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34

FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1987

Continued from preceding page

have the "obligation" to get
into this debate. He said if
American Jews would bom-
bard Congress with opposi-
tion to Israel's policies in the
West Bank, as Hertzberg urg-
ed, it would undermine sup-
port for the $3 billion annual
aid Israel receives from the
United States.
Rosenberg, former editor of
the Near East Report,
published by the American
Israel Public Affairs Commit-
tee, said neither AIPAC nor
most other Jewish organiza-
tions take stands on the issue
of the administered ter-
ritories or other political
issues debated in Israel.
He said their main concern
is to ensure continued sup-
port for U.S. aid to Israel and
a strong U.S.-Israel
relationship.
Peri gave a brief outline of
the Israeli view of this issue.
He said the founding genera-
tion of Israelis believed "the
only place for all Jews was in
Israel." Jews who did not
make aliyah should support
Israel economically and
politically "and must not
disagree with Israel," he said.
Their Israeli-born children
held the Diaspora in con-
tempt and also agreed that
Jews outside Israel had "a
secondary role," Peri said.
But, he added, the next
generation, now in their 30s
and 40s, have come to realize
that Israel is not always right
and that Jews both inside and
outside Israel "have a right to
criticize and dissent."
He said that while Israel is
the center of Jewish life and
only through the exercise of
political sovereignty can Jews
live a full Jewish life, other
Jewish communities are
"legitimate." "American
Jewry is not heading toward
annihilation by anti-
Semitism or by assimilation,"
he added.

U.S. Warms
Syria Ties

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Washington (JTA) — The
State Department confirmed
June 26 that President
Reagan has sent a letter to
Syrian President Hafez Assad
in an apparent effort- to im-
prove relations between the
two countries.
"Syria is an important
country in the region and it
has an important role to play
in any Middle East peace set-
tlement," State Department
spokesman Charles Redman
said.
Relations between the two
countries weakened after the
Syrians were linked with the
attempted bombing of an -El

Al jet in London in April
1986. The Administration
withdrew its ambassador to
Syria, Thomas Eagleton, last
October in protest. Redman
said there were no plans to
send Eagleton back.
Redman denied assertions
that the U.S. was hoping to
use Syrian influence to free
journalist Charles Glass who
was taken hostage last week
in Lebanon.

Crockett Hits
PLO Closure

Washington, D.C.
Rep.
George W. Crockett, Jr. (D-
Mich.) along with eight other
congressmen, has circulated a
letter in the U.S. House of
Representatives, opposing
legislation to close the offices
of the Palestine Liberation
Organization in the United
States.
In the letter, Crockett
argued that a bill proposed by
Rep. Jack Kemp (R.-N.Y.)
would hinder First Amend-.
meat rights to free speech.
Outlawing the PLO "without
benefit of trial or opportuni-
ty to defend," the letter con-
tinues, is "reminiscent of
Hitler's Germany." •
Crockett charges that the
proposed legislation
"threatens to derail recent
moves towards a peaceful
solution of the Middle East
conflict."
Cosigners include Reps.
John Conyers, David Bonior,
Mery Dymally, Augustus
Hawkins, Charles Hayes, Gus
Savage, Nick Joe Rahall and
Harold Ford.

I NEWS I

Terrorist
Frogmen Make
Fatal Mistake

Tel Aviv (JTA) — Two ter-
rorist frogmen on a hostage-
taking mission to Israel ap-
parently misjudged their posi-
tion and came ashore in
Lebanon where they were
killed by soldiers of the Israel-
backed South Lebanon Army
(SLA) last week. A third
frogman is believed to have
escaped.
The terrorists, identified as
members of the Syrian-
backed Al-Saiqa, were spotted
after they pushed a box-
shaped boat on to a beach at
Ras Biyada, about seven kil-
ometers north of the Israel
border. The boat box con-
tained assault weapons and
leaflets handwritten in
Hebrew demanding the re-
lease of Palestinian prisoners.

