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Friday, June 20, 1980 21
Gloomy Outlook for Israel in D.C.
(Continued from Page 20)
ment makes the decision
and they have so far carried
those decisions out.
"What Prime Minister
Begin has described to me is
an extension of existing set-
tlements and he did agree to
a temporary moratorium or
delay in the establishment
of new settlements after
Camp David. So I would not
be willing to endorse the
' concept of establishing civi-
lian settlements on the
West Bank but I do endorse
the concept that Jews
should have a right to live
where they choose and Jews
should have a right to leave
a place of their choosing.
The thing that is troubl-
ing about the establishment
of settlements under the
aegis and with the sponsor-
- ship and sometimes the
financing of the Israeli gov-
ernment is that it indicates
to the Palestinian Arabs, to
the Egyptians and to others
that Israel will not carry out
the principles of the Camp
David Accords in withdraw-
ing their government, mili-
tary government, and es-
tablishing a security out-
post.
"This is a long-time
position of the ,United
States. It's one that has
been discussed clearly
with Prime Minister
Begin and it does not
mean at all that op-
pose Jews living where
they choose, including on
the West Bank."
So 'distressing and agoniz-
ing has the situation be-
come that Israel Ambas-
sador to the U.S. Ephraim
Evron, a principal speaker
at the AJPA convention,
was embittered and ad-
dressed the editors protest-
ingly against that accumu-
lation of attempts to
undermine Israel's free-
doms.
(The total coverage of
the convention appears
in special articles in this
issue by Mr. Polakoff.)
The editors gave a plat-
form to Republican
presidential
aspirant
Ronald Reagan, who replied
to questions addressed to
him in a telephone ex-
change between Los
Angeles and Washington.
The telephone interview
was conducted by Frank E.
Wundohl, the re-elected
president of the American .
Jewish Press Association,
who presided at all of the
convention sessions.
(AJPA President Wun-
dohl announced that the
mid-year session of the
editors and publishers will
be held in Detroit in No-
vember, when the General
Assembly of the Council of
Jewish Federations will
convene, and the annual
convention will be held in
May 1981 in Houston, Tex.)
The Reagan comments do
not differ from a summation
that was released by the
American Israel Public Af-
fairs Committee in Near
East Report in which the
Reagan position is defined
in part:
"Ronald Reagan has
never held an elective office
that involved voting on
foreign policy. Con-
sequently, his record on the
Middle East is based
entirely on public and pri-
vate statements. Those
statements reflect instinc-
tive, strong and consistent
support of Israel.
"While most of the
Presidential candidates
have spoken of Israel's
strategic importance to the
United States as well as its
moral significance, 'Reagan
has drawn a particularly
clear picture of Israel's
strategic dimension that
fits in with the rest of his
foreign policy:
" 'I think we have to rec-
ognize . . . that, with the fall
of the shah, Israel remains
the most stable ally we have
in the Middle East,' he said
in an interview earlier this
year, 'with a combat-ready,
experienced military that is
a deterrent to further
meddling in the area by the
Soviet Union.'
"Reagan has stressed the
benefits the United States
derives from its relation-
ship with Israel. 'Israel's
strength derives from the
reality that her affinity
with the West is not depen-
dent on the survival of an
autocratic or capricious
ruler,' he said last year in a
nationally syndicated col-
umn.
" 'Israel has the demo-
cratic will, national cohe-
sion, technological
capacity and military
fiber to stand forth as
America's trusted ally.'
"Reagan is not, as some
have charged, so 'one-sided'
on Israel as to be incapable
of having any credibility as
a mediator with the Arab
world. In 1976, he told The
Boston Globe that part of
the reason the Arab-Israeli
dispute was so complex was
because there. is `so much
right' on both sides.
"When it comes to specific
issues which reflect a
willingness or unwilling-
ness to safeguard Israel's
security, however, Reagan
has consistently come down
on the side of defending the
Jewish state.
."He has stressed Jordan's
responsibility in solving the
Palestinian problem, noting
that Jordan is 80 percent of
what was Britain's Pales-
tine Mandate.
"He has been forceful
in his opposition to U.S.
dealings with the PLO
until that organization
`renounces terrorism, ac-
cepts UN Resolution 242,
changes its charter and
recognizes Israel's right
to exist. He asserts that
OPEC pricing is 'totally
unrelated' to the Arab-
Israel conflict. He advo-
cates 'defensible borders'
for Israel.
"He recently told a group
of Jewish leaders that he be-
lieves in Israel's right to
have settlements in the
West Bank; he told the same
group he recognizes Israeli
sovereignty over all of
Jerusalem, although at
times in the recent past he
has been more cautious on
BILL BROCK
the Jerusalem issue, declin-
ing to stake out a position.
"Reagan's strong defense
policy is consistent with a
policy that advocates a
strong Israel. He has ex-
pressed opposition to U.S.
arms sales to Arab coun-
tries opposed to the
Israeli-Egyptian peace
treaty and said that arms
sales to Egypt should be
linked to progress on the
treaty."
Replying to a question on
united Jerusalem as Israel's
capital, Reagan said, "I be-
lieve in the sovereignty of
Israel. If Israel declares
Jerusalem its capital, then I
think the United States
would recognize that. I rec-
ognize that the three great
religions in the world all
have holy places treasured
by them in Jerusalem."
In that connection, Re-
agan suggested that "an
area could be made, similar
to the Vatican, open to all
the people of the three reli-
gions." He said he believed
Israel "would be' mag-
nanimous."
More eloquent and more
decisive was the statement
of Bill Brock, chairman of
the Republican National
Committee, who appeared
in person at the June 12
morning session of the con-
vention, sessions of which
were held at the Interna-
tional Bnai Brith Head-
quarters.
Brock was emphatic in
his declaration that Is-
rael is a free state, a
democratic entity, whose
rights are not to be inter-
ferred with. Therefore,
he declared, Israel has
the right to choose her
own capital.
Only the final session of
the convention was held at
the Gramercy Inn where the
delegates stayed next to the
Bnai Brith Building, the
convention headquarters,
and at the Gramercy, at the
closing Shabat Eve dinner,
Israel correspondents
shared with the Americans
concern over the erosion of
devotion to Israel in many
ranks.
For the record it should be
stated that, contrary to the
Peacenik advertising cam-
paign by 90 Americans con-
demning Israel Prime
Minister Menahem Begin
and the current Israeli
policies, in the AJPA ranks
there was evidence of an
urgency to lend support to
all efforts to protect Israel
and to reject antagonisms
detrimental to the Jewish
state's existence.
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June 20, 1980 - Image 21
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- The Detroit Jewish News, 1980-06-20
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