Insight Remember When • • Israel's Front Man Mark Regev shares impassioned message at AIPAC fund-raiser. DON COHEN Special to the Jewish News 111 ark Regev isn't just another talking head. He's our talking head. As spokesman for the Embassy of Israel in Washington, D.C., Regev can turn up on Fox, MSNBC or CNN at almost any hour of the day or night to take questions and spar with such Palestinian luminaries as Hanan Ashrawi or PLO spokesman Abdel Rahman. On March 12, he turned up at a fund-raiser for the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) at the Franklin home of Lori and Robert Nusbaum. But even in front of a friendly audience of 200 AIPAC supporters, Regev was just as impassioned, forthright and articulate as he shared the messages he tries to get across when speaking to a national audience. Introduced by event co-chair Linda Stulberg as "Israel's weapon of mass instruction," Regev covered a lot of ground in front of a rapt audience. "I want people to understand that Israelis are real people trying to deal with a real problem of terrorism," he said. Explaining that it is important to come across "nice, moderate, cool, calm and collected," he doesn't want view- ers to say there are "two foreigners yelling at each other, a pox on both of their houses." One of Regev's frustrations is the prevalence of the idea that there is a cycle of violence in the Middle East. Not so, he says. "There is one side trying to kill as many innocent civil- ians as they can, and the other side is trying to defend itself. That is the simple truth." Referring to the March 5 bus bombing in Haifa that killed at least 17 people, including many schoolchildren, he called such attacks "terrorism in the purest and most evil form that there is." "It's not us saying it. It's them that say it after every attack," he says, noting that as an Israeli, he takes it per- sonally. "To Hamas and Hezbollah, my 16-month-old child is a legitimate target." In contrast, Regev insists, "in the [Israeli army], it is very clear, you make every effort not to harm Palestinian civilians." Israel Is Ready With a possible war with Iraq on everyone's mind, Regev acknowledged that Israel is taking the threat "extremely seriously," asking rhetorically, "How do you deter someone when this is his last game?" In spite of the worries and unknowns, Regev says Israel has three tiers of defense against a missile threat from Iraq, and is "better prepared than ever before." "There is an American commitment to us, and we know 3/21 2003 36 it is serious," Regev says of the first tier. The second is the Arrow missile jointly developed by Israel and the United States to intercept incoming missiles well before they reach Israeli airspace, and the third tier is the new generation of Patriot missiles. "The problem is, when dealing with the Scud threat, we're dealing with the threat of 10 years ago. What can [Saddam] do to surprise us?" Regev asked, mentioning Iraq's low-flying drones that can spray biological agents as well as terrorism and "mega-terrorism" against the political, financial and military infrastructure. Dealing regularly with journalists of all stripes, Regev is more concerned about their professionalism than their bias. Noting that in the Arab countries and Palestinian areas "everyone follows the party line or else," journalists need to report as they did from the former Soviet Union where it was their job to go beyond the party line. From the pages of the Jewish News from this week 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 and 60 years ago. 1993 Southfield-Lathrup High School is phasing out its Hebrew language program due to lack of interest. 1983 Milton Marwil is elected president of the Hebrew Free Loan Association. Rabbis Avraham Shapiro and Mordehai Eliahu won substantial victories in the chief rabbinate elections to become Israel's Ashkenazic and Shephardic chief rabbis, respectively. Members of the six Reform con- gregants in the Detroit area will hold a combined religious service to honor Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise, founder of the American Reform movement. 1963 A new organization, the National Bar Mitzvah Club, the first organ- ization of its kind in the U.S., is formed to enable Jewish youth to make special pilgrimages to Israel. 953 Mark Regev "Their job is to be good journalists, their job is to get it right," insists Regev. "My concern is not that they are not pro-Israel, but that they're not professional." Eric Bronstein of Huntington Woods is part of AIPAC's new Young Leadership Board in metro Detroit. He found Regev to be right on target, and the talk further cemented his confidence in AIPAC. "I had this great frustration to do something [to help Israel]," Bronstein says. "It's really inspirational to hear from the Israeli government that [AIPAC's political sup- port] is exactly what they need from us, that this is the way to make a difference." Marla Zwas of Southfield, who together with Howard Jacobson and Linda and Bob Stulberg co-chaired the event, told the group that "halfway around the world someone is planning how to destroy Israel, and someone is planning how to plant a bomb. That keeps me motivated to act on behalf of Israel here." 4iimiatimoomm Contracts were signed in New York for construction of the first youth hostel in Israel. It will be dedicated in the memory of Louise Waterman Wise, founder and lifetime president of the American Jewish Congress Women's Division. Rabbi Alfred L. Friedman of Congregation Shaarey Zedek of Lansing will be honored by the members of the sisterhood at a testimonial dinner on his 10th anniversary in the rabbinate. 411077.7 Bessie Spalter, a former member of the staff of the Jewish Social Service Bureau of Detroit, is now serving in the British Isles as an American Red Cross director. — Compiled by Holly Teasdle, archivist, the Rabbi Leo M. Franklin Archives of Temple Beth El