THE JEWISH NEWS THIS ISSUE 60cp SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY Round Two For Unity Government HELEN DAVIS Special to The Jewish News PLO leader Yassir Arafat has in- advertantly saved the political hide of the Likud's Yitzhak Shamir and Labor's Shimon Peres. By making the declarations that won him a measure of respectability in Washington and a host of Western European capitals, Arafat has presented Israel with the diplomatic challenge of its life. The two political archrivals in the Israeli political firmament agree on ANALYSIS few of the major political issues — most notably, the need for a ter- ritorial compromise over the occupied territories — but both, for the mo- ment, are united in rejecting a dialogue with Arafat. After seven weeks of horse- trading with the minor political par- ties, Shamir and Peres had reached the end of the road. Shamir appeared set to form a narrow-based government with a far- right/religious coalition, which had exacted an extortionate price for its support. Such a coalition, Shamir feared, would have propelled Israel onto a perilous course in its interna- tional relations and its relations with the Diaspora. At the same time, Peres was gaz- ing into the political wilderness. Hav- ing suffered four straight electoral defeats, unable to match Shamir's concession to the clutch of small par- ties, and facing the prospect of four years in opposition, he must have known that his days as party leader were numbered. But the sense of crisis engendered by Arafat's declarations in Geneva and the positive response from Washington changed all that. It concentrated the minds of Israel's political leaders on the two issues, albeit negative, which transcended personal and ideological antagonisms: a refusal to negotiate with the PLO and a rejection of an in- dependent Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza (though Labor would sanction a Palestinian homeland in confederation with Jor- dan). The crisis conveniently allowed the leaders of both major political blocs to draw a veil across their con- siderable differences. Indeed, the main task of the new DECEMBER 30, 1988 / 22 TEVET 5749 A 'Machiavellian • Dove' ehoshafa ar = a • intelligence, asserts that for the Jewish state to survive it must negotiate with the PLO to establish an independent Palestinian state. CLOSE-UP Continued on Page 14 Israel Urges Hussein To Join Peace Talks Jerusalem (JTA) — New in- itiatives in the Middle East peace pro- cess seemed to be brewing in Cairo and Jerusalem this week. President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt said he is ready to visit Israel if it will have some "positive results." And Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir said in several interviews that he is working on a new peace plan believed to be based on the 1978 Camp David Accords. The prime minister said on televi- sion early this week that he will be glad to welcome Mubarak to Israel. "I am sure that if we meet and talk, we shall reach 'positive results; " he said. In addition, Israel is urging Jor- dan's King Hussein to get involved in the peace process without preconditions. The message to the king was to be delivered this week. It reportedly was from Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir or Foreign Minister Moshe Arens and was to be forwarded to the king by U.S. Sen. John Rockefeller IV (D-WV), who is visiting the Middle East. Shamir, who favors direct talks between Israel and its neighbors as a means of resolving the Arab-Israeli conflict, has made similar overtures to Hussein in the past, according to William Pierce, a spokesman for the State Department's Bureau of Near East and South Asian Affairs. "This would not be the first time the prime minister has said that," Pierce said. He has conveyed such a message "at least one or two times over the past year." If Mubarak comes to Israel, he will be the first Arab leader to visit Israel since the late Egyptian Presi- dent Anwar Sadat made his historic trip to Jerusalem in November 1977. In the past, Mubarak has condition- Continued on Page 18 Feeling Good Music Maven PAGE 43