Word: yitzhaks
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...would be involved in the negotiations, but it would be up to the Palestinians to designate by plebiscite their choice of a government to succeed Israeli occupation forces. The sticking point is that Israel is ready to negotiate with Hussein, but not with the P.L.O. in any way. Premier Yitzhak Rabin told Labor Party leaders in Tel Aviv last week: "There is only one meeting place for Israel and the terrorist organizations, and that is on the battlefield...
Talk in Israel was equally defiant. Reviewing the Israeli position in advance of Kissinger's visit, Premier Yitzhak Rabin told the Israeli Parliament that his government was carrying out "a combination of two efforts, preparation for the possibility of war and a drive toward peace." Preparations for war include a call-up of army reserve mechanics to get all mobile equipment in combat shape and a review of all men under the age of 54 who had previously been disqualified from service for medical reasons...
Alarmed by a resumption of terrorist raids over the Israeli border, Premier Yitzhak Rabin last week summoned a Cabinet meeting to review counterterror precautions. At the same time, the Palestine Liberation Organization, the political umbrella of the guerrilla movement, acknowledged a serious split in its ranks. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, the second