Bibi Maybe, Madeleine No AIPAC is left in the dark on the availability of its headline speakers. JAMES D. BESSER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS THE DETROI T JEWIS H NEW S T 80 he crisis in the Middle East and the controver- sy over recent actions by the Clinton administra- tion will add to the normally high energy level of this week's AIPAC policy conference, which begins on Sunday as some 2,000 pro-Israel activists converge on the city. But the crisis also is playing havoc with AIPAC's schedulers. At press time, the AIPACers were still trying to find out if Prime Minister Binyamin Ne- tanyahu was planning to appear before the group, as previously scheduled; the Israeli embassy here said it hadn't a clue. On Tuesday, the White House said that Mr. Netanyahu would arrive early next week for an emergency meeting with Presi- dent Bill Clinton, but it was not clear if he would keep his date with AIPAC. Whatever he decides, Mr. Ne- tanyahu's plans will be subject to change if conditions in the region deteriorate. Ms. Albright was on the early AIPAC schedule, but this week she decided not to attend. Ad- ministration sources said one rea- son was concern that her presence at the big pro-Israel meeting at a particularly sensitive time in the peace process could be counter- productive. Even without Mr. Netanyahu and Ms. Albright, the AIPAC con- tion to focus more on Palestinian — and a freeze on building at Har vention will represent the usual leader Yassir Arafat's failure to Homa. unabashed display of Jewish po- limit terrorism, not Israel's poli- The American Israel Public Af- litical muscle. On the schedule are cies on building in Jerusalem. fairs Committee has activated its Vice President Al Gore, House The White House has seen a big political network to urge Speaker Newt Gingrich, House sharp increase in calls and letters stronger U.S. pressure on Mr. minority leader Dick Gephardt from Jews upset with Arafat; the Con- and a congressional cast of hun- recent criticisms of Is- ference of Presi- Binyamin Netanyahu and dreds. rael's decision to build Madele ine Albright. dents of Major And, of course, legislators by - apartments in the Har American Jewish the dozen and political hopefuls Homa section of east Organizations from around the country will du- Jerusalem and with was in "regular tifully attend the Monday night what many activists see as a de- contact" with top administration banquet — de rigueur for politi- liberate downplaying of Mr. officials to express concern over a cians seeking Jewish and pro-Is- Arafat's role in fomenting recent perceived shift in U.S. policy, said rael support. violence. Malcolm Hoenlein, the group's ex- Against the backdrop of the The lobbying became even ecutive vice chairman. worst crisis in the Israeli-Pales- more intense as it became appar- The Zionist Organization of tinian peace talks since they be- ent that the administration was America has mounted a nation- gan in 1991, American Jewish considering a dramatic proposal wide drive against what Morton groups sped toward a confronta- for salvaging the Mideast negoti- Klein, the group's president, called tion with the Clinton administra- ations, which would include an ac- U.S. pressure to force Israel to tion. celeration of the final status talks, make "one-sided concessions." A broad range of pro-Israel a new campaign by the Palestin- At a contentious meeting be- groups pressed. the administra- ian leadership against terrorism tween a delegation from the Pres- idents Conference and Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, some activists charged that the admin- istration's slow response to Mr. Arafat's renewed use of the terror threat may have contributed to recent violence, including the deadly bombing at a Tel Aviv cafe. "The secretary got an earful," said one participant. "The tone was fairly strident; the secretary said she was 'disappointed' with the implication that U.S. policy was somehow to blame for the vi- olence." Mr. Hoenlein agreed that Ms. Albright heard some "very direct talk. People .spoke of the admin- istration's shift from private to public criticism [of Israel]. There was a perception that the admin- istration's tactics have changed." There were signs that the ad- ministration heard the message. At a State Department briefing,