62
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Friday, March 7, 1986
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U.S. And Terrorism:
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it II IV WAWA
U.S. frustrations in dealing
with international terrorism
were mirrored in audience reac-
tions in Detroit last week,'when
State Department envoy Edward
Marks was met with hostile
questions.
• A former Detroiter and Uni-
versity of Michigan graduate,
Marks bristled on Monday at
the Einstein Luncheon Forum
sponsored by the Zionist Organ-
ization of America - Detroit Dis-
trict. He had a heated exchange
with audience member Harry
Weinsaft when Weinsaft
suggested that the State De-
partment had several desks that
were anti-Semitic.
The next questioner, Dr. Joel
Dryer, suggested that Marks
had violated his training as a
hostage negotiator by "losing his
cool" with Weinsaft Marks re-
plied that deliberately losing
one's "cool" was a negotiating
tactic.
The exchange enlivened a
textbook-like lecture on ter-
rorism, in which Marks
suggested that increasingly
brutal actions are on the ter-
rorist agenda.
A former director of the State
Department's Office for Combat-
ting Terrorism and Emergency
•Planning, Marks said interna-
tional terrorists have increased
their ties to international drug
traffic and state support for ter-
rorism in the last three-four
years. The result has been, more
funding for terror groups and
"an increasing lethiality" in ter-
. ror actions.
"There will be no more Italian
`kneecapping,'" Marks said.
"Now we have bombs at air-
ports. The terrorists have upped
the ante in blood in order to get
more attention."
Marks defended U.S. policies
on combatting terrorism and
reminded his audience, "We are
not dealing with a single prob-
lem amenable to an easy solu-
tion." Listing the Irish Republi-
can Army, Basque separatists in
Europe and the Hesballah group
in Lebanon as examples, he
warned, "You can't throw money
at these problems and have
them end in three weeks. This
terrorism) is something we are
going to have to learn to live
with. We are going to have good
days and bad- days — successes
and failures."
Western democracy, and the
United States as its leader, is
the target of terrorism, Marks
said.
"The. United -States limits its
response to that which is appro-
priate to the threat," he said.
America has contingency plans
intelligence units, bureaucrats,
agreements with other countries
"which have led to some success,
but it is slow and marginal."
The Marks-Weinsaft exchange
came during Weinsaft's question
about the State Department's
attitude towards Israel's solu-
tion to terrorism. Following the
exchange over anti-Semitism,
Marks said Israel faces "a fun-
damental threat to the contin-
ued existence of its society. The
United States faces a serious
problem, but it is not a funda-
mental threat.We react differ-
ently."
The United States, he said, is
limited by law and practicality
in its use of force. Using the
capture of the Achille Laura
hijackers as an example, he
pointed out that if the govern-
ment of Egypt had fallen in the
aftermath' of the capture of the
hijackers, then the capture
would "not have been worth it"
to the United States.
Responding to a ' question
about Saudi Arabia's bankrol-
ling the Palestine Liberation
Organization, Marks explained
the Saudis' "moderate" status:
Countries are our friends to the
extent that they are willing to
work with us. The Saudis are a
major source of PLO funds, but
not the only ones. But they also
play a major role in the world
economy."
Dr. Louis Panush asked why
the State Department does not
extradite Yassir Arafat in the
same way it has sought extradi-
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