Friday, March 21, 1975 21 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Kissinger Peace Shuttle May Be Stalemated agreement and several areas thinking processes of the of disagreement," the Secre- Egyptian population. tary said, adding that Sadat Washington analysts say has given him "some addi- the Egyptian news - media tional considerations and are not preparing the Arab ideas" to take back to Israel. public for any significant Sadat said it was "not political concessions by feasible and is really ab- Egypt in return for Israel's surd" to discuss a normali- withdrawal from the stra-' zation of relations with Is- tegic passes and oil fields in rael before there is an the Sinai. overall settlement of the The Cairo media remain Middle East conflict. He silent on conciliation --with said there was no point in Israel. Rather, they are discussing non:belligerency. emphasizing that the Cairo "We shall not agree to end press is unanimous that on the state of belligerency as his current visit to Israel, long as there are any for- Kissinger would present a eign soldiers on our land," Sadat specification that Is- Sadat declared. raeli withdrawal in the He declined to say Sinai must be related to a JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israeli negotiators believe a whether Egypt would similar withdrawal on the serious impasse has been agree to demilitarize terri- Syrian front and the invit- reached in efforts to achieve tory evacuated by Israel ing of the Palestinians to a second stage Israeli-Egyp- but said it was quite natu- Geneva. ral that a strengthened While Israelis say any tian agreement in Sinai. President Anwar Sadat United Nations presence Israeli-Egyptian agreement flatly rejected Israel's de- would be part of a second must not be altered at Ge- mands for a formal non-bel- stage disengagement neva, the semi-official Al Ahram is saying editorially agreement. ligerency accord. Officials here stressed in Cairo that the current A "senior U.S. official" on Kissinger's plane told re- that the non-belligerency discussions are not being porters the Secretary's issue is still the main stick- held for the purpose of end- ing the war or concluding a shuttle diplomacy mission ing point of an agreement. Israeli sources said peace treaty. was not yet deadlocked, that The newspaper Al Akh- an accord could still be bluntly that they regarded reached and the negotia- the "substantial ideas" Kis- bar declared that Kissin- tions had not reached "the singer brought from Egypt ger's task is aimed at crunch point." The official last Friday as unsatisfac- bringing about a new Is- said that the situation was tory. Rabin reportedly told raeli withdrawal. This not yet ripe for Dr. Kissin- the Secretary that Egypt's task, it said, is known to ger to introduce initiatives conditions for a new settle- all except Israel. An earlier analysis in and ideas of his own. What ment did not meet Israel's both Israel and Egypt now demands for a clear, public, Washington that Egypt was needed, he said, was "to-- written renunciation of bel- take stock of where they ligerency by both sides. Defense Minister Shimon stand." Nevertheless, the feeling Peres said that even if Kis- here was that a stalemate singer's "shuttle" diplomacy situation has occurred is eventually successful, "a that could be changed only difficult period will ensue" and peace would not neces- if Israel gives in. Kissinger told reporters sarily follow. He said the basic prob- in Aswan that there were still "several substantial lem was that peace be- areas of disagreement" be- tween Israel and Egypt tween Egypt and Israel. was not merely a geo- "The gap has been narrowed graphical issue but "an but it remains to be seen exercise in public rela- whether, it will be finally tions" in which the Egyp- tian leadership would closed," he said. "There are some areas of have to transform the Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger's shut- tling mission appears to have bogged in a stalemate agonized by frustration. While' retaining a mea- sure of hope that some- thing can be attained, Kis- singer has admitted frUstration over the hard- ening positions and lack of movement on the part of both Egypt and Israel. There were reports from Washington that Egypt's expressions of optimism before the talks began were an effort to blame 7 failure in the talks on . deliberately inflating Kis- singer's chances of success in order to pin the blame on Israel as "intransigent" if he fails, appears to be ac- curate. The Cairo propaganda appears to be abetted by some American commenta- tors who argue that if Israel were not so intransigent and gives up the land it oc- cupied in the Six-Day War, then peace would be, at hand. Egyptian President An- war Sadat's public position appears unchanged. His people know only from their media that an Israeli with- drawal is imperative and without any Egyptian ac- ceptafice of Israel's sover- eignty and a pledge of con- tinuing negotiations to achieve peace. Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo.) said Sunday that peace in the Middle' East depends on an agreement between the United States and the Soviet Union "as to what should or not be done" in that re- gion. Speaking on ABC-TV's "Issues and Answers," he said the "basic problems" in the Middle East "not only have to do with the new oil problem but also with some form of agreement between the Soviet Union and United States," Symington said. "If we could get some agree- ment between these two superpowers as to what should or should not be done in the Middle East, that would be the only thing that could put us all more at ease with respect to a possible future war out there." Soviet Leader Leonid I. Breshnev made his first public appearance in several months Tuesday, and said the USSR supports the se- curity and independence of all states in the Middle East, implying without mentioning Israel by name that she was included. But, as usual, he added that Israel must give back all territory she has ac- quired from the Arabs and recognize a Palestinian state. Brezhev spoke in Bu- dapest to the 11th congress of the Hungarian Commun- ist Party. 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Electrolysis is the only medically approved method to remove hair permanently. OPEN MON., WED., THURS. b FRI. BY APPOINTMENT — 557-8115 8221 Curtis Open Tues. Only 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. UN 2-8914 EL AL The Airline Of The People Of Israel Extends best wishes for Ir e PLO Seeking UN Privileges; Paris Parley Hits UNESCO VIENNA, (JTA) — A United Nations legal confer- ence passed a resolution calling on the UN General Assembly to consider ex- tending diplomatic immun- ity and privileges_ to repre- sentatives of the- Palestine Liberation Organization. It asked the same rights for all liberation organiza- .* tions recognized by the Or- = - anization of African Unity fr the Arab League, which have observer status with an international organization. Israel, together with the U.S., France, Britain and West Germany, voted against the resolution; 53 nations, mostly the East European bloc and Third World countries, supported the resolution, and 15 ab- stained. The resolution rec- ommended that all UN members grant such privi- leges immediately while the General Assembly's action is pending. Meanwhile, the organiz- ers of the conference "For the Universality of UNESCO," which met in Paris last weekend, re- leased the names of 23 Nobel Prize winners and more than 125 artists, writers, scientists and_ed- ucators who have _an- nounced their support for the conference and pro- tested UNESCO's anti-Is- rael discrimination. The intellectuals, who did not attend the conference but had written to announce their support, included writ- ers Simone de Beauvoir, Frederick Durrenmatt, Jo- sef Kessel, Graham Green and Gunther Grass; cinema director Federico Fellini; and conductor-composer Leonard Bernstein. The conference voted a resolution calling upon all UNESCO member states to convene a special UNESCO Assembly to reconsider and change its anti-Israel reso- lutions. a happy and joyous to all 24100 Southfield Rd., Southfield 557 5737 -