Guerrilla Leaders Are Striving to Heal Deep Split in Ranks; USSR Claims Its Missiles have Forced the Peace Movement TEL AVIV (JTA) — The split in the Palestinian guerrilla ranks deepened Wednesday morning with reports of clashes in the Jordan Valley between the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, the 4,000-member Marxist-Leninist or- ganization headed by Dr. George Habash, and the Action organiza- tion for the Liberation of Pales- tine, a 50-man Nasserite Socialist splinter group. The guerrilla dis- unity began last Thursday when the Action organization along with the 100-member Arab Palestine Organization, endorsed Egypt's acceptance of the United States peace initiative. The PFLP is militantly opposed to any peace settlement with Israe 1. There were fears that fighting might spread to Amman, where guerril- las battled Jordanian troops in June. (In Cairo, the authoritative newspaper Al Ahram said Egypt would "keep its hands free to move politically in the light of its national responsibilities." This was seen as representing Egypt's de- termination to withstand guerrilla opposition to the government's ac- ceptance of the U.S. plan.) Arab leaders opened their sum- mit meeting in Tripoli Wednesday without the participation of Iraq and Algeria, which have condemn- ed Egypt for accepting the U.S. initiative. Libyas revolutionary leader, Col. Muammar al-Qadhafi, returned to his capital from Bagh- dad, where he was unsuccessful in urging Iraqi leaders to join the conference. The Libyan Revolu- tionary Command Council, which has not yet taken a formal posi- tion on the U.S. plan, declared that it "stands firmly at the side of Egypt" and decries "slanderous campaigns" against "the reputa- Boris Smolar's 'Between You (Editor-in-Chief Emeritus, J.T.A.) (Copyright 1970, JTA Inc.) 1 JDC IMAGE: Many Jews in this country think of the Joint Distri- bution Committee in terms of the American Red Cross. This is not enough. The Red Cross is providing mostly urgent relief. It is on the spot when there is an emergency like a flood, an earthquake, and of course in war situations. The JDC does much more than that. Not only does it come to the aid of needy Jews in wartime and in emergency situations, but it con- ducts a worldwide relief and rehabilitation program also in "normal" times in countries where Jews are in need of various forms of aid. During the years of its existence—since 1914—it spent about $940,000,000 not only on feeding and clothing of needy Jews overseas and of taking care of their children, but also on reconstructing their lives, meeting their medical, cultural and religious needs, rehabilitating many thousands of handicapped, and taking care of the aged. A look at the record as presented by Samuel L. Haber, JDC executive vice-chairman, gives an idea of the gigantic task which the JDC performs. Its field of activities is global. Last year alone, which was comparatively a "quiet" year, JDC served more than 320,000 bene- ficiaries. More than a third of its global allocations of about $24,000,000 were spent on assisting 173,000 Jews in Europe, both East and West. The JDC network of relief and rehabilitation is widespread over Europe and North Africa. It embraces also such distant lands as Iran and China, not to speak of Israel, where through the JDC, its well- known Malben program has over the past two decades assisted over 250,000 aged, chronically ill and handicapped newcomers with health, welfare and other services not otherwise available in the young state. In Eastern Europe alone, the JDC reaches 85,000 persons with assistance through its Relief-in-Transit program. This does not include the aid given to 15,000 Jews in Romania. Last year it aided about 6,000 transmigrants who were compelled to leave their countries—like the Jews in Poland—and were awaiting final resettlement in Israel and other countries. It extends solid aid to the impoverished Jewish communities in Moslem lands, like Morocco, where the Jewish popula- tion of over 200,000 a decade ago is today less than 14,000, and Tunisia where there are today less than 14,000 of the 65,000 Jews of ten years ago. One finds that JDC aid has been given to Jews in Spain and in Portugal, in Sweden and in Yugoslavia, and where not? INSIDE JDC: A large part of the JDC work is conducted under the supervision of JDC directors stationed in various countries. Once a year these directors gather in Geneva, where the overseas headquarters of the JDC is located, to share experiences and to map plans for work in the coming year. American top JDC leaders come from New York to Geneva to participate in this conclave. For the first time in the JDC history the gathering of the country directors will take place this year in the United States. It will be held in the middle of October in New York. The purpose of holding it this year in New York instead of Geneva is to give leaders of American Jewish communities the feel of what the JDC actually does and of the problems it faces. It is no easy task to organize in New York a conference of JDC country directors brought over from various parts of the world. But Louis Broido, JDC chairman, and Jack D. Weiler, chairman of the National Council, felt that the JDC owes it to American Jewish leaders to present to them all the "inside mechanics" of the JDC work as carried out by the professionals on the spot. And Haber, who has acquired a high reputation in the American Jewish community as the "spark plug" of the JDC, held the same opinion. The burden of arranging the JDC country directors conference will, naturally, fall upon Haber who is known for his organizing ability. Prior to his becoming the executive head of the organization, he served as JDC director in Germany during the immediate post-war years, later as JDC country director in North Africa, and finally as one of the high officers of the JDC European headquarters in Geneva. His experiences are wide and he knows the JDC work in every country on the tips of his fingers. As the JDC country directors from Israel, North Africa, Italy, France and other countries—together with the directors and experts from the JDC quarters in Geneva—will present their reports and plans in New York, those American Jewish leaders who will be invited to the two-day working meetings will emerge from them inspired from what they have heard and elevated by the competence of the JDC men who do their work with great dedication. They will see the JDC in its full light and in action. ton of President Gamal Abdel Nasser as the leader of the Arab nation." It also said it would continue financial aid to the guer- rilla movement, especially Al Fa- tah, "as long as it carries on its liberation drive and maintains unity of Palestinian action." (The countries represented at Tripoli are Egypt, Jordan and the Sudan, which have endorsed the U.S. initiative; Syria, which has denounced but not formally reject- ed it, and Libya. The conference was postponed from Monday to give Col. Al-Qadhafi, who took power last September, time to try to get Iraq to participate. He also conferred briefly at the Damascus Airport with Syrian President Nu- reddin al-Attasi. Al Ahram assail- ed Iraq as "a bloody, isolated regime" that was "seeking a role for itself in the Arab world after the isolation it brought upon itself by the bloody liquidation opera- tions it undertook since coming to power in 1968." Top Iraq officials arrived in Moscow for consulta- tions at the Kremlin. (The Sudan withdrew its sus- pensions of Palestinian broadcasts that had criticized her and Egypt's acceptance of the U.S. plan.) LONDON (JTA) — Egypt and the Soviet Union appeared deter- mined not to allow new diplomatic efforts for a negotiated Middle East settlement to founder on the intransigence of some Arab states. The Iraqi government's hard-line opposition to Egypt's and Jordan's acceptance of the latest United States peace initiative was sharp- ly criticized by President Gamal Abdel Nasser in a message to President Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr, of Iraq. Iraq has also been criti- cized in the Soviet press. The mes- sage was given by President Nas- ser to the Iraqi minister of labor and social affairs, Gen. Anwar al- Hadithi, who visited Cairo two days ago. It heaped scorn on the Iraqi regime for indulging in street demonstrations while Egypt bore the brunt of armed struggle with Israel. The text of the message was pub- lished by Egypt's official Middle East News Agency. In it the Egyp- tian leader told his Iraqi counter- part that the energy used in slo- ganeering in the streets of Bagh- dad and in denouncing Egypt's diplomatic moves could be better directed toward "ordering Iraqi planes to attack Israeli targets or strengthening Iraqi forces on the eastern front against Israel." President Nasser added: "The Egyptian people have not indulged in the luxury of fighting from speakers' platforms." According to the Russians, it was their establishment of an ef- fective Egyptian air defense sys- tem through the introduction of SAM-2 and SAM-3 missiles and the stationing of Soviet techni- cians, protected by Russian pilots and combat troops in Egypt, which convinced the United States and Israel that the time for negotia- tions had arrived. The dispute was further aggra- vated when an Iraqi spokesman accused President Nasser of mak- ing a blunder that led to the Arab defeat in the Six-Day War. A large Iraqi delegation which arrived in Moscow Tuesday heard a Soviet deputy premier, Kirin Mazurov, voice support for a "fair political settlement." Mazrurov as- sured the Iraqis of continued "al- round assistance" to the Arab states and did not mention the reported reprimand. JERUSALEM (JTA) — King Hussein is gradually revoking the concessions he made to the Pales- tinian terrorists organization July 7 after the June-July hostilities, according to unconfirmed reports circulating here. Mounting bitter- ness is reported among the ter- rorists over a purge of the officer corps that resulted in the removal of 50 officers. General Zayed Ben Shaker, formerly commander of the armored units of the Jordanian army, who was removed at the insistence of the terrorists, has been reinstated in rank and ap- pointed deputy chief of staff, ac- cording to one report. Another re- port states that the chief of intelli- gence, a General Badran, has been dismissed and replaced by Colonel Mudir Omar. ENROLL—EARN YOUR DEGREE THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 22—Friday, August 7, 1970 Put some FUN in Your Fund Raising Great skill and the use of an intricate new process have led to reproductions of faithful Masterpieces on Great authentic Stretcher Canvas. of Bachelors of Bible Philosophy (B.Ph.B.), Master of Bible Philosophy (M.Ph.B.). Graduate of Bible Philos- ophy (G.Ph.B.), Director of Metaphys- ics (Ms.D.), or Doctor of Divinity (D.D.) Chartered by State Corre- spondence Courses only. Please write for FREE BOOKLET. 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