,
Friday, July 25, 180 5
THE DETHOtt JEWISH NEWS
47
I srael is Undeterred by UN Assembly Effort to Halt Peace Process
(Continued from Page 1)
create 'right' or make 'bind-
ing obligations' or even in-
ternational law, are delud-
ing themselves."
"In the final analysis," he
said. "They will not change
anything on the ground.
They will not bring the
course of peace any closer."
The special emergency ses-
sion, which opened Tues-
day, is expected to continue
into next week.
Israeli representatives
did not attend the Tuesday
sessions because of Tisha
ay.
A working paper in
reparation for the de-
bate calls on Israel "to
completely withdraw its
forces from all the occu-
pied Palestinian and
other Arab territories,
including Jerusalem"
and urges that such him to "totally reject the
withdrawal begin no specious and obvious at-
later than Nov. 15, 1980. tempt by some nations to
The working paper is a circumvent the Camp David
prelude to a draft resolu- process" at the General As-
tion.
sembly session.
The wire, signed by JLC
Blum pointed out that the
"emergency" of the meeting president Doi Slaiman,
is a "protracted emergency" .called on Carter to instruct
that was planned in Havana -= the U.S. Ambassador Donal
last year at the meeting McHenry "to totally reject"
there of the non-aligned instead of abstain on any
resolution emerging from
countries.
According to the plan, the the session.
* * *
Security Council was called
into session in April for the
PLO Leader
specific purpose of drawing
Blasts U.S., Israel
a U.S. veto of a resolution
Farouk
Khaddoumi, head
endorsing Palestinian
of the Plo's political de-
statehood. On that pretext,
partment, attacked both Is-
the General Assembly has
rael and the U.S. in his
been called into emergency 'General Assembly speech
session, Blum explained.
Meanwhile, the Jewish Tuesday and warned that
session of the General
Labor Committee in a wire this
Assembly is the last chance
to President Carter, asked "before the explosion" to
enable the people of Pales-
Dutch Block EEC
AMSTERDAM (JTA) —
Dutch Foreign Minister
Christoph van der Klaauw,
attending the conference of
European foreign ministers
in Brussels on Tuesday, was
instrumental in rejecting a
proposal by the West Ger-
man foreign. minister,
Hans-Dietrich Genscher,
for a European draft resolu-
tion on the Palestinian
problem.
Genscher had proposed
that such a draft be pre-
sented at the General As-
sembly's special emergency
session in New York. Van
der Klaauw pointed out that
it would be unwise to sub-
mit a European resolution
at this time since it would
certainly be opposed by an
Arab resolution. Genscher
apparently believed that a
European resolution would
have a moderating influ-
ence on the General Assem-
bly.
Genscher's
proposal
would have been based on
the European Economic
Community's Venice dec-
laration of June 30 which
stated that the Palestinians
and the Palestine Libera-
tion Organization must be
associated with the Middle
East peace process.
Genscher has proposed
a summit meeting of the
EEC and Arab foreign
ministers, except Egypt,
which is boycotted by the
Arab League. The pur-
pose is to discuss the
West European role in
the Middle East.
Genscher offered that
suggestion as Chedli Klibi,
'secretary general of the
Arab League, arrived in
West Germany for meetings
Nith Chancellor Helmut
'Schmidt and Foreign Mins-
ter Gaston Thorn of Luxem-
bourg who is acting
president of the EEC's
Ministerial Council. Thorn
is expected to be dispatched
shortly on a mission of in-
quiry into the Arab-Israeli
conflict, as decided in Ven-
ice last month.
These developments were
seen as an additional means
of promoting Euro-Arab
understanding and
strengthening their politi-
cal cooperation in search of
a solution to the Middle
East conflict on a new dip-
lomatic basis.
Genscher and French
Foreign Minister Francois
Poncet recently spoke out in
support of renewing the
Euro-Arab dialogue on a
high political level.
The flurry of activity on
the part of the EEC is be-
lieved to be related in part
to expectations that Ameri-
can diplomacy in the Middle
East will be paralyzed by
the Presidential elections.
As of September, PLO
chief Yasir Arafat is ex-
pected to assume the role
of secretary general of
the Arab League for a
limited period of time.
Observers believe that
putting the Euro-Arab
dialogue on a high political
level — which constitutes a
major change from the prev-
ious European stance
toward this institution —
would pave the way for reg-
ular meetings between the
PLO leader and West Euro-
pean foreign ministers and
heads of government.
In Great Britain, the
Jewish community's
mounting alarm at Brit-
ain's and Europe's Middle
East policy was brought viv-
idly home to the govern-
ment last week when Doug-
las Hurd, the Foreign Office
minister of state, faced an
hour-and-a-half of hostile
questioning by the Board of
Deputies of British Jews.
- Hurd was making the
latest in a series of attempts
to convince Anglo-Jewry
that neither Britain nor
Europe were betraying Is-
rael's security interests by
gestures toward the Pales-
tine Liberation Organiza-
tion or by talking of Pales-
tinian self-determination.
He will be followed next
week by Lord Carrington,
the foreign secretary.
In addition to his assur-
ance of concern for Israel's
security, Hurd also claimed
that there was growing
realization in Britain, the
U.S. and Europe, of the im-
portance of recognizing "the
legitimate rights of the
Palestinian people."
tine to achieve self-
determination and state-
hood.
Khaddoumi, who is re-
garded as the PLO's
"foreign minister," devoted
a large part of his speech to
rejection of the Camp David
agreements "between the
Egyptian regime and the
goverment of the terrorist,
Menahem Begin." He
charged that since Camp
David, Israel has "hysteri-
cally intensified all its ra-
cist, aggressive practices on
all levels."
He accused Israel of op-
pressing the Palestinians
and plundering the natural
resources of the West Bank.
Khaddoumi also blasted
the U.S. for supporting Is-
rael. He said the present
General Assembly session
represented a "rebellion"
against the "veto weapon"
used by the U.S. in the Se-
curity Council since 1974 to
abort efforts toward the im-
plementation of Palestinian
rights.
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