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May 04, 1990 - Image 14

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1990-05-04

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

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14

FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1990

LIFESTYLE EDUCATION

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Report: Syrian-Israeli
Pact Is Needed

Washington (JTA) - A
report submitted to the
Trilateral Commission has
predicted little chance for
success for Secretary of State
James Baker's efforts to br-
ing about an Israeli-
Palestinian dialogue.
Instead, the report's au-
thor, Garret FitzGerald,
former prime minister of
Ireland, said the United
States and the Soviet Union
should work toward bring-
ing about negotiations bet-
ween Israel and Syria.
If they were successful at
that, it could lead to Israel's
acceptance of a Palestinian
state, he said.
FitzGerald, who is also the
Trilateral Commission's Eu-
ropean deputy chairman,
also urged the United States
to liberalize its immigration
laws to allow more Soviet
Jews to enter the country.
This would "reduce
significantly tensions in the
occupied territories and
among neighboring Arab
states."
He said the Palestinians
and other Arabs fear that
the large influx of Soviet
Jews in Israel will eventual-
ly push Palestinians out of
the West Bank.
FitzGerald's report, which
was prepared as a
"discussion draft" for the
commission's recent annual
meeting, was reportedly
greeted coolly by the more
than 200 delegates atten-
ding the session.

The commission is a
nongovernmental body with
more than 300 members
from North America, West
Europe and Japan. Its stated
aim is to promote mutual
understanding and greater

cooperation between the
countries from which its
members come.
The Trilateral Commis-
sion countries could aid the
peace process "by pursuing
issues of nonproliferation of
chemical, biological and
atomic weapons and of con-
ventional disarmament in
the region," FitzGerald
urges.
Pursuit of these issues
coupled with an agreement
between Israel and Syria
"could facilitate Israeli
agreement to a peace set-
tlement involving a Pales-
tinian state," FitzGerald
concludes.
"There can be no doubt
about the reality of Israeli
concern over the scale and
range of armaments
available to its Arab
neighbors and Israeli doubts
over the wisdom of permit-
ting the emergence of a Pa-
lestinian state in the
absence of a peaceful set-
tlement with nearby Arab
states such as Syria."
FitzGerald suggests that
because the Soviet Union is
now seen as less of a threat
by the United States, "Israel
may be no longer seen . . . as
the principal ally of the
United States in this area."
He also noted that "Presi-
dent Bush is less uniformly
supportive of Israel and in
particular is critical of the
Israeli policy on settlements
on the West Bank and
Gaza."
FitzGerald, who is critical
of Israeli polices in the West
Bank and Gaza Strip, does
not directly call for a Pales-
tinian state. But he assumes
throughout the study that
this will and should be the
eventual outcome.

Support Base For Israel
Is Being Broadened

As rumors continue to cir-
culate about possible moves
to cut foreign aid to Israel or
attach conditions to that aid,
congressional supporters of
Israel and pro-Israel groups
are working energetically to
broaden the constituency for
the foreign aid process.
In a recent letter signed by
a number of ethnic and so-
cial action organizations, the
importance of the entire for-
eign aid program was em-
phasized, not just aid to
Israel.
Impetus for the letter came
from legislators interested

in insuring that the demand
for additional foreign aid
money for the developing
democracies in Eastern
Europe and Central America
did not come at the expense
of current recipients like
Israel, and from Jewish
groups concerned about the
recent call by Sen. Robert
Dole (R-Kans.) for cuts in aid
to Israel and other top reci-
pients.
Signers included groups
representing other ethnic
groups, like the Polish
American Congress and the
Ukrainian National Assoc.

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