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40 Friday, January 24, 1986 - THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
.
,
•
January's
Most Colorful
Ida and David Iwrey
ti
acknowledge with thanks the
donations to charity and
good wishes extended to
them by relatives and
friends on the occasion
of their 60th wedding
anniversary.
1
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ii
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-
V
• NEWS
Shultz
Continued from preceding page
.
Without Portfolio Moshe
Arens had been in Washington
when the Pollard incident in-
itially erupted. Arens, a former
Defense Minister and Ambas-
sador to the United States,
had met with Shultz that very
first day. Together, they set in
motion the events which even-
tually led to, Israel's diplo-
matically unprecedented deci-
sion to allow a high-level
delegation from the State
Department, the Justice
Department, the Federal
Bureau of Investigation and
the U.S. Attorney's Office in
Washington to visit Israel.
There, they met with the key
Israeli intelligence operatives
implicated in the affair. They
also received all of the stolen
documents from Israel.
Shultz, moreover, had been
in close personal contact with
Prime Minister Shimon Peres
throughout that ordeal. "We
were very lucky that he
[Shultz] was in charge," one
Israeli official said. "It could
have turned out much worse
for us."
The Secretary has •estab-
lished a very good personal
relationship with Arens, Peres,
Defense Minister Yitzhak
Rabin, Deputy Prime Minister
and Foreign Minister Yitzhak
Shamir and other Israeli
leaders. He likes them and
they like him. These personal
ties have created a new climate
of trust between Washington
and Jerusalem. Indeed, U.S.
and Israeli officials insist that
• American-Israeli relations are
today still better than ever
before, despite Pollard.
Without Shultz in the equa-
tion, however, the situation
could very easily suffer.
It is somewhat ironic that
the rightwing conservatives
should complain so actively
about Shultz since he has prob-
ably' been the most forceful ad-
vocate within the Administra-
tion in getting tough with ter-'
• rorism against the United
States.
Shultz — much more than
Defense Secretary Caspar
Weinberger, Central Intel-
ligence Agency Director
William Casey, and even Presi-
dent Reagan himself — has
repeatedly called for a firm
U.S. response in dealing with
the terrorists and their state
sponsors, including the use of
military measures. In the pro-
cess, he has sounded very
much like Israeli leaders de-
fending their own actions
against Arab terrorists.
"We must be prepared to
-commit our political, economic
and, if, necessary, military
power when the threat iñtill
manageable and when its pru-
dent use can prevent the threat
from growing," Shultz said on
Jan.- 15.
"It is absurd to argue that
international law prohibits us
from capturing terrorists in in-
•
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106
10-9
12 5
George Shultz
ternational waters or airspace,,
•from attacking them on the
soil of other nations, even for
the purpose of rescuing
hostages, or from using force
against states that support,
train and harbor terrorists or
guerrillas," he continued.
"International law requires no
such result. A nation attacked
by terrorists is permitted to
use force to prevent or preempt
future attacks, to seize ter-
rorists or to rescue its citizens
when no other means is avail-
able.
"The law requires that such
actions be necessary and pro-
portionate., but this nation has
consistently affirmed the right •
of states to use force in exer-
cise of their right of individual ,
or collective self-defense."
Addressing a Pentagon con-
ference on low-intensity war-
fare, the Secretary added,
"There is substantial legal
authority 'for the view that a
state which supports terrorists
or its subversive attacks
against another state or which
Supports or encourages ter-
rorist planning and other ac-
tivities within its own territory
is responsible for such attacks.
Such conduct can amount to
an ongoing armed aggression
against the other state under
international law."
This same argument, of
course, has often been used by
Israeli officials in defending
their own preemptive or retal-
iatory strikes against terrorist
targets in Lebanon and else-
where in the region. This was
Israel's basic argument of
"legitimate self-defense" after •
its raid late last year against
PLO headquarters in Tunisia.
"Think about the practical
and strategic implications of
allowing a state to evade
responsibility for the acts of its
terrorist surrogates," Shultz
said. "A nation like Qadaffi's
Libya would acquire immunity
while carrying on the secret or
ambiguous war'fare which
poses such a threat today to
the security and wellbeing of
free nations,"
Shultz has not always come
down on Israel's side. Like
virtually everyone else in. the
Reagan Administration, he is
very supportive of the propos-
ed sale of advanced anti-
•