Jo—rnany, uec.
LI, I914 •
111Ik DiEROIT JEWISH NEWS
Kissinger Meets UN Leaders
UNITED NATIONS (JTA)
—Secretary of State Henry
A. Kissinger met with Sec-
retary General Kurt Wald-
heim Saturday and after-
wards with UN General As-
sembly. President Abdelaziz
Bouteflika about a wide range
of topics, including the Mid-
dle East and about what the
United States has termed
one-sided, and arbitrary de-
cisions taken by the assem-
bly.
The meeting occurred two
weeks after John Scali, the
U.S. ambassador. to the UN,
charged that American sup-
port for the UN was eroding
because of the one-sided and
unrealistic resolutions passed
by the 'world body and the
"tyranny of the majority."
The secretary's meeting
with Bouteflika was the first
'high-level meeting between
Algerian and American of-
ficials since the two coun-
tries resumed diplomatic re-
lations last month.
Asked if Bouteflika had
discussed the PLO, Kissinger
said, "Mr. Bouteflika ex-
pressed his view on the sub-
ject, and our views on the
subject are well known."
Regarding the Mideast, the
secretary stated that -"There
is no dramatic new- develop-
ment."
ADL Survey Shows U.S. Newspapers
Critical of Yasir Arafat's UN Speech
NEW YORK—A survey- by
the Anti-Defamation League
of Bnai Brith revealed that 41
out of the 50 top circulation
newspapers in the United
States commenting on Yasir
Arafat's U nit e d Nations
speech, 39 were critical and
two were "basically uncriti-
cal." The remaining 9 took
no editorial position.
. The survey noted that al-
most all the critical editorials
said that the position taken
by the Palestine Liberation
Organization leader contained
no "olive branch" but was a
call for 'the destruction of
Israel.
Arnold Forster, ADL's as-
soCiate director and general
counsel, called it "gratifying
that Arafat failed to mislead
so large 'a section of the
press."
He said, however, that des-
It is easier to spot faults pite the near unanimous con-
ii others than virtues in demnation of the Arafat
speech itself, "many papers
oneself.
did not categorically reject
the PLO as a participant or
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Twenty of the 39 papers
also specifically criticized the
UN either for offering Arafat
a platform in the first place
or for according ,him a stand-
ing ovation and a hero's -wel-
come.
Among the league's ex-
cerpts of comments, The De-
troit News said Arafat's
speech • "made it perfectly
clear that the PLO remains
dedicated to the destruction
of Israel."
The Chicago Tribune said
Arafat's "words . . . may
sound idealistic enough on'
the surface but are frighten-
ing in their, deeper implica-
tions." It added that his pro-
posal of "one democratic
state where Christian, Jew
and Moslem live in justice"
really means that Israel
would- disappear and be re-
placed by another state • . .
A people which has suffered
through thousand's of years as
an often •persecuted minority
—everywhere except in Israel
— would lose its one haven
of majority." -
The Newark Star - Ledger
said Arafat's "olive branch"
was obviously "full of thorny
obstacles that would make
a n y reasonable settlement
virtually impossible to a-
chieve on the terms he set
forth." -
Other papers focused their
criticism on Arafat's rewrit-
ing of history. The Rocky
Mountain News disputed Ar-
afat's description of a new
Palestine: "He says it would
be democratic. But only little
Lebanon it in any way demo-
cratic. He said it would be
secular, but all Arab states—
again excepting Lebanon —
are strictly Moslem. He im-
plies that Jews would be safe
in PLO-dominated. Palestine.
But they are persecuted and
harassed in Syria and Iraq,
two PLO supporters, had to
flee from almost all the rest
of the Arab world."
Several papers denounced
Arafat's- •attempt to depict
himself and the PLO as revo-
lutionaries in a great histori-
cal tradition, rather than as-
terrorists. The Kansas City
Times- Slimmed up by saying
Arafat "was talking non-
sense." •
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WASHINGTON (ZINS)—
At. a private meeting with a
group of pro-Israel Harvard
professors, Dr. Henry Kis-
singer warned that a new
Middle East war would be
catastrophic for • Israel. N6
matter which side initiated
hostilities, the Arabs or Is-
rael, the political conse-
quences for the state of Is-
rael would be disastrous.
The secretary of state as-
serted that even a decisiv
military victory would not
ease Israel's perilous polit-
ical condition. Kissinger said
it is for these reasons tha
he intends to do everything
within his power to c
ce
Israel that it must
from a preventive wa
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TEL AVIV — In the after-
math of the recent Arab ter-
rorist attack, President Eph-
raim visited the Beit-Shean
area to meet with local au-
thorities and residents. He n
expressed satisfaction over 11 .
the growth of the towel and
called for additional volun-
teerism and cooperation with
the neighboring settlements.
Katzir stated that "As pub-
lic service organizations, both
Magen David Adorn, Israel's
Emergency Medical health a
and disaster services, and the
newly established Civil
Guard express the best -of
Israel. These are the tools
each -civilian can and must
use to better fight terrorism
and the 'answer to the prob-
lem of security 'reinforcement
throughout the nation."
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