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Subscriptions: 1 year - $24 — 2 years - $45 — Out of State - $26 — Foreign - S38 CANDLELIGHTING AT 5:01 P.M. VOL. XC, NO. 20 Of Cardinal Concern • John Cardinal O'Connor's visit to the Middle East, which began as an effort to strengthen undestancling, veered toward a fiasco but managed to conclude on a more hopeful note. The Cardinal, who is Archbishop of New York, has been caught in the middle of a situation he did not create but one that underscores the Vatican's ambiguous relationship with Israel. Throughout his politically perilous journey, Cardinal O'Connor called attention to the plight of the Palestinians. Some of his statements, including his support of self-determination for the Palestinians, have gone further than American policy. Even more disturbing, though, is the Vatican's unwillingness to recognize Israel formally or view Jerusalem as its capital. Cardinal O'Connor says that policy will change only when Jerusalem is given some form of international status and steps are taken to solve the Palestinian problem. In truth, though, Jerusalem is the capital, and soul, of the Jewish State, a state that will not go away. And a resolution of the conflict will only come about when the Arab states — and the Vatican — accept that reality. Which Gorbachev? Glasnost seems to be the word of the day. Russian for "openness" or "candor,"glasnost is a keystone of Mikhail Gorbachev's alleged new direction for the Soviet Union. Anatoly Shcharansky's emigration to the West last Feburary, the recent release from internal exile of dissident Andrei Sakharov and the USSR's new emigration policy have all been touted as a breath of fresh air in the stale atmosphere of the Soviet state. But there has been wide dispute over the depths — and the motives — for the Gorbachevianglasnost. Newsweek for instance, has done a fine P.R. job for the Soviet leader with a cover story entitled "Opening A Closed Society." Economic efficiency, a streamlining of the cumbersome Russian bureaucracy and, especially, improved trade and arms agreements with the West are all cited as prodding 'Mr. Gorbachev toward glasnost. These matters have been answered by a man who should know — Natan Shcharansky (Anatoly's adopted new name). In last Sunday's New York Times, Shcharansky wrote that the release of such prominent dissidents as himself "are part of a carefully calibrated program of gestures" intended to convince the West that a new breeze is blowing through the Kremlin. The demise of repression is not Gorbachev's goal, says Shcharansky. Changing his society to preserve that repression is his aim. The release of Sakharov, for example, was timed to mask the death of fellow dissident Anatoly T. Machenko, who died of a hunger strike in Christopol prison about the same time. Shcharansky knows — as few men do — the workings of the Soviet government. We should heed his warnings that Gorbachev will take only "the minimum steps" necessary to appease Western human rights advocates. True, we should be pleased that tensions have eased somewhat for Soviet dissidents. But we should also understand the self-interest from which glasnost springs — and know that there may be a narrow, limited impulse behind what is being billed as a new climate in Russia. OP-ED Is There An Arab-Israel Axis On The Mideast Horizon? EMANUEL WINSTON I n the next several years do not be too surprised to see Israel approached by a group of Arab states seeking a military alliance. It will not be a miracle, but merely the expediency of survival which will cause one contingent of the Arab world to seek an alliance with Israel in their own self interest. From ancient times through to- day, nations or tribes formed tempor- ary alliances to hold off and defeat a more powerful enemy. Often the al- liance was based upon how many armed men each group could field against the common enemy. The number of men under arms is still im- portant, particularly since the sophis- tication of today's weapons is a force multiplier of fantastic proportions. One aircraft can devastate a city block of apartments in one pass, with only conventional bombs. Israel has demonstrated her abil- ity to fight on many frontssimultane- ously and win. This is a valuable com- modity when one seeks an ally. The Middle East is a constantly shifting spectrum of hostiles, alliances, broken treaties, and then new alliances. Yes- terday's bitter enemy is today's fight- ing partner against some other al- liance, very likely of former "friendly" nations. However, there has been a super war in the making for numerous years. The Middle East nations have been buying and absorbing staggering quantities of high tech weapons. Some say in public that they intend to drive Israel into the sea. For some it is merely a wish; for others it is a deadly pledge. In private, they speak not so Emanuel A. Winston of Highland Park, Ill. is an international trustee for the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University. much of Israel, but their fear of other Middle Eastern countries. The immediate players are Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Iraq, Iran, Libya and, of course, Israel. Af- ghanistan, Ethiopia, Somalia, Sudan, Morrocco, Tunisia, Yemen and South Yemen, Oman, Qatar, and the Arab Emirates are all interested parties on the fringes of the immediate area and of minimal contribution. The outside The Middle East is a constantly shifting spectrum of hostiles, alliances, broken treaties, and then new alliances. Yesterday's bitter enemy is today's fighting partner. interested parties are the United States, the Soviet Union, Europe, and Japan. Any of the confrontational states can, under certain conditions, create an alliance that can last for 30 days or even several years. Although the Arab states change alliances quickly and frequently, nevertheless, they do have some distinctive characteristics which can be called either moderate or radi- cal. Syria and Iraq can easily be called radical due to their leaders and the method by which they change gov- ernments — the bloody coup. Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Kuwait, Oman, the Arab Emirates can be called moderate, although each supports groups of Arab radicals and terrorists who wish to see the destruction of Israel. At the moment, in this constantly shifting picture of changing alliances, the so-called moderates fear Iran and their Islamic fundamentalism. Even Egypt fears the potential of civil war instigated by such radical groups as the Moslem Brotherhood. The radicalization of 50 million Egyptians through rising religious fanaticism L'\/