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December 20, 1991 - Image 86

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1991-12-20

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1991

Sharon Addresses
N.Y. Jewish Groups

New York (JTA) — Israeli
Housing Minister Ariel Sha-
ron was a paradigm of
parliamentary protocol in
meetings with Jewish
groups here last week,
demurring when offered the
chance to repeat his harsh
criticism of Prime Minister
Yitzhak Shamir's participa-
tion in the current peace in-
itiative.
But he made clear that if it
were up to him, there would
be no peace talks, in Wash-
ington or elsewhere, until
several stiff conditions were
met.
In talks to Israel Bonds
purchasers and the Con-
ference of Presidents of
Major American Jewish
Organizations, Mr. Sharon
warned that any approach to
peace not based on the twin
pillars of democratization
and disarmament was
doomed to failure.
While criticizing the
United States for not mak-
ing any such demands on
Arab participants in the
peace process, he also
criticized the Arabs for mak-
ing no real moves towards
peace and, implicitly, Israel
for opening negotiations in
the absence of such moves.
"Any Arab country that
wants to join in peace talks
should first dismantle ter-
rorist organizations," he
said, mentioning Tunisia,
home to the Palestine Lib-
eration Organization's
headquarters and a prospec-
tive participant at the up-
coming multilateral talks.
Ridiculing the idea that
"the release of murderers
from prison" qualifies as a
confidence-building mea-
sure, he said he would like to
see an end to the arms race
in the Middle East, which he
said has now reached a pace
unprecedented in 30 years.
"Syria, while talking
about peace, is in the same
days unloading new Scud
missiles," he said.
He raised the specter of
Arab countries buying the
assistance and know-how of
nuclear scientists left jobless
by the disintegration of the
Soviet Union.
"Jews are naive if they
believe that because, after
an effort, they have manag-
ed to shake hands with an
Arab member of a delega-
tion, we are already halfway
to peace," he said.
Asked by a reporter
whether there were any cir-
cumstances under which he
would support a freeze on
settlements, Mr. Sharon

said: "I don't understand the
question, and I'll tell you
why."
He proceeded to
characterize the building of
settlements in the ad-
ministered territories as a
24-year-old policy carried
out under both Labor and
Likud.
Handed a map and
overlays by an aide, he ex-
plained to the Conference of
Presidents how the geog-
raphy of the area mandated
continued Israeli control
over the Samaritan high
ground.
He did not, however,
discuss charges levied by the
Israeli press and members of
the opposition that the
Israeli Housing Ministry,
under Sharon's leadership,

Any approach to
peace not based
on the twin pillars
of democratization
and disarmament
was doomed to
failure.

is spending as much as $1
billion annually on set-
tlement activity in the ad-
ministered territories.
Nor did he address his
ministry's reported sub-
sidies to the settlement
movement which has begun
buying housing in Arab
villages within Jerusalem
and evicting the current
residents.
But the general's hard-line
policy clearly struck a chord
among his listeners, one of
whom, applauding Mr. Sha-
ron's efforts to ensure that
"not one inch of Israel
should be Judenrein,"
pledged to purchase $1 mill-
ion of bonds this year.
Mr. Sharon said that for
the United States to condi-
tion the $10 billion in loan
guarantees sought by Israel
to resettle Soviet immi-
grants on the freezing of set-
tlement activity would
"make Russian Jews
hostage" to actions "which
we believe will endanger our
life there.
"We have to decide, which
to endanger: Those Jews in
Russia, or our lives, which
will include those Soviet
Jews, too."
"You must come into the
picture, much more seri-
ously," he challenged his
audience, both by pushing
for the loan guarantees, and
by helping Israel Bonds
reach its record target of $1
billion.

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