BAC KG ROU N D Donald S. Beser, M.D., F.A.C.S. Robert D. Beitman, M.D., F.A.C.S. Robert T. Clark, M.D. F.A.C.S. Amy B. Eston, M.D. Lawrence L. Stocker, M.D. 1. Metropolitin Eye surgeons Are Pleased To Announce Their New Associate Leslie David Grosinger, M.D. Professional Background: • University of Michigan, Undergraduate and Medical School • William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, Michigan Internal Medicine Residency • Sinai Hospital of Detroit, Michigan Ophthalmology Residency Iraqi troops take cover behind an armored personnel carrier in Kuwait. America's Re-Evaluation Could Include Israel JAMES D. BESSER Detroit West Bloomfield Brighton Bloomfield Hills 14800 West McNichols 8641 West Grand River 1575 Woodward Ave. Suite 102 Suite 310 Suite 9 . 5813 West Maple Suite 137 Hours by Appointment 1-800-638-7639 WANTED OLD WATCHES (Will Pay Cash!) Your old broken wrist or pocket watches Could be worth Thousands of Dollars MAKES: • • • • • • • • A. Lange Rolex* • J. Assmann Patek Philippe* Vacheron & Constantin* • LeCoultre • Hamilton Audemars Piguet • Gruen Movado • Omega Breitling • Tiffany & Co. Universal TYPES: MOONPHASES, CHRONOGRAPHS, COSMOGRAPHS REPEATERS, WORLD TIME, MILITARY, DOCTORS & PILOTS WATCHES BACK IN TIME .. . VINTAGE TIMEPIECES EXPERT REPAIR/WATCHBANDS 124 S. WOODWARD STE. 16 DOWNTOWN BIRMINGHAM (Located 2nd Floor in "Shops at the Top") Tues.-Sat. 12.6 Local Calls: Call Toll Free: 1 (800) 233-8812 (313) 540-4646 Next time you feed your face, think about your heart. Go easy on your heart and start cutting back on foods that are high in saturated fat and cholesterol. The change'll do you good. luf American Heart Association WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE 28 FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, 1990 Washington Correspondent I raq's stunning conquest of Kuwait last week pro- ved once more that the angry passions of the Middle East tend to defy the best predictions of the foreign af- fairs experts. But as the administration re-evaluates its failed stra- tegies for dealing with Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein, pro-Israel activists in Wash- ington suggest there could also be a significant re- evaluation of Israel's role in the region and a thaw in U.S.-Israeli relations. Mr. Hussein's military triumph injected a dose of reality into an administra- tion that had cherished the hope that Hussein could be transformed into a responsi- ble member of the interna- tional community. "Our policy towards Hus- sein was essentially to ap- pease the bully — to look past his outrageous, bar- baric conduct and hope that somehow we could get him to change his fundamental character," said Rep. Howard Berman D-Calif., who led the quest for econ- omic sanctions since Iraq's use of poison gas on Kurdish civilians in 1988. The Ad- ministration blocked the quest. "That policy, as a gen- eral rule, doesn't work, and it was a disaster in this case." The Iraqi blitzkrieg pro- vided a kind of grim confir- mation of several key arguments that the Israelis have been making for years, a fact that may strengthen their position with critics within the Bush administra- tion. "This Iraqi action shatters one of the last illusions about countries like Iraq," said David Harris, Washing- ton representative for the American Jewish Com- mittee. "It proves the point that Israel has been making all along — that the danger in the region goes well beyond just the Arab- Israeli conflict. It refutes the idea still popular in some quarters that if you just end the Arab-Israeli conflict, order will come to the re- gion. This invasion demon- strates the fallacy of that kind of thinking." Since the end of the Iran- Iraq war and the crisis over Persian Gulf shipping, the entire focus of U.S. Middle East policy has been on Israel and its problems with the Palestinian uprising. The new crisis, with its implicit threat to the Ameri- can economy through Iraq's growing chokehold on oil supplies, casts a new light on the Israeli- Palestinian situation. Before the Iraqi invasion, Mr. Bush and Secretary of State James Baker had staked much of their credibility on finding a solu- tion to the problems sur- rounding the Palestinian uprising. Now, the focus will necessarily shift to the much more threatening problem of Iraq. In the short term, the Iraqi invasion is almost certain to relieve some of the intense pressure on the new Israeli government to make major concessions in the stalled peace process. . Until the Kuwait debacle, it was widely assumed in Washington that this week's meeting between Israeli Foreign Minister David Levy and Mr. Baker would be a difficult one — espe- cially if Mr. Levy did not ar- rive in Washington with concrete proposals for mov- ing the peace process for- ward.