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June 11, 1976 - Image 17

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1976-06-11

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE DETROIT JEWISH, NEWS

June

.

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Retiring Sisco Predicts Peace
in Mideast, B ut Not in 1976

NEW YORK (JTA) —
Retiring Undersecretary of
State for Political Affairs
Joseph J. Sisco said that
there is hope for peace in
the Middle East because
both the Arabs and the Is-
raelis are "sick and tired of
war." But he added that he
does not believe anything
could be achieved in the
Mideast this year.
Sisco is leaving his pre-
sent post July 1 to assume
the presidency of American
University in Washington,
D.C. He joined the State De-
partment in 1951 and has
dealt in Mideast affairs
since the mid-1960s.
Meanwhile, President
Ford said that the momen-
tum for an Arab-Israeli
peace settlement must con-
tinue but he did not believe
a Middle East peace confer-
ence would be held this
year.
In Boston, an American
Zionist leader and social
analyst has offered a pic-
ture of Israeli society in
the next 10 years in which
persons with military
training and outlook will
hold dominant positions
and the majority of the
population, born in Israel,
"will no longer be reflec-
tive of the advocacy of the
Jewish state and the aspi-
rations to attain it."
For them, according to
Dr. Judah J. Shapiro, presi-
dent of the Labor Zionist
Alliance, "Israel will be
their country of birth and
its realities will shape their
views as citizens of that
state and as Jews."
He observed that "Un-
fortunately, the constant
pressures of war and the
international community
and the economic strains
will have eliminated any
projection of a state of nor-
malcy and peace. Few in Is-
rael in the next decade will
have been raised to a vision
of a Jewish state living at
peace with its neighbors and
evolving a Jewish society in
relation to the local environ-
ment and culture."
In a related development,
Simcha Dinitz, Israel's
Ambassador to the United
States, has urged the world
not to grow impatient with
the slow progress toward
peace in the Middle East.
The Israeli envoy de-
clared that the main ob-
stacle to peace is the re-
fusal of the Islamic world
to recognize the indepen-
dent Jewish state of Is-
rael. This is in keeping
with the Islamic commu-
nity in its midst, Dinitz
said.
In Jerusalem, Premier
Yitzhak Rabin is lending an
ear to Israeli "doves."
Political observers believe
the purpose of these meet-
ings is to impress on the
public the fact that neither
the kibutz movement nor
the religious community in
Israel was uniformly or
even mainly "hawkish" in
outlook.
The visitors included
members of Ichud Haki-
butzim VeHakvutzot,

11, 1976 17

Buy or Lease An

which is Mapai-oriented,
Hakibutz Hameuchad, the
movement of the Labor
Party's Achdut Avoda
wing; Hakibutz Haartzi,
the Mapam kibutz move-
ment and Hakibutz Had-
ati, the religious kibutz
movement.
Danny Zamir, of the Ma-
pam group, said at a press
conference after the meet-
ing that Rabin had stressed
his readiness for territorial
compromises on all fronts
and to negotiate a full peace
or further interim accords.
But he also stressed that
any agreement involving
withdrawals from the West
'Bank would have to be rati-
fied by Israeli voters in prior
elections.

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