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POMEROY 559-3344 Look/of-Id Ai/ hilheWAHT ADS- //NW ///////////////////////////////////////// ////////////////////////////////////////////?/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////)/////////////////////// 84 Friday, August 29, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Has USSR Really Decided To Better Ties With Israel? U S. officials were not very surprised by the Soviet Union's harsh denunciation of Israel in the immediate aftermath of the one-day round of for- mal Israeli-Soviet talks in Helsinki. The Americans said that the Soviet Union was well aware of Israel's plan to raise the matter of Soviet Jewry during those discussions. Israel had widely broadcast this intention in advance. U.S. experts believe that the strident Soviet reaction in public may be designed simply to allay the fears among the radical Arab states, especially Syria, that Moscow and Jerusalem would shortly restore diplomatic ties. And what is apparently of even greater= concern to some of these Arabs is the prospect of more Soviet Jews arriving in Israel. Beyond the need to re- assure the Arabs, U.S. offi- cials said, the Soviets were also outlining a tough open- ing position with Israel as part of their "politics of the marketplace." This is seen as a typical Soviet ploy in any round of negotiations. There is, though, a clear consensus among authorita- tive governmental specialists in Washington that the Krem- lin leadership has made a ma- jor decision to improve rela- tions with Israel. "They are slow to move," a State Department official said. "But even though they are cautious, they are mov- ing. The fact that they met with the Israelis in Helsinki before the eyes of the world was significant in and of itself." The Moscow correspondent of The Washington Post, Celestine Bohlen, wrote that "both the meeting and the fallout were part of the script — , with each side playing to its own constituency: Jeru- salem to its domestic audi- ence, Moscow to jittery Arab allies." The Reagan Administra- tion, for its part, has been on record for several years in supporting a resumption of diplomatic relations between Moscow and Jerusalem. In- deed, senior U.S. officials have repeatedly cited this as essential in demonstrating the Soviet Union's genuine commitment to the Arab- Israeli peace process. In addition, the State Department has urged the Soviets to curtail arms shipments to radical Arab states and to ease the plight of Soviet Jewry. This •would supposedly underline a new and more "constructive" Soviet policy. There have been regular ■ ' "regional" meetings between U.S. and Soviet specialists on the Middle East over the past two years: Most recently, Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs Richard Mur- phy met in Stockholm earlier this summer with his Soviet counterpart, Vladimir Polya- kov. Nothing new emerged from that session. A year earlier, they met in Geneva. Clearly, U.S. officials said, the Soviets are still very anx- ious to try to play a more cen- tral role in any revived Arab- Israeli diplomacy. For the Kremlin leadership, this is a matter of high prestige and statesmanship. Moscow is afraid of being left out of the scene. The U.S. is not necessarily opposed — provided that the Kremlin first moves decisive- ly on the matters of restoring relations with Israel, curbing lethal arms sales to Arab states and permitting greater emigration. U.S. officials have noted that Prime Minister Shimon Peres, during his United Na- tions General Assembly ad- dress last October, similarly signalled an Israeli readiness to accept a more highly-visi- ble Soviet role if some of those conditions were met. The Americans assume this Israeli position will remain in effect following the scheduled governmental "rotation" in October. There is a prevailing sense in Washington that the Soviets would indeed like to improve their relationship with Israel. But they are clearly uncomfortable as they grope around for some modest first steps in the process. Everyone recognizes that the Soviets had to extend a green light to Poland before it could establish low-level diplomatic "interest sec- tions" with Israel. Hungary, Bulgaria and other Eastern European regimes would need similar permission. Israel's United Nations Ambassador, Benjamin Netanyahu, was confident that the Soviets would even- tually restore relations with Israel. He told some 3,000 delegates at the Hadassah National Convention in Miami Beach on Aug. 19 that the process was "slow, but it is actually happening." He said that it was in the Krem- lin's leadership — "just as much as ours" — to establish normal relations. At the United Nations, Netanyahu has met informal- ly with Soviet officials. He recalled that the former Soviet Ambassador, Oleg Trayonovsky, once invited him to a meeting outside the