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New York (JTA) — Former
Israeli Prime Minister Yit-
zhak Shamir has charged
the Israeli government with
"a desperate bid to preserve
their power" in reaching an
accord with the Palestine
Liberation Organization.
Mr. Shamir charged the
government with acting
"hastily under pressure that
was self induced."
"My generation re-
members the other occasion
when peace in our time was
welcomed with great en-
thusiasm," he said. "This is
the real tragedy — and it is a
terrible thing to say — that
our government may yet
place its domestic interests
above the national."
Speaking before the Con-
ference of Presidents of
Major American Jewish
Organizations in New York,
Mr. Shamir appeared lively
and in a good mood, a year
and a half after his Likud
government was defeated in
the elections that brought
Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin to power.
While Mr. Shamir has
since yielded his position as
Likud party head in favor of
a younger generation, he has
been working to rally oppo-
sition to the peace accord
with the PLO in Israel and
now in the United States.
Mr. Shamir said he was
violating his principles
against criticizing Israel's
government abroad "only
because my colleagues and I
are convinced we are facing
extraordinary cir-
cumstances."
This distinction left one
opponent of American Jew-
ish criticism of the Israeli
government unimpressed.
"That's exactly what
Peace Now said," in justify-
ing its criticism, said Abra-
ham Foxman, national di-
rector of the Anti- Defama-
tion League of B'nai B'rith.
Mr. Shamir warned that
the agreement reached with
the PLO "places everything
we have created in Israel in
great trouble. And if this is
the case, it concerns every
friend of Israel, every Jew,
and everyone who cares."
Mr. Shamir said that if his
Likud party returns to
power, the new government
"will find a way to get out"
from the agreement with the
PLO, which he said he hoped
would be "abrogated."
While Prime Minister Yit-
zhak Rabin and others have
placed the peace accord in
the context of a changing
world, Mr. Shamir said the
changes made the return of
territories and the recogni-
tion of the PLO all the less
necessary.
"In the past, when we had
pressure to make peace and
pay for peace with territory,
it was a time when the
Soviet Union was still a
world power.
"Our situation is far better
than it was 20 or 30 years
ago. The Soviet Union
doesn't exist any more and
Yitzhak Shamir:
Charged hasty actions.
Israel is not any more
threatened by any war on
the part of the Arab coun-
tries," he said.
"We have decided to take
this step without any
pressure," he said, "and it is
a terrible mistake."
For Mr. Shamir, the battle
with the Arabs has been one
of stamina. He did not worry
about getting tired by the
continuing conflict.
"The moment we will get
tired will be a very
dangerous and tragic mo-
ment for us. The question is,
who will be the first to get
tired, we or the Arabs. As
the Americans say
sometimes, who will be blink
first.
"And it was crucial for us,
not to be the first to be tired,
never to be tired.
"We have to defend
ourselves, have to protect
ourselves, until the Arabs
come to the conclusion that
through terrorism the will
not get anything. And we
came very near to this situa-
tion.".
❑