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Washington's support for Israel's
war on Hamas terrorism began
to look tangible this week.
American and Israeli officials
here were busy nailing down de-
tails of the promised follow-up in
Washington to the unprecedent-
ed anti-terror summit at Sharm
el-Sheik.
That session, scheduled to
begin on March 28, was to bring
together "working level" part-
icipants from the 27 nations that
joined in the summit in Egypt.
That means military and law
enforcement officials, not prime
ministers and presidents.
"Invitations were issued over
the weekend to all participants
in the summit," said an Israeli of-
ficial here. "Israel definitely will
attend. The goal is to agree on
some practical steps the leaders
of these countries can take to
combat terrorism."
This week's session could be
followed by a meeting of foreign
ministers a week later.
Washington also moved sur-
prisingly fast on the $100 million
in supplementary aid promised
by President Clinton to help Is-
rael mount its battle against ter-
rorist groups.
Despite the budget-cutting
frenzy that continues in Con-
gress, the Senate folded the first
$50 million of the two-year pack-
age into the giant continuing res-
olution that — if all goes well —
will fund the government
through the end of the fiscal year.
Additional technical support
will come from Pentagon ac-
counts, said knowledgeable Capi-
tol Hill sources.
The added money will go for
sophisticated security equipment
and for the controversial plan
to build high-tech barriers to
separate Israel from the newly
autonomous Palestinian terri-
tories.
A broad spectrum of Senate
leaders quietly supported the
added money — a strong reflec-
tion of continuing support for Is-
rael's approach to the peace
process, according to sources on
Capitol Hill.
And work is continuing here
and in Israel on a formal anti-ter-
rorist agreement — something
more than a memorandum of un-
derstanding, less than a full-
blown treaty — that will .
formalize the American commit-
ment to Israel's security and to
her intensifying battle against
terrorism.
Administration officials hope
for a formal announcement dur-
ing Prime Minister Shimon
Peres' scheduled visit to Wash-
ington at the end of April.
C--