israeli of-
ficials believe that the Big Four
talks on the Middle East will con-
tinue despite the apparent failure
of Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei
A. Gromyko to persuade President
Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt to
accept a reported compromise
plan. Gromyko, on his surprise
visit to Cairo, spent three days in
consultations with President Nas-
ser and other Egyptian officials.
According to various reports, his
purpose was to test Egyptian re-
action to proposals made by the
United States.
Egyptian Foreign Minister Mali-
moud Riad said Gromyko brought
five separate proposals, one from
each of the powers participating in
the talks and the fifth from a com-
mittee of Big Four deputies working
group formed during the meetings
of the Big Four ambassadors to
the United Nations. Some sources
said Gromyko sought President
Nasser's approval of a highly gen-
eral interim statement to be issued
by the U.S.. Russia. Britain and
France before they recess their
talks for the •summer.
A joint communique made pub-
lic after Gromyko left Cairo on
Friday declared that a settle-
ment of the Middle East conflict
would require adherence to "all
parts and provisions" of the
Security Council's Nov. 22, 1967,
Mid East resolution. But the
Gromyko-Nasser communique re-
ferred specifically only to the re-
solution's call for an Israeli with-
drawal from the territories oc-
cupied during the Six-Day War

said the document proved that
Egypt and Soviet Russia were re-
sponsible for "immobility and rig-
idity" which have "blocked all
efforts to turn away from the ten-
sions and rancors of the past to-
ward a peaceful future." Eban said
Israel held firmly to its position
calling for free negotiations without
prior conditions on all matters at
issue. He said there was "no inter-
national authority for the proposal
to restore the position and lines of
June 4, 1967" the day before the
outbreak of the Six-Day War. "Is-
rael," he said, "will never agree to
put herself again in that position of
peril and vulnerability."
(Diplomatic sources abroad said
the U.S. proposal carried to Cairo
by Gromyko called for the creation
of "a mood of settlement" by the
signing of a contractual agreement
which would be followed by Israel's
withdrawal to mutually agreed bor-
bers and a solution of the Palestine
refugee problem with U.S. assist
ante. According to these sources,

East peace proposals made in
recent weeks in the course of bi-
lateral talks between Assistant
Secretary of State Joseph Sisco
and Soviet Ambassador Anatoly
F. Dobrynin.

( According to a department
spokesman, the response was de-
livered to Secretary of State Wil-
liam P. Rogers by Uri Tchernia-
kov, charge d'affaires at the Soviet
Embassy. The contents were not
disclosed but they are believed to
30 American Zionists
be based on the impressions gained
by Gromyko following his meeting
on Israel Seminar-Tour
with Nasser. Rogers was said to he
NEW YORK (JTA) — Thirty "studying" the Soviet document.)
American
Zionists and Jewish
Sen. Jacob Javits, New York
community leaders left for Israel
to participate in the first seminar Republican, called on the Nixon ad-
ministration
to allay the fear wide-
and tour under the auspices of the
spread in Israel that the United
American Zionist Council.
States might be "maneuvered" by
Rabbi Israel Miller, council the Soviet Union into accepting a
chairman, said the tour was In-
tended to give community leaders
first-hand information with which Plan of Great Synagogue
they could explain . the problems in Israel Not So Great
and accomplishments of Israel to
(Direct JTA Teletype Wire
to The Jewish News)
the Jewish public and the public
JERUSALEM — A "great syna-
at large. He said the project was
gogue"
in
Jerusalem's centrally lo-
"experimental" and. if successful,
mould be conducted in the future cated King George Ave. may take
years to build, it was reported as
on a semi-annual basis.
liehal Shlomo, the chief rabbinate's
office. sent out invitations to the
cornerstone laying Tuesday.
According to municipal and dis-
trict planning authorities, the plot
reserved for the structure is not

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Science has found a medicatioh
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to relieve pain, itching and shrink
hemorrhoids. In case after case
doctors proved, while gently re-
lieving pain,actual reduction took
place. The secret is Preparation
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—Adv.

