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PLEASE CALL LISA AT 353-3060 FOR MORE INFORMATION
"WE TOLD YOU SO" page 55
ing Israel's efforts to do so.
"When Israel removed
about 400 inciters of terror,
the entire world, the targets
of this terror, coalesced to
turn on Israel," Mr.
Netanyahu said. "What sort
of message could have been
taken from this? The mes-
sage was that anything goes,
and that the victim will be
blamed rather than the
perpetrator."
Mr. Netanyahu said Israel
must make its case against
Arab terror more effectively
in order to mobilize Ameri-
can and Western public opi-
nion against it. But a promi-
nent Israeli communications
professor said he did not ex-
pect foreign public opinion to
change, and that it would
remain fundamentally un-
sympathetic toward Israel's
actions against Arab
violence.
"The story of a child whose
father has been deported be-
cause he's some sort of
freedom fighter is a much
more powerful, clearer
human drama on TV than
the political story of a state
fighting for its survival.
People like to see human
dramas, and that's what TV
gives them," said Yariv Ben-
Eliezer, professor of com-
munications at Tel Aviv's
College of Administration.
"Americans in general
don't know about Israel,
they don't particularly care
about Israel, and in the long
run they can't distinguish
between one group of Arabs
and another," continued Mr.
Ben-Eliezer, who has also
taught at New York,
Rutgers and Adelphi univer-
sities in the U.S.
"Americans like an under-
dog, and Israel, since the Six
Day War, is no longer the
underdog."
12-20-92
DAY
SALE
3 Friday,
Saturday, Monday
SPRING
SAVINGS! 30% OFF
Thursday, March 18, 1993
Background
Israel Stays Mute
On Arms Report
Washington (JTA) — Israeli
officials are dismissing but
not explicitly denying the
accuracy of a Russian intel-
ligence report that asserts
the Jewish state could have
stockpiled between 100 and
200 nuclear weapons since
1970.
An English translation of
the report was made public
this week by U.S. Sen. John
Glenn, D-Ohio, during a
hearing of the Senate Com-
mittee on Government Af-
fairs, which he chairs.
The Israeli Embassy re-
sponded to the report by is-
suing the same statement it
always does when asked
about the country's nuclear
capability: that "Israel will
not be the first (country) to
introduce nuclear weapons
into the Middle East."
Similar reports about
Israel's possible nuclear
stockpile "have been cropp-
ing up for many years now,"
said Michael Shiloh, deputy
chief of mission at the em-
bassy. "Israel has never
related to such reports."
"I don't know" if the sena-
tor "thinks he detected
anything new," Mr. Shiloh
said. "I don't see anything
new."
A spokesman for Mr.
Glenn agreed that there
have always been rumors re-
lating to Israel's nuclear
stockpile.
"We're not endorsing" the
Russian findings, the
spokesman said. "We're
showing what the Russian
intelligence service has
done."
Mr. Glenn released the
English translation at a
hearing where James
Woolsey, the CIA director,
was testifying.
The report, compiled by
the Russian Foreign Intel-
ligence Service and titled "A
New Challenge After the
Cold War - The Proliferation
of Weapons of Mass Destruc-
tion," surveyed the global
threat of nuclear prolifera-
tion and provided informa-
tion on the nuclear
stockpiles of specific coun-
tries.
A news release issued by
Mr. Glenn's office focused
more on the historic nature
of the Russian report and did
not even mention the Israeli
angle.
The report, Mr. Glenn said
in the release, "represents
not only a historic look into
Russia's research on the pro-
liferation threat, but a fur-
ther thawing of the Cold
War mentality that is in the
best interest of global
stability."
"It is a broad overview of
the entire field of nuclear
proliferation," the Glenn
spokesman said.
(