THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Israel Rejects Arab Peace Plan'
(Continued from Page 20)
mostly the resolutions
which have been adopted by
the international organiza-
tions." He added, "But Fez
lacks the mechanism of how
to achieve its goals."
The
Egyptian
president explained that
the question now was,
"Who is going to execute
all the goals set in Fez and
how? All that is men-
tioned in the Fez state-
ment is what every Arab
wants to achieve. The
point is how? So I think
you could ask the Arab
summit what mechanism
and how it will work. It is
not my business." Egypt,
ousted from the Arab
League because of its
peace treaty with Israel,
was not represented at
Fez.
Another reaction to the
Fez communique came from
Foreign Minister Fuad But-
ros of Lebanon who said in
Beirut that his government
was disappointed by the
failure of the Arab League
summit to endorse in full a
Lebanese government
working paper for the with-
drawal of all foreign forces
from Lebanese territory.
While the Fez com-
munique ended the five-
year mandate of Syria to
police Lebanon with its
forces and proposed that Be-
irut and Damascus
negotiate the withdrawal of
the Syrian army, the Arab
League leaders did not men-
tion the continued presence
of armed Palestinians in
Lebanon.
At the Senate Foreign Re-
lations Committee hearing
in Washington, Sen. Rudy
Boschwitz (R-Minn.) said he
found the Fez communique
"negative" and one in which
the Arab leaders "adopted
the lowest common de-
nominator." The committee
also continued to discuss the
Reagan plan.
Chairman Charles
Percy (R-Ill.) and
Claiborne Pell (D-R.I.),
the ranking Democrat on
the committee, said they
could not see how Pre-
mier Menahem Begin
could have been sur-
prised by the President's
call for a freeze on Jewish
settlements.
They noted that former
Sen. Jacob Javits of New
Stocks, Inflation
on the Increase
TEL AVIV (ZINS) — De-
spite the military activity in
Beirut, the share market
maintained its bouyancy
and, for the third consecu-
tive week new yearly_ highs
were established. Political
and military news appears
to have little negative effect
on the stock market and the
outlook is generally op-
timistic.
But Israel's inflation
quickened in part because of
the war in Lebanon, accord-
ing to the Central Bureau of
Statistics. The rate of infla-
tion in the first seven
months of 1982 was 130 per-
cent in annual terms, com-
pared to 100 percent in the
same period in 1981.
York, formerly a senior
member of the Foreign Re-
lations Committee and now
a consultant to it, had
recommended such a freeze
several months ago and dis-
cussed it with Begin when
the Israeli Premier met
with the committee last
spring.
Sen. Joseph Biden (D-
Del.) said it would have
been in the United States
interest to have discussed
the President's proposals
with Begin before taking
Friday, September 11, 1902 21
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
A YEAR OF HEALTH, PEACE AND PROSPERITY
TO ALL
them to Jordan.
Shultz said that all par-
ties, including members of
the Israeli govenrment,
have agreed in the past that
it was important to bring
Jordan into the negotia-
tions. He said the U.S.,
therefore, discussed the
proposals first with Jordan.
When King Hussein indi-
cated he considered them
"serious," they were pre-
sented simultaneously to
Israel and other Arab coun-
tries.
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Date: Wednesday, September 29, 1982
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Honorary Chairmen
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