NEWS . 'ME' Evron Describes Diplomatic Attempts to Defuse Iraq (Continued from Page 10) lieved Iraq was going to build a nuclear device. Israeli Ambassador Evron rejected charges that Israel had not exhausted diplomatic ef- forts before it destroyed Iraq's nuclear reactor. Speaking at a meeting of the Board of Trustees of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, Evron noted that when the late Yigal Allon was Israel's Foreign Minister in 1966, he first warned of the danger to Is- rael from the nuclear plant being built in Iraq. The envoy said that since then, Israel had talked to France, which built the plant, Italy, which supplied it, and the Journalist Honored By GERALD GREEN (Copyright 1981, JTA, Inc.) (Editor's note: The fol- lowing are excerpts of remarks of author Gerald Green at the recent Joint Distribution Committee semi-annual meeting honoring Boris Smolar, editor-in-chief emeritus of the Jewish Tele- graphic Agency). It is fitting that the JDC pays tribute to a man who has so long honored his commitment as journalist, essayist, political analyst, historian and eyewitness to so much of recent history. Let me say, that as a former journalist, I'm deeply -hon- ored to join in the tribute to him. Over the years, all of us have read Boris Smolar's dispatches and articles, and we are fully cognizant of his enormous contributions to a world-wide understanding of Jewish problems, Jewish affairs, and the intense, complex, and so often, the terribly tragic turns of Jewish history in modern times. ::lay I say a few words about the JDC, since I find it an especially happy mar- riage of organization and individual — the Joint, which is an organization that believes in doing, act- ing, helping. And Mr. Smo- lar, whose dedication to truth and the dissemination of vital information and the interpretation of important events, has been of the same practical, logical and vital order . . . It is much to my regret that I never knew Boris Smolar personally, al- though I was a working journalist for many years, and his name was well known to me. Let me tell two stories about him. My friend Gerold Frank, the distinguished biog- rapher, historian and journalist, worked for Mr. Smolar for many years — as did the novelist Meyer Levin. Vhen I was asked to par- icipate in these cere- monies, I agreed, and I immediately called Jerry Frank. "Boris Smolar?" Gerold asked. "He was my boss for years. And what a man. He knew everything there was to know about reporting, editing, writing. He taught me how to cover a story, how to find sources, how to beat the competition." Gerry Frank patised. "What else can I tell you about Boris Smolar? I'll sum it up in one short sentence. He was a one-man Associated Press." BORIS SMOLAR Another story. Many years ago — in 1947 to be exact — I was a callow cable editor at the now-defunct International News Service of the Hearst Organization. One day I was sent out to the United Nations to assist our UN bureau chief, Pierre J. Huss, in covering the Gen- eral Assembly debate on the forthcoming vote on the partition of Palestine. It was, I seem to recall, mid- November of 1947. The vote came on Nov. 29th, you'll recall. I sat with Pete Huss in the press gallery, and my atten- tion was drawn to an energetic stocky man in the front row, frantically send- ing out brief scrawled cables to a runner, obviously for immediate dispatch. All the other reporters seemed to lounge about, or wait, or take their time. Not so this one correspondent, who kept a steady stream of ca- bles flying from his desk. This will sound as if I made it up, but I swear to you, I even could read his name, scrawled in large block let- ters at the bottom of each cable — SMOLAR. I asked Pete Huss who this dynamo of journalis- tic energy was, and Pete said: "That's Boris Smo- lar of the Jewish Tele- graphic Agency. He knows more about the Middle East than the rest of us put together." And I said, "Oh, I'd like to meet him. Maybe when the de- bate is over?" And Pete replied: "You'll have to wait your turn, Jerry. I always grab him to find out what it all really means. And after me, UP, AP, and Reuters line up for a briefing." So, Mr. Smolar, it's an honor, a privilege and a pleasure to meet you today, and join in this well- deserved tribute. Truly, you have been a witness and a teacher, in the most noble and creative sense. Not only as Jews, but as citizens, members of the American community, we thank you, and we honor you. United States. "We talked about it, we warned about it, we pleaded about it with three Secretaries of State," Cyrus Vance, Edmund Muskie and Alexander Haig, Evron said. Evron told the Reform leaders that only last March, Haig expressed "concern" over the possibil- ity of nuclear weapons in the hands of such countries as Iraq. Evron said Israel's dip- lomatic efforts continued but, after Francois Mit- terand was elected president of France last month, the Mitterand government stressed it * * Levin Defends Israel Strike on Iraq to Senate Assembly In a statement delivered to the Senate Wednesday, Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) strongly defended Israel's air attack on the Iraqi nu- clear reactor last week. Levin stated in part: "As time reduces the passions which still flame too brightly now, I believe that America will come to realize that Israel acted reasonably in preventing that reactor from coining on line. Additionally, the pas- sage of time will also allow us to see even more clearly how great a threat a nuclear Iraq would be to Israel and to American interests in the Middle East." In his address, Levin said that Iraqi hatred for Israel and its avowed plan to destroy the Jewish state gave Israel cause to destroy the reac- tor, which Israel saw as a threat to its existence. Levin added that "Iraq, however, takes the position that her participation in non-proliferation inspec- tion agreements, and the finding of the International Atomic Energy Agency that no diversion of fuel has yet occurred, absolves her ac- tions of any threatening implications . . . We have to recognize that nothing bound Iraq to continue to participate in the non- proliferation agreement. She had the ability to pull out of even the modest pro- tection that agreement pro- vides at any time that suited her interests. "We cannot say what Iraq might or might not have done. But that is precisely the motive behind the raeli attack. By the time that Israel confirmed Iraq's diversion of nuclear mate- rials, it would have been too late. No strike against the reactor would have been possible once it was opera- tional." On the question of self- defense, Levin explained Is- rael's action thus: "Israel did not act in a theoretical world with a May Head INS WASHINGTON — The Justice Department has recommended that President Reagan appoint Miami Beach businessman Norman Braman to head the Immigration and Naturalization Service. Braman was a Reagan campaign fundraiser and is the son of Jewish immig- rants from Eastern Europe. goal of enunciating a new policy. Israel acted in a real world with the goal of protecting their legiti- mate national security interests. Her action, and any precedent it sets, must be understood in that context." 11 _ friday:, hin'e_19' 1981 INSTANT was keeping the com- mitments . of former President Valery Giscard d'Estaing, including building the reactor in Iraq. "It is really astonishing that we now have to prove that we acted in self- defense," the Israeli ambas- sador said. 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