3141, , U311130 31911111 39NR 3H1,, „ H111 30 . 11 T XT Package incl. (full leather seats, spoilers, alum. wheels and special tires) p.d.1., tinted glass, carpet floor mats, F&R, air, aux. lighting, pw, delay wipers, rw.d., console, cruise, 2.81,, V6, auto. trans., tilt, AM- FM stereo cass. w/equalizer, gauges. List $16,292 $2300 $13,992 8 Available At This Price *Plus tax, title, destination. All rebates included where applicable. Rebates expire 9/28/88. Picture shown may not be actual vehicle, advertised. On selected models. 28111 Telegraph and 12 Mile at 1-696 355-1000 LOOK, SHOP, GET YOUR BEST DEAL, BUT DON'T BUY UNTIL YOU SEE THE UNBEATABLE DEALER! 10 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1988 1V30 318VIV38N 3111, NEW 1988 CORSICA XT'S , U 31 1130 31: vitgeNn 3 1, UAL" Now Only H N BE ATABLE DE ALE ' ' OPINION Transfer 0 31B V1V 3: N t 3. `T E N BEATA BLE DE AL R ' `TN UNBE ATA BLE DEALE " `THE UNBE ATA BLE DE ALE R " "THE UN BE A TABLE DE AL E R ' I Continued from Page 7 give their allegiance to the Palestinian home — a tiny state devoted to enlarging itself by supplanting the Jews — next door. That fear, and the fear of eventual Arab secession in the Galilee, Nazareth, Jerusalem, Haifa, and the Negev is well-founded. Israel's Declaration of In- dependence guarantees Israeli Arabs "complete equality of social and political rights." The same document also establishes Israel as a Jewish state and guarantees a Jewish right of return. If Arabs have complete equality, may then then, when they become a majority, take control from the Jews? May they abrogate the right of return and turn Israelinto an Islamic state? Even to ask these questions, as Meir Kahane argues, belies the promise of equality. Israel will become an Arab-ruled country over the dead bodies of the Jews. No Muslim or Christian Arab, however moderate, can find full political realization in a Jewish state. The very concept condemns him to a life as a minority. Only to the extent that an Arab is willing to forego the pleasures of com- plete political autonomy, cultural and political in- dependence and statehood will he be happy living in Israel. In the United States, those whose beliefs make them un- willing or unable to accept the fundamental laws of the country may be barred from entry, residence and citizen- ship. Most countries have similar mechanisms for testing and ensuring loyalty. Israel requires the allegiance of Jews but expects and receives nothing of the sort from its Arab citizens. The policy that grants rights without respon- sibilities is bankrupt. Israeli officials realize that Arabs are evading their taxes, yet they make no special collec- tion effort. Arab sqatters set- tle on government land; the government customarily, ex post facto, grants them leases — at terms more favorable than those given to Jews. The policy goal: to avoid anti- Semitic confrontations and unfavorable international publicity. Young Jewish men and women must, at 17, begin na- tional service — an obligation that, for men, continues for the next 28 years — from which Israeli Arabs are ex- cused. Outside the army, almost nowhere in Israel can a Jew set off on his own to farm the land or build a home without fear ofmarauding Arabs. In Judea, Samaria and Gaza, Arabs receive funding from oil-rich Arab govern- ments, enabling them to pro- sper during strikes and upheavals while selling their produce to foreigners who boycott Jews. Arabs who live in Egypt's one remaining Gaza refugee camp cut through the border fences to get work in the same Israel that they hope to destroy. Individuals who hate Israel — who won't or can't tolerate Jewish national existence, Israel's Jewish character or fundamental laws — probably don't belong there. "We must deny the Arabs employment in our own country," Herzl wrote, "and help them find employment elsewhere?' That is one mechanism of a transfer process. Taking sav- ing measures, without help for a world that seeks something other than Israel's dismemberment, won't be easy. But the only other alter- natives are unacceptable. Historian Chaim Simons is director of Israel's Nonsen. In- stitute, which researches transfer proposals. Recalling Fridtjof Nansen, the Norweigen delegate to the League of Nations and chief author of the Turkish-Greek exchange, Simons said, "Nansen's transfer of Turks from Greece and Greeks from Turkey solved what had been described as hopeless pro- blems of Turkish-Greek rioting, religious and ethnic oppression and reciprocal massacres" that kept that area in the news. More than 1,250,000 Christians and 355,000 Muslims were moved from their separate ancient enclaves — some at the point of a gun — and happily resettled. "For peace's sake," Nansen said, "remove the sources of conflict. Transfer the popula- tions, and cut the ulcer clear." The proud Arab peoples find Jewish statehood dif- ficult enough to accept anyway. For Jews to dominate a restive Palestinian Muslim minority is, from an Islamic theological standpoint, intolerable. Israel's 40 years of more than equalitarian generosity to Israel's Arabs hardly has accommodated them or mollified any other Arabs. With no shared allegiance, two politically antithetical, implacably opposed peoples living together in oneland must endanger each other. Yet Palestinians can always leave for any of 22 Arab coun- tries, while Jews have only Israel. Moving, to a new country, can be a positive experience; those who can't believe in Israel will thrive better