tour of Israel and Western Europe-.
He said. "I found what is unusual
to find in American-Israeli rela-
tions, a communications gap."
Sen. Javits said Israel's fears
stemmed from the Four Power
talks which they opposed and the
concurrent talks between Sisco
and Dobrynin.
The Big Four talks on the Middle

Another War Not 'Desirable'—Egyptian Spokesman

TA) — An Egyptian now, we shall wait. Waiting for a
L O N DO N
g o vernment ( s j pokesman said war few months or years will not sap
with Israel was not "desirable" the vitality of the country."
now but added that Egypt could
wait "for a few months or years"
ill YOU TURN TM
if necessary. Mohamed Hassan el-
Zayyat said there were two ways
to end Israel's occupation of
IPPSIOR DOWN YOU WON?
"Arab" lands—by force or by find- j
NM A NMI WWI 'THAN

' V ' s ."

ing "a policeman and a judge in

the United Nations." He said, "It
is obvious that the policeman and
the judge are not functioning. If
force is not available or desirable

zoned for public buildings, nor is

the area one in which a building of
the planned height of the synagogue

is permitted.
The drafts submitted have been
rejected as bad planning by the
city's architects advisory panel. In
addition, under Israel's building
laws, the plan must be displayed
after provisional approval, and the
public can then submit objections.
Residents of adjacent buildings
have already announced that they
will not accept the erection of a

large structure that would dwarf
their dwellings.

("// /7",2

Mika Whoirlos, Detroit Mich.

ANYWHERE

EVERYWHERE

TRAVELING
YESHIVATH BETH YEHUDAH

East are "the last gesture of an
expiring era" and whatever their
outcome. Israel and the Arab states
will still have to settle their differ-
ences themselves.•' Rabbi Jay
Kaufman, executive vice president
of Bnai Brith, told 1.200 delegates
at the annual convention of Bnai
Brith district three in New York.
The "negligible effect" on world
trade of a blocked Suez Canal, the
obsolescence of military bases be
cause of advanced missile technol-
the U.S. viewed its proposals going ogy. and geopolitical factors are
a long way toward Israel's demand making the Middle East "not worth
for a negotiated agreement while fighting over" among o orld powers.
allowing the Arabs to save face by Rabbi Kaufman said. "The experi-
not requiring them to enter into ences of the 1950s. which brought
French and British armies to re-
direct talks with the Israelis.
(Sources in Washington said that cover t he Suez and American
troops
to rescue Lebanon. are not
the U.S. envisioned only minor rec-
tifications of the borders that exist- likely to be repeated." he said.
ed prior to the 1967 war which Some form of direct negotiation.
would provide Israel with secure "probably halting and disguised at
boundaries but would not "reflect first." is inevitable. he predicted.
the weight of conquest." The U.S.
proposal which President Nasser
reportedly would have had Israel
withdraw from the Sinai Peninsula,
the Gaza Strip and the West Bank
but would leave the Golan Heights

In the communique, the Soviet
Union reiterated "full support" for and East Jerusalem open to future
Egypt and the other Arab govern- negotiation. Israeli officials said
ments involved in the dispute. It that the Gromyko-Nasser commu-
maintained that despite demands nique made it clear that Soviet
from some Arabs for a new war Mid East policy is in effect dictated
against Israel, Cairo continued to by President Nasser, not the other
support the search for a peaceful way around.
settlement through the UN resolu-
(The State Department dis-
tion and favored international en-
closed Wednesday that the Soviet
deavors to bring it about.
Union has responded to U.S. Mid

Israel's Foreign Minister Abba
Eban denounced the Gromyko-
Nasser communique as a "deplor-
able document" that contained
"hostility in every line" and was
"a new blow to peace. - He said the
policies proclaimed by the con-
ferees were the same ones that
w ere emphatically rejected by the
UN General Assembly when pre-
sented there on June 13. 1967 Eban

Middle East settlement inimical to
Israel's security. Sen. Javits. a
member o fhte Senate Foreign Re-
lations Committee, spoke _ to news-
men on his return from a 17-day

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