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Is Monica Good for Israel?
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GET
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"INTERNATIONAL PAPERS" BY E-MAIL!
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For Tuesday and
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Saturday morning delivery of this column, plus "Today's Papers" (daily),
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"Pundit Central" (Monday morning), and "Summary Judgment" (Wednesday morning),
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click here. And
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if you missed the most recent installments of this column, here they are:
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posted Tuesday, Oct. 6, and Friday, Oct.
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2.
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Writing Thursday in the
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Jerusalem Post, Yossi
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Ben-Aharon, a former director-general in the Israeli prime minister's office,
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proffered the Monica Lewinsky case as an example of why Benjamin
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Netanyahu should convene an emergency conference of world Jewish leaders in
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Jerusalem to adopt "an urgent plan to save Diaspora Jewry from extinction."
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Lewinsky demonstrates the extent to which American Jewry has become
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assimilated, he said. The fact that she landed a "much-sought-after job" in the
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White House "show[s] the extent to which the American Jewish community [has]
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become so well-connected, right up to the highest levels of society and
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government."
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Ben-Aharon wrote that a report by the World Jewish Congress showed "the
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American Jewish community is fast disappearing from the Jewish demographic
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map." According to the WJC, he wrote, the present number of Jews in the United
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States--5.5 million--will be reduced by half in two decades. "The government of
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Israel, the Jewish Agency and the organized leadership of world Jewry must wake
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up to the urgent need to take action in the face of the impending
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disaster."
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With NATO poised for military action over Kosovo,
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Yugoslavia, the Russian press took a strongly anti-Western line on the issue.
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But the daily Sevodnya also mocked President Boris Yeltsin for devoting
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more time to it than to Russia's economic crisis. "Russians waited for a month
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and a half for Yeltsin to explain the crisis and how the country should fight
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it," the paper said Wednesday. "The president, however, remained in a state of
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lethargy." Then, "when he finally woke up," he immediately started making phone
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calls to world leaders about Kosovo because this "gave him a chance to feel
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himself a leader of a great power." On Russia's pledge to veto any U.N.
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resolution authorizing force against Yugoslavia, Sevodnya described
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Russia's position as ambiguous "because [it] is both threatening the West and
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begging it for money at the same time."
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Izvestiya said the use of force against Yugoslavia would revive the Cold
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War. Nezavisimaya
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Gazeta said there is a possibility Russia will send troops into the Balkans
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in extreme circumstances. "Back in February 1994, when NATO threatened to bomb
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the Bosnian Serbs, it was the appearance of Russian peacekeepers in the region
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that prevented the attack," it explained. It added that, by constantly putting
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pressure on only one side in the conflict--the Serbs--the West was encouraging
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Albanian terrorism. "The general assumption that Milosevic is bad and Albanians
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are good still dominates Western politics," it concluded.
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In an editorial Thursday, the Times of London decried the
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chaos afflicting international diplomacy over Kosovo, "with meetings scheduled
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and cancelled within hours, statements issued and promptly retracted, statesmen
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announcing their arrival in capitals unprepared to greet them, and leaders
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trying to keep telephone track of the Balkan imbroglio while locked into
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campaigns and duties thousands of miles away." Attempts to base every decision
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on consensus had created a multinational muddle, "while Slobodan Milosevic
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laughs a little longer," it concluded.
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On
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Russia's own crisis, Komsomolskaya Pravda said Yeltsin was being sheltered from
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reality by his Kremlin advisers who sent him reports making his reforms appear
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successful and life in Russia happier than it was. But it praised him for
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having at least restored free speech to a country that had been deprived of it
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for centuries. "No one in Yeltsin's time has ever been persecuted for making
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anti-Russian statements," it said.
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Novye Izvestiya ran an interview Wednesday with the
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American economist Geoffrey Saks, an adviser to the Russian government in 1994,
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whom it quoted as saying that corruption and misappropriation of Western
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credits have created a situation in Russia to which no one sees a solution.
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Saks said that between $50 billion and $100 billion in Western aid was taken
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out of the country and either deposited in Western banks or used to buy
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property abroad. Saks added that when he spoke to the White House and the State
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Department about this scandal, he was met only with silence, even though, in
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private talks, U.S. officials admitted the West had given money to Russia not
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for economic but for political purposes.
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In Paris,
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Le Monde reported
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Thursday on its front page that the mayor has ordered the establishment of a
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100 square meter vegetable garden in the old quarter of Le Marais as a memorial
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to Princess Diana. It is designed to be "a center of initiation to nature" for
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children, the paper said. The proposal angered neighborhood leaders and
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provoked some acid comments in British newspapers, which pointed out that Diana
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had no interest in gardening and that she couldn't even cook. But the London
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Evening Standard hopes the proposal will undermine a deeply
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controversial plan supported by the British government for a memorial garden to
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her to be created in Kensington Gardens in London.
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