Friday, April 22, 1983 35 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS “Walli, , Street Journal iBielgodes • h. (Editor's note: The fol- lowing editorial ap- peared in the April 19 Wall Street Journal under the headline, "Be- irut Normalcy.") The force of it was stun- ning. A car bomb in Beirut blew up the American em- bassy yesterday morning, tearing away the front of the building and collapsing the reinforced concrete floors like a deck of cards. At least 63 people, some of them American serv- icemen, were killed. There is one grisly saving grace about modern-day Mideast -politics: Whenever you get your head too far into the clouds, with dreams of grand manipulations and comprehensive peace, one sort of explosion or another will remind you of the bloody impossibility of the place. On the eve of the embassy tragedy, the centerpiece of the Reagan Administra- tion's Mideast policy, its plan to solve the problem of the West Bank, was falling into the trap that has gob- bled up every comprehensive-style peace plan for the Mideast. The Administration was trying desperately to get Jordan's King Hussein, as well as any other available Arab heads of state, to sit down with the Israelis. The king proved himself a secure hostage to the dic- tates of Yasir Arafat, who is no more ready to give up his status as a revolutionary figure this time than he has ever been. The peace plan has suffered its predictable impasse. BefOre that, the U.S. military was complaining that the Israeli soldiers in Lebanon were harassing our troops there. Top civilian authorities in the Pentagon in. structed our Marine commander to write a let- ter saying so, then leaked the letter and made it a nasty little public inci- dent. There was much speculation about the Is- raelis' possible dirty mo- tives and ours. In the course of the fight the Israelis revealed one reason for the constant ten- sion: U.S. soldiers in Leba- non were forbidden to estab- lish the normal type of liaison and communications with their Israeli comrades, apparently because of someone's fear that Arabs would regard this as un- . seemly fraternization. Hence minor conflicts over sector responsibilities were festering in wait of diploma- tic solutions. In the process of all this, the Administration deliv- ered insult after insult to the Israelis. The President sent a message to the Sy- rians saying that the U.S. might include the Syrians' demand for the return of the Golan Heights in any future negotiations. Our Karen El- liott House, in reporting last week's fascinating two-part series on the polit- PrQsstiZeisAlAt P4Ille t9 - bear on the Jordanian king, was told that President Re- agan had said he was will- ing to risk loss of the Jewish vote in 1984 to get the king's cooperation-on the peace plan. The White House has, of course, denied this bit of political expansiveness, but the credibility of the Hus- sein meeting account was strengthened by the President's earlier threat to hold up sale of F-16 fighter planes to Israel until Israeli troops are out of Lebanon. The situation has also turned slightly poisonous within the U.S. govern- ment; the President's ad- viser for Jewish affairs within the White House has quit after discovering that there is a big difference be- tween being listened to in the Oval Office and having anyone take you seriously. This everlasting seesaw is by no means new in U.S. diplomacy towards the Middle East. Almost since the forma- tion of the state of Israesl 35 years ago, the U.S. has combined its special rela- tionship with Israel and with attempts to try to win the friendship and confidence of Arab states and mediate on Israeli- Arab peace. No one can say for sure that some other policy would have worked better, given the conflicts of the area, but the one the U.S. has fol- lowed clearly has had serious deficiencies. Quite possibly the U.S. has been victim to a danger- ous illusion: that a broad and stable peace is possible in the Mideast and that we have the power to bring it about. In fact, Israel or no Israel, the region is,going to be victim to political insta- bility for years to come; all we can prudently do is to choose the crucial points at which we can mitigate the situation in our own inter- ests, keeping in mind that our best chance for doing that lies with maintaining a close working relationship with the one stable and militarily effective democ- racy in the area, Israel. All this fooling around on our part, with large prom- ises and potential commit- ments to shaky and mutu- ally suspicious Arab lead- ers, is dangerous. There are Soviets in the Mideast. They have just reminded us of that by re- stocking Syria with even more advanced weapons than the ones the Syrians lost in the Lebanese war, and sending in large num- bers-of Russians to help man them. Diplomatically, the Soviets are there, too. This time around they played a crucial role in persuading . Midetief sPollidyl I y Arafat and Hussein not to bite at the Reagan plan. We cannot casually stomp on our allies in the region with the Russians so eager to make capital of the situa- tion. bomb Yesterday's might be read by some as just that much more evi- dence that we have to do more to redress Arab grievances. There is nothing in the record to support such a claim. Terrorism is the work of Arab factions interested in conquest, not peace, and certainly no friends of the U.S. The lesson we should draw from the latest Beirut horror is that grandstand- ing and moralizing in such a highly charged situation are merely ways to court embarrassment. It's time to get down to a quieter kind of work, and also to remember who our friends are. Niniiiiniaiic:1 Body to Gather Numismatic Israel Society of Michigan, Inc., will meet 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Jimmy Prentis Morris Branch of the Jewish Com- munity Center. Refresh- ments will be served. Elley Meisler will show slides from her recent trip to Israel. rig A celebration A meeting A banquet A wedding A bar mitzvah A party A conference A get-together See our totally new banquet rooms. • Magnificent new decor completely redecorated. • 3 Ballrooms plus Grand Ballroom. • Can accommodate 10 to 500. • • Imaginative menu. • An elegant and ideal location. • 9 Meeting rooms. Call our banquet and meeting planner. 643-7800 Litvaks Sought A Connecticut man is seeking Jews who immig- rated from the town of Oshmyana, Lithuania. Persons with information should write Raymond Mag, 247 Reservoir Rd., Newington, Conn. 06111. , 2601 W. Big Beaver Road.Troy. MI 48084 R •+•i *