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September 26, 1986 - Image 24

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1986-09-26

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

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NEWS

Peres Meets With
Soviet Diplomat

United Nations (JTA) —
Prime Minister Shimon Peres
said after a meeting with
Soviet Foreign Minister
Eduard Shevardnadze here
last Monday that they had
discussed "steps to arrive at
full normalization" of rela-
tions between Israel and the
Soviet Union. He called their
talk "an opening of the
issues."
Peres said at the briefing
for Israeli correspondents
that he and the Foreign Min-
ister had discussed three sub-
jects: relations between their
countries, Soviet Jewry and
the chances of an interna-
tional conference for Middle
East peace. He said both had
promised to "think about"
what the other said and
agreed to continue negotia-
tions but nothing definite was
arranged.
Peres said he told Shevard-
nadze that Jewish history
will be richer "if we find a
solution to the problem of
Soviet Jewry" and Commun-
ist history would not be the
poorer for it.
Their meeting, in the South
Lounge at UN headquarters
lasted an hour and 20
minutes. It had not been ex-
pected to run longer than a
half hour. Present with Peres
was his chief advisor, Nimrod
Novick. Shevardnadze had
only a translator with him.
He spoke in Russian and
Peres in English.
Peres said he found the
Soviet diplomat to be "open,
a thinking man, not dogmat-
ic" and also humorous. Their
discussion, he said, "sym-
bolized the search for steps

toward normalization (of rela-
tions) between Israel and the
Soviet Union." However, he
stressed, all the problems be-
tween the two countries can-
not be resolved in the course
of 80 minutes. "But we did
begin a dialogue," he said.
Peres characterized the talk
as informal and said the fact
it was held meant an opening
up of relations. Israel has had
no diplomatic ties with the
USSR since Moscow broke
relations during the 1967 Six
Day War. Peres met briefly
with Shevardnadze at a
diplomatic reception at the
UN last year. In 1984, Israeli
Foreign Minister Yitzhak
Shamir met at the UN with
'then Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko.
The Peres-Shevardnadze
meeting was not on the agen-
da of Peres' current visit to
the U.S. and caused him to
postpone his return to Israel
by one day. According to
some sources here it was ar-
ranged by the Israeli Am-
bassador to the U.S., • Meir
Rosenne.
Peres spoke briefly to
reporters as he left the
meeting. He told them it was
a discussion of what steps
had to be taken to normalize
Israel-soviet relations.
Shevardnadze, who left the
meeting separately, was
quoted as saying his talk with
Peres was "very serious" and
included such matters as
bilateral relations, questions
related to the Middle East
and some of the problems in-
volved in an international
conference on the Middle
East.

Urge Summit Spot
For Soviet Jews

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Friday, September 26, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

DR. S.M. TEPPER

Washington (JTA) — The
organized Jewish community
launched a national campaign
last week to ensure that the
issue of Soviet Jewry will be
on the agenda if and when
President Reagan and Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev
hold a second summit.
At the same time, it was an-
nounced from the steps of the
Capitol that one million
signatures will be sought for
a petition to Reagan urging
that he "continue to insist
that human rights remain a
key issue of East-West rela-
tions."
The majority leaders of
both Houses, Sen. Robert
Dole (R.Kans.) and Rep. Jim
Wright (D. lex.), were among
the participants in the
Capitol ceremony.
A majority of the Senate
and House have already
signed the petitions which
was circulated by Sens. Frank

Lautenberg (D.NJ) and John
Heinz (R.Pa.) and Reps. Ben-
jamin Gilman (R.NY) and
Lawrence Smith (D.Fla.).
Morris Abram, chairman of
the National Conference on
Soviet Jewry, said at a press
conference at the Capitol,
that the "Campaign to Sum-
mit II" was being launched
just days prior to the meeting
between Shultz and Soviet
Foreign Minister Eduard
Shevardnadze at which the
proposed summit is expected
to be discussed.
Abram said the campaign,
whose cochairpersons are
Martin Stein, national chair-
man of the United Jewish Ap-
peal, and Shoshana Cardin,
president of the Council of
Jewish Federations, will try
to "mobilize the sentiments
of the American people
behind a human rights cam-
paign" aimed at allowing
Jews to emigrate from the
Soviet Union.

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