Johnson and Goldberg Get Share of Hate from Sadat

Egypt's President Anwar el-Sadat has two major hates—for Israel and the United States.

In his four-hour speech on Monday, explaining the reason for his basing ousted some 15.000 mili-
tary and technical Russian experts, he threatened that he can carry on a war against Israel on his own,
without Soviet aid, and he launched attacks on Abba Eban and on many Americans who were men-
tioned by name.

Prominent among those he selected for attack were former President Lyndon R. Johnson. former
U.S. Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg, the late Senator Robert F. Kennedy, former Secretary
of State Dean Rusk, Secretary of State William P. Rogers and Assistant Secretary of State for Near

President Johnson

East and South Asian Affairs Joseph J. Sisco.

JEWISH NEWS

Jerusalem's
Status:
Biased Attack
Demolished
by Christian
Theologian

A Weekly Review

Editorial

Page 4

VCL. LXI. No. 20

Arthur

of Jewish Events

Possible
Threat to
Israel From
USSR's Ouster b y
Egypt Calls for
Added Vigilance

Commentary
Page 2

Michigan's Only English-Jewish Newspaper

-It—

Goldberg

17515 W. 9 Mile, Suite 865, Southfield, Mich. 48075 356-8400 $8.00 Per Year: This Issue 25c

July 28, 1972

Go lda Meir to Anwar el-Sadat:

Make Direct Peace ... No Foreign
Power Can Solve Our Problems'

More USSR Oppression Reported;
Shapiro Given I-Year Jail Term;
100,000 Believed Seeking Visas

TEL AVIV (JTA)—Hillel Seidel, head of the Histadrut absorp-
tion department, told the Histadrut Central Committee that about
100,000 Russian Jews are currently seeking permission to emigrate
to Israel. He made the report after returning from Vienna where he
visited the transit camp for Russian Jewish emigres.
The large group of Russian Jews who arrived here Sunday night
included Prof. Vladimir Bravcj, noted chemist from Kiev, his•wife,
son and daughter. The scientist and his son were arrested several

times during their efforts to obtain exit visas. Both were arrested
several months ago for participating in a rally outside the Kiev syna-
gogue. They were released two weeks ago and told they could obtain
their visas. However, Bravoj's son's wife was denied a visa and is

still in the Soviet Union.

Shapiro Gets Light Term

MOSCOW—A Moscow court Wednesday found Gavriel Shapiro
guilty of evading military training and sentenced him to one year of
"corrective labor." The jail sentence was considered light.
Shapiro will be free to live at home in Moscow, but will be
work at a job given him by the court. Twenty per cent

forced to

of his earnings from the job will be appropriated by the state. The
rest he can keep. The maximum penalty is one year in prison.
Shapiro did expect the light sentence. He credited the U.S. gov-
ernment and his wife for the verdict. "I knew that the U.S. govern-
ment and my wife (Judith Silver Shapiro) would make an impression
on the results. I thought I would probably not he put in jail."
In a recent story about Gavriel Shapiro written by Boris Antonov

the Novosti Press Agency, the Soviet point of view concerning
the Gavriel Shapiro case is offered. The story was passed along to
The Jewish News by Stephan Roganov,, First Secretary at the In-

of

(Continued on Page 22)

JERUSALEM (JTA)—Premier Golda Meir called on President Anwar el-Sadat of
Egypt Wednesday to "make a joint supreme effort" with Israel "to arrive at an agreed
solution to all the outstanding problems." Mrs. Meir made her appeal for peace negotia-
tions in the course of a lengthy speech to the Knesset Wednesday morning in which she
stated her government's evaluation of recent developments in Egypt, mainly President
el-Sadat's ouster of Soviet military advisers.

"It is still premature to make a reliable evaluation of the reasons, scope and re-
sults" of the Soviet withdrawal. Mrs. Meir said in viewing the end of Russia's strategic
presence in Egypt. She estimated the Russian presence in Egypt up to the time of the pull-
out at over 7,000 advisers, experts and instructors with Egypt's armed forces and close
to 10,000 assigned to jet fighter squadrons and anti-aircraft missile batteries. The experts
and advisors were ordered to leave but not the instructors, Mrs. Meir said.

