• ' ' '". 2 Friday, January 13, 1978 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Purely Commentary It Stands to Reason That Israel Must Be Apprenhensive of Dangers Jordan's King Hussein, confronted with the matter of Israel's concern about her security on her borders, necessi- tating retention of a military force in the Judea-Samaria areas, said he did not know why Israel should anticipate trouble. What he failed to recognize and to acknowledge that while he was, by implication, suggesting that Israel should ha'e confidence in Arab assurances, there were murders of Arabs who were cooperating with Israel in educational functions and there were bombings in numerous areas. Proof that there is the urgency of being on guard against repeated terrorism is provided in some research that was conducted in a study of the thinking of the Arab children. A Reuters news story from Beirut is more revealing than anything else that may be related about the poisoning of young minds. Especially in Lebanon, where the children were witnesses to the horrible bloodbath among kinsmen, the bitterness that has been perpetuated is frightening. Children have become experts on guns, and the frequent revelations of the extent of their hatred for Israel taught them by a terrorist generation is something with which to be seriously concerned. The news story referred to states: Children who remained here throughout the civil war that took thousands of lives over a year and a half showed scant interest in toy guns this Christmas, according to a magazine survey. But children who were taken out of the Christian- Moslem country during the fighting still,cared for war toys, the investigation of Christmas shopping habits by the magazine Monday Morning discovered. Of the children who endured the 19-month civil war, one toy shop owner was quoted as having said: "They know the difference between the real thing and the toy. They can identify every gun and name its function easily. They do not seem interested in make- believe weapons anymore." It would have been well to have confidence in pledges and in politically maneuvered promises. But the poison that has set in causes concern. Egyptians have been greeting Jews with "Shalom," but with a turn of events what certainty is there that the friendship of this hour will be perpetuated into tomorrow and the months and years ahead? The euphoria hopefully will last, but caution is an especially vital matter in the Middle East, more than anywhere else. If only the poison could be removed from young minds! The hope for a happier morrow would be more realistic. A 'Mistake in Judgment' Proves Need for Accurate Research Henry Ford Sr. went through a libel suit and apologized to the Jewish people, in a letter to Louis Marshall, for , having encouraged anti-Semitism by publishing one of the most outrageous canards, - The International Jew," which accused Jews of an -international conspiracy." Aaron Sapiro and Herman Bernstein leveled libel suits against him. He escaped, appearing on the witness stand with his apology. But he never really abandoned his anti- Semitic feelings. As late as the early 1940s he told the Associated Press automobile editor, David J. Wilkie, that the Jews were responsible for World War II. The Six Million Jews were the major victims of Nazism, but to the elder Ford they were warmongers, international con- spirators. These facts should always be stated in their fullest context in reviewing the history of Detroit and its great auto magnates. But a Detroit Free Press writer, Remer Tyson, most regrettably overlooked the facts and merely mentioned the "international Jewish conspiracy" in a reference to Henry Ford, thereby giving credence to the canard. He corrected the blunder, calling it a "mistake in judgment." It was inadvertent and it is good that an honest newspaperman acted promptly to avoid leaving a bad impression. There is a lesson in this "mistake in judgment." Especially when dealing with accusations involving an entire people, the facts should be researched for their accuracy. In the Henry Ford case this was especially vital. The Ford-sponsored anti-Semitic literature, like that of Father Coughlin, still is being circulated in Latin American and Arab countries, together with the "Protocols of the Elders of Zion" falsifications. The moment they are presented as facts the anti-Semites gain new ground for the activities. Remer Tyson's explanatory correction appeared in his column entitled "Things Change — But Not Very Much." How true this is of anti-Semitism! Only a Sensible Peace Can Assure Security for All in M.E. Many of the speculations and puzzles affecting the Middle East agonies are, unfortunately, clouded in a lack of understanding of the basic problems that emerge into When Children Become Experts in Gunmanship: The Arab Hatred and the Middle East Problem...