AUTO SHOW SALE
AT GLASSMAN SAAB
Saab 900005
Sri*
LEBANON page 115
AP PHOTONARON KAMINSKY
SAVE
$4200!
.............
WAS $36,145
•
NOW $30,216*
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
46964514949:000%.9.9.5,496016:600:00.00004.15.9.1962.651.360104140
900S CONVERTIBLE
WAS $34,490
SAVE
$5900!
NOW
$30,230*
OR LEASE
FOR
OR LEASE
FOR
$389**
'449**
• ;,
/W7
0
SAVE
SAVE
$5400
WAS $33,005
$4300!
WAS $35,515
NOW $ 31,198*
900S CONVERTIBLE
OR LEASE FOR
$399**
(
NOW $27,539*
9000CS 5•SPEED
OR LEASE FOR
$399**
/ v
**48 mo. lease requires 1st. month's payment, refundable sec. dep. $1999 cap. cost reduction, and $495
acq. fee. 12,000 miles per year allowed, 15e per mile over. Lessee is
responsible for excess wear and tear, plus tax, title, and plates. All rebates and incentives to dealer. Plus tax,
title, plates. All incentives to dealer. GM employee or family member
save additional money!
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11
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Israeli soldiers leap a creek while
patrolling near the Golan Heights.
Syria and Iran may not control
Hizbullah, but they can turn the
heat up or down whenever it
suits them.
Like many Israelis, Mr. Ka-
halani, a reserve brigadier-gen-
eral, is no longer convinced that
the troops need to be in Lebanon.
He put the queasy questioning
into the Knesset, where it soon
turned into a debate between
generals turned politicians.
At the heart of the heated talk:
The security zone made sense as
a barrier to terror and rocket
strikes when it was established
in its present form in 1985. Does
it justify the sacrifices involved
12 years later?
Mr. Kahalani proposed that Is-
rael withdraw unilaterally from
the
75-mile-long security zone
strip, which varies in depth from
two to six miles and stretches
from the Mediterranean to the
foothills of Mount Hermon.
Israeli patrols and observation
posts, he suggested, should be re-
placed by a multinational force
to prevent attacks on Israel's
northern border towns and vil-
lages.
"If we continue like this, the
situation will still be the same in
the next decade," he insisted. "I'm
not prepared for a situation in
which a soldier is killed and
buried and the country just goes
on staring. We could talk with
Hizbullah and with the Lebanese
government. We could reach an
agreement with them, even if the
Syrians don't support it. The
United States could force an
agreement of this kind on
Lebanon."
The weakness of Mr. Kaha-
lani's case is not the diagnosis,
but the prescription. He almost
admitted as much when he said
he was speaking out "to let the
soldier there know that someone
in Jerusalem cares."
Of course, Israel's experience
with international forces, under
whatever umbrella, is that they
are good for monitoring, but not
for preirenting. They can under-
write an agreement, if both sides
want to abide by it.
There has been an ineffective