LETTERS (1°
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Continued from preceding page
ing Iraqi missiles carrying
atomic warheads.
Defeat of the United States
by Iraq seems unthinkable,
just like the victory of Hitler
was unimaginable in 1939.
Within a few years, Hussein
will have the ability to deliver
a nuclear blow to the
democracies of the world. The
fact that the United States
will have a vastly superior
nuclear capability will be
neutralized by Hussein's
ruthlessness. If Hussein is not
defeated now, he will have to
be defeated later at a far
higher cost.
Dr. Emanuel Tanay
Detroit
OPINION 11"'
If Only
Continued from Page 7
ly terrain of the West Bank
separated Kuwait from Iraq,
there might still be an in-
dependent Kuwait today.
And then there is the mat-
ter of trusting Arab moder-
ates like King Hussein and
President Hosni Mubarak
when they assure Israel that
Arafat, Hafez Assad, and, of
course, Saddam Hussein him-
self have reconciled them-
selves to Israel's existence.
They argue that the Arab
League's. Fez resolution in-
directly recognizes Israel by
accepting the legitimacy of all
sovereign states in the area.
But what about Kuwait's
sovereignty? Is Israel to
believe that the same Arab
states that don't much mind
Kuwait's conquest by Iraq
would weep over Israel's
demise?
No, Iraq's aggression and
the Arab world's reaction to it
will probably convince Israel
to hang tough, regardless of
what Mr. Bush and Mr. Baker
say. The case for negotiating
with the Palestinians — and
for compromising over the
West Bank — is still a good
one. But it must be made in
a new context. That context is
provided by Saddam Hussein.
Don't blame Yitzhak Shamir
if he decides, once again, that
in the Middle East territory
is worth a lot more than pro-
mises. ❑
M. J. Rosenberg, a former
editor of The Near East
Report, is a contributing
editor to the Baltimore
Jewish Times.