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December 22, 1995 - Image 44

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1995-12-22

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

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persistent undertone to
the visit to Washington
by Prime Minister Shi-
mon Peres involved the
idea of a full-blown defense al-
liance between the two nations
— potentially a major contro-
versy for pro-Israel forces.
The concept surfaced recent-
ly in a campaign speech by Sen.
Bob Dole, R-Kans., who pro-
posed upgrading the current
strategic cooperation between
Washington and Jerusalem into
a formal military alliance.
Mr. Peres indicated an inter-
est in the idea of an alliance,
something strongly opposed by
his predecessor, the late Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
Most observers suggest Mr.
Peres has revived the idea be-
cause of the possibility of seri-
ous movement on the
Syrian-Israeli negotiating front
— and because of the difficulty
of selling a deal involving the
Golan Heights to a nervous Is-
raeli electorate.
"One of his primary goals in
Washington is to sound the ad-
ministration out on just how far
they will go in participating in
a possible Syrian-Israeli deal in
a military way," said a top pro-
Israel source. "Peres is appar-
ently ready to move quickly on
the Syrian track — but he needs
a big boost to sell a deal to his
own people. That's apparently
what he hopes to do by hinting
about an affiance that will com-
mit the United States to defend
Israel."
But Israeli military officials
have traditionally opposed the
idea because it would limit their
flexibility.
"Israel's policy has tradition-
ally been one of preemption,"
said Shoshana Bryen, special
projects director for the Jewish
Institute for National Security

A

Affairs (JINSA). "That policy
would be a problem in a formal
military alliance. It's terribly
risky for Israel because it limits
their options, and it would give
officials in Washington a certain
amount of control over what
they can do."
And the American military
establishment is unlikely to fa-
vor the idea of a formal alliance
in today's uncertain interna-
tional climate, she said.
An American-Israeli military
alliance could also forestall any
move to put American peace-
keeping forces on the Golan
Heights, since such troops are
supposed to come from neutral
countries.
Mr. Peres came to town to
talk mostly about Syria, but he
came away with some goodies
— including an agreement for
cooperation in space-based re-
search that could lead to Israeli
participation in the Space Shut-
tle program.
"As part of our effort to sup-
port Israel's advances in science
and technology, I have today
agreed with Prime Minister
Peres to proceed with space-
based experiments in sustain-
able water use and
environmental protection," Pres-
ident Clinton said at a Monday
news conference.
"These experiments will take
place in unmanned space vehi-
cles, in the shuttle program and
in the international space sta-
tion."
President Clinton said the
program would include the
training of Israeli astronauts.
"We look forward to working
out the arrangements for this
cooperation, and we are ab-
solutely certain that it will ben-
efit Israel's high-tech
development as well as our
own," he said.

Army White
Supremacists?

here was finally some good
news about the bottled-up
anti-terrorism bill, thanks
to a compromise proposal
by Rep. Henry Hyde, R-Ill., and
Rep. Bob Barr, R-Ga., intended
to answer objections from con-
servative Republicans in the
House. The Senate passed its

T

version of the bill aimed at both
foreign and domestic terrorist
groups earlier this year.
But the optimism may have
been premature.
A group of 30 Republicans
shot off a letter to House Speak-
er Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., ex-
pressing concern about the

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