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Stk. #3027 A Matter Of Viewpoint Condemned abroad, the deportation of 415 Hamas and Islamic Jihad members was hailed in Israel and bolstered Rabin's standing. LARRY DERFNER AND INA FRIEDMAN W ithin Israel, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin suddenly looks bigger and more confident than he has since the early, triumphant weeks of his administration. His decision to expel 415 llamas and Islamic Jihad members answered the public's angry demands for action against escalating terror. Fully 91 percent of the Israeli Jewish public backed Mr. Rabin's move, according to a survey by Dr. Mina Tsemach, the coun- try's best-known public opi- nion pollster. All the right-wing opposi- tion parties praised the ac- tion. Tsomet and the Na- tional Religious Party (NRP) cancelled their planned no- confidence motions against the government, and now say they want to join Mr. Rabin's ruling coalition. The left-wing Meretz party vowed to leave the govern- ment if Tsomet and the NRP came in. Should the switch take place, the Rabin coali- tion would be transformed from a center-left to a center- right government. The expulsions have split Meretz. Party leaders such as Shulamit Aloni and Yossi Sarid are being criticized vehemently by many in the Meretz rank-and-file for supporting Mr. Rabin's deci- sion. Meretz cabinet min- isters and Knesset members faced demonstrations by their own party activists, who accused them of selling out the party's progressive ideals and cooperating with a policy • of "transfer." One protester's sign asked them, "Have You Gone Mad?" The expulsions have also redefined the difference between Israel's left and right wings, between the government and the opposi- tion. Before, Mr. Rabin was being denounced by the right as too soft on the Arabs, both at the negotia- ting table and in the ter- ritories. In the wake of the deportations, the difference between the two sides is that the government believes a hawkish approach on the ground will enable its dovish policy at the negotiations to succeed; the right-wing in- - sists on a single approach to terror and the peace process — no compromise. Government leaders say they want to advance on the peace front by strengthening the "moderate" Palestinians . — represented by the main- stream PLO and the Pales- tinian delegates in Wash- ington — while the right- wing draws no distinction between the PLO and Hamas, saying they are all terrorists who must be hunted down equally. Politically, the expulsions were the timeliest of moves. In the past few months, the Rabin administration's pop- ularity had been going straight downhill. The prime minister had promised three things in his campaign — a decrease in terror, jobs, and progress toward peace. After nearly six months in office, Mr. Rabin had nothing to show. Unemployment, at 11 per- cent, was as bad as ever, with no improvement in sight; the peace talks had returned to a standstill, with Arab delegations talking about pulling out altogether, and terror — the overriding issue — was substantially • worse. From the outside world, the early returns on the ex- pulsions were markedly horrible. The United Nations, the U.S., Europe and everyone else denounced • them, the deportees' tent camp was a llamas public relations trump at Israel's expense, the PLO was clos- ing ranks with llamas rather than making recipro- cal gestures to Israel, and all the Arab delegations warned that if the deportations Correction In a Dec. 11 article on Borman Hall, it was inaccurately re- ported that Alan Funk was asked by the board to resign his administrative posi- tion. He resigned vol- untarily.