Friday, April 26, 1985
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
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Rendezvous
Jerusalem (JTA) — The
Cabinet decided by majority vote
Sunday to implement stage three
of the Israel Defense Force (IDF)
withdrawal from Lebanon so that
the last Israeli soldier will be out
of that country by the first week in
June.
The vote, which came after a
seven-hour debate, was 17-3 with
one abstention. Three former
Likud Defense Ministers — Ezer
Weizman, Moshe Arens and Ariel
Sharon — voted against the pro-
posal by the present Defense
Minister, Yitzhak Rabin for a
total pullback of IDF troops and
the creation of an 8-15-
kilometer-wide security zone
across the border.
The army radio reported that
the Cabinet meeting was
"stormy" and that there had been
sharp exchanges between Com-
munications Minister Amnon
Rubinstein of the Shinui faction
and Sharon, currently the Minis-
ter of Commerce and Industry.
The final stage of the with-
drawal plan approved by the
Cabinet Jan. 14 will bring the IDF
behind the international border.
But Rabin warned at a press con-
ference afterwards that the IDF
"will not see itself to be limited by
any line" should terrorist threats
arise inside Lebanon.
If the threat is "30, 40 or 50
kilometers from the border" and
Israel considered it to endanger
her security, she would act
against it, Rabin said. He said the
IDF also would come to the aid of
the South Lebanon Army (SLA) if
any of its units encountered a se-
curity problem they could not
handle.
At the United Nations in New
York last week, the Security
Council extended the mandate of
the United Nations Interim force
in Lebanon (UNIFIL) for another
six months, until Oct. 19. The
mandate of the 7,000-troops force
was due to expire last Friday.
The vote was 13-0, with two
countries — the Soviet Union and
the Ukraine — abstaining. The
resolution extending the mandate
of UNIFIL also reiterated the Se-
curity council's "strong support
for the territorial integrity, sov-
ereignty and independence of
Lebanon within its
internationally-recognized boun-
daries."
The resolution adopted last
week also requested Secretary
General Javier Perez de Cuellar
to continue his consultation with
the Lebanese government, and
other parties concerned, regard-
ing the implementation of the
resolution and to report back to
the Security Council.
With the withdrawal of the Is-
raeli forces in south Lebanon,
UNIFIL assumed an added role in
maintaining the precarious situa-
tion there.
In a related development, MK
Mordechai Virshubksy of the
Shinui faction maintained over
the weekend that his demand for a
full scale judicial inquiry into the
Israel government's decision to
invade Lebanon in June, 1982 has
been re-enforced by information
provided him by Rabin.
The Defense Minister, in a writ-
ten reply to a parliamentary ques-
tion, informed MK Virshubsky
that in the 11 months preceding
the invasion — July, 1981 - June,
1982 — eight Israelis were
wounded, two fatally, as a result
of terrorist attacks from acoss the
Lebanese border.
In that entire period, according
to Rabin's information, there
were only two Katyusha rocket
and artillery bombardments on
northern Galilee by Palestinian
terrorists, both in response to Is-
raeli air raids against Palestine
Liberation Organization targets
in Lebanon.
Meanwhile, an IDF patrol kil-
led two terrorists Monday night in
a clash near Jebel Barukh, an IDF
outpost in south Lebanon in the
process of being evacuated. There
were no Israeli casualties.
The two dead men wore flak
jackets and were carrying
Kalachnikof assaults rifles. Ter-
rorists fired rocket-propelled gre-
nades at IDF positions east of
Tyre Tuesday morning without
causing casualties.
In other news out of Lebanon,
Israeli military circles have wel-
comed the cooperation of Amal,
the main line militia of the Shiite
Moslems. It has set up roadblocks
around the key town of Nabatiya
to prevent the infiltration of
Palestinian terrorists. The IDF
withdrew from Nabatiya last
week.
The end of the war will bring
good news for reservists — all
able-bodied men and (unmarried)
women between ages 18-20 —
who were required to do military
service. It will also ease the bur-
den on the defense budget.
Deputy chief of Staff Gen. Dan
Shomron announced last week
that this year reserve officers will
be called up for 44-day shifts and
non-commissioned personnel for a
maximum of 37 days. Last year,
many reservists were on duty for
as long as 70 days. Those units
that have served in Lebanon will
be assigned "easier" training
areas this year, Gen. Shomron
said.
Each reservist on active duty
costs the army 18,000 shekels
(about $20) a day. By reducing the
number of days, the IDF will save
some 10 billion shekels ($11 mil-
lion), Shomron said.
(-/
Students Reject
Farrakhan Talk
San Francisco — Seniors at a
Berkeley, Calif. high school have
rejected a move to invite controv-
ersial Black Muslim leader Louis
Farrakhan to speak during their
June 18 commencement exer-
cises. Comedian Bill Cosby will be
asked to deliver the address in-
stead.(JTA) — Farrakhan, the
Jesse Jackson supporter who
touched off a wave of criticism last
summer when he made anti-
Semitic remarks during the
presidential campaign, was one of
five potential speakers nominated
by Berkeley High School seniors
last February. An "overwhelming
majority" of the school's 650
, seniors reportedly selected Cosby
in last week's vote, although indi-
vidual totals were not made pub-
lic.
/ _