Dayan Foresees Stalemate
TEL AVIV (JTA) — Dc-
tense Minister Moshe Dayan
indicated Tuesday night that
the Middle East stalemate is
likely to continue indefinitely
because Israel is not pre-
- pared to withdraw from the
Arab territories it took in
the Six-Day War, and the
Arab governments are not
prepared to make territorial
concessions despite their
battlefield defeats and de-
teriorating military position.
But Gen. Dayan noted that
significant changes have oc-
curred in the grass-roots re-
lations between Israelis and
the Arab population in the
occupied territories which
bode well for the future.
The defense minister ad-
dressed an audience at Tel
Aviv University where honor-
ary degrees were awarded to
seven scholars, artists and
community leaders and doc-
torates conferred on gradu-
ates in medicine and phil-
osophy. Ile maintained that
time may not bring solutions
to Israel's problems, "but it
supports our assumptions and
direct approach to realities."
He said "On a realistic
basis, we should listen at-
tentively to the Arab attitude
and meet them as far as pos-
sible but not more than that."
Dayan said, "This is a period
where we can mold our fu-
ture with our own hands.
Let's not be afraid of fulfill-
ing the Zionist aspiration."
Dayan contended that Is-
raelis and Arabs can live to-
gether in peace only under
the auspices of the Israeli
government and defense
forces. Ile claimed that
should Israel withdraw from
the West Bank and the Gaza
Strip, no Israeli would be
able to set foot in these
places.
Dayan also asserted "I do
not believe that in the fore-
seeable future the Arab gov-
ernments will be ready for
territorial concession which
derive from our activity in
Sinai, the West Bank and
the Golan Heights."
Dayan said that in con-
trast to the Arab leade r-
ship, the Arab peoples in
both Lebanon and in the oc-
cupied areas have come to
realize that Israel intends
them no harm. Villagers in
.southern Lebanon no longer
flee when the Israeli army
enters the area, he said. He
quoted articles in the Arabic
press acknowledging the
enormous economic and so-
cial improvements of Arabs
in the occupied areas. He
said one such article was
published in the Lebanese
newspaper El Itawades.
Meanwhile, Syria has es-
tablished a maritime feda-
yeen unit under its navy
command, according to re-
ports reaching here, concur-
rent with reports that Arab
terrorists are contemplating
sabotage against Israel
through small naval units.
The Israeli navy, alerted
to such a possibility, has in-
stituted preventive opera-
tions. -
The Syrian navy is almost
negligible in the deployment
of naval forces in the Medi-
terranean. Damascus appar-
ently feels it is wiser to
create a small guerrilla unit
for maritime action as s sub-
;Dime for naval units in the
war against Israel
Soon,. said that the Soviet
airlift of military hardware
to Syria appears to have end -
ed. The airlift lasted four to
five days, with four or five
planes landing at Damascus
each day. Each of the planes
was capable of carrying a
payload of 80 tons, the
sources said.
There was no information
as to whether the Soviet air-
lift to Syria was accompanied
by Soviet military personnel.
There are presently about
1,000 Soviet military person-
nel stationed in Syria.
A Soviet naval presence
also has been observed in the
Syrian ports of Latakia and
Tarsus, but neither of those
ports are equipped to service
modern warships on a per-
manent
basis, the Israeli
sources said.
The Soviet navy, however,
continues to use Egyptian
ports on a scale unchanged
since Egypt's ouster of Soviet
military personnel last June.
Premier Aziz Sidky of
Egypt left the Soviet Union
Wednesday after only seven
hours of discussion with
Kremlin leaders and without
meeting Communist Party
chief Leonid 1. Brezhnev.
Although the semiofficial
Cairo newspaper Al Ahram
said Sidky's talks on the
Arab-Israeli conflict and So-
viet-Egyptian relations wet',
"successful" it appeared he
had failed to repair the dam-
age done by President Anwar
Sadat's ouster of Soviet ad-
visers last July.
Foreign Minister Abba
Than met with U.S. Ambas-
sador Walworth Barbour
Tuesday afternoon over Sun-
,
but Optimistic on Grass-Roots Level
day's air raids. The Ameri- was discussed at both meet-
can envoy reiterated U.S. ings.
The Lebanese government
concern over the raids,
has instructed its U.S. am-
sources here said.
Eban, who had asked for bassador to lodge a formal
the meeting with Barbour, complaint with the Security
stressed that Israeli policy Council, but Lebanon so far
toward the terrorists' was has not asked for an emer-
based on the premise that gency session of that body,
the terrorists have declared they said.
In Washington, State De-
war on Israel.
Sources said Eban told partment spokesman Robert
Barbour that Israeli policy J. McCloskey bald Monday
is not to let the terrorists that while the department
know when or how Israeli hopes for Middle East peace
progress, "No one here sees
forces will strike at them.
a clear path yet ahead by
After the meeting, which
which we could guarantee
lasted 40 minutes, Israeli
talks will begin."
sources Intimated unofficial-
McCloskey was comment-
ly that the U.S. seemed to be
"going through the motions" ing on reporters' questions
about
Secretary of State
to satisfy Lebanese sensibili-
ties. There were no hints, William Rogers' remark
even unofficially, that Israel Sunday oq ABC-TV's "Is-
was concerned by the Amer- sues and AnSwers," in regard
to his recent meetings with
ican attitude.
Egyptian Foreign Minister
The latest air raids were
Mohammed H. el-Zayyat.
discussed in Washington Mon-
Rogers told newsmen: "I
day by Israel Ambassador
think
we have an understand-
Itzhak Rabin and U.S. Assist-
ing
of each other's position
ant Secretary of State for
Near Eastern Affairs Joseph and I think that we have
J. Sisco at a luncheon meet- s.,:ne hope that in the next
ing at Rabin's residence. few months we may be able
Sisco met later with Leban- ti• start the negotiating proc-
• "
ese Ambassador Najati Kab-
bani.
State Department spokes-
man Charles Bray said that
the State Department was
"fairly well satisfied with the
facts" as they were present-
ed by the Lebanese am-
bassador. Officials acknowl-
edged Tuesday that the ques-
tion of - Security Council action
ular intervals for the euitunu-
lathe affect such strikes may
have.
The targets in Lebanon
were two El Fatah strong-
holds In southeastern Leban-
on near the Syrian border
and coastal bases for ter-
rorist maritime activities at
the mouth of the Litani River
and south of the port town of
Sidon.
terrorist bases in Lebanon
and one terrorist training
base deep inside Syria Sun-
day afternoon.
A military spokesman re-
ported that all planes re-
turned safely to their bases.
According to Israeli
sources, the air raids were
not in retaliation for specific
terrorist actions but repre-
sented a new policy of hitting
terrorist strongholds at reg-
(Continued on Page
McCloskey said Rogers' as-
sessment was "based on col-
lective discussions the secre-
tary had with various foreign
ministers in New York."
Air Force Jets Bomb
Four Terrorist Bases in
Lebanon, One in Syria
TEL AVIV (JTA)—Israel
air force jets bombed four
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