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Thus, while the Israeli corn- mission categorically banned perjury by intelligence agents when giving evidence in court, it did leave open the door for certain unorthodox practices, including physical force, during an interrogation. "It might seem repugnant to use violence to extract in- formation from a suspect," said one Israeli commentator, "but when you're pretty cer- tain a bomb is about to go off in the center of town, you don't threaten to withhold his morning cup of coffee." Interrogators' primary tool, said the Landau report, should be non-violent psycho- logical pressure "via a vigorous and lengthy inter- rogation using various stratagems, including acts of deception." But if this fails, using "a moderate measure of physical pressure is not to be avoided." Although the commission- ers defined the limits of such force, their "guidelines" are in a secret annex to the main report. The report has even been welcomed by the Shin Bet, which is relieved by the recommendation that "a line be drawn" over the past and that none of its agents be pro- secuted for breaking the law. The report has also been widely welcomed by ordinary Israelis, who have been strug- gling to reconcile two power- ful, conflicting reactions. Nevertheless, some of the commission's findings — that Israeli political leaders and judiciary were ignorant of the Shin Bet's methods and that the agency's agents commit- ted perjury for the past 16 years — were greeted with open disbelief and sometimes derision. "How is it possible that for 16 years, not a single judge, prosecutor or attorney general was aware of the systematic deception that was not such a well-kept secret?" asked Yoel Marcus, a leading Israeli columnist, in the dai- ly newspaper, Ha'aretz. "And why was the political echelon freed of blame? It is wor- risome, very worrisome." The 1967 Six Day War is regarded as a watershed year for the Shin Bet. Before that, the service was a small, highly-motivated group of men and women drawn from Israel's elite. It was controlled — more or less informally — by the country's political leaders, who had all grown up together, served in the army together and knew each other well. The system worked. But 20 years of Israeli oc- cupation of the West Bank and Gaza has caused the Shin Bet to balloon in size. Accord- ing to sources, many of its new recruits have conformed to neither the agency's once lofty standards nor to the ideas and methods of the rul- ing elite. "The service," said the source, "is ripe for an overhaul." The great danger for Israel is that the Shin Bet may find that old habits die hard. If so, it is likely to accelerate a growing impatience with democratic principles that has become evident among certain sections of Israeli society. According to Ze'ev Schiff, a senior Israeli military analyst, powerful forces are striving to change Israel's democratic character, "whether openly and inten- tionally or out of weakness and under the guise of securi- ty imperatives?' "Representatives of this trend will make an effort to gain a foothold in Israel's security services — and perhaps even take control of them in the future." NEWS Farrakhan Denies Anti-Semitism Syracuse, N.Y. (JTA) — With 500 protestors clamoring out- side, including an uninvited Jewish Defense Organization (JDO), Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan denied he was anti-Semitic and preach- ed his message of black racial pride and economic self-deter- mination here last week. The protestors — singing, chanting and waving signs — congregated opposite the Syracuse University Schine Student Center, where Far- rakhan spoke to more than 1,700 people. The protesters argued volubly with sup- porters of Farrakhan, but no violence broke out. Earlier in the day, the Syracuse Area Interreligious Council (SAIC) held a demon- stration on the steps of the university chapel. SAIC members, university chap- lains, local rabbis and profes- sional and volunteer leaders of the Syracuse Jewish Federation gathered to affirm brotherhood. But area black religious leaders were noticeably absent.