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June 03, 1983 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1983-06-03

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

6 Friday, June 3, 1983

Peace Groups Pushing Likud to Pull Lebanon Troops

Caricatures
your u yr pa
fo r r yoB

(Continued from Page 1)
taken precautionary meas-
ures in Lebanon. He said he
was confident that in the
long run the Syrians and
the PLO would withdraw

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from Lebanon, enabling Is-
raeli troops to pull out
under the terms of the
Israel-Lebanon agreement.
But there is rising senti-
ment among some segments
of the public for a unilateral
withdrawal or partial RAH-
back of Israeli troops. The
Peace Now movement sent
telegrams to Begin and De-
fense Minister Moshe Arens
on Tuesday, urging them
not to let Syria or the PLO
dictate when Israel should
begin to implement its
agreement with Lebanon.
"If withdrawal was started
now, the troops could be out
of Lebanon within a few
weeks," they said. They said
they had made the same ap-
peal to the Lebanese gov-
ernment.
Peace Now is conduct-
ing a war protest march

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from Rosh Hanikra on
the Lebanese border to
Tel Aviv. It began Sun-
day and is scheduled to
end with a mass peace
rally in Tel Aviv's munic-
ipal square on Saturday
night. The marchers
camped south of Haifa
Tuesday night. They told
local youngsters who
came to encourage them
that no reserve soldier
should refuse duty in
Lebanon because army
discipline must be main-
tained even though there
is no national concensus
on the war in Lebanon.
Peace Now has dis-
sociated itself from the
Committee Against the
War in Lebanon, a front of
Israel's Hadash Communist
Party, which plans to join
its peace demonstration in
Tel Aviv.
Another anti-war group,
Parents Against Silence,
demonstrated outside the
Knesset on Monday to de-
mand immediate with-
drawal from Lebanon. A
delegation of five women
me,t, with Arens at his office
to appeal for a speedy with-
drawal to end the casual-
ties. A spokeswomen said
later that Arens listened
carefully but on the basis of
his replies, "We think we
have to continue our strug-
gle."
During May alone, eight
Israeli soldiers were killed
and 71 were wounded in 33
separate incidents. Two Is-
raeli soldiers were killed
Tuesday and three were
wounded when their ve-
hicles were ambushed near
Behamdoun village, just
south of the • Beirut-
Damascus highway.
An Israeli patrol came
under small arms fire
Wednesday in Beirut. It
wounded and captured
one of the assailants. The
others fled. One Israeli
soldier was grazed by a
bullet in the brief ex-
change of fire.
The clash occurred just
south of the Galerie Sa-
moan, a crossing point be-
tween east and west Beirut.
The attackers, believed to -
be part of the estimated
1,000 Palestine Liberation
Organization terrorists who
have re-infiltrated Beirut,
escaped into an area of the
city patrolled by Italian
units of the multinational
force. The Israeli patrol
halted its pursuit at the
boundary of the area. Ita-
lian soldiers searched for
the terrorists without suc-
cess.
Meanwhile, Syria's am-
bassador to France said
Tuesday that a new war in
the Middle East is "immi-
nent" and accused Israel
and the United States of
"plotting" an attack on
Syria.
Ambassador
Yussuf
Chakur, a former Syrian
army chief of staff, also said
that the Israeli-Lebanese

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agreement of May 18 is
jeopardizing Syria's Basic
security.
The envoy, who ad-
dressed a press confer-
ence, said, "Syria is made
to appear like the bad
guy in the withdrawal
process. Actually, Syria
is ready to withdraw its
forces from Lebanon as
soon as Israel carries out
an unconditional evacua-
tion of its own troops and
does nothing to affect
Lebanon's independence
and territorial integrity."
Chakur revealed that
4,500 Syrian soldiers in-
cluding 90 poilots were kil-
led during last June's brief
fighting in Lebanon. He
said, "Syria wants to avoid a
new war but without com-
promising its security and
independence." He claimed
that the Israeli-Lebanese
agreement threatens
Syria's security as it pro-
vides for the presence of Is-
raeli forces in a security
zone in southern Lebanon
only 15 miles from Damas-
cus.
West European govern-
ments and public opinion
increasingly tend to blame
Syria for the stalemate in
the withdrawal process
from Lebanon. Israeli De-
fense Minister Moshe Arens
was expected to hammer
home this view during
meetings with French
ministers and top aides this
week in Paris.
Foreign Minister Yitzhak

Shamir,' currently on an of-
ficial visit to Luxemburg,
Belgium and Italy, is trying
to obtain West European
diplomatic pressure on
Damascus for the evacua-
tion of Syrian troops
stationed in the Bekaa Val-
ley.

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