Right-wing Lrelis honor late Rabbi Meir Kahane Los Angeles Times JERUSALEM - As more than 100,000 Israelis gathered in Tel Aviv to remember slain Prime MinisterYitzhak Rabin, about 200 right-wing Jewish radicals gathered hereto remember slain Rabbi Meir Kahane, whom the govern- ient considers the spiritual guide of those who allegedly conspired to kill ,Rabin. No tears were shed for Rabin during the sunset service at Kahane's grave in the Har Hamenuhot cemetery on the fifth anniversary of the Brooklyn-born rabbi's assassination in New York. * Whether or not the religious men and vomen who attended were happy about .abin's assassination - and clearly several were-they shared the view of confessed killer Yigal Amir that Rabin as a traitor to Jews. ) The people here today belong to the rup that is not afraid to identify with et truth," Kahane's son, Binyamin, told the group. The truth according to the followers of Kahane is that Greater Israel, includ- ing the occupied West Bank hills they call Judea and Samaria, was given to Jews by God and that Arabs should beexpelled; Rabin had no right to nego- Ytiate Jewish land with the Palestinians, ;theycharge. Amir told police after his arrest that he was carrying out God's work when "he-shot Rabin at point-blank range in ,Tel Aviv on Nov. 4 and was acting according to Jewish law. He reportedly haa religious ruling from one or more rabbis identifying Rabin as a "rodef," -or-pursuer of Jews, making the prime 'minister an acceptable target for death under Jewish law. Yesterday, Rabbi Yoel Ben Nun, a religious leader from the West Bank settlement of Ofra, gave Israel's chief rabbis a list of other rabbis who report- edly have issued such rulings. Israeli television named three of them as ' Nachum Rabinowich from the Maale 'Edumim settlement, Dov Lior from Kiryat Arba and Eliahu Zini of Israel's ~top technological institute, the 'Techni on. None of them could be reached for comment, but Israeli radio said the three denied they had ever sanctioned mur- der. The case has brought out the deep divisions between Israel's secular and ;religious communities and dealt a blow to the image of Orthodox Jews, who are struggling for influence in the increas- 'dngly secular state. Police have said they believe Amir and his brother, Hagai, were the ring- leaders of a group that conspired for 'more than two years to kill Rabin. They say Hagai Amir stalked Rabin at home "and in public events and got close to him at least five times before Yigal emir pulled the trigger. NAm' Dw/wavuLD The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 13, 1995 - 7A Rebel Serbs make deal with Croatia A young Israeli holds a candle and a sticker bearing a portrait of slain Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin that reads "Enough Violence" at a peace rally held yesterday in a Tel Aviv square. The Kings of Israel Square will be renamed in Rabin's honor. Israei secunty agency told in advanCe of plot to murder Rabin ERDUT, Croatia (AP)-Rebel Serbs agreed yesterday to submit the last of their holdings in Croatia to government authority, resolving a dispute that threat- ened to derail U.S.-led talks in Ohio on peace for the Balkans. "This is a historic signing," U.S. Am- bassador Peter Galbraith said. "For the first time in this conflict an issue has been solved by a signature and not by a bullet." The agreement, signed in this Serb- held town in eastern Croatia and wit- nessed by Galbraith and chief U.N. envoy Thorvald Stoltenberg, also averted the imminent threat of more fighting. Croatian troops in May and August recaptured most Serb-held territory taken in a 1991 war, sending about 180,000 Croatian Serbs fleeing to Bosnia and Serbia. Croatia threatened to attack the re- maining bit of Serb-held territory, known as eastern Slavonia, if rebels refused to accept the plan for its reinte- gration. Suchan attack on the territory, which borders Serbia, could have drawn in the Serb-led Yugoslav army, leading to re- newed war and a collapse of Bosnian peace talks at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. In a show of force, the Croatian army had moved crack troops and heavy ar- tillery toward the front line over the past few days. Witnesses also reported seeing a large column ofYugoslav army troops and guns headed toward the Croatian border late Saturday night. "The agreement provides forapeace- ful solution," Stoltenberg said. "I gen- erally hope that this will have a conta- gious effect for the whole area." The two negotiators later took the agreement to Zagreb, the Croatian capi- tal, where the government's lead nego- tiator signed for Croatia. The Croatian government and rebel Serb leaders had agreed Oct. 3 on basic principles for the return of the territory, but remained at odds over how that would be done. Serbs wanted a three-year transition period and U.N. monitoring. Croatia in- sisted on no more than one year and U.S. troops face rough Balkan tour Los Angeles Times GRAFENWOEHR, Germany - As Sgt. 1st Class John M. Baggett practices harsh tank combat tactics at the U.S. Army training base, he mustkeep the immediacyofthetrain- ing in mind. Ifnegotiations among the three war- ring Balkan factions produce a peace accord, Baggett and some 23,000 U.S. soldiers like him will be deployed deep into Bosnia-Herzegovina to serve as part of an international peacekeeping unit. The operation would be enormous. The U.S. contingent would join a NATO-led ground force of more than 60,000 troops --- including troops from Western Europe, Russia, the old Warsaw Pact countries and a handful of Third World contingents. The first wave would hit the ground just four days after a peace accord is signed and the rest would arrive within a couple of weeks. Accompanying them wouldbeaNATOairarnadaeven larger than the one that carried out bombing raids against the Bosnian Serbs lIst sum- mer. The risks would be formidable as troops may face snipers, and the tierce cold may bring difficulty in moving vehicles and equipment and locating the over 6 million active land mines left by the warring factions. wanted a NATO presence, similar to that which would enforce peace in Bosnia. The agreement calls for a one-year transitional period that can be extended to two if requested by either side. It asks the U.N. Security Council to create an interim administration for the