Washington Report, August 11, 1986, Page 18
Facts For Your Files: A Chronology of U.S.-Middle East
Relations
June 18:
A knowledgeable Reagan Administration source said the Justice Department
has decided to seek an indictment of Israeli Air Force officer Brigadier
Aviem Sella for his alleged role in connection with the Pollard
spy case. The official, who spoke to the press on the condition
that he not be identified, said reports that the Israeli officer
would be granted immunity were untrue.
June 18:
John Cardinal O'Connor, the Archbishop of New York, said in Italy
following a three-day trip to Lebanon that "Somehow, a homeland
has to be provided for the Palestinian people .... It's not for
me to talk about statehood or protocol or official recognition or
whatever. But from a moral perspective, those people have to be
given a homeland."
June 20:
Former hostage Benjamin Weir, the newly-elected moderator of the
Presbyterian Church (USA), criticized the Reagan Administration
for not working actively enough to secure the release of the five
Americans still being held in Lebanon.
June 21:
Senior Reagan Administration officials said the Soviet Union was
quietly pressuring the Libyan government to stop sponsoring terrorist
attacks against Americans and American targets.
June 22:
The Reagan Administration, in a move designed to tighten its economic
sanctions against Libya, banned the export to third countries of
goods and technology destined for eventual use in the Libyan oil
industry.
June 24:
The United States and Italy signed an agreement in Rome to combine
intelligence resources in the fight against international terrorism.
The agreement expands a 1984 U.S.-Italian accord on cooperation
against drug trafficking and organized crime to encompass anti-terrorism
efforts.
June 25:
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Murphy met in Sweden with his
Soviet counterpart Vladimir Polyakov to discuss recent developments
in the Middle East. The meeting is one of a series agreed to by
President Reagan and Soviet leader Gorbachev during their summit
meeting in Geneva last year.
June 25:
A high-ranking Egyptian economic team, led by Planning Minister
Kamal Ganzouri, in Washington for talks with U.S. officials about
the difficulties facing the Egyptian government, asked the Reagan
Administration to convert $500 million in U.S. economic aid from
a loan to a cash grant to mitigate effects of an expected $3 billion
decline in Egypt's foreign exchange earnings this year.
June 25:
The Senate adopted by voice vote an amendment proposed by Senator
Jesse Helms (R-NC) to prohibit the construction of any new U.S.
diplomatic facilities in Israel unless they are located within five
miles of the Israeli Knesset building. If ultimately adopted, Helm's
amendment would imply U.S. recognition of Jerusalem as the capital
of Israel-recognition that the U.S. has eschewed to date.
June 29:
U.S. Representative Robert Dornan (R-CA) delivered a letter from
251 Members of Congress to Syrian President Hafez Al-Assad asking
for the Syrian leader's assistance in securing the freedom of five
Americans being held captive in Lebanon by the Islamic Jihad organization.
June 30:
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia officially took possession of the first
of five AWACS radar planes it purchased from the U.S. in 1981. Saud
Arabia's Ambassador to the United States, Prince Bandar bin Sultan,
accepted the plane from its builder, Boeing Co., in Washington state.
June 30:
Assistant Secretary of State Michael Armacost said the five U.S.
oil companies—Conoco, Marathon, Amerada Hess, Occidental and
Grace—with business interests in Libya had terminated their
operations in that country and were now in full compliance with
the economic sanctions announced earlier this year by the Reagan
Administration.
July 2:
An American who claimed he was on an undercover mission for the
U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency in Lebanon and that a ransom had been
paid by his family was freed by his captors after being held for
more than a year in the Bekaa Valley by unidentified gunmen. White
House officials said they believe the case of Steven Donahue, the
freed American, was unrelated to the politically motivated kidnappings
of five other Americans still missing in Lebanon.
July 2:
The Jerusalem Post said that West German authorities are
investigating the alleged involvement of the Israeli government
in a deal to sell an estimated $82 million in U.S. weaponry—including
TOW anti-tank missiles—to Iran.
July 3:
U.S. State Department Counsel Abraham Sofaer met in Tel Aviv with
Israeli and Egyptian negotiators in an effort to resolve the Taba
border dispute. Following the meeting, one Israeli official said:
"We're close to a deal with Egypt that would mean a breakthrough
on Taba and on normalisation."
July 6:
The Heritage Foundation, a conservative, Washington-based think-tank,
released a study calling for even closer strategic and military
cooperation between the U.S. and Israel to deter Soviet expansion
in the Mediterranean Sea and Gulf regions.
July 8:
U.S. authorities issued subpoenas and search warrants for a number
of employees at three U.S. companies and Israel's purchasing mission
in New York City in connection with an investigation into alleged
Israeli efforts illegally to acquire sophisticated U.S. technology
to produce cluster bombs. Exports to Israel of U.S.-made cluster
bombs were banned by the Reagan administration in 1982 following
widespread reports that Israel had used the deadly weapons during
its invasion of Lebanon.
July 8:
Britain's Jane's DefenseWeekly reported that Jordan has
concluded a deal to purchase surface-to-air missiles from the Soviet
Union because of the collapse earlier this spring—as a result
of congressional pressure—of the long-planned $1.6 billion
U.S. arms sale to the kingdom. The magazine said that the deal includes
100 SA-8 Gecko and SA-13 Gopher missile systems.
July 10:
State Department spokesman Bernard Kalb rejected a Soviet proposal
for the convening of a preliminary Mideast peace conference, saying
that such a meeting could lead to "posturing and rhetorical
excess instead of real hard suggestions." Kalb also said that
if the Soviet Union truly wanted to play a constructive regional
role it should resume diplomatic relations with Israel.
July 10:
Israeli military sources said two Israeli soldiers and four Palestinians
were killed and nine other Israelis were wounded in a gun battle
on the Lebanese coast just north of the Israeli border. After the
battle, Israeli aircraft raided several Palestinian refugee camps
on the outskirts of the Lebanese city of Sidon, killing or wounding
at least ten people.
July 13:
A U.S. Defense Department spokesman confirmed that the U.S. Navy
had been conducting "routine exercises" off the Libyan
coast, but refused to say how close the maneuvers are to the disputed
Gulf of Sidra. Following this announcement, a Libyan government
official said that the Libyan Navy had begun a three-day missile-firing
exercise in the Gulf, while the country's official news agency,
JANA, warned that the U.S. was "playing with fire and risking
the life of mankind." |