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July 25, 1986 - Image 32

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1986-07-25

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

OPINION

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Mideast And Peace
Remain At Status Quo

I Stuart Germansky I

Jacqueline Holzman Fincher

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(2 Miles West of Telegraph
1 Mile East of Middlebelt

Open Mon. & Thurs till 9

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MARTIN KROHNER

AGGRESSIVE

RESPECTED

Assistant Prosecuting Attorney

• Co-founder of M.AD.D. (Mothers Against
Drunk Driving) in Michigan

• Long-time member of the legal
community

• Trial experience in District Court,
Recorders Court and Circuit Court.

• Founder and First President Oakland
County Chapter of M.A.D.D.

• Faculty member of Prosecuting
Attorneys Association of Michigan

• Lecturer. Rape Crisis Center

• Excellent reputation amongst both
bench and bar
• Fair and just

EXPERIENCED
, • Over 13 years experience as an

• Family Law Attorney - Oakland. County
Legal Aid

• Court Clerk to-Probate Judge Eugene
Arthur Moore, Oakland County

• Proposed Alternate Detention Facility
(Jail for Drunks) Self-supporting system
of separating offenders from hardened
criminals



• Affiliations:

• Criminal Law Section -
State Bar of Michigan

• Michigan State University, B.A.

• U of D Law School - J.D.

• Juvenile Problems Committee -
Oakland County Bar Association

• Spouse Abuse Committee -
Family Law Section,
State Bar of Michigan

Martin Krohner is in your corner. When
you cast your vote make it Martin
Krohner . . . for Judge.

KROHNER

...IN YOUR CORNER

MARTIN KROHNER FOR OAKLAND COUNTY CIRCUIT JUDGE

NON-PARTISAN

Paid for .by Citizens Supporting Martin Krohner, 29966 Mayfair, Farmington Hills, MI 48018

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32 Friday, July 25, 1986

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

REV. FRANKLIN H. LITTELL

Special to The Jewish News

erusalem — Since the
Camp David Accord, Is-
rael has not had peace
with the surrounding Arab
League nations, but there has
been an armistace of sorts.
Egypt, which was to have
suupplied the manpower for the
next war against the "Zionist
entity ,"withdrew from bellige-
rency. Lebanon was pacified, but
Israel could not alone do the
policing; the advantage was let
slip, and most of the Lebanese
jungle is now ruled by Syria (a
Russian satrapy).
In the confusion, and appar-
ently in concord with Egypt,
King Hussein of Jordan released
hints that his regime might be
willing to represent the Arab
population of Samaria and Judea
in negotiations with Israel. These
areas have been under • Israel
military government for nearly
20 years. They were acquired in
Israel's victory over the aggres-
sors in the third war of defense.
Their disposition has awaited
some overtures from the other de-
feated powers, to indicate that
they were willing to cancel their
declarations of war against Is-
rael, recognize Israel's right to
exist as a state, and move beyond
a cease fire toward armistace and
peace.
Hussein's modest efforts have
been cancelled, however, by vio-
lent explosions of Arab fratricidal
strife in Egypt and Nablus.
Basic to the move toward peace
has been to bring to the fore Arab
representatives in the territories
who could speak for the interests
of the common people. That
meant finding spokesmen for
other than PLO ideology and ter-
rorism. And that has been a dif-
ficult task, for over the years
such moderates have regularly
been assassinated by the "rejec-
tionist" terrorist elements. To the
PLO and its sponsors, the Arabs
in war refugee camps and in the
territories under Israel military
government have been pawns in
the mounting of a final crusade to
destroy Israel once and for all.
Their youngsters have been re-
cruited for terrorist bands and
their older leaders have been, if
they sought first the economic
and political well-being of the
common people, intimidated or
murdered.
The PLO, recognized as a "gov-
ernment in exile" by all Arab
League regimes, has an economic
power of some $6 billion in in-
vested funds plus approximately
$100 million in annual subven-
tions from Saudi Arabia and
others dubbed "moderate" by the
appeasement circles in Washing-
ton and Western Europe. King
Hussein, in his little fiefdom
without natural resources, is also
dependent upon Saudi Arabia for
heavy infusions of economic aid.
His modest effort to go it alone in
diplomatic initiatives has failed.
. Zaafer al-Masri, the popular

Rev. Littell is founder of the Anne
Frank Institute of Philadelphia.

mayor of Nablus who was willing
to talk with Israel authorities,
has been assassinated. Two other
public leaders, who had initially'
agreed to stand as popular repre-
sentatives (to be mayors in
Ramallah and Al-Bireh), have
been frightened into withdraw-
ing from candidacy. The PLO,
which hypocritically tried to turn
al-Masri's funeral procession into
a pro-PLO political demonstra-
tion, has apparently succeeded
again in suppressing any
genuinely-representative voice
for Arabs in the occupied ter-
ritories.
President Mubarak of Egypt,

Hussein's modest
efforts have been
cancelled by violent
explosions of Arab
fratricidal strife.

who has by and -large observed
the terms of the Camp David ar-
mistace, has also had to deal with
a violent explosion against his
regime. Egypt's economic situa-
tion is precarious, with a sharp
decline in tourism, a catastrophic
fall in oil-export prices, a reduced
number of oil tankers using the
Suez Canal and paying tolls, and
a sharp rise in unemployment
(augmented by the dismissal of
Egyptians working outside the
country in the oil states of the
Persian Gulf). The political situa-
tion is precarious, due to the
spreading underground activity
of the terrorist Muslim Brother-
hood and the continuing mili-
tancy of the (secularist) PLO —
whose chief he offered haven
some months ago.
The immediate occasion of in-
stability within Egypt was a re-
volt of substantial sections of the
quasi-military police forces.
Mubarak was able to count upon
the loyalty of his army, but his
regime has been enough shaken
to forestall any new initiatives
toward peace in the coming
months.
The PLO, which might have
been finiShed off in Lebanon as a
political force, but for the hesita-
tion and indecisiveness of the
Western governments (including
the Reagan Administration), has
again risen like a phoenix from
the ashes. The appeasers will
again proclaim this to be evi-
dence of the PLO's popularity.
Students of terrorism and ter-
rorist movements will recognize
it as another evidence of the con-
tinuing cost of failing to crush
terrorism and give the strongest
support and protection to
genuinely representative leader-
ship.

Weizmann Hosts
Science Pupils

Israel — Seventy-nine top sci-
ence students from 18 countries
are participating in the Weiz-
mann Institute's 18th annual Dr.
Bessie F. Lawrence International
Summer Science Institute.

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