STRUGGLE page 55
Minister Yitzhak Rabin and the
pro-Israel lobbying group.
That latter factor, which Mr.
Grossman insisted has been ex-
aggerated by the press, could be
magnified by the recent resig-
nation of an AIPAC vice-presi-
dent after calling Israersdeputy
foreign minister a "little slime
ball."
And Mr. Dine was a superb
fundraiser. AIPAC has nobody
waiting in the wings to pick up
that function.
Est. 1919
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Meanwhile, the speculation
continues over who will replace
Mr. Dine. According to the
Washington gossip mill, the list
of candidates includes former
legislators like Rep. Mel Levine,
D-Calif., Rep. Stephen Solarz,
D-N.Y., and Sen. Rudy
Boschwitz, R-Minn., as well as
a host of leaders of other Jew-
ish organizations and Capitol
Hill staffers.
But that's just smoke screen,
according to Washington insid-
ers. Once associated with a
highly partisan group like
AIPAC, a politician would have
great difficulty appealing to a
broad-based electorate. That is
why, these insiders note, it is
unlikely that a major political
figure would sacrifice their fu-
ture chance of holding high of-
fice for a chance to run AIPAC
— and to report to its some-
times-cranky board
That leaves Mr. Dine's act-
ing replacement, Howard Kohr
— who has run many of
AIPAC's day-to-day operations
since last year, and who enjoys
excellent relations with key
members of the AIPAC board
— as the most likely permanent
replacement. 0
U.S. Files
To Revoke Citizenship
New York (JTA) — The U.S.
Justice Department filed a
motion in federal court here
last week to revoke the U.S.
citizenship of a New York
state man without the
customary legal proceedings
because he had admitted
taking part in a massacre of
Jews in Poland during
World War II.
Jakob (Jack) Reimer, an
ethnic German native of
Ukraine, told Justice
Department attorneys that
as an sergeant in the Nazi
SS, he had shot a man dead
during a mass shooting of
Jews in Poland.
The shooting took place in
either 1941 or 1942 near his
extermination unit's head-
quarters, the death camp
training facility at
Trawniki.
The motion to summarily
revoke Mr. Reimer's citizen-
ship, filed July 8 in U.S.
District Court in
Manhattan, is based on the
grounds that Reimer's taped
confession is so in-
criminating that there is no
need for a formal trial.
Mr. Reimer, 74, has main-
tained his innocence of war
crimes. His lawyer, former
U.S. Attorney General
Ramsey Clark, told the court
his client is innocent and
was himself a victim of the
war.
The Justice Department's
Office of Special Investiga-
tions first filed its complaint
against Reimer in June
1992, a month after OSI at-
torneys interviewed him.
The complaint charged
that Mr. Reimer "illegally
procured his citizenship be-
cause he advocated or
assisted in the persecution"
of persons "because of race,
religion or national origin,
which rendered his entry to
the United States unlawful"
under the Displaced Persons
Act.
A retired restaurant and
food delivery manager who
lives in Carmel, N.Y., Mr.
Reimer was given a U.S.
visa in 1952 and became a
citizen in 1959. He was
previously a German citizen,
having become so in 1944.
Captured as a Soviet army
officer in 1941, Mr. Reimer
was held as a prisoner of war
by the German army and
transferred to the Trawniki
training camp for SS guards
in or around September
1941.
According to court docu-
ments, Mr. Reimer c'
"admitted that, to his
knowledge, the exclusive
purpose of Trawniki was to
train men to murder Jews."
Among the court docu-
ments is a service oath he
signed in 1941 in which he