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See [Myer and Sons Volvo for detais. N (1151-0t1 911TfRIOPS Featured in: • Better Homes & Garden's Bedroom & Bath Construction by: Newmeyer Inc. H precisely a time when Egypt could be demonstrating its clout in the region by serving as a facilitator in the peace process, why has Mr. Mubarak chosen to lock horns with Israel rather than downplay their dif- ferences? One answer ascribes Egypt's behavior to tactics. What might appear to be Egypt's sudden opposition to Israel's unique nuclear status has actually been a pillar of Egyptian policy. Egypt's proposal to declare the Middle East a nuclear-free zone goes back to a draft of the Camp David accords — from which it was deleted at Ameri- ca's and Israel's insistence. Since the Madrid Conference, the meetings of the arms-control working group of the Multilat- eral Talks have come nowhere near seriously discussing nuclear weapons. Thus the renewal of the NPT is a golden opportunity for Egypt to highlight Israel's "unfair privileged status." A more sophisticated expla- nation points to a deep Arab am- bivalence toward the peace process or at least toward its pos- sible results. In a striking piece titled "The Arabs in Their Own Eyes," Ze'ev Schiff, defense edi- tor of the Israeli daily Ha'aretz, noted that the Arab world per- ceives itself as exceptionally di- vided and weak at this time. In light of that weakness, even the high points of the peace process — like the Casablanca Confer- ence, which Israel organized with such aplomb — have spawned suspicions that what peace will really mean is Israeli hegemony in the region. A fear of losing control of po- litical developments — as Israel wins over the Arab periphery (the Gulf and North Africa) be- fore making full concessions to the confrontation states (Syria, Lebanon and the Palestinians) — has been heightened by the specter of an Israeli economic juggernaut. Add to that the de- mand backed by the United States that Israel be allowed to retain its nuclear option (read "military hegemony") and it's easier to grasp why Egypt, the self-styled leader of the Arab world, has built up a store of re- sentment and been venting it so strongly of late. The "hegemony theory," which has become a buzz word in the Israel media, only complicates an excruciatingly complex situ- ation. For it suggests that even under the best of circumstances, Israel can expect no more than the aloof peace it has experienced with Egypt with all its Arab neighbors. And that, in turn, im- plies that rather than adjust its philosophy of deterrence to the needs of an age of peace, Jerusalem should cling to its "nu- clear ambiguity" for as long as it possibly can. FENBY STEIN Entertainment Tobyann Pollak allied ASID • Detroit Free Press • Eccentric (810) 737-3387 117