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August 21, 1992 - Image 22

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1992-08-21

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

W

POLITICS

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Talking to Jewish journalists, the
Democratic presidential nominee touts
his pro-Israel position.

Washington Correspondent

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E

s Republicans
gathered in Houston
for their national
convention, Democratic
presidential nominee Bill
Clinton sought to steal some
of their thunder in a session
with a group of reporters
from American-Jewish
newspapers on Monday.
In a half-hotu• conference
call, a sometimes testy and
defensive Gov. Clinton an-
swered questions on a wide
range of foreign and do-
mestic issues.
The meeting came at the
urging of several key Jewish
backers of the Arkansas
governor and followed by
less than a week a similar
session hosted by President
Bush at the White House —
a meeting that was widely
regarded as the beginning of
an aggressive GOP effort to
win Jewish votes.
Gov. Clinton praised Pres-
ident Bush and Secretary of
State James Baker for bring-
ing the nations of the Middle
East together for their first-
ever direct peace talks. But
he criticized the administra-
tion for the positions it has
taken since the talks opened.
"Because of the problems
between the Bush ad-
ministration and the former
government of Israel, all
public comment concerning
the Middle East from the
time the peace process
started were those directed
against the Israeli position,"
Gov. Clinton said. "The
United States ought to be a
very strong and aggressive
pusher of the peace process,
without in any way attemp-
ting to deliver Israel to the
Arab position."
Gov. Clinton suggested
that if he is elected, he would
consider appointing a special
envoy to maintain momen-
tum in the peace talks.
"I will make a decision on
that and on all other issues
relating to this in this con-
text: I want to give this
peace process the highest
priority," he said. "I think
we have a real shot to make
progress. I want to support
the process, and I will do so
very strongly."
Gov. Clinton bristled at a
question about the cursory

approach to the Middle East
in the Democratic party
platform and about the fact
that his acceptance speech
did not include any mention
of Israel.
"My response is that
George Bush and Dan
Quayle can't hold a candle to
the record (Democratic vice
presidential candidate) Al
Gore has made in the Senate
as a friend of Israel," he
said. "And I was standing up
for Israel when George Bush
was moaning that he was
one poor little person in the
White House being
beleaguered by the vicious
Israel lobby, AIPAC (the

"I was standing up
for Israel when
George Bush was
moaning that he
was . . . being
beleaguered by the
vicious Israel
lobby."

Gov. Bill Clinton

American Israel Public Af-
fairs Committee).
"I was sticking up for
Israel when the secretary of
state was reported to have
made brutally anti-Semitic
remarks in talking about
Israel, just a few months
ago."
The GOP platform, which
contains detailed language
on the Middle East and the
U.S.-Israeli relationship,
does not reflect the perfor-
mance of the Bush ad-
ministration, he added.
"They can put all the words
they want in their platform
— and anybody who forgets
their record deserves what
they get," Gov. Clinton said.
He also responded angrily
to questions about a possible
tilt in his campaign toward
the dovish end of the Middle
East spectrum as a result of
the "Peace Now" activists
who are in his inner circle.
"The criticism I got in the
primary process was that
was too close to AIPAC, and
had been too hard on the
other side in the Middle
East, too militantly pro-
Israel," he complained.
"Maybe I can't please
anybody."

Continued on Page 24

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