Washington Report, June 13, 1983, Page 6
Facts For Your Files: A Chronology of U.S.-Middle East
Relations
May 26:
President Reagan announced that he would nominate Hume Alexander
Horan, currently U.S. envoy to Equatorial Guinea, to be the Ambassador
to the Sudan. He would replace C. William Kontos, who has been serving
in Khartourn since 1980.
May 27:
Responding to the increase in the number of Syrian forces in Lebanon
and along the Syrian-Lebanon border, the State Department issued
a statement saying: "The Syrian buildup of forces into Lebanon
and along the Syrian-Lebanon border can lead only to increased tensions
in an already volatile area and could threaten the uneasy peace
that now prevails in Lebanon."
May 28:
Amid increased tension in the Bekaa valley in Lebanon between Israel
and Syria, a senior State Department official attending the Williamsburg
economic summit conference said: "The additional Soviet weaponry,
the Soviets manning that weaponry, the aggressive behavior of the
Syrians, their association with PLO guerrilla forces, with Iranian
terrorist groups that are there, all provide a situation that is
dangerous." The official, who could not be named under the
rules of the briefing, said that Israel had demonstrated "restraint"
in the face of "quite a large Syrian buildup."
May 28:
The Reagan Administration, in a statement read by spokesman Larry
Speakes in Williamsburg, called on the Soviet Union and other nations
"contributing to the tensions" in Lebanon to exercise
"utmost restraint" so that "the risk of conflict
can be reduced."
May 28:
Approximately 1,200 U.S. marines from the 24th Marine Amphibious
Unit (MAU) arrived in Beirut to exchange positions with marines
of the 22nd MAU, who had been serving since last February as part
of the multinational peacekeeping force in Lebanon.
June 1:
The State Department issued a statement saying that the U.S. government
"is seriously concerned by a recent upsurge of Libyan military
activity" in the Aouzou strip in northern Chad, an area which
Libyan troops have occupied since 1973. The statement added that
although there was "no evidence" that Libya was planning
a land invasion of Chad as it did in 1980, it had increased the
number of flights in the strip and that "with support elements
now in place at Aouzou (Libya) would be capable of launching (air)
attacks" against Chad's forces.
June 2:
Nicholas Veliotes, Assistant Secretary for Near East and South
Asian Affairs, told the House Subcommittee on Europe and the Middle
East that the Administration "will not oppose" Congressional
moves to increase the grant portion of aid to Israel above the $1.34
billion requested by President Reagan—providing, he said,
that aid to Egypt is also increased, and that this additional money
for Israel and Egypt not be taken away from another country's allocation.
Another Administration official has told the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee that the Administration, to accommodate such increases,
would raise the overall total of foreign aid money it had initially
requested by some $400 million.
June 2:
By a vote of 276 to 76, the House of Representatives agreed to
authorize $251 million in economic and military assistance for Lebanon
this year. The Senate—which passed a similar bill May 20—still
has to approve the House version, which does not differ on figures
but on language specifying the conditions under which President
Reagan can commit additional U.S. troops to Lebanon. Appropriation
of the money is being handled in separate legislation.
June 2:
Mark Richards, Deputy Assistant Attorney General of the United
States, canceled an official meeting in the office of Israel's Attorney
General, Yitzhak Zamir, because the office is located in East Jerusalem,
according to a U.S. Embassy spokesman in Tel Aviv. The U.S. does
not recognize Israel's annexation of East Jerusalem, territory which
Israel captured in war in 1967. The two men were to have discussed
the possibility of Israel's accepting for trial in Israel several
former Nazis and Nazi sympathizers, currently living in the U.S.,
who have been accused of war crimes against Jews.
June 3:
It was announced at the White House that Geoffrey T.H. Kemp, the
senior director of Near East and South Asian Affairs in the National
Security Council (NSC), was one of eight NSC staff members to be
promoted to the position of special assistant to the President.
June 7:
State Department spokesman Alan Romberg. in commenting on a June
6 statement made in Moscow by the Soviet Anti-Zionist Committee,
said: "The contention that the majority of Jews who desire
to emigrate from the Soviet Union have already left is patently
false."
June 8:
President Reagan met at the White House with Lebanon's Foreign
Minister, Elie Salem, who told reporters that while in the U.S.
on a private visit he was seeking "to make sure the American
interest in Lebanon does not lag." Mr. Salem added that he
felt "pretty confident" that Syria would agree to withdraw
its forces from Lebanon.
|