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Seymour Hersh

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ple who run this world. His
impatient anger is apparent
in an interview — mostly di-
rected at American officials
who he says confounded
their own goal of limiting
nuclear proliferation in the
Middle East by ignoring the
abundant evidence of Isra-
el's aggressive weapons
program.
"In my case, the passion is
that, what originally may
have been rational is irra-
tional now — and not as
much from the Israeli as
from the American point of
view," he said.
"Israel has a right to do
what it wants to do, and I
can't do anything about it.
But for the United States to
go along with this meshu-
gas, this craziness, that's
troublesome."
Mr. Hersh maintains that
he is not condemning Israel
for its acquisition of nuclear
weapons.
"I don't make a moral
judgment," he said. "I un-
derstand what they did, at
least in the beginning. But
right now, we really need to
talk about it in terms of the
potential conflict in the
Middle East, and we need to
look at it in slightly different
terms. We can't look at it
just in terms of Israel's se-
curity, because that's
assured; nobody has a nu-
clear bomb in that part of
the world but the Israelis."
Mr. Hersh says that an
open discussion of Israel's
nuclear capability would not
compromise that country's
security or needlessly com-
plicate the peace process. In
fact, he argues, unless that
discussion takes place, it
will be impossible to control
the transformation of the

Middle East into a nuclear
battlefield.
Mr. Hersh's book has pro-
duced a curiously muted re-
action in the Jewish com-
munity.
"It's a very well written
and engaging book," said
Marvin Feuerwerger, a se-
nior strategic fellow at the
Washington Institute for
Near East Policy and a for-
raer defense department of-
ficial.
"But my problems with
the book are problems of
analysis and factual inac-
curacies. And in his desire to
write sensationally, he's al-
ways looking for a Jew un-
der every stone."

Mr. Hersh's book
has produced a
curiously muted
reaction in the
Jewish community.

The real reason for the
subdued reaction to the
book, he said, is that there's
little new in it, at least in the
parts that are substanti-
ated.
"The Israeli community is
much more open about it,"
Mr. Hersh said. "In this
country, we have this at-
titude of 'hear no evil, see no
evil, speak no evil' about the
Israeli bomb. A lot of Jews
said, 'I can understand why
you want to write this book.
But why tell the goyim?'
That's a crazy line of think-
ing.
The Israeli government
manipulates Jews here, he
suggested. "They treat the
American Jewish communi-
ty like 'goys.' They tell them
only what they want them to
know." ❑

11

Bush Discusses
Mideast Peace Process

Washington (JTA) A
group of prominent Arab-
Americans met with Pres-
ident Bush last week and
emerged frosm the White
House session apparently
satisfied with the president's
stance on the Middle East
peace process.
"There is no question in
my mind that this-ad-
ministration is dedicated to
a just peace in the Middle
East," Philip Habib, a
former U.S. special envoy to
the Middle East who is of
Lebanese descent, told
reporters after Bush met -
with him and 22 fellow
Arab-Americans. "
Mr. Bush requested the
meeting to discuss the peace

process with them, said
White House spokesman
Marlin Fitzwater. The ses-
sion came three days after
Mr. Bush met in- New York
with a delegation of top
American Jewish leaders,
again at the president's in-
itiative.
At that meeting, Mr. Bush
pledged to maintain Israel's
qualitative military edge
and to work to repeal the
1975 U.N. General
Assembly resolution
denigrating Zionism as
racism.
But those promises did not
seem to bother the Arab
group. "Those are longstan-
ding positions of every ad-
ministration which I find

