-c3 Week SUBURBAN ACURA'S 2001 3.2 CI. Premium Washington Watch #YA4241 End-Around Buy '25,895" Sanctioning Iran, Libya; missile minicrisis; Conservative lobby. 20030 INTEGRA LS , JAMES D. BESSER Missile Minicrisis Washington Correspondent The picture made pro-Israel leaders wince. It was a Chinese F-8 jet just like the one that forced down a U.S. recon- naissance plane on April 1. And slung under the wing was a missile — built in Israel. A video released by the Defense Department over the weekend showed F-8s tangling with U.S. spy planes ear- lier this year. The Chinese planes then were equipped with Python 3 air-to- air missiles — the Israeli cousin to the American Sidewinder. The F-8 that collided with the U.S. Navy EP-3 on April 1 was apparently not carrying one of the missiles, but may have been equipped to do so. The incident could reopen what has been a persistent sore spot in U.S.- Israeli relations: Jerusalem's willingness to sell advanced weaponry around the world, including to potential U.S. adversaries. ro-Israel activists are waging a quiet uphill fight for renewal of the Iran-Libya Sanctions Act (ILSA), one of the pillars of U.S. policy in dealing with the rogue states. Renewal legislation will be intro- duced soon after Congress returns from its Easter/Passover recess, but the Bush administration's silence on the issue — and reemphasis on oil as a central theme in U.S. diplomacy — have ILSA backers worried. The original law imposed sanctions on non-U.S. companies investing more than $20 million annually in the Iranian oil and gas business. A separate executive order prohibits U.S. compa- nies and foreign subsidiaries from doing business with Iran and bans the financing of oil projects in Iran. The goal of the legislation is to limit the funds available to both countries to pursue their active efforts to acquire weapons of mass destruction and to support international terrorism. For Iran, in particular, oil revenues are an important component in financing weapons development. But the Bush administration — heavy with former oil company execu- has been cooler to sanctions as tives an instrument of U.S. policy. Secretary of State Colin Powell has already signaled a possible change in sanctions policy toward Iraq — the target of international sanctions that have been crumbling in the past few years. "There is a growing understanding in Congress and the administration that sanctions alone are not enough," said Shoshana Bryen, special projects director for the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs. "In the absence of other tough and realistic policies, sanctions alone inevitably only hurt the weakest people in these societies because these are dictator- ships." The administration, and Secretary of State Colin Powell in particular, want to reevaluate how sanctions fit into the broader policy picture before commit- ring themselves on ILSA or on contin- ued sanctions against Iraq, she said. pl Leather, BOSE CD Changer, Loaded Buy '35,695" 'All payments plus tax, title, license, doc., 12,000 miles/yr.. — All prices plus tax, title, license, doc, destination. Must take delivery from dealer stock by 4/30/01. Prior sales excluded or approved credit. All incentives to dealer. Preferred financing in lieu of rebates To 1.96 To 1-696 c_D SUBURBAN 248-471-9200 ACURA 25000 HAGGERTY • FARMINGTON TEN MILE Just North of Grand River Ave. Mon & Thurs 9-9. Tues, Wed. Fri 9-6 KNIGHT & DEUTSCH g4 MA S TER OF (248) 352-7030 Creating images that touch the heart... — 26571 W. 12 Mile Road — Southfield, 48034 www.knight-deutschphoto:com 1 )euts,-1, Maxie Collision, Inc. Jim Fleischer r ig "Since 1987" 32581 Northwestern Highway, Farmington Hills, MI 48334 248-737-7122 • • • ° • Clinical Teaching ......... LEARN I Nq • , •, • • Testing/Evaluation ISAD LITI ES First fully accredited Education Clinic in the United States to receive North Central Accreditation. 4/20 2001 24 LYNNE MASTER, M. ED Owner, Director N IC 'SCA Accedited by the North Central Association of Colieges and Schools (248) 545-6677 (248) 433-3323 Bloomfield Hills Oak Park www.Idclom Conservative Lobby A key leader of the Conservative Movement is moving to ratchet up its involvement in public policy debates, mirroring the efforts of other Jewish religious groups that have become a growing presence in Washington in recent years. But he may face daunting obstacles. This week, Rabbi Jerome M. Epstein, executive vice president of the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism, was in Washington to bolster a Conservative political presence that he said is long overdue. "As individuals, we have been very involved, but as a movement we have been passive," he said in an interview. "We definitely want to correct that problem; we feel we have an impor- tant message and an important per- spective as a movement." Initially, the group's New York-based social action director, Sarrae G. Crane, will spend more time in Washington — using a desk provided by the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism. Rabbi Epstein will spend more time traveling to the capital and getting acquainted with Washington's movers and shakers.