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SUPPORT page 63
for a strong, secure and intact
Israel," he said.
The emerging strategy of
that movement, he said, is best
articulated by Mr. Sharon, the
former defense minister, whose
speech at a New York syna-
gogue was regarded by hardline
forces as a watershed in their
effort to find issues that will sell
in this new era of negotiations
and concessions.
"He has come up with a plan
— not just rejecting the peace
plan out of hand, but proposing
a long series of modifications to
the Rabin plan," Mr. Lehmann
said.
Groups on the right also hope
to shift, the focus away from the
general issue of the Israeli-PLO
accord, and toward a long list of
specific objections to the Israeli-
PLO accord signed in Septem-
ber, a basic theme of Mr.
Sharon's speech on Sunday.
Right-wing forces are also
portraying the fate of the set-
tlers in areas likely to be turned
over for Palestinian self-rule as
a humanitarian issue.
"We will mount a worldwide
media campaign. We are work-
ing very hard on a grassroots
level, where people are being
educated to the fact that the
West Bank will be handed over
in July 1994 — not just Gaza
and Jericho," said Dr. Joseph
Frager, a leader in the World
Committee who has also been
active in organizing the Ortho-
dox community to oppose the
Rabin policies.
Other observers expect the
critics on the Right to focus on
such evocative images as the
creation of a Palestinian police
force for Gaza and Jericho.
"There's no question in my
mind that people will raise
questions about the overall
agreement by focusing on issues
like that," said Mr. Jacoby of the
Israel Policy Forum. 'They will
take the extremist violence that
everybody anticipated and try
to picture all Palestinians as be-
ing the same. They will rely on
the politics of fear, as they al-
ways have."
The sudden rise of groups
like the World Committee for
Israel, and the appearances by
Mr. Sharon and former Prime
Minister Shamir, may be set-
ting the stage for a much more
bitter, polarized debate within
the American Jewish commu-
nity if the peace process turns
sour, or if continuing Arab ter-
rorism punctures the shaky op-
timism of most American Jews.
"The new groups may dam-
age themselves because of their
obvious extremism," said a Ra-
bin supporter, who asked to
stay anonymous. "But their ex-
tremism might prove more at-
tractive if there is a significant
increase in terrorism, or if the
Israel-PLO alks fall apart."