ANALYSIS IN CELEBRATION OF THE GRAND OPENING OF OUR BERNHARDT GALLERY AT TEL-TWELVE MALL... SAVE 30% ON SPECIAL ORDERS ONLY at both locations on fine furniture from Bernhardt now thru May 31st. Stunning living room, dining room and bedroom displays. Stop in and see for yourself why Bernhardt is known for quality and craftsmanship. Our courteous staff of professional interior designers awaits you. Secretary Baker: Putting the onus on Israel. Baker's Outburst: Just The Tip Of The Iceberg? JAMES D. BESSER Washington Correspondent SOUTHFIELD • Tel-Twelve Mall • 12 Mile & Telegraph Daily 10-9 • Sunday 12-5 Phone 354-9060 WEST BLOOMFIELD • 6644 Orchard Lake at Maple Mon-Thu-Fri 10-9 • Tue-Wed-Sat 10-6 • Sun 12-5 Phone 855-1600 INSTALLATION SPECIAL OFF RICK WALD $1 00 This Ad) 489-586 (With JOB HUNTING? Can't seem to get interviews? Changing Careers? Re-entering the workforce? Feel you are too old, inexperienced, not sure of what job you want or should be looking for? Not satisfied with cur- rent employment? Phone TODAY for o consultation appointment ELLMAN & ASSOCIATES (313)737-7252 30 FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1991 (not an employment agency) RENDS NOW OPEN CROSSWINDS MALL Orchard Lake Rd. at Lone Pine Rd. Q351-4455 S ecretary of State James Baker's out- burst against Israel this past week in Congress was not an effort to "jump start" negotiations, as por- trayed in some news ac- counts. It was an expression of anger and frustration, and will only serve to deepen the mistrust between Israel and the U.S. regarding peace talks, according to Washing- ton insiders. How, they ask, can Mr. Baker assume the role of honest broker when he ap- pears to be biased against Israel? Speaking before the House appropriations committee on foreign operations, Mr. Baker, in cool, clipped tones, charged that Israel's recent expansion of settlements was "the single biggest obstacle" to his peace efforts. With the Secretary of State putting the blame for his stalled talks on Israel, and the Jewish state refus- ing to see its recent set- tlement activities as a public relations disaster and a dip- lomatic poke in the eye to Mr. Baker, the two countries are acting more like oppo- nents than allies on this issue. Pro-Israel activists argued that Mr. Baker's emphasis on the settlements question represented a fundamental imbalance in the secretary's approach to the region. Arab intransigence on a number of issues, not to mention Syria's virtual annexation of Lebanon by treaty last week, were at least as provocative as Israel's expansion of Jew- ish settlements, they argued. In Senate hearings the next day, Mr. Baker was greeted with a barrage of angry questions from a group of pro-Israel senators, including Sen. Alfonse D'Amato, R-N.Y., and Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J. They wanted to know if Israel's settlement activity was more of an obstacle to peace than Syria's purchase of Scud missiles from North Korea, more than the Arab refusal to end their state of war with Israel, more than Saudi Arabia and Kuwait's refusal to institute any forms of democracy. There was active talk of congressional "dear col- league" letters and resolu- tions condemning the Baker statements. But all that activity belied some deep ambivalence run- ning through the pro-Israel community in Washington. Before last week's fireworks, many of Israel's friends here were privately expressing their distress over Israel's settlements pol- icies. Some of Israel's friends in Congress had weighed in quietly with Israeli officials; there was special concern about Housing Minister Ariel Sharon's activities and what some members of Con- gress see as Mr. Sharon's