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June 20, 1980 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1980-06-20

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

Friday, June 20, 1980 5

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

King Hussein's Stand on Mideast Unchanged

(Continued from Page 1)
ing "goodbye" on the White
House lawn, to Hussein,
Carter told reporters that
they had "not tried to
change each other's mind
about the procedure to be
used," but that the King
knew that Israel, Egypt and
the United States are de-
termined to proceed with

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the Camp David process."
Hussein said that a peace
settlement could be
achieved with a solution
"which would give the
people of Palestine their
legitimate rights on their
soil." The 90-minute session
Wednesday was also
marked by statements of
commitment to a Middle
East peace, despite dif-
ferences in their ap-
proaches.
Carter said Tuesday at
a state dinner for Hussein
at the White House that
Jordan could not avoid
having a major role in fu-
ture Middle East peace
talks and that the talks
with King Hussein had
been "much better" than
he had expected.
Hussein was criticized in
Alexandria, Egypt, by
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat, who predicted the
King would not join in \the
Camp David negotiations.
Sadat said that Hussein
wanted to join the Palesti-
nian autonomy talks in
1978, but, added, "I did not
invite him to participate"

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because that "was oppor-
tunism" on the King's part.
Hussein said that he had
heard Sadat's remarks on
television. "I have never
been in the habit of respond-
ing to such an attack. I
know where I stand," the
King said.
Meanwhile, in Amman,
Jordan, Jordan's Crown
Prince Hassan the King's

youngest brother, was
reported as saying that
the Unied States will
have to broaden its Mid-
dle East peace initiative if
the Camp David proceed-
ings do not produce a
solution to the Palesti-
nian problem by next
January.
In an interview with the
Associated Press, Hassan

TEL AVIV (JTA) —
Soviet authorities have
canceled all of the entry
visas they previously
granted Israelis who paid
$400 in advance to attend
the Olympic Games in Mos-
cow this summer.
Their act was seen as a
reprisal for Israel's decision
last month to join the U.S.
and other countries boycot-
ting the games because of
the Soviet invasion of Af-
ghanistan.
Although Israel will not
send its athletes to Moscow,
about 170 Israeli nationals
applied for visas and paid in
U.S. dollars for hotel ac-
commodations and admis-
sion tickets to the various
events. Monday, 80 of them
were notified that their
visas were granted.
But the Soviet Embassy
in Vienna advised the Is-
raeli travel company,
Peltours, that all of the
visas have been with-
drawn and the passports
of the applicants were on
their way back to Israel.
Peltours had made the
travel and hotel ar-
rangements in conjunction.
with Intourist, the Soviet
travel agency, which col-
lected the $400 from each
applicant.
Meanwhile, Premier
Menahem Begin sought to
offer encouragement to the
aged mother of Yosef Men-
delevitch, one of the re-
maining prisoners of Zion
still held in a Soviet jail.
The mother, together
with other ex-prisoners,
called on Begin at his home
to mark the 10th anniver-
sary of the "Leningrad Af-
fair," the effort of a group of
Soviet Jews to seize a plane
and flee the country. Most of
the group have been re-
leased from jail and are now
in Israel. But Mendelevitch,
who has become Orthodox
while in prison, is still
there.
In a related develop-
ment, Burton S. Levinson
was recently re-elected
chairman of the National
Conference on Soviet
Jewry.
Meanwhile, Dr. William
Korey, director of foreign
policy research for Bnai
Brith International, de-
clared in a new study re-
leased in Paris, that using
its vast armed forces as a
captive student body, the
Soviet Union is systemati-

cally indoctrinating its
people in anti-Semitism.
Addressing Bnai Brith's
International Council meet-
ing in Paris for the first
time, one of America's top
Sovietologists outlined the
ideological training of the
Soviet military and warned
that this training, which
emphasizes an anti-Zionist,
anti-Jewish theme, is lay-
ing the groundwork for a
new "warrant for genocide."
Korey reported that the
indoctrination is pervasive
and conducted at all levels,
from the 161 officer-
training schools analogous
to West Point and An-
napolis to high school
teenagers — as well as the
army, navy and air forces.

was reported as having lit- Palestinian terrorists use
tle hope that his brother's its territory to mount at-
visit to Washington would tacks against Israel.
budge Jordan's opposition
to the peace talks.
King Hussein assured the
OFFICIAL
AGENCY
U.S. that Jordan won't let

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