Diplomatic Macher Lefi• In 1980, .Stuart Eizenstat was President Carter's domestic adviser. Above: Zbzgn iew Brzezinski, Eizenstat and Democratic nominee Jimmy Carter prepared for Washington. Man In The Middle Stuart Eizenstat's impact on U.S. policy and Jewish concerns is enormous. JAMES D. BESSER Washington Correspondent Washington II is title is Undersecretary of State for Economic, Business and Agricultural Affairs. It is a mouthful that does little to convey the real impact of Stuart Eizenstat. The soft-spoken public servant may be the Jewish community's best-ever asset in Washington. Iisk recent decades he has been the man behind a remarkable list of Jewish head- lines — rescuing Iranian Jews; uncovering Swiss gold; the economics of Mideast peace; creating the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and resettling Soviet Jews. Through it all, he has carefully bal- anced his commitment to government service with an equal devotion to Jewish activism — sometimes to the dismay of Jewish leaders who demand that the loyal- ty to the communal cause be paramount. 3/5 )99 12 Detroit Jewish News - "Yes, there is pressure," Eizenstat con- ceded in a recent interview. For example, he said, when he was trying last year to negotiate ground rules for restitution of Jewish property looted by the Nazis, there was "consternation on the part of Jewish groups that sometimes don't seem to rec- ognize my government position." Pursuing a narrow agenda, he insists, is less fruitful than striking a balance. "You can get a lot more done if you represent the best interests of the United States because, frankly, this country of ours has a wonderful moral and humani- tarian history and set of values that is very consistent with the interests of the Jewish community," Eizenstat said. "To the purists, what he does will never be enough, and in the end they will charge 'sell out,"' said David Harris, exec- utive director of the American Jewish Committee. "But to everyone else this is a man who has worked miracles. He brings to the job a seriousness of purpose, a commitment to Jewish life and an under- standing of the American bureaucracy that's unequaled." Two Sides Of The Coin For Eizenstat, activism on behalf of the Jewish community and public service are two sides of the same coin, one shaped by his strong Jewish upbringing in Atlanta. His father, a traveling salesman, "was a layman, but he was extremely learned. We used to joke that he was the pinch hitter at the synagogue; anytime they had a des- ignated Haftorah reader who got sick, my father could do it with absolutely no preparation." After the usual slackening of interest in things Jewish as a young adult, he gradu- ally returned to observance after his mar- riage. "One of the early discussions we had when we were married was whether or not to keep kosher. We decided not to. But that changed about 15 years ago, largely because we had sent our oldest son to a Jewish camp in Massachusetts. He'd