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King Hassan and Premier Peres: Talking without third
parties.
Arabs Slowly Extend
Recognition To Israel
VICTOR M. BIENSTOCK
Special to The Jewish News
T
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Our wish for a
year filled with
happiness, health
and prosperity
22
Friday, October 10, 1986
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
r.
he assumption that
time is on the side of
the Arabs in their
conflict with the State of Is-
rael is one of the holiest and
most often repeated axioms
tossed around by self-
proclaimed Middle East ex-
perts. Time itself is proving
that dictum to be incorrect.
Demonstrably revealed as
equally fallacious is the as-
sumption that the path to
peace requires Israel's cessa-
tion of territory in exchange
for Arab recognition of its
right to exist - the outdated
premise on which the Ameri-
can peace-making interces-
sion is based.
The Arab states — with
the possible exception of
Syria — have not gotten
stronger in relation to Israel
over the years despite the
massive supply of arms they
True, the
Soviet Union has supplied
Syria with new weapons that
would permit it to inflict
serious damage on Israel's
towns but, overall, Syria is
not a match for Israel in con-
flict and" dictator Hafez al-
have received.
Assad is shrewd enough to
recognize that fact.
Of the other rejectionist
states, Iraq is being bled to
death in the murderous, un-
ending war which its ruler,
Saddam Hussein launched
against Iran, and the princi-
pal threat Libya can mount is
terrorist assaults.
None of the Arab regimes
has become stronger politi-
cally; all worry over the
spread of religious fundamen-
talism which threatens their
survival. King Hussein of
Jordan sees his country be-
coming • overwhelmingly
Palestinian in population and
his grip on the throne ever
more tenuous.
The House of Saud, obses-
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