MIDEAST In case you were wondering, here is an explanation of diplomatic and historical terms that have surfaced at the Madrid peace talks. TERRITORY ON THE the putting together. Will act as go-between if called upon. Has gained the trust of Arabs and Palestinians. Supported linking U.S.-backed loan guarantees with building of Israeli set- tlements. AGENDA George Bush: Will preside over opening of the Mideast Peace Con- ference. Will also have summit with Soviet Presi- dent Mikhail Gorbachev to discuss arms control and aid. Mikhail Gorbachev: Keeping his face in the international arena. No longer chief supporter of Syria, nor does he wield kind of influence once had in the Middle East. A co-sponsor of the talks. GROUPS TO WATCH Hizbollah: or Party of God. Extreme, radical fringe, against peace with Israel. Responsible for latest terrorist attacks in Turkey and in Israel. Shalom Achshav: Israeli leftists willing to trade land for peace with Arab neighbors. Have stag- West Bank: YITZHAK SHAMIR, 76, will personally head the Israeli delegation. In a move likely to guarantee a hard-line Israeli delegation, Mr. Shamir bumped aside David Levy, his relatively dovish foreign minister. As head of Israel's Likud Party, he refuses to trade land for peace. ed demonstrations in Tel Aviv in recent weeks. Tehiya: Right-wing Israeli party led by Yuval Ne'eman. Withdrew from Knesset following Mr. Shamir's an- nouncement to attend the peace conference. Gush Emunim: The band of Jewish set- tlers living in the West Bank and Gaza. They aren't likely to leave their homes without a fight. ❑ GEORGE BUSH presided over the opening of the Mideast Peace Conference. Captured from Jordan in the 1967, Six-Day War. Area now home to 850,000 Pales- tinians and more than 100 Jewish settlements. Israel will put on the agenda a five- year-plan for Palestinian self-rule as well as plans for economic development. Gaza Strip: Captured from Egypt in Six-Day War. Wedged along the Mediterranean Coast between Israel and the nor- thern Sinai. Two-thirds of its 850,000 Palestinians are refugees from wars in 1948 and 1967. Their fate was to be decided by election accor- ding to terms of the 1979 treaty with Egypt. No elec- tions ever took place. About 2,500 Jews live along the coast. ISRAEL A land one- third the size of Lake Michigan, it approaches the peace table with one goal: to reduce the threat of war. 33. GAZA STRIP Almost entirely Palestinian. It has always been administered by other nations. 32: Golan Heights: Captured from Syria in Six-Day War. Annexed in 1982. 500-square-miles of rocky, hilly terrain. Popula- tion includes 10,000 Jewish settlers, 15,000 Arabs, most- ly Druse Arabs. Israel fears a Syrian-dominated Golan would once again pose a dai- ly menace to the Galilee's inhabitants (and a strategic threat to the country). 31' Jerusalem: Israel won the city's western half in 1948 War of Independence. Later, Israel captured and annexed east- ern half in the Six-Day War. Israel refuses to negotiate the fate of Jerusalem. Has refused to meet with Pales- tinian delegates from East Jerusalem. Arabs demand East Jerusalem become the capital of an independent Palestinian state. Southern Lebanon: Syria in essence controls the Lebanese government. Israel maintains a 24- square-mile wide security zone where Israeli and allied Southern Lebanon Army troops combat infiltration attempts into Israel. Israel is willing to evacuate zone as soon as satisfactory security arrangements are met. GOLAN HEIGHTS These hills overlook all of northern Israel. Syria wants them back. WEST BANK Mostly populated by Palestinians, this area is seeing a dramatic rise in Jewish settlements. 3 s. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 37