28

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, March 8, 1985

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Mideast Talks

Continued from Page 4

meeting with a Jordanian-
Palestinian delegation that
does not include the PLO,"
Peres said.
"I mean there is no sense
hiding the fact there are dif-
ferences of opinion in the na-
tional coalition because it is
made of two parties that hold
different views. But there is a
common denominator at least
on how to start the negotia-
tions."
Earlier last week, the Re-
agan Administration made
clear it was prepared to re-
engage actively in Arab-
Israeli diplomacy when all the
sides indicated a readiness to
negotiate directly on the basis
of UN Security Council Reso-
lution 242.
Assistant Secretary of State
for Near Eastern and South
Asian Affairs Richard Murphy
told a Congressional subcom-
mittee that the U.S. would
participate in a manner the
parties "deem appropriate."
But throughout the week,
Murphy and other U.S.
spokesman have remained ex-
tremely cautious in their pub-
lic pronouncements. They re-
fused to describe in much de-
tail the exact nature of all the
most recent Arab-Israeli ma-
neuverings.
The Assistant Secretary in-
sisted that Mubarak was seri-
ous in his quest to revitalize
the peace process, and was not
simply engaging in public re-
lations aimed at improving
Egypt's image on the eve of
Mubarak's arrival in Wash-
ington.
In an interview published
last week in the Washington
Post Mubarak said he was
encouraged by the flurry of
diplomatic activity aimed at
reviving the peace process.
"The United States is a super-
power," he said. "The United
States cannot continue to sit
with its hands folded."
He also praised Peres as
someone who "wants to be
much more flexible" than his
predecessors.
The Americans, who have
maintained a low diplomatic
profile in all of this activity,
have welcomed the latest di-
rect Israeli-Egyptian talks in
Jerusalem. The Wall Street
Journal, for example, quoted
one senior U.S. official as
commenting: "There hasn't
been a tremendous amount of
high-level Egyptian-Israeli
contact in recent years. This is
significant."
Asked whether he would
urge Jordan's King Hussein to
invite Peres to come to Jordan,
Mubarak replied: "It's too
early to say that. But I have to

discuss this with Hussein.
These things should take
preparation."
He said Washington should
not press the PLO to specifi-
cally accept Resolution 242
right now. That, he said,
would put Arafat in a "difficult
position."
Mubarak said those Pales-
tinians named to the joint
delegation with Jordan would
be "moderate people who can
talk sense, who speak logic."
He also said such Palestinians
need not necessarily be known
members of the PLO.
"Be realistic," Mubarak
said, referring to the matter of
the PLO's acceptance of Reso-
lution 242. "During the
negotiations this could be
solved. Give them some confi-
dence. They need confidence.
They are afraid to lose every-
thing."
Arafat has subsequently in-
sisted that only the PLO would
decide which Palestinians
would be included in the joint
delegation.

Mubarak said he was
encouraged by the
flurry of diplomatic
activity.

On ABC-TV Sunday, Minis-
ter Without Portfolio Ezer
Weizman was very positive in
welcoming the latest Egyptian
peace initiative. He also had
high praise for Jordan's King
Hussein.
But Weizman, substituting
for Peres who declined to ap-
pear on the program after ear-
lier having accepted an invita-
tion, said no one in Israel was
speaking of negotiating with
the PLO.
Weizman agreed that
Mubarak was accelerating the
peace process now because
Peres was Prime Minister.
Former U.S. Assistant Sec-
retary of State for Near East-
ern and South Asian Affairs
Harold Saunders, also appear-
ing on the same program,
urged the Reagan administra-
tion to accept Mubarak's call
for preliminary talks in Wash-
ington with the joint
Palestinian-Jordanian dele-
gation.
But unless the Israeli gov-
ernment should first change
its own stance by giving its
blessing to such indirect U.S.
mediation, the Reagan Ad-
ministration is believed likely
to resist Saunders' recom-
mendation.

