Thousands of that country's citizens have signed up to fight under Saddam Hus- sein's banner. Almost daily, there are demonstrations in the streets of Amman and elsewhere. As a result, Jor- dan has gone on full military alert as King Hussein struggles to keep his citizenry under control. The Hashemite monarch's task is made even more difficult by the majority Pa- lestinian population there. Throughout the Arab world, the Palestinians have been the most outspoken in sup- port of Saddam Hussein and in opposition to those who side with the West. In Jor- dan, however, the threat they pose is to the regime that rules them. As it is, the Palestinians have always looked upon King Hussein as an interloper and Jordan as their birthright. To them, Jordan is two-thirds of Palestine. As much as their leaders deny it in interna- tional forums, they know that Jordan was a consola- tion prize given by the British to the ousted leaders of Arabia. They have long dreamed of getting it back from the Hashemites. Twenty years ago, King Hussein went to war against the Palestinians to protect his monarchy. Likely, he will have to do so again. This time, however, it is Saddam Hussein who is rallying the Palestinians in Jordan and he is giving them powerful allies: Jordan's non- Palestinian poor. Here, too, it will not matter what is Saddam's fate; these people want the piece of pie he has promised them. Many of Israel's Arab citizens are also siding with Saddam Hussein. From Arab members of Knesset to the Arab man in the streets of Kafr Cana, Saddam's praises are sung. There also are cries of anger against Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and all the others who support the West's supposed aggression against Iraq. As the threats grow, the moderate regimes will begin looking around for scapegoats to deflect the anger of the people. The first will be the oil-rich sheikhdoms. Cries of "equitable distribution" and "Arab land belongs to all Arabs" will be heard in in- creasing frequency, even- tually forcing these sheikhdoms to tow a more pan-Arab line. The moderate leaderships will then turn their atten- tions to the United States. They will demand that Washington be more "even- handed" in its regional poli- cies. By this, of course, they will mean (among other things) that the United States will have to take their side over Israel's. They will argue that this is the only way they can hold the militants at bay. If the United States does not help them, they will say, their countries, too, may be led by Saddam Husseins and then where will the Western economies be? The U.S. will be hard- pressed to disagree with such arguments. After all, that is the justification it is using for its role in the cur- rent Gulf crisis. It will be even more hard- pressed to explain why it has demanded that Iraq comply with resolutions of the United Nations Security Council, but does not make a similar demand of Israel. The Arab world does not want to hear that the situa- tions differ. To them, it is ir- relevant that Washington already has brought about Israeli withdrawal from the bulk of territories it occupied in 1967 and that this technically fulfills the specific resolutions to which they refer. Israel, meanwhile, can ex- pect the unrest in the ter- ritories to continue and, possibly, to intensify. Those who say even Israeli Arabs cannot be trusted will find new listeners. So will those who say Jordan is Palestine and that the way to resolve the intifada is to "transfer" West Bank Arabs to the other side of the Jordan River. As for those who say that Israel must talk with the Pa- lestinians, and particularly the PLO, they will find fewer listeners. Indeed, some may find it increasingly harder to find any listeners at all. Even if the unlikely happened and peace broke out between Israel and its Arab neighbors, Israel no longer can count on the so- called "peace dividend." Rather than diverting funds from defense to other press- ing needs, Israel will have to remain fully mobilized and forever modernized. Thanks to the forces Saddam Hus- sein has activated in the Arab world, Israel would be more foolhardy than ever to rely on the goodwill of moderate Arab leaders to keep the peace. Thus, the future is a grim one for the Middle East. INSIDEOUTSIDE CLEARANCE! August 23, 24 & 25th Thursday-Riday-Saturday COATS UNLIMITED OAK PARK STORE ONLY SPORTSWEAR • Printed T-Shirts • Spring-Summer Tops - Skirts - Pants • Select Fall Sportswear Groups $ 1000 "AT BARGAIN" "PRICES" $10"-$30" COATSSUITS • • • • • • Suit Group Slicker Rainwear Denim Jackets Activewear Fleece Jackets Summer Jackets Raincoats $ 49"Pg$69" $1 9"$ 39 " $29" $249 %4 29" $99 %1 $2 9 " $ 399 •59 " BUY NOW FOR NEXT FALL AT TERRIFIC PRICES FALL JACKET GROUP • London Fog-Woolrich Many Other Brands • Fall Zip-Out Rainwear $299"49 9° $399%4 599° MEN'S LONDON FOG® MEMBER ONLY® Summer Jackets $299"49" COATS UNLIMITED OAK PARK LINCOLN CENTER GREENFIELD AT 101/2 MILE 968-2060 ❑ THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 45