area and deploy troops to maintain peace, but does not specify the composition of those forces. TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - In the latest evidence of a stunning intelli- gence failure, the Shin Bet security agency acknowledged yesterday that it had advance information about the assassin of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. In a court appearance, the confessed assassin's brother said he received weapons from a sergeant in an elite army unit, who is the seventh detained suspect. The assassin's brother was or- dered held for 12 more days. As the official mourning period ended, more than 200,000 Israelis streamed into newly named Yitzhak Rabin Square in a defiant replay of the peace rally where a Jewish ex- tremist shot down the prime minister eight days before. It was believed to be the biggest gathering ever in Is- rael. Even as the square was filled with flags, candles, cardboard doves and signs reading "Enough Death," Israeli troops began pulling out of the West Bank town of Jenin, as provided by the autonomy agreement signed by Rabin and PLO chief Yasser Arafat in Sep- tember. The pullout is to be done by today. In a highly unusual move, the secre- tive Shin Bet sent a fax to Israel's Army radio saying that authorities were told of an assassination plot in June by a friend ofYigal Amir, who confessed to gunning down Rabin after the Nov. 4 peace rally. The Associated Press ob- tained a copy of the fax. The agency acknowledged that a friend of Amir's, Shlomo Halevy, pro- vided authorities with an accurate de- scription of the assassin after being told of plans to kill Rabin by a mutual friend. Halevy told his army commander of the plot but did not reveal Amir's name or say that he knew him, pretending instead that he had overheard two men discussing the plot in a bus station bath- room, the Shin Bet said. Halevy said one of the plotters was 25, short, black-haired, amember ofthe militant Jewish group Eyal and a stu- dent at Bar Ilan University. Amir fits that description. Security sources said on condition of anonymity that Halevy's information was turned over to the Shin Bet, but after a superficial check, the agency decided to ignore it. Theories that Rabin was the victim of a wider conspiracy were also bolstered yesterday when police told a magistrate's court in Tel Aviv they had evidence linking a sergeant in an elite army unit to the assassination. The detained soldier, an observant Jew, is the seventh suspect in custody. Hagai Amir, Yigal Amir's 27-year-old brother, told the court he received weap- ons from the soldier, Eric Schwartz, but returned them. Police said they have arrested Schwartz, but he did not appear in court yesterday. Police would not say if he would appear today. Hagai, wearing jeans and a black skullcap, told the court he did not be- lieve his brother really planned to kill Rabin. He said a cache of weapons found at the Amir house was intended for possible use against Arabs. Jude Dan Arbel, in agreeing to a police request for extending Hagai Amir's detention for 12 more days, said he believed "there was a conspiracy and an organization" to kill Rabin. "This was not done by one man," Arbel said. The sobering revelations were likely to further shake Israel's security ser- vices, already widely blamed for fail- ing to protect Rabin. Four senior Shin Bet officials have lost their jobs. Its director, identified only as C, has offered to resign but was asked by acting Prime Minister Shimon Peres to stay on until a government probe is completed. Five other people were arrested near Tel Aviv yesterday when they tele- phoned police and threatened to kill Peres. Earlier, generals, Cabinet members and relatives filed past the flower-strewn grave of "Lieutenant General Yitzhak Rabin" at Jerusalem's Mount Herzl cemetery to mark the end of the official seven days of mourning. 9SPENDING ContInued from Page 1A provides temporary funding at only 60 percent of last year's levels - but that -if Republicans were willing to delete -the Medicare provision, it would give 'thetwo sides "a basis to talk." Gingrich aides said the President cut the call short after about eight minutes to leave to speak at a Veterans Day event. - Gingrich said the call was "appar- tly designed to set up his press secre- ,ary promptly rushing in" to the White 1fouse press room to announce Clinton's ' version." '"He in effect said on the telephone, you know, 'Get lost,"' Dole said. "That's sort of the tone of it. ... I know when somebody's pulling my leg on the telephone. I wasn't born yesterday. I think it was all a set-up." 'The phone call was the first direct budget conversation Clinton and the two leaders had since one at the White House two weeks ago when the Presi- dent laid out his insistence that the broader battles over the direction of federal spending be carried out in the full budget negotiations, not in the cri- sis atmosphere of a possible govern- ment shutdown and a potential default on its outstanding debts, if the government's authority to continue to borrow runs out. By midweek, the Treasury is likely to bump up against its $4.9 trillion debt limit, although a default is unlikely because the Treasury secretary can dip into several trust funds for cash needed to make interest payments on govern- ment borrowings. The House and Senate have passed a temporary debt ceiling increase, but the president has said he will veto it because it puts too many restrictions on the Trea- sury secretary's ability to cope with a debt crisis and also contains too many unre- lated provisions, such as limits on appeals by death row inmates and restrictions on new government regulations. House leadership aides said the debt ceiling legislation could go to the presi- dent yesterday. They did not send it to the White House earlier to keep Clinton from using it as a prop during his weekly radio address, when he had planned to announce a veto of the bill. In his address, he called "blackmail" the GOP's use of the debt limit and short-term spending bill to force him to come to terms with them on the GOP goal of balancing the budget by 2002. Clinton insisted he will not change his demand that Congress send short-term funding and debt-ceiling legislation unadorned with extraneous policy mat- ters. 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