34 Friday, December 27, 1985 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Lew Silver SAVE 30-60% ON NEW AND OUT-OF-PAWN CARS FOR RENT NO MILEAGE CHARGE DIAMONDS & JEWELRY Lew Silver Diamond Broker 9 Mile Road at Greenfield Across from the Advance Building Confidential Loans On Jewelry 11=111111111 ■ 111r DIRECT INSURANCE BILLING DAY—WEEK—MONTH OPEN 7 DAYS-- Diana Silberstein 559-5323 645-5278 Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 How Many Famous Artists Can You Find? title: JACKSON SQUARE artist: MELANIE TAYLOR KENT size: 22 x 31 1/2 inches number of colors: 90 Plus price framed: $950.00 40% OFF CUSTOM FRAMING thru Dec. 31st C THE JOSEPH HUR GALLERY oseph (-lur GALLERY NEWS LOW RATES Orchard Mall Orchard Lake Rd. N. of Maple iBrowse Books invites you to Save 30% on Everything in the Store!! (excluding periodicals & gallery items) Wed., January 1st, 1986 from 12:00 noon - 5:00 p.m. only iBrowse Books 33086 Northwestern Hwy. (at Orchard Lake Rd.) 855-9153 Don't Miss This Great Savings Opportunity 855-0633 Life After Pollard: Shaky Israeli Regime BY HELEN DAVIS Special to The Jewish News In the very month that opi- nion polls show Shimon Peres to be the most popular prime minister in Israel's 37-year history, a political scandal has blown up in his face and now threatens to abruptly end a brilliant, often troubled, career. In a country where political crises have become routine, the revelation that Israel was run- ning an American Jew as a spy deep inside the United States defense establishment was a crisis of an altogether different magnitude. The United States is, after all, Israel's closest and most trusted ally. It already shares high-quality intelligence with Jerusalem and provides more aid — approximately US$3.5 billion ayear — for the Jewish state than for any other country. Moreover, no administration has been more openly suppor- tive of Israel than that of President Ronald Reagan. And the Washington-Jerusalem axis has been greatly enhanced since Mr. Peres stepped into the Prime Minister's Office 14 months ago. But the arrest of US Navy intelligence analyst Jonathan Pollard, 31, by FBI agents out- side the Israeli Embassy in Washington in late November has caused shock-waves of seismic proportions to shake this idyllic relationship. The full extent of the scandal has yet to be revealed, but if, as early reports indicate, Pollard's Israeli contact was indeed located in the Prime Minister's Office, Mr. Peres will find himself in a danger- ously exposed position. If he did not know about the operation — as he insists he did not — he will be open to charges of gross dereliction; if he did, he will be guilty of an act of supreme political in- discretion. And he can be in no doubt of the deep anger and dismay which the scandal has generated among the very peo- ple he looks to in Israel for political support. There is, in fact, a haunting familiarity in Mr. Peres's career with that of another political leader whose long and tortuous political life was dogged by suspicion and who was brought to his knees by scandal after he had reached the very pinnacle of power — Richard M. Nixon. Like the former US presi- dent, who resigned in the wake of the Watergate scandal, Shimon Peres had a brilliant start to his political life. While still in his twenties he was a close and trusted aide of Israel's first Prime Minister, Mr. David Ben-Gurion. In- deed, so great was the trust and so outstanding were the administrative abilities of the young Peres that Ben-Gurion appointed him, at the age of Shimon Peres Jonathan Pollard just 29, to be the top civil ser- vant in Israel's massive de- fence establishment. It was a post that offered Shimon Peres the opportunity to lay the foundations for Israel's high- tech industry. Few Israelis then doubted that Ben-Gurion's prodigy would himself one day occupy the Prime Minister's Office. In fact, though, the path was so long and so difficult that by the time Shimon Peres became prime minister in July last year his image had become that of the eternal loser. Beset by bitter intra-party rivalries and disputes, he only just managed to snatch the leadership of the Labour Party after the former prime minister (and now defence minister), Mr. Yitzhak Rabin, was dis- graced in a financial scandal in 1977. At the time, Mr. Rabin's aides reportedly swore that they detected the hand of Shimon Peres in the disclosure of the scandal — that Mr. Rabin's wife was illegally operating a foreign bank ac- count in the United States. Mr. Peres, perhaps not unex- pectedly, lost the election that followed Mr. Rabin's downfall, but there was no such excuse for losing the subsequent 1981 election to Mr. Menachem Begin. The seven years of Likud rule that followed, first under