I MIDEAST FELDBRO QUALITY MEATS 6720 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD (Next to Americana West) 626-4656 626-4657 FREE DELIVERY $35 min. order NOW TAKING ORDERS FOR THANKSGIVING Please Order Early Call today to find out just how much Bonds can do for you HELEN DAVIS erusalem — While the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip may be -periodically convulsed by violence, Israel has never en- joyed such a prolonged absence of external military threat as now. It has a formal peace trea- ty with Egypt in the south and a de facto peace with Jor- dan in the east. Lebanon has not been counted among the Arab belligerents since 1948, while Palestinian na- tionalists and Islamic fun- damentalists have failed to penetrate the border either by land or by sea. Only Syria, perched on Israel's northern border, re- mains openly aggressive, although its failure to achieve "strategic parity" — the abili- ty to confront Israel on its own — has persuaded Israeli strategists that it does not, for the moment, pose a serious threat. Indeed, military analysts in Jerusalem are confident that, given the present military balance of power, Israel would be capable of defeating any combination of hostile Arab forces. Their confidence is based on twin pillars — both in- disputable, but neither im- mutable: First, Egypt and Jordan, two of the key con- frontation states, have remov- ed themselves from the war coalition; second, the Arab world, preoccupied by the Gulf War and fearful of an Iranian victory, is deeply divided. With the Arab world thus split between Iran (Syria and Libya) and Iraq (Jordan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait), any significant col- laboration between these former battlefield allies is ex- tremely unlikely as long as the Gulf War persists. Last week, however, Israeli Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin, rudely shattered the complacency when he warned senior Israeli officers that Israel could be engaged in a war within the next few years. The seven-year-old Gulf War would not end "next week," he told the officers at Israel's Staff and Command College, but it would be over within two or three years. After that Israel could expect an end to the current calm and it must be prepared for any eventuality. j 1-800-US-BONDS Serve Your Guests Your Thanksgiving Best! When you want to serve the very best, depend on Empire Kosher's delicious turkey. You can taste the difference in every tender bite, because Empire takes the extra time and care to grow every turkey slowly and naturally to the highest kosher standards. This Thanksgiving, look for genuine Empire Kosher turkey, with the convenient Pop-Up timer, wherever fine kosher products are sold. Specify Empire, the most trusted name in kosher poultry, and feast on the compliments! Cold Water Processed! AVAILABLE AT FINER SUPERMARKETS AND BUTCHERS COAST TO COAST THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN KOSHER POULTRY AND FOODS 1-800-EMPIRE-4 FRIDAY, NOV. 13, 1987 Yitzhak Rabin Hears Distant War Drums Israel Correspondent Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 84 ■ 1111111111 ■ 111 U.S. Savings Bonds make good business sense! Strictly Fresh, Never Frozen, No Pin Feathers, Completely Cleaned, Turkeys — Turkey Breast — Geese — Ducks. Open Mon.-Sat. 8-6, Sunday 8-5 IIMINE1 Rabin: Cold statistics The Defense Minister might have been sounding the war drums prematurely, but the cold statistics show that Israel does indeed have little room for complacency. In raw numbers, Israel has always been faced with an overwhelming disadvantage in both men and materiel. And in the wake of the Gulf War this imbalance will be dramatically increased. Iraq, which has par- ticipated in every war against Israel, has greatly enlarged the size of its standing army since the start of its war with Iran in September 1980 from 12 divisions to 40, represen- ting a staggering one million men under arms. Even if Iraq were to halve the size of its army when hostilities cease, Israeli analysts estimate that it would still be capable of dispatching an expeditionary force of at least six battle- hardened divisions to Israel's eastern front. In addition, Iraq now has some 742 combat aircraft and 5,000 tanks — more than any other army in the region (by way of comparison, Germany had a total of 3,000 tanks at its disposal when it con- quered France during the Se- cond World War). And Iraq is not alone. Since the last major Arab-Israeli conflict in 1973, the armies of Israel's immediate neighbors — Syria, Jordan and Egypt — have undergone a massive expansion. They have increased their combined tank force by 60 per cent (from 4,500 to 7,300) and their fleet of fighter aircraft by 100 per cent (from 950 to 1,900). Compounding the dif- Continued on Page 86