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January 20, 1989 - Image 58

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1989-01-20

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

COMMENT

Pesach '89

Experience A Classic

Celebrate Passover on the shores of the Pacific. Beautiful, enchanting and historic Santa Barbara
is the setting and Fess Parker's majestic Red Lion Resort is the exquisite oceanfront locale.

Has PNC Negated
The 'Three Nos?"

ALON BEN-MEIR

Special to The Jewish News

T

California's Newest Oceanfront Luxury Resort

YOUR PESACH VACATION INCLUDES:

• Tennis • Golf • Horseback Riding • Health Club • Sauna • Concierge •
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• All Rooms With Balcony or Patio & Larger Than Suites in Many Other Hotels •
• Oceanview, Mountainview, Poolview & Gardenview Rooms •
• Sunrises, Sunsets, Poolside Concerts, Evening Entertainment •
• Children's Programs, Cultural & Social Events •
• Pacific Ocean, Santa Ynez Mountains, Santa Barbara, Solvang •
• Free Limousine Service From Santa Barbara's Airport •
• Rent A-Surrey-With-A-Fringe-On-Top, A Bicycle Built For 2 or Walk To The Zoo •
• Water Skiing, Deep-Sea Diving, Hang Gliding •
• Hearst Castle, Magic Mountain, Universal Studios and the Channel Islands •
• Lavish Traditioonal Sedorim, Three Full Meals Daily, Tea Rooms •
• All Meat Glatt, Cholov Yisroel and Non-Gebrokt Products Available •
• All Meals Prepared Under Strict Orthodox Rabbinical Hashgacha •
For reservations and information call Your Tour Operators Jeanne Litvin and Melvin Teitelbaum

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i

AMERICAN
PCANCER
SOCIETY'

Help us keep winning.

wenty-four years ago
in Rabat, Morocco,
the Arab League pass-
ed the celebrated "three nos"
resolution: no peace, no
recognition, no negotiations
with Israel.
Despite ambiguities in the
declaration issued recently in
Algiers by the Palestine Na-
tional Council, it is widely
believed that the Palestine
Liberation Organization may
have finally come to the
unavoidable conclusions that
the only way to realize the na-
tional aspirations of the
Palestinian people is to
recognize Israel's right to
exist.
In that sense, the PLO has
indeed come a long way from
Rabat to Algiers.
Since the PLO's inception
in 1964, political fragmenta-
tion and ideological divisions
have prevented it from form-
ing a cohesive, unambiguous
policy toward Israel.
Unfortunately, that same
divisiveness and equivocation
was very much reflected in
the Algiers declaration.
The dissenting voices of Dr.
George Habash, head of the
Marxist-oriented Popular
Front for the Liberation of
Palestine, and Nayef
Hawatmeh, leader of the
Democratic Front for the
Liberation of Palestine,
echoed throughout the con-
ference rooms.
Thus, even acceptance of
U.N. Security Council Resolu-
tion 242, which implicitly
recognizes Israel's right to ex-
ist and constitutes the cor-
nerstone for any future
negotiations, as made in the
context of a demand for an in-
ternational eace conference
and not on its own merits.
Yet, British Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher told Presi-
dent Reagan recently, "When
people do things we like, we
should welcome them."
Her spokesman, Bernard
Ingham, describing the
Algiers move, added, "Here is
something she would argue to
build on."
However, as an aide to
president-elect Bush stated,
"The only way the U.S. can
take seriously the PLO
documents is if it is followed
by concrete action."
While the PLO has made
what many may judge as a
historic move toward peace,
Israel is about to form a new
coalition government that
leans distinctly to the right.

Even though the leadership
of both major parties, Likud
and Labor, rejeced the Algiers
declaration, 58 percent of
Israel's electorate backed par-
ties that either favor or would
consider giving up part of the
administered territories for
peace.
The Israelis, however, will
not respond in kind to the
PLO's overtures unless they
are absolutely convinced that
the Palestinians want peace
and not piecemeal territorial
gains.

Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Shamir Backs
Mossad Chief

Jerusalem (JTA) — Prime
Minister Yitzhak Shamir
gave his unqualified backing
last week to the outgoing
head of Mossad, who has
become the subject of un-
wanted publicity as a result of
a High Court of Justice deci-
sion.
Israel's supreme court ruled
this week that the Tel Aviv
weekly Ha'ir could publish an
article highly critical of the
organization and its current
chief, who is about to resign.
Shamir said he had full con-
fidence in him and regretted
that he had been "unfairly
pilloried" by some of the
media.
The news media reported,
meanwhile, that a behind-the-
scenes battle is being waged
over the appointment of a
new Mossad chief.
According to newspaper ac-
counts, pressure is being put
on Shamir to name the Mos-
sad choice for the job instead
of outside candidates.
Shamir, himself a former
senior Mossad operative, is
said to be more deeply in-
volved in the appointment
than even his position as
prime minister would war-
rant.
But Labor Party leader
Shimon Peres, now finance
minister, must be consulted
on the new appointment
under an amendment to the
Labor-Likud coalition agree-
ment.
The reporter, Alouph Benn,
alleged that the Mossad head,
whose identity is a state
secret, is being ousted
because of a series of mishaps
to Mossad operations abroad
in recent years.
Benn said the Mossad in-
cumbent, who has served a
6-year term, had planned his
retirement months ago and it
was not the result of the court
decision.

4

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