She said the demand for evacuation also affected Soviet operational units integrated
in the Egyptian air defense system and that "perhaps also the interceptor squadrons have
been handed over to the Egyptians."
Mrs. Meir said Israel would have to remain on guard against the possible conse-
quences of the reduction of the Soviet presence in Egypt. If it is true that the Russians re
strained the Egyptians from their more hostile impulses then this "contributed to saying
Egypt from a further defeat and prevented a dangerous deterioration in this region." the
premier said.
However, she went (v. Israel must be alert lest continued Egyptian frustration lead
to a resumption of shooting. "Who can guarantee that they )the Egyptians) will not try
to find a solution or a way out of confusion. frustration and internal strife by resuming
fighting?" she asked. "The doctrine of preparation for a military decision still holds sway.
hundreds of thousands of men are still under arms and tension still exists." Mrs. Meir said.
She noted that the reason behind el-Sadat's ouster of the Russians was Moscow's refusal
to approve and support Egypt's more aggressive demands.

Mrs. Meir did not dwell at length on el-Sadat's bellicose speech to the Arab Socialist
Union in Cairo Monday. Though she read it "from beginning to end," Mrs. Meir said, it con-
tained no hint of how el-Sadat intended to terminate the situation of "no - war - no - peace"
that he found intolerable. The Israeli premier suggested that he terminate it by making
peace directly with Israel because "no foreign country or factor can solve for us, or in-
stead of us, the problems which stand between us . . Negotiations for peace is not a
badge of surrender or humiliation . . . It is a supreme revelation of sovereigntY, of na-
(Continued on Page 61

Young Republicans Emulate Democrats Propose
Strong Pro-Israel Plank, Jerusalem as Capital

WASHINGTON (JTA)—The Young Republican National Federation has adopted a five-point statement
of policy for the United States regarding the Middle East which it hopes will be part of the Republican Party's

platform in the Presidential campaign.
The policy statement will be presented to the Republican platform committee in Miami Beach during the
week of Aug. 14. That committee will offer its recommendations to the party convention the following week.
The Federation's five points, whi..h closely approximate the plank adopted by the Democratic Party Convention in

Miami Beach two weeks ago, says the following:

"An important goal of American foreign policy is seeing a just and lasting peace achieved in the Middle
area. Observing the sovereignty
East. The United States cannot and should not dictate the terms of peace in the
and territorial rights of all the nations of the Middle East is inherent in the administration's pursuit of a genera-
tion of peace. We specifically recommend: 1. Direct, face-to-face Arab-Israeli negotiations; 2. The continued
aircraft sufficient to maintain a balance of strength in the area; 3. Recogni-
supply of military equipment and
and relocation of the United States Embassy there; 4. Assistance to both
tion of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel
Israel and the Arab states in relocating refu^,ees and encouraging the help of the other nations of the world in
all Arab nations willing to accept our policy of

this problem; 5. The resumption of diplomatic relations with
friendship."

section titled "humanitarian con•
Regarding Soviet Jewry, the Federation's recommendation declares in a
cerns" that "we believe in the right of all people in all nations to pursue their own religious, political and

economic lives."

(Continued on Page 51

Squadrons Shadowing
U.S. Fleet Retained
Within Egypt by USSR

TEL AVIV (ITA) -Russian pilots and air defense
technicians continued their departure from Egypt Wednes-
day but the planes and missiles they left behind are
being manned by Egyptians. According to information
reaching here. the only Russian pilots remaining in Fray pt
are those assigned to squadrons shadowing the U Sixth
Fleet and pilots of the MIG-23, the world's fastest com-
bat aircraft which hale been deployed in Egypt in

limited numbers.
It was learned here th,it about 150 MIG-21 jetfight-
ers of impro%ed design. previously flown only by Russians
are now in Egyptian hand The Egyptians also ha- e
taken charge of 65 batteries e,f SAM 3 ground to air
missile's previously manned almost eXCIUSIS ely by Rus-
sians. The I-;;:yptians hale been operating the less snob's-
tici•'ed SAM 2 batteries for some time. But the Russians
reportedly do not permit Egyptians to man their highly
sophisticated SAM 6 missile batteries why h Rua rd the
'Continued on Pare 61

