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October 14, 1994 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-10-14

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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Iraqi Troop Movements
Inspire Calm, Fear In Detroit

JILL DAVIDSON SKLAR STAFF WRITER

etroit Jews have
mixed opinions re-
garding the fate of
Israel should an-
other Persian Gulf crisis
escalate.
The situation began
Oct. 7 with reports of
Iraqi troop movements
toward Kuwait. In re-
sponse, President Bill
Clinton ordered Ameri-
can troops deployed to
the Persian Gulf area to
reinforce Kuwaiti troops
at their northern border.
Iraq announced Mon-
day that it was with-
drawing its troops, but
President Clinton said
the United States has
seen no withdrawal and
therefore has no inten-
tion of slowing deploy-
ment.
"Saddam Hussein has
shown the world before,
with his acts of aggres-
sion and his weapons of
mass destruction, that
he cannot be trusted.
Iraq's troop movements
and threatening state-
ments in recent days are
more proof of this," Pres-
ident Clinton said in a
televised speech Monday
night.
All of this sounds fa-
miliar to Sharona
Shapiro of the Michigan Scud missile damage in 1991 in a suburb of Tel Aviv.
Chapter, American Jew-
self to vulnerability now.
ish Committee. Although the
"Israel is probably as vulnera-
peace process has begun with ble as it was then," Mr. Kaye said.
some of the neighboring Arab "But then Israel will always be
states in the Middle East, Israel very vulnerable when its civilian
would be making a big mistake population is at risk."
if it were to assume there would
But Dr. Frederic Pearson, di-
be no threat this time, she said. rector of the Center for Peace and
"Israel continues to be as vul- Conflict Studies at Wayne State
nerable as in 1991 as long as all University in Detroit, and David
of its neighbors have not bought Gad-Harf, executive director of
into the peace process," she said. the Jewish Community Council
In addition, other countries of Metropolitan Detroit, dis-
like Japan who did not actively agreed. Both said Israel has
support the United Nations ef- much less to worry about this
forts in the fight against Iraq last time around.
time would probably not change
their position.
"Those countries who do not
have a history of participating as
strongly as the United States will
continue to maintain, in my opin-
ion, the status quo until their own
self-interests are threatened and
they don't have anything to prove
"If Iraq has Scud missiles and
to the rest of the world," she said.
Jeff Kaye, the community if they have Scud missile launch-
shaliach for the Michigan/Israel ers and if they are able to launch
Connection, said Israel's civilian one at Israel, then Israel is in
community has been a target of danger. But those are big ifs," Mr.
attack in the past, which lends it- Gad-Harf said.

D

Without
Scud power,
threat is less.

•-/

For one, Iraq is much less of a
military power than it was in
1990. When the Gulf War end-
ed in 1991, Iraq had lost more
than half of its ground troops and
nearly all of its Scud missiles, Dr.
Pearson said.
Another reason is that many
of the countries who had been
previously hostile toward Israel
have started peace negotiations
or entered economic partner-
ships. While the peace process
has not sealed the fate of Israel,
it has made it much less vulner-
able to attack, Dr. Pearson said.
For example, Jordan, once a
supporter of Iraq, has entered
into an agreement with Israel to
build a pipeline between the Red
Sea and the Dead Sea. The pur-
pose for the project is to provide
power for a joint desalination
plant.
Mr. Gad-Harf pointed to the
fact that Jordan and the Pales-
tine Liberation Organization
have urged Iraq not to take ac-
tion against Kuwait, a departure
from their supportive actions in
1990.

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