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POST® Grape- Nuts'''. cereal, Grape-Nuts ® Flakes, Natural Bran Flakes and Natural Raisin Bran give you all the goodness nature intended. No artificial 66 Friday, February 13, 1987 colors, artificial flavors or preservatives are ever added. All four cereals are fortified with at least eight essential vitamins and they're absolutely Kosher. So look for POST® the natural choice. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS CAPITOL REPORT WOLF BLITZER Shamir May Hit Tough Crossfire On U.S. Visit rime Minister Yitzhak Shamir is likely to face two different lines of questioning when he visits Washington from February 16 to 20. From the news media and Members of Congress, he will face a tough grilling about Israel's controversial involve- ment in the Iran arms sales and the alleged diversion of funds to the Contra rebels in Nicaragua. From the Reagan Admini- stration, he will be asked about the Arab-Israeli "peace process — specifically, what Israel might be able to do to get it off "the ground. Administration officials, Israeli diplomats and other informed sources in Washing- ton agree that Shamir is like- ly to do better during his private sessions with Presi- dent Ronald Reagan, Vice President George Bush, Secretary of State George Shultz and other top policy- makers than during his en- counters with the rough Washington press corps. Shamir will almost certain- ly stick to the public denials issued by the Israeli govern- ment in recent weeks — de- nials that Israel promoted the arms sales to Iran or knew anything about the diversion of profits to the Contras. In addition, the Prime Minister can be expected to restate the Israeli position that Israel does not "directly" support the Contras. But in the face of the Sen- ate Intelligence Committee report on the Iran "arms! Contra-funding affair, Shamir will have his work cut out for him. He will "be pressed to explain what counterter- rorism adviser Amhara Nir knew and when "did he know it. Colonel Oliver North, the dismissed National Security Council "staffer, has charged that the entire idea was Nir's. But his reception at the White House and the State Department is expected to be cordialr. President Reagan and his aides have no great desire to get into any argu- ments with Israel right now. Indeed, they "need Israel's cooperation in several areas, including their effort to try to "revive the stalled peace process. The Americans have been hoping that Egyptian Presi- dent Hosni Mubarak would follow Shamir to Washington, but that now seems uncertain at best. Jordan's King Hus- sein, according to one scenario, was supposed to then follow "Mubarak. The stream of Arab and Israeli visitors to Washington would at least "create the impres- p sion of movement. But no one knows whether they will come. The whole purpose of Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs Richard Mur- phy's recent swing through the Middle East was to help lay the groundwork for such "movement" in order to get a fresh dialogue going. But the moderate Arabs are some- what reluctant to get in- volved, still burning from the revelations of U.S. arms going to Iran in close cooperation with Israel. While Reagan and Shultz haven't totally given up, both have too many other "prob- lems on their minds right now to focus much of their atten- tion on a "peace process whose prospects for success are remote, at best. Shamir will be arriving in the United States while the country remains obsessed with the Iran/Contra affair and the latest wave of ter- rorism and hostage-taking in Lebanon. The spotlight again is on international terrorism and what the United States can do to combat it. One thing that could mar the Shamir visit is the Jonathan Jay Pollard spy scandal. Pollard's long- delayed sentencing is now set for March 4, long after Shamir's return home. But some 10 days to two weeks before that sentencing, Pol- lard's lawyers are scheduled to release his pre-sentencing memorandum to the Judge. Pollard's document will argue his side of the story. It can be expected to generate consid- erable news media attention, perhaps right around the time of Shamir's stay in Washington. And this could prove to be rather embarrass- ing for him and for Israel. Another potentially awk- ward subject for Shamir will be South Africa. Israel's rela- tionship with the Apartheid regime is coming under closer scrutiny. Since the enactment of U.S. economic sanctions against South Africa, the State Department has been preparing a study on those countries still engaged in a military relationship with Pretoria. A final report is due out in early April. If it details an extensive Israeli military connection in violation of the United Nations-imposed em- bargo on military transfers. In addition to Washington, the Prime Minister will also visit New York and Los Angeles, attending several meetings with a cross section of the American Jewish and non-Jewish communities.