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June 17, 1988 - Image 17

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1988-06-17

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

tyfitat. t& Cad 1 a YR a

GIGANTIC DISCOUNTS

Savings Up to $6,000

pear deliberately designed to
win friends and influence peo-
ple in Jerusalem. In par-
ticular, they note that:
• Relatively large number
of Soviet Jews have been
allowed to emigrate over the
past year;
• Israeli and Soviet officials
have held a sucession of
meetings at various levels
(the latest, at the initiative of
the Soviets, involving Prime
Minister Yitzhak Shamir and
Soviet Foreign Minister
Eduard Shevardnaze in New
York last week);
• A Soviet consular delega-
tion, which has been in Israel
for almost a year, is becoming
something of a fixture and
that the Soviets have now
agreed, after an initial
"nyet," to allow a reciprocal
Israeli mission to visit
Moscow.
• Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev has recently
delivered tough, public
messages to his major allies
in the region — Syria and the
Palestine Liberation Organ-
ization — to face reality and
find a diplomatic solution to
their problems with Israel.
Both the United States and
the Soviet Union appear anx-
ious to reduce regional ten-
sions in general and the
highly combustible Arab-
Israeli conflict in particular.
Furthermore, both must also
know that they need each
other if they are to have any
hope of solving this most in-
tractable of regional conflicts.
It is quite likely that
Israel's Shimon Peres and
Jordan's King Hussein, could
reach an accommodation and
come to terms with each
other if they were the only
factors in the equation.
The harsh facts of Middle
East political life, however,
dictate that it is the hard-
liners on both sides — Syria's
President Assad and Israel's
Prime Minister Shamir —
who will have to be "en-
couraged," with carrots and
sticks, to participate in a
peace process.
Even then, it will take the
combined strength of their
respective superpower pa-
trons to achieve the awesome
task of dragging them, kick-
ing and screaming, to the
negotiating table.
Shultz may find it distaste-
ful to contemplate the pros-
pect of the Soviets returning
to the center-stage of Arab-
Israeli diplomacy, and indeed
he resisted pressures from his
own senior State Department
officials for many months.
Nevertheless, he appears to
have concluded that if the
Middle East enemies are ever
to confront each other at the
negotiating table it will re-

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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

17

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