Understanding of Israel's Arms Needs Feared Lacking; Cairo Pressure Is Seen WASHINGTON (JTA) — The shipments to Israel ended last Council on Foreign Relations sur- week. vey of 1,500 of its members on the Bayh accused the Nixon admin- iddle East showed that orly 40 istration of delaying answers to er cent support continued mili- Israel's arms requests, thereby tary aid to Israel in order to "jeopardizing" the balance of pow- retain her military superiority or er in the Middle East. (Sen. Robert Packwood, Oregon even parity with her Arab enemies. The survey included members Republican, who is visiting Israel of the council's committees on for- as a guest of the government, said eign relations in 34 cities, laymen in Tel Aviv last Friday that the who "meet regularly with experts Nixon administration was delay- to inform themselves on foreign ing arms shipments to Israel, and licy issues," according to Coun- he didn't think the delay was justified.) >zrature. Sen. Bayh said "the administra- survey, entitled "The Mid- dle East and U. S. Soviet Rela- tion is wrong in giving the appear. ions," asks the community lead- ance if not the effect" of using rs to select what alternatives military aid to "blackmail Israel" ould be the most wise for the into concession on an interim . S. to pursue. Two-thirds of the peace settlement. He added that espondents felt that the U. S. realizing the Israeli "economic hould offer to participate in a Big bind" and Soviet support of the our or UN guarantee of a Mid Arabs, he favored approving Is- ast settlement acceptable to Is- rael's first request for a military assistance grant of $200,000,000. ael, Egypt and Jordan. – However, one-fourth of the re- spondents favored reduced U. S.- Israeli friendship in the hope of improving chances for a settle- ment of the crisis. About 40 per cent of those surveyed felt the U. S. should reduce its military power worldwide and review its commitments to "lessen chances of involvement in local con- flicts." McGovern sees "an old Czarist carry-over . • . of wanting to have access to the Eastern Mediter- ranen." But McGovern does not foresee a big clash in the Mid East. Regarding American aid to Is- rael, McGovern asserts; "as long as Russia keeps supplying arms to the Arabs, we have to make sure that the balance is sufficient for Israel to defend itself , . . I think we've been right in seeking to counteract (the Soviet's) mischief- making in the Middle East by selling arms to Israel. And we must leave no doubt that we are committing ourselves to Israel's survival." Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D- Wash.) said Wednesday the Soviet Union has nearly 600 supersonic military planes based in the Middle East. Some are so advanced, he said, they "are not yet widely available even within the Russian air force." Sen. Jackson said his figures meant that the Israeli air force was outnumbered five or six to one in supersonic aircraft. About 90 per cent of those re- Sen. George McGovern said in plying said that Soviet naval move- an interview in the August issue ments in the Mediterranean and of Playboy, that if the United shipments of arms to Egypt repre- States hopes to make progress sented a threat to the U. S. The toward peace in the Middle East, threat was envisaged either in Berlin and South East Asia and terms of the possibility of a U. S.- Soviet confrontation in the area by toward arms control, "we're going some and in terms of an altera- to have to abandon our paranoia tion in the balance of power by about Russian's ambition to domi- nate the world." He observed that others. Meanwhile, two Israeli leaders "if the Russians had messianic have voiced concern that their views at one time, they've largely country's best friends do not re- subsided." The Russians, he says, fear a gard its security needs with suffi- "revived German militarism" cient urgency. Defense Minister Moshe Dayan, abeted by American policy, and interviewed on Kol Israel radio, "that's the real reason they charged bluntly that Egyptian wanted a cushion of communist pressure on the United States was states on their Western border, preventing Israel from getting the from Poland to the Mediterra- nean." Regarding the Middle East, combat aircraft it needed. 4. 0 Premier Golda Meir, addressing SHA ,I ELS CAN FIT YOU! a Labor Party rally at Ramat Gan „Friday said the main argument fl 1. k, ;With "our best friend. the U. S. A., and we have no greater friend, as ,well as with other friendly na- 1, , , . . is to try to bring home to 11.S , m 61M.Ln the basic premise of Israel's • Short, Long, Pant style FrSecurity which is secure borders." • For Weddings, Parties, Dates 7 ....Z.; She said the terrorist rocket at- • Junior, Misses, Large Sizes tack on Petah Tikva last Wednes- . 'day night. which so far has claim- Ed four lives, was "the best dem- 154 South Woodward onstration of how important secure ' Birmingham, Mich. - J borders are for Israel." -'15 1. ( Two Africans Win Grants at Rehovot Grad School REHOVOT—Two young Africans, a Ghanaian and an Ethiopian, have been awarded Solomon B. Caulker Memorial Scholarships for studies at the Weizmann Institute's Feinberg Graduate School during the 1971-72 academic year begin- ning in October. The Caulker Scholarships were established in 1960 by the Weiz- mann Institute and the Rehovot Conference on Science in the Ad- vancement of New States, in mem- ory of the late Rev. Solomon B. Caulkner, vice principal of Fourah Bay College, Sierra Leone, who was killed in an airplane crash on his way home from the first Rehovot conference. The Caulker Scholars will be Legesse Senbetu of the Haile Selassie I. University in Addis Ababa and G. K. Osei of the Uni- _ versity of Ghana in Lagon. Senbetu will be attached to the department of nuclear physics and Osei to the department of pure mathematics. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, July 16, 1971-5 Your Scotch dollar buns ms oreure fra cefr Lauder s Scotch with Imported Lauder's Scotch has a world-wide tradition of quality and smooth taste ... it's been around since 1834. AFTER-5 GOWNS $29 to $199 $ 18 THE FIFTH 1/2. GAL. 4/5 PINT V I 2 81 $ 2 " ; HANDELS Authentic Scotch dollar (Crown) minted between 1605-25. Symbol of Lauder's. All Taxes Included - Mrs. Meir disclosed that she had told visiting West German Foreign Minister Walter Scheel: " .--iropeans tell us they want ensure our security through tne United Nations and even in- troduce foreign forpes in a pro- tective cordon. Does this mean that once peace is achieved with the Arabs, Israel has to be spe- cially guarded?. I should like to know where they have stationed special guards along the Euro- pean borders after signing peace treaties?" Mrs. ,vleir said it was no secret that one of Israel's main points of discussion with Washington was that "We need more Phan- toms." She added that one Phan- tom costs $6,000,000. WASHINGTON (JTA) — Sen. Birch Bayh, • Indiana Democrat, doesn't believe that an American troop cutback in Western Europe, which he advocates, would be con- strued by Moscow as a curtail- ment of the American commitment to Israel, as long as the U. S. continues to ship Phantom jets and other military equipment to that country. Current U. 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