k 48 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, January 9, 1981 Levin Gives Reagan Series of Recommendations for U.S. Policy (Continued from Page 47) our security than most areas of the world. We need one command to study and plan for its defense. We need one command to coordinate the operation of our forces. That single command should take responsibility for all the lands and waters in the Near East, i.e. Per- sian Gulf, Middle East, Southwest Asia, and the Horn of Africa. We should take one other preventative action in the Gulf. Because one of the most effective ways to close the Strait of Hormuz to oil tanker traf- fic is to mine it (sinking a ship or two won't do it — it is 26 miles wide), we should expand our own efforts to improve our mine countermeasures capabilities and our col- laboration with other na- tions which already are well-established in this field. Third, our top civilian de- fense and military leaders should improve their dialogue with their coun- terparts in that region and with our allies who already are supporting us in this regard in an effort to better coordinate planning, pro- gramming and operations for the defense of the Per- sian Gulf. If possible, the conduct of multi-national military exercises also ought to be considered to augment the lessons learned from past, and to be learned from fu- ture bilateral joint opera- tions. These, then, are the three principle recommendations which I have developed since returning from my trip. There are, in addition, several occasions which my . experiences in this area lead me to believe need to be better explained to the American people. . • PRESCRIPTION OPTICAL CO. PHIL ELLIS PHIL ELLIS INVITES YOU TO INSPECT OUR LARGE SELECTION OF EYE FASHIONS SILHOUETTE, AVANT GARDE, ANTHONY MARTIN & MORE Tues.-Fri. 9:30-6 26001 COOLIDGE HWY Thurs. Evening 7-9 p. m OAK PARK, MICH 543-3343 Sat. 9:30-5 By 101/2 Mile CLOSED SUNDAY & MONDAY 16, .41 ■ 11.11 ■ We must understand the strategic position and external threats to our friends from their perspective. For in- stance, Oman, "guard- ing" the Straits of Hor- muz to her east, has no economic need to keep them open — her oil is shipped from ports lo- cated below the Straits. But she is threatened to her west by South Yemen, supported by Russia and Cuba. Another example: Egypt is not pre-occupied with threats from Israel — she is very much concerned about her mortal enemy Libya, which has a power-mad dic- tator and oil riches to arm herself with Soviet weapons to threaten Chad, the Sudan and Egypt itself. The Sudan contains a great stretch of the Nile, be- fore it reaches Egypt. Egypt is dependent on the Nile for her very life's blood: her population lives exclusively along side it (the other 98 percent of Egypt is arrid desert). We must understand the internal dynamics of our al- lies. The future of Camp David is less likely to be de- termined in the short run by negotiations between the parties as it will be by Is- raeli elections (where Begin may try to paint Peres as a supporter of an independent Palestinian state in the VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE YOU ARE NEEDED TO: 1. Share yourself with a child. Be a JFS Big Brother/Big Sister 2. Visit with an elderly man or woman so that a spouse may leave the home for a few hours a week. 3. Write checks and/or letters, read mail for a blind individual. 4. Take a young blind woman shopping or to a movie. 5. Do marketing for an arthritic woman. 6. Spend a half day per week driving clients to physical therapy or other medical appointments. 7. Take an elderly woman to visit her husband's grave. 8. Screen phone requests for Volunteer Service and make appointments. 9. Help us get our JFS LIBRARY IN ORDER. 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Domestic law prohibits us from provid- ing such training, al- though we could help train their army. I would hope our law could be changed so justifiable exceptions could be are a potent economic force as well as a political lightn- ing rod in the Middle East. The basic aspirations of most people involve hous- ing, food and survival. The Strait of Hormuz and Rapid Deployment Forces mean little to the masses of Egypt or to the desperate Lebanese. We must understand that real progress is possible de- spite seemingly overwhelm- ing odds. Camp David was an extraordinary feat, de- example: spite its failure so far to Another stereotypes about the Pales- untie the Palestinian knot. tinians place them huddled Recognizing that fact will in refugee camps, and while keep hopes alive. Equal' there are too many of those, important it helps keep _ Palestinians have become focus what is achievable. If economically powerful in we expect more than Camp many Arab lands to which David in any one step, we they have emigrated. They are expecting too much. allowed, perhaps upon notice to the appropriate Congressional commit- tees. We must seek to avoid stereotypes. For instance, Arab states are very differ- ent from each other. The to- tally closed society of Saudi Arabia, fearful of even the slightest "western" influ- ence, and dominated by religious orthodoxy, is as different from Jordan as Canada is from Mexico. Levin Sees Mideast Awaiting Reagan and Israel's Elections WASHINGTON (JTA) — Senator Carl Levin (D- Mich.) says top officials of the six Middle East coun- tries he met on his recently-concluded nine- day visit all speak well of President-elect Ronald Re- agan although some lead- ers, such as Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Jordan's King Hussein, have reservations about Reagan's expressed views that favor Israel as a strategic U.S. ally. "Everybody welcomes the new President," Levin said. "My impression is that Sadat misses Jimmy Car- ter. Reagan has somewhat pooh-poohed Camp David and Sadat, who seems will- ing to meet with Reagan, wants Camp David." On the other hand, Levin added, King Hussein regards Camp David's "very name as a distaste" and "a dead horse." Referring to Reagan's election campaign pledges, Levin said Hussein re- marked, "I choose not to be- lieve them." He also re- ported Hussein saying Jor- dan would not participate alone in the settlement negotiations with Israel like Egypt but must have the Palestinians and other Arabs included, "at least Saudi Arabia." Israel's Prime Minister Menahem Begin and his chief political rival, Labor Party leader Shi- mon Peres, think Jordan will hold "informal dis- cussions with Israel as in the past," Levin said. Sadat, "yearning" for a new direction from Is- rael, feels that "nothing can happen" in the peace process until after Is- rael's elections sometime this year and therefore Sadat, at present, is "kind of on a shelf." Observing that "Peres is looking for other options," Levin said, "Sadat's people are very close to the Labor Party in Israel." Many Egyptians, he said, attended the party's con- vention and "they were acclaimed. wildly Whenever Camp David was mentioned, there was an ovation." Levin visited Saudi Arabia, Oman, Jordan, Is- rael, Lebanon and Egypt. Levin saw the possibility of Palestinian Arab partici- pation in the West Bank/ Gaza talks. The "only solu- tion" for that problem, he thought, would come after Hussein and other Arabs meet with the PLO and see how the West Bank and Jordan would look under West Bank autonomy. Hus- sein was non-committal, he said, on the meaning of "self-determination" for the Palestinians while Israel would not accept self- determination because of the threat that poses to it. Sadat doesn't want "pure self-determination" be- (Continued on Page 49) NEW HOURS V HOURS lutis - l F-- ell/e'er Ain tti SELECTED JEWELRY i.e. 1-41.10 SERN ICE ( ) i 13720 W. 9 Mile Rd., Oak Park, Mich. h Near Post Office u N OPEN WED. LI 7-5068 CLOSED SAT. STARTING SATURDAY JANUARY 10th Clearing Out Entire Stock of HANDBAGS NOW 1/2 PRICE CHARLOTTE'S Shopss 9 Mile and Coolidge 12 1 /2 Mile and Southfield, Southfield Plaza 15 Mile and Orchard Lake All Sales Final Sorry No Charges