OTHER VIEWS Boycott Gas-Guzzlers To Help Israel o my friend says: "I would love to visit Israel, but I just can't do it. I keep thinking of the risk and my family. I'm frustrated because I want to do something." I respond: "Your decision'is regret- table although understandable. But there is something you can do. And it would be much more meaningful than a visit to Israel, which in the end, while important, is still symbolic. "Sell your SUV," I said. "That's hardly a sacrifice and it would impact the fight against terror- ism much more than a trip to Israel." My friend did not respond, as few have, when I've made this recommen- dation to get rid of their Sport Utility Vehicles. But we need to understand that the dollars we are spending on oil directly aids terrorists and countries such as Saudi Arabia, which supports terror- ism and helps finance it. Bed Falbaum, author, playwright, Farmington Hills public relations executive and former political reporter, teaches journalism at Wayne State University in Detroit. George Easterbrook, writing in the . New Republic, makes a cogent case for reducing oil consumption to impact terrorist states. He cites these statistics: • In 2000, the U.S imported 1.6 mil- lion barrels of oil per day from Saudi Arabia and 613,000 barrels from Iraq • More than one-fifth of America's petroleum imports come from Persian Gulf states, most of which have some connection to anti-American and anti- Israel terror • Americans burn 875 gallons per year per licensed driver and of that, about 100 gallons come from Persian Gulf states. (This works out to rough- ly $75 per year transferred from the typical American driver to Iraq's Saddam Hussein and the "desert princes who smile as their allies chant death to America" and Israel.) Easterbrook notes that if America simply reduced its petroleum use by 2 percent annually, "Gulf-state oil income would falter." His editor, Martin Peretz, followed up with a col- umn in which he said he has bought an electric-gasoline-powered car that achieves 51 miles per gallon. So it's clear we can do something When Students Die Maliciously A s a member of the Jewish . community, I hesitate before turning on the morning news, aching every time ter- ror reigns in Israel. As a member of the board of direc- tors of Women's American ORT — a supporter of the ORT Israel network of schools that educate 100,000 annu- ally — I mourn, too, every time one of our students or graduates is directly affected, when they lose family and friends, or fear attending a class trip or climbing aboard a bus to go to school. Patti Aaron, a West Bloomfield resident, is a past president of Michigan Region, Women's American ORT. And indeed, June 18 once again proved that this fear is rightfully earned: In Jerusalem, a No. 32 bus exploded merely 150 feet from the gates of ORT Spanian, killing 19 people (including 10 schoolchildren) and wounding 52. The incident comes in the wake of a harrowing year for the ORT commu- nity. Since the beginning of the latest Palestinian intifada (uprising), 36 ORT students and graduates have lost their lives in terror incidents and mili- tary action. Somehow, it seems surreal, as reports of the unthinkable pepper the papers day after day. But the students of ORT Spanian make it all the more tangible. Many of the Arafat Just Doesn't Get It Washington, D.C. f you can believe Yasser Arafat — and few do — he is the only one on the planet who hasn't figured out that President George W. Bush wants to get rid of him. I Douglas M. Bloomfield is a former %TN 7/ 5 2002 34 executive director of the American Israel Public. Affairs Committee. His e-mail address is dmb@his.com The discredited Palestinian leader not only said he doesn't believe Bush's call for new Palestinian leader- ship applies to him, but he also offered to meet the American presi- dent anywhere and any time to talk peace. There are a few problems with that, starting with the fact that Bush refused to meet with Arafat even before evidence surfaced linking the Palestinian Authority leader to a about terrorism by reducing that would advocate ridding the gasoline consumption, which highways of wasteful vehicles would not only impair the eco- like the SUVs — which, in a nomic strength of anti-Israeli moment of candor, Ford Motor Arab nations and terrorism but Company Chairman William would help in the development Clay Ford admitted not only of foreign policy. guzzle gas but are dangerous and Oil-producing Arab nations damaging to the environment. would be much more forth- A side benefit would be that BE RL coming if their pocketbooks with oil demand decreased, gas FALB AUM were affected. After all, it is prices would plunge, helping Comm unity the threat of oil boycotts or the economy. Vie oil higher prices that makes Would non-Jews and others the world, including the U.S., who may not feel strongly so compliant to Arab demands in the about Israel support such a boycott? Middle East conflict. Just make the case that the same Thus, if the entire national Jewish countries that attack Israel financed body politic were to launch a major the Sept. 11 terrorists and that it is in campaign to not only eliminate SUVs, this country's interest in fighting but also boycott other gas-guzzlers, we world-wide terror to reduce this coun- could make . a difference and help Israel. try's dependency on oil. Forget about expensive full-page politi- Never has the political environment cal ads in newspapers, forget about devel- been more favorable to such an effort. oping talking points and sending e-mails The United States has experienced terror to ourselves, abandon other "feel good" on its own soil for the first time in histo- programs which in the end do little to ry. It now understands — perhaps still affect the policies of those who kill Israeli not as fully as Israel — the horrors of ter- men, women and children almost daily. ror, and would be more sympathetic to Take all the limited financial resources such recommendations than in the past. and allocate them to a major program What's more, selling our SUVs is school's 600 students come from low-flying plane had caused the nearby southern Jerusalem the boom, until his friend neighborhood of Gilo and travel came running into the shul on the No. 32 bus route. After the shouting about a terrorist blast, administrators began a attack outside the school. frantic search to ascertain • "We started assisting people whether their students were safe. in need who had been wound- "Our school was under a lot ed," Eliran said. "The sights of pressure," said Ariel Tzaba, a were really scary. A few minutes ATTI ninth-grader at ORT Spanian, later, there was already a long AARON who auspiciously went to school line of corpses covered with Com munity late that day. "Teachers tried locat- black bags being identified Views ing students, and guidance coun- according to serial numbers. selors came into the classrooms to "I hope never again to witness talk to the students they could find." an event as frightening as this," he said. One of those students was Eliran We stand as surrogate witnesses." Shalom, who was in the process of put- Peace cannot come fast enough. I, ting on tefillin (phylacteries) in the along with members of Women's school synagogue when he heard a American ORT, join the entire Jewish tremendous explosion. He assumed a community in prayer for its arrival. number of recent terror week, however. According to bombings and arms-smug- American diplomats, few of gling schemes. And now, so the leaders, if any, trust does the rest of Bush's govern- Arafat and most see him as a ment. threat to regional stability Arafat is not entirely friend- and an obstacle to peace. less, however. A top Arafat lieutenant Following Bush's call for blasted Arab leaders for DOUGLAS M. "their strange silence." Arafat's removal, the French leaped to his defense, proba- BLOOMFIELD Finally, contending for Special bly out of reflexive anti- Hypocrite-of-the-Year hon- Commentary Americanism, followed by ors, Egyptian President the United Nations and Hosni Mubarak said, "Egypt most of the Europeans. strongly supports the democratically Arab leaders held back for nearly a elected Palestinian leadership." This