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December 16, 1983 - Image 30

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1983-12-16

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



THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

30 Friday, December 16, 1983

Palestinian Self-Determination Urged by Carter Aide

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Administration helped
negotiate the Camp David
agreements, called for a "re-
sumption of the diplomatic
process" to seek self-
determination for the
Palestinian people.
Saunders, now a resident
fellow at the American
Enterprise Institute (AEI),
said the United States
should seek to make up
some of the defects of the
Camp David accords by
pressing for self-
determination for Palesti-
nians on the West Bank and
Gaza.
However, he added, this
did not necessarily mean a
Palestinian state and also
required safeguarding the
self-determination of both
Israel and Jordan.
Saunders' remarks
were made at the close of
a three-hour panel dis-
cussion on the Middle
East which was part of
the AEI's Public Policy
Week held at the Mayf-
lower Hotel in Washing-
ton.
He said it has been so very
long since negotiations
have been held that it is now
necessary to determine the
basis on which each of the
parties — Israel, Egypt and
Jordan — would be willing
to enter the talks. Because
of this, Saunders said, the
Camp David agreements
would now be only one of the
elements in the negotia-
tions and not the framework
for the negotiations.
One panelist, Anthony
Cordesman, international
policy editor of the Armed
Forces Journal Interna-
tional, charged that Israel's
Likud government has been
a "strategic liability" to the
U.S. rather than an asset.
He called the strategic
military alliance between
the countries announced by
President Reagan and Is-
raeli Premier Yitzhak
Shamir, "cosmetic," claim-
ing that the Israeli military
could not play a role in the
defense of the Arab world in
the foreseeable future be-
cause it would "alienate"
more Arab countries than
there would be benefits to
the U.S. from the Israeli
military contribution.
Cordesman also said
that for the U.S. to pre-
position military supplies
in Israel or even if "it
used Israeli medical
facilities," it also would
be costly to the U.S. in the
Arab world. He rejected
the view that Israeli mili-
tary action in Lebanon
had provided military
benefits to the U.S. be-
cause of the lessons
learned by the Israelis,
saying "those lessons
were of marginal value."
Cordesman charged that
"every Israeli use of U.S.
technology transfers data to

Prayer Breakfast

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — The
third National Prayer
Breakfast in Honor of Israel
will be held Feb. 1 at the
Shoreham Hotel in Wash-
ington. The event is spon-
sored by the Religious
Roundtable organization.

the Soviet Union" in such
areas as electronic warfare
and air defenses. He said it
thus provides billions of dol-
lars of information - to the
Soviet Union while costing
NATO billions of dollars
needed to match the knowl-
edge gained by the Soviets.
In remarks that seemd to
echo the views of those in
the Pentagon opposed to
closer U.S.-Israeli military
ties, Cordesman said Israel
would probably have to re-
ceive from the U.S. $2-$2.5
billion annually in foreign
aid grants in the next de-
cade to meet its defense
needs.
"If Israel is to be as de-
pendent on the U.S. as it
virtually must be, its going
to have to trade some of its
political ambitions for that
aid and is going to have to
act like a strategic asset and
less than like a strategic
pain in the ass," Cordesman
said.
He listed requirements
he believed Israel should
meet. "At a minimum, it
should put an end to mili-
tary adventures" such as
its invasion of Lebanon,
he said. He said Israel
should also show "mili-
tary restraint," show
active support for Jor-
dan's internal and exter-
nal security, be willing to
see strong U.S. military
ties to Arab countries,
show greater responsibil-
ity in Lebanon and move
toward some kind of set-
tlement for the West
Bank.
Philip Habib, who was
President Reagan's special
representative to the Mid-
dle East and recently joined
the AEI as a senior fellow,
stressed that while atten-

tion is being focussed on the
crisis in Lebanon, the over-
all problem of Middle East
peace should not be ignored.

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