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Thursday till 8. closed Sunday BUY DIRECT FROM THE MANUFACTURER AND SAVE 10 Friday, September 5, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS NEWS U.S., Israel Hope Hussein Joins Talks Jerusalem (JTA) — Both the United States and Israel appear to be trying to per- suade Jordan's King Hussein to join an international framework for Mideast peace negotiations. This seemed ap- parent last Monday as Prime Minister Shimon Peres an- nounced that U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Richard Murphy would shuttle be- tween Israel, Egypt and Jor- dan in preparation for the summit meeting between Peres and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, tentatively scheduled for next week. Meanwhile, Minister-with- out-Portfolio Ezer Weizman began discreet high-level talks in Europe as Peres' en- voy, meeting in Bonn with West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl. The summit will be held if Israeli and Egyptian nego- tiators agree on a panel of three international arbitra- tors to join with the one Egyptian and one Israeli legal expert to adjudicate the Taba border dispute. 'Paba is 25 acres of Sinai beachfront which both Israel and Egypt claim under the two nations' 1979 peace trea- ty. Recently, the two govern- ments formally approved the compromise, or terms of reference, of the arbitrations, which had been worked out through months of nego- tiations. Before the summit, and provided the Taba talks have been wound up, Egypt is to send an Ambassador to Aviv, thereby restoring the diplomatic relationship to what it was before September . 1982, when Cairo recalled its Ambassador in the wake of the Beirut refugee camps massacre. Pere told the Knesset For- eign Affairs and Defense Committee that the summit agenda would deal with Tate, normalization of bilateral ties, and the broader peace pro- cess, in that order. Deputy Prime Minister and Likud leader Yitzhak Shamir repeatedly has urged that the summit, if held, dwell on bilateral relations rather than on the broader (i.e. Palesti- nian) peace issues. Peres made it clear, how- ever, that he sought tangible progress on the broader peace process: He is hoping to es- tablish a procedural frame- work for peace negotiations, or at very least a joint declaration of goals and prin- ciples. Peres and the Labor Alignment have enunciated publicly their readiness to ac- cept "international accom- paniment" for Mideast peace negotiations. This implies an international conference, though Peres has been at pains to insist that nuts-and- bolts negotiations would take place between Israel and each of the Arab parties separate- ly and privately. Peres has said that the Soviets, too, would be wel- come to participate in such a framework, provided they first restore diplomatic rela- tions with Israel. Much, however, will depend on the positions of Jordan's King Hussein, and it is within that context that observers are studying the upcoming Murphy mission and Weiz- man's hitherto unannounced trip to Europe. Hussein is due in London for a private visit and medical treatment. While there is virtually no prospect of Jordanian par- ticipation at the Israeli- Egyptian summit, any con- crete progress achieved by Peres and Mubarak would heavily depend on Jordan's vicarious cooperation. Hence, according to well- place observers, Mubarak's through coordination with Jordan in advance of the sum- mit: The President and the King met in Amman Jordan, and Jordanian Premier Zaid Rifai was in Cairo for further talks. Weizman's talks in Europe, even if he does not meet secretly with Hussein, are seen as part of Peres' effort to persuade the neighboring moderate King to participate in the new diplomatic initiative. France Wants UNIFIL Safety Guarantees Paris (JTA) — Prime Min- ister Jacques Chirac last week issued a new warning that France will pull its soldiers out of the United Na- tions Interim Force in Leb- anon (UNIFIL) unless new guarantees for their safety are given by the United Na- tions. Chirac, speaking to a youth group of his conservative Rally for the Republic (RPR) Party, urged the UN to "re- define the objective of its forces in the Middle East. Should this not be done, it would be absurd to maintain troops there under current conditions, whatever their na- tionality, particularly those from France." The Prime Minister' com- ments echoed a similar state- ment by Foreign Minister Jean-Bernard Raimond. Government concern over the participation of more than 1,000 French troops in UNIFIL stem from attacks on their positions by Shiite militia that have left some two dozen French soldiers in- jured in recent weeks. ,