Children of Holocaust Survivors Association in Michigan Secretary Dick Cheney: A Friend Or A Foe? Annual Event Honoring Sheldon and Sidney Lutz WOLF BLITZER Capitol Correspondent A Sheldon M. Lutz Sidney A. Lutz Sunday, April 9, 1989 7:00 PM Movies at Prudential Town Center — Southfield Special screening of: HBO's "Murderers Among Us: The Simon Wiesenthal Story" For further information contact Art Kirsh at 557-6089 FOOT CARE s Important • Medical & Surgical Management of Foot & Ankle Problems Treatment of Sports Related Injuries • House Calls for the Home Bound Patient WEST BLOOMFIELD • MICHIGAN Marvin A. Aronovitz, D.P.M. and Daniel C. Aronovitz, D.P.M. are pleased to announce the opening of our new office at Knollwood Office Park 6431 Inkster • Suite 222 • Birmingham NOW OPEN IN MADISON HEIGHTS! MADISON PLACE - 589-3032 —Hours by Appointment — 855-6630 MARK' also 1 0 ~ 7,Resource;Z 32730 Northwestern Hwy. Farmington Hills, Michigan 48018 737-0360 34 FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1989 4c ViE4 Natui al CLEANING AND TAILORING No tailor shop in West Bloomfield, Farmington Hills or any other city can offer a service like this. L LET US BE YOUR TAILOR — FREE 1989 CALENDARS ORCHARD PLACE 855-0122 J Ittk ‘ k day after Jonathan Jay Pollard was sen- tenced to life in prison after pleading guilty to spy- ing for Israel, then Republican Rep. Richard Cheney of Wyoming and a few other members of the House Intelligence Committee received a high-level classified briefing from the Central Intelligence Agency. Cheney, recently named secretary of defense in the Bush admiriistration, emerg- ed from that closed-door ses- sion to tell reporters that he did not believe that Pollard was part of any unauthorized Israeli operation. "I don't think it was a rogue operation," he said on March 5, 1987. "I think it was a ma- jor, very successful penetra- tion of the U.S. government and our intelligence agencies by the Israeli government." He said that such behavior "doesn't behoove an ally," ad- ding: "I don't think we've heard the last of it." Cheney, like other members of the House panel that day, had been informed of the ex- act kind of top secret informa- tion compiled by Pollard. The congressman was clearly angry. "On the one hand," he said, "Israel pleads a special rela- tionship with the United States, and on the other hand, they run a major intelligelice operation against us. There isn't much they couldn't get if they asked for it, but they chose not to do it that way, and I think the Israeli govern- ment ought to know that some of us are deeply concern- ed about that kind of con- duct." But Cheney, even in his deep anger and frustration, still insisted that the United States should not retaliate against Israel by cutting economic and military assistance. "It wouldn't be in our national interest to significantly reduce aid levels just because the Israelis made a dumb mistake," he said. Since then, the new defense secretary has continued to make clear that he still has a positive appreciation of Israel's strategic connection to the United States. A political conservative, the 48-year-old Cheney values Israel's role in bolstering Western interests in the eastern Mediterranean. While still in his mid-30s, Cheney served as the White House Chief of Staff under President Gerald Ford _ . He worked very closely in those days with Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and Na- tional Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft. On foreign policy, Cheney, of course, deferred to them. In recent years, he has become a major player on . Capitol Hill. Clearly very in- telligent and politically say- Dick Cheney: Voted for arms sales to Arab nations. -4 -• -• I vy, he worked his way up the ladder to become the House Republican Whip in 1988 — following a unanimous vote among his Republican colleagues. His popularity was underlined when Bush nominated him for defense secretary. And Cheney's speedy confirmation hearings 4 were without incident — unlike former Republican —4 Sen. John Tower of Texas who had been Bush's first choice se.4 for the job. Israeli officials and American Jewish political ac- tivists in Washington have been scurrying since then in their efforts to size up Cheney. Will he prove to be a friend of Israel at the Pentagon? Their assessments, based on his voting record during 10 years in Congress, are mixed. He has often voted in favor of the worldwide foreign aid package (of which Israel is the largest individual recipient). Occasionally, he has found reason to oppose it. But in ex- plaining his opposition, he has not cited the money ap- propriated for Israel as a reason. Cheney has almost always voted in favor of U.S. arms -40-1 4