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May 10, 1985 - Image 24

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1985-05-10

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

24

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Friday, May 10, 1985

THE WRITE WORD

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NEWS

owlsen

Border Security Is Key
Concern In Withdrawal

Tel Aviv (JTA) — The Israel
Defense Force (IDF) engineering
corps is rushing through con-
struction of a new security fence
along the northern border, in
preparation for the final pullback
within a month of all IDF forces
from the security zone in Lebanon
to the old international border.
The new defense line consists of
barbed wire, electrified fences,
watchtowers with powerful lights
and a wide ditch, on the Lebanon
side of the border, to prevent the
entry of suicide bombers driving
explosive-laden vehicles.
In a related development, three
Lebanese ships called at Haifa
port last week, • to take off some
700 Christian refugees who had
fled into Israel and the security
belt from attacking Shiite Mos-
lem and other militias, Druze and
Palestinians.
The small ferry boats took the
refugees to Beirut, thus avoiding
the dangerous roads inside Leba-
non along which various militia
groups have established road
blocks.
Meanwhile, Defense Minister
Yitzhak Rabin said last Tuesday
that Palestinian terrorists will
almost certainly try to infiltrate
through south Lebanon toward
the Israeli border and for that rea-
son the security belt now held by
the IDF will be vital to the defense
of Israel after the IDF withdraws
at the beginning of June.
Rabin, addressing the Knes-

set's foreign affairs and security
committee said that Palestine
Liberation Organization chief
Yassir Arafat was directly in-
volved in the planning and execu-
tion of terrorist attacks against
the IDF and against Israel.
He said the PLO terrorists, who
were driven out of south Lebanon
by the IDF in June, 1982, will re-
turn under cover of the current
strife between rival religious and
ethnic groups. The security belt is
therefore of major importance, ac-
cording to Rabin. When the IDF
departs, the south Lebanon Army
(SLA) will bear the main burden
of responsibility for security in
the region, he said.
An IDF patrol killed four Shiite
Amal movement guerrillas and
wounded and captured another
last week. The patrol came upon
the gang after midnight last
Tuesday, near Rehan village
northeast of Nabatiya and north
of Marjayoun, just inside the bor-
der of the security zone.
In a search of the area after a
clash the bodies of four men were
found, together with the fifth
wounded man. The gang was on
its way to plant what was de-
scribed as a "very large" explosive
charge.
The men were said to have been
mambers of the Shiite Amal
militia, dressed in Lebanon army
uniforms. They had come from Be-
irut and had been briefed on their
mission in Sidon.

U.S. Still Sees '242'
As Key To Peace Talks

Washington (JTA) — The State
Department stressed that it still
believes negotiations between Is-
rael and the Arab countries
should be based on an interpreta-
tion of United Nations Security
Council Resolution 242, which
provides that there be an "ex-
change of territory" between Is-
rael and her Arab neighors for
peace.
"We believe that it applies to all
fronts and provides a basis of
negotiations on the principle of
the exchange of territory for full
peace," Department deputy
spokesman Edward Djerejian said
of the UN resolution.
He noted that President Re-
agan, in his Sept. 1, 1982 peace
initiative, stressed that "the ex-
tent to which Israel can give up
territory is heavily affected by the
extent of peace and normalization
and security arrangements of-
fered."
Djerejian was commenting on
an interview in the Washington
Post with King Hussein ofJordan,
in which Hussein asserted that
the Palestine- Liberation Organ-
ization had met the United States
demand that it accept Resolution
242.
The agreement signed by Hus-
sein and PLO leader Yassir
Arafat on Feb. 11 for Jordanian-
Palestinian cooperation accepts
all UN resolutions dealing with
the Mideast, but the United
States says this does not meet its

requirement for explicit recogni-
tion of 242 as well as Resolution
338 and a statement recognizing
Israel's right to exist.

King Hussein, in the interview,
called on the United States to
come up with new ideas to move
the peace process ahead. Djerejian
said that the U.S. is "actively in-
volved" in the Mideast peace
process. He pointed to the recent
"exploratory" trip to the area by
Richard Murphy, Assistant Sec-
retary of State for near Eastern
and south Asian Affairs, and said
that Secretary of State George
Shultz will be discussing the is-
sues with King Hussein, Egyp-
tian president Hosni Mubarak
and Israeli leaders when he visits
the area soon.
Meanwhile, House Majority
Leader Jim Wright (D-Tex.) told
an" Arab-American lobby group
last week that there should be
mutual and simultaneous recog-
nition between Israel and "the
Palestinians."
Noting that Palestinians have
refused to recognize Israel's right
to exist, Rep. Wright said at a
luncheon address to the National
Association of Arab-Americans
that "at the same time, the Is-
raelis say that the Palestine Lib-
eration Organization is commit-
ted to their destruction and re-
fuses to recognize their right to
exist as a nation behind peaceful
borders."

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