`Error in Judgment' and Fact-Finding...Security Means Sensible Peace for M.E. dangers. While, in the main, the problems revolve around security and border issues, there is a failure to appreciate the fact that Israel, more than the antagonistic states, has a trump card in its ability to destroy and to cause havoc. Israel's aerial power could, for example, cause a lot of destruction. Another example: Israel could cause a lot of damage to the Arab oil lines. But Israel won't resort to such tactics because anything dekructive can react damagingly to herself. Then there is the obligation to the United States not to yield to the temptatiori of vandalizing or destroying her neighbors' valuables. There is too much at stake in such an operation because the U.S. is, virtually, a partner with the Arabs in producing the energy providing oil so vital to industry. Jonathan Broder, writing for the Chicago Tribune from the Golan Heights last July, thus dealt with the Saudi Arabian issue explaining why. Israel would not bomb its neighbor's oil wells:... Every Morning, an Israeli goverdnielit technician patrols the vital oil pipeline that cuts across this volcanic plateau looking for trouble. He checks his instruments for leaks and ruptures while an Israeli army unit keeps alert for signs of Arab guerrilla sabotage. Then the technician returns to his headquarters and reports to an American oil official in Beirut by radio, telling him the crude is flowing as usual. The pipeline belongs to the Trans-Arabian Pipeline Co. (TAP), an American-owned subsidiary of the Arabian-American Oil Co. (ARAMCO). Running 1,000 miles from the Ras Tanura oil fields in Saudi Arabia through Jordan to its Mediterranean terminal at Sidon, Lebanon, the 30-inch pipe also passes through the Israeli occupied Golan Heights in a strange setup that defies virtually every obstacle in the Middle East conflict. An American diplomat in Tel Aviv called the situation "weird." "What you've got is the Israelis making sure that Saudi Arabian crude oil continues to flow through Israeli-held territory," he says. "The oil starts out from an enemy country, travels through a pipeline owned by a pro-Arab boycott company, and forms a tributary that feeds the Arab oil weapon against Israel. It's all quite contradictory." ARAMCO and Israeli officials are reluctant to give details of their arrangement. But government energy authorities here have confirmed that a little publicized contract exists to insure the flow of Arab oil through the line since a 30-mile section of it fell into Israeli hands in the conquest of the Syrian Golan in 1967. "We have a maintenance contract," says Dr. Zvi Dinstein, Israel's top authority on energy and oil. "We make sure, through technical and military patrols that nothing happens to the line, and ARAMCO has supplied us with special equipment to help prevent ruptures in the line and possible pollution of the area." According to an Israeli military spokesman, Palesti- nian Arab saboteurs blew up two points along the Golan Heights segment in 1968 and 1969, causing extensive pollution in the Sea of Galilee, several miles down the Golan slope. Since then, Dr. Dinstein says, ARAMCO. has built a small dam and provided Israel with an oil-collecting barge and special pumping equipment. At the same time, Israeli army patrols have stepped up their patrol along the mineladen pipeline route, killing several Arab guerrillas on sabotage missions. Dr. Dinstein declines comment on the apparent conflict of interest, saying only, "The Israeli govern- ment has decided not to use the TAP line as a weapon against the Arabs." Reliable sources say that before 1967 the Israeli army formulated a plan to destroy the line but former Premier Levi Eshkol vetoed the idea out of wider Israeli foreign policy considerations. "The TAP line is a totally owned American enter- prise belonging to Texaco, Standard Oil of California, Exxon, and Mobil—the U.S. oil companies that make up ARAMCO," said a U.S. Embassy official. "If Israel ever purposefully damaged the TAP line, the U.S. would not take something like that lying down. Israel needs the Americans a little too much to risk that kind of business," he said. ARAMCO built the line in 1949 for $200 million to unseat British oil interests in the Middle East. Until recently, it was the only major crude oil pipeline in the world successfully competing with the ocean tankers carrying Persian Gulf oil to the West. According to British oil author Anthony Sampson, the TAP line plugged the U.S. into the vast wealth of Middle East oil and "committed the (U.S.) government to a fixed foreign policy for at least 25 years." With the advent of the supertanker--a cheaper By Philip Slomovitz method of oil transportation—ARAMCO reduced the TAP flow of 470,000 barrels a day by about half. Today, the TAP pumps crude oil into the Zerqa refinery in Jordon and Lebanon's Zaharani facility at Sidon, from where ARAMCO tankers ferry some of the crude to refineries in Europe. Israel receives no transit fees from ARAMCO, Dr. Dinstein says. ARAMCO does pay transit fees to Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon. An ARAMCO spokesman in the Hague said the payment figures are secret. Some oil industry experts doubt that ARAMCO's transit payments stop with those four countries. "After all," says one knowledgeable source in Ni- cosia, Cyprus, "a payment to the Lebanese govern- ment these days is no insurance that radical Palesti- nian guerrillas won't dynamite the line in southern Lebanon, where the Palestinians and the Christians are still fighting for control. I wouldn't be surprised if PLO chief Yasir Arafat also received a hefty transit fee." Restraint, in the form analyzed by Broder, is seldom con- fronted in the fashion suggested here. Yet it is reasonable to believe that both in dealing with the oil wealth of her neighbors and with various other aspects of a conflict that has assumed international proportions there could be dam- aging temptations for vengeance that could be catastrophic. Good sense regulates diplomacy and this is to the credit of the Israelis. Perhaps the U.S. relationship is the calming factor. In any event, good sense has become an effective weapon in monitoring restraint in the Middle East. One wonders whether the Saudis and even Sadat understand this aspect of a trying situation that affects them as well as Israel. Zionist Roles and Enigmas Now that the elections for the 29th World Zionist Congress have ended, it is time for some reflections. As had been indicated, the elections could have been avoided and delegates' representations could have been agreed upon pro rata, according to the memberships of the respective Zionist bodies. But the blunder became irrepa- rable. Now there is a duty incumbent upon all Zionist parties to work cooperatively for the advancement of the aims of the World Zionist Organization to labor coopera- tively for the advancement of Jewish cultural needs, for increased aliya to Israel, for encouragement to the youth. The educational departments must be assured the sup- port so vitally needed to assure knowledgeability both about political factors and historical backgrounds leading to identification with present-day objectives. Aid for youth movements and efforts to enroll the younger generation in Zionist tasks is a necessity in behalf of all tasks that demand enrollment of the younger people in all Jewish undertakings. Then there is the matter of aliya. Crises in a number of countries seem to be encouraging emigration. There is already an increased aliya movement from South Africa. The Argentinian situation is menacing. An increased trend toward Israel among emigres from the Soviet Union has been reported in recent weeks. These are trends that demand practical treatment of efforts toward an increased aliya to Israel. The elections to - the World Zionist Congress were marked by the entrance into world Zionist affairs of a new party, the Reform Zionist Bloc. This is a spectacular devel- opment. It was from the Socialist Bund and the Reform Jewish ranks that the anti-Zionists gathered their strength. These two elements were bitter in their hatred of the Jewish nationalist aspirations. Because these antagonisms have nearly vanished, the creation of a Reform Zionist party is an amazing development. Conservative Jews rejected a proposal for the formation of a new Zionist party among their members. The Conserv- atives' feelings are that their members can join any of the existing movements: Labor, Centrists, General, religious existing as Mizrachi. Why a new religious movement? What the Reform Zionist movement does is an intrusion into the available delegateships. If the new party should win two or three seats at the World Zionist Congress it will mean a loss of that number to one or more of the previously functioning parties. Meanwhile. one of the major problems at the WZCongress which will be held in February in Jerusalem will be the selection of a new chairman, of the WZOrganization as well as the Jewish Agency. There is a perpetuated movement stemming from Labor ranks to prevent the elevation of Leon Dulzin to that post. Dulzin's supporters view this as a devilish machination based only on a desire to retain power. To prevent power-seeking, it is to be hoped that Dulzin, who has the backing of Menahem Begin, will succeed in attaining the chairmanship for which he pos- sesses all the necessary qualifications. The belief pre- dominating now is that he will emerge triumphant against the forces that kept him out of that leadership until now.