of a successful peacekeeping op-
eration for more than a decade.
The presence of American
peacekeepers will also limit Is-
rael's ability to strike preemp-
tively, she said — a critical
strategy for a country that can-
not afford to fight major battles
on its own soil.
But other Jewish groups seem
more intent on using the politi-
cally •charged issue to forestall ter-

Reagan administration who now
heads the Center for Security Pol-
icy, agreed that the administra-
tion's focus on the peacekeeping
idea has provided an important
political lever for opponents of Ra-
bin policies. '
"The issue creates an opportu-
nity to introduce the note of cau-
tion and realism that I think is in
order," he said. "It's an opportu-
nity to explain to the American

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An Israeli soldier checks the papers of a Palestinian taxi driver.

AP/JACQUELINE ARZT

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ritorial concessions to Syria by
altering the political equation in
Washington.
"It's becoming the hottest is-
sue, and we expect to focus heav-
ily on it," said Dr. Ernest Bloch,
executive director of PRO IS-
RAEL, a group that has close ties
to the Israeli settlers' movement.
"It would be a very dangerous de-
velopment for Israel if something
like this went through. It would
seriously compromise Israel's se-
curity to give up the Golan
Heights."
Herbert Zweibon, chairman of
Americans for a Safe Israel, ar-
gued that Israelis cannot count
on American troops to protect
them from the consequences of a
land-for-peace deal.
"Our position is that we have
an obligation to warn the people
of Israel not to expect that the
Americans will be there to save
them," he said. "When the dan-
ger comes, we'll still be debating
the issue in Congress."
The growing aversion to peace-
keeping operations in general, he
said, combine with memories of
the Beirut bombing to create a
"strategic opening" for American
groups that have opposed the Ra-
bin policies.
Frank Gaffney Jr., a former as-
sistant secretary of defense in the

people much more clearly just
how materially our interests and
Israel's interests are being jeop-
ardized by this peace process."
The prospect of American
troops deployed in a narrow
buffer zone between Syrian and
Israeli forces, he said, "means
that this abstraction of the peace
process will become much more
concrete and unappetizing to the
American people. Hopefully an
opportunity will be created to
demonstrate more clearly what's
wrong with this peace process."
'What we're talking about is
body bags with American GIs in-
side when all hell breaks loose on
the Golan Heights," added Dr.
Joseph Frager, a New York
physician and political activist.
"We're just trying to show that
this whole peace process is an
American issue. The public is be-
ing sold a bill of goods. We want
to educate people about the facts;
American troops, that's the is-
sue."
Mr. Frager's group, the World
Committee for Israel, is getting
set to run an advertisement evok-
ing those kinds of powerful im-
ages.
There are indications that this
kind of approach to a possible
Golan deal is already reaching re-
PEACEKEEPERS page 60

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