THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, July 11, 1981 5 Talks Optimistic, F-16s Will Be Delivered to Israel (Continued from Page 1) delivery of F-16 warplanes could be resumed. The Reagan Adminis- tration apparently plans to go down to the wire on its self-imposed deadline for an expected an- nouncement that the United States will resume shipment of F-I6 jew fighters to Israel. (White House spokesmen announced Thursday morn- ing that the 10 F-15 jets will be shipped to Israel from Texas immediately. The awaited report on alleged Israeli guilt of using Ameri- can jets illegally for attacks on Iraq apparently is being shelved.) State Department spokesman Dean Fischer refused to disclose anything McFarlane may have dis- cussed while in Israel nor would he clarify what the "misunderstandings" were between Israel and the U.S. He said that he could not say whether McFarlane had discussed the use of American-made weapons by Israel in its raids on Palestinian terrorist bases in Lebanon. He said McFarlane went to Israel for the "specific" purpose of dis- cussing the use of American-made weapons in the raid on Iraq. State Department deputy spokesman Alan Romburg said Tuesday that there is "no connection between the decision" on the F-16s and the Administration's pro- posal to sell AWACS recon- naisance aircraft and other weapons to Saudi Arabia. He was replying to press reports from the Middle East that McFarlane had shown Israel the terms under which the AWACS would be sold to the Saudis. McFarlane reportedly tried to lessen Israeli opposition to the AWACS sale in re- turn for resumption of the F-16 deliveries. There has also been much speculation that the Ad- ministration would offi- cially notify Congress of its proposed AWACS sale at the same time that it an- nounced resumption of the F-16 deliveries in order to neutralize opposition from both Israel and the Arab countries. But a Capitol Hill source said that in order to prevent the accusation of linkaget the adminis- tration is now not ex- pected to send the AWACS package to Con- gress for another week to 10 days. Spanish Jews Propose an Economic Plan for Israel By MICHAEL FOONER (Copyright 1981, JTA, Inc.) MADRID — Spanish Jews seem to take an upside-down view of dip- lomatic relations with Is- rael — Israel could help Spain cope with its prob- lems if Spain established re- lations, much more than Spain would help Israel. For instance, says Maurice Hatchwell, an in-_ ternational businessman, Israel could supply Spain with much needed technological, research and _mv ■4 9 Daily—Hospital Sympathy ‘} 4 * • s if FRUIT BASKETS 3 Times Daily Nation-Wide Delivery $ 1695 RODNICK- ii McINERNEY'S :,;,1 779-4140 772-4350 development assistance. It could help Spain get her economy moving again, he believes. Spain, however, is stone-walling on the Israeli proposals to normalize dip- lomatic relations. Maurice Toledano, an international commodities trader based in Madrid who is also active in Jewish community affairs, declares the government's denial of diplomatic recog- nition of Israel results from submission to Arab blackmail, and hurts both Spain and Israel. "Our government over-reacts to threats by oil-producing countries," he says. "Spain is not wholly dependent on them. Coal imports, for example, are rising stead- ily, and are already scheduled at 17 to 20 mil- lion tons annually, equal to 30 percent of our re- liance on oil, and coal im- ports could be • in- creased." But at the same time, some Jewish businessmen in Spain are critical of Is- rael's failure to solve its own economic problems despite the talents of its own people. The Jewish state is in serious danger due to per- sistent housing shortages, unemployment and infla- tion, according to Hatch- well. Worse than the mate- rial difficulties is the impact on Israeli citizen morale, he says. And he adds, the Jewish community of Spain does not propose to sit idly by in frustration. Israel's essen- tial concentration on mili- tary defense and security needs must be matched with solid, progressive economic initiatives if it is to survive as a viable nation, he de- clares. "We need to counteract what is becoming a gen- eral demoralization of Is- raeli youth. Graduates of schools and colleges are coming out into a world of no jobs and little hope. The result is emigration or despair or both among talented young people who should be the backbone of Israel's fu- ture," he said. Hatchwell's solution is a proposal to form a commit- tee of Diaspora business leaders and economic spe- cialists which will devise a new modern plan of Israeli economic development, to be placed at the disposal of the new Israeli government. "Jewish talent for indus- trial and commercial man- agement is a phenomenal resource," he observes, "and exists the world over. In the present crisis it must be or- ganized and channeled in a way Israel can use and grow on." He sees the committee as consisting of 20 outstanding business leaders and economists, with nine or 10 from North America, and three or four each from South America, England and Europe. The object is not just another foreign in- vestment survey, but to come up with new ideas for solid economic develop- ment. Asked why Spanish Jewry should be the source of this initiative, Hatchwell says it is a natural consequence of Israel's being part of the Sephardic world. "There are 600,000 Sephardic Jews in Israel to- day, people with whom we have the closest kinship, who are part of that special cultural identity that rooted and flowered in Spain for 1,500 years, and which merged itself into the body of the nation of Israel," he declared. Israel desperately needs links to the outside world for survival and well-being, he said. Sephardic com- munities around the world have had a built-in sense of their kinship since the Diaspora first came into existence, and have main- tained it through centuries of migrations. In the past three decades, Israel has become a major link in the global chain of Sephardic communities, due to the heavy migration there, especially in -two waves, during the mid-'50s and after the 1967 war. Spain, by contrast, is numerically a minor link in terms of numbers. It has, however, an impor- tant psychological posi- tion in Sephardic Jewry, as the cultural and histor- ical "homeland" of their world wide community. That psychological posi- tion has been enormously strengthened by the recognition granted their community by secular authorities within Spain. Moreover, secular and of- ficial Spain has become in- tensely interested in its "Jewish roots" and has in- itiated the study of Jews' historic participation in Spanish culture, activity which is independent of present-day Jewish paroc- hial concerns. LOOK BETTER ! SAVE ar. LSOHNORT' DRESSES $59 Values $ 29 After Five (sizes 6-44) $199 Group 5139 Group T 399 Group WEDDINGS - PARTIES - BAR MITZVAS TODAY thru SAT — 10 am to 5:30 pm BIRMINGHAM SOUTH WOODWARD (MI 2.415 JEWISH NATIONAL FUND 27308 SOUTHFIELD SFLD, MI. 48076 557-6644 Monday thru Thursday, 9 AM to 5 PM Friday 9 AM to 4 PM summit in Nairobi last month. Cairo's Minister of State for Foreign Affiars, Butros Ghali, made a speech at that summit which Israel regarded as unwarrantedly strident and hostile. Shamir also cited Egypt's behavior at the UN, and at the Interna- tional Atomic Energy Commission in Vienna, where Egyptian dele- gates echoed Israel's most hardline foes in their attacks on the Is- raeli air raid. Shamir's letter, it is un- derstood, was written in close coordination with Prime Minister Begin him- self. The letter also dwelt on OFFICIAL Q AGENCY IQM EGA AUTHORIZED SALES & REPAIRS Creative Jewelers Diamonds — Precious Stones — Precision Time Pieces HARVARD ROW MALL 11 Mlle & Lahser 353-31 $4900 OVER INVOICE the vehement — and in some cases virulent — reac- tions in the Egyptian press to Israel's action. Shamir sought to remind Ali that the peace treaty between the two states, in Article V of Annex III, requires that "the parties shall seek to foster mutual understand- ing and tolerance and will, accordingly, abstain from hostile propaganda against each other." Monday Only July 20th BRAND NEW `81 OMEGA J'Ii iscc4 ,-Zdh more $7737" stk. no. 1391 Named to UJA NEW YORK — H. David Weinstein has been ap- pointed director of the offices of the national chairman, president and executive vice chairman of the United Jewish Appeal. 111••••• ■ 111. ■ 611assrmai7 0/61 Israel Reported Fuming Over Criticism by Egypt on Bombing of Iraq Reactor JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel has delivered what sources here termed a "sharp protest" to Egypt over Cairo's conduct follow- ing the Israeli air raid on the Iraqi nuclear reactor on June 7. In a letter from Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir to Egypt's Foreign Minister Kemal Hassan Ali, Israel complained forcefully and bitterly at Egypt's vehe- mently hostile criticism of the Israeli attack. The letter was delivered Wednesday by Ambassador Moshe Sas- son. Shamir cited particularly Egypt's leading role in the Organization of African Unity in condemnation of Israel, issued by the OAU , George Ohrenstein Jewelers Ltd. $99 $69 $49 UF gHANDELS 1$4 Meanwhile, Secretary of State Alexander Haig said that he was "optimistic" about chances for "progress in the near future" toward a Middle East peace settle- ment. "We are now on the verge of initialing the Sinai agreement which will per- mit the return of the Sinai to Egypt," he said. He added, "there have been ex- pressions already from the Israeli government — that government being formed — suggesting that they must get on with the au- tonomy talks." Haig said these were the two remaining aspects of the Camp David Accords and that while the longer term aspects of peace are "very, very difficult," he was "optimistic that with good will on both sides and a sense of urgency which must be forthcoming, that there will be progress in the near future." 28000 Telegraph at Tel-12 Mall 354-3300 Open 'Til 9:00 rs i Mon. & Thurs. Eves. ∎ "Keep That Great GM Feeling With Genuine GM Parts." GREATER DETROIT OLDS DEALERS IheitalTeople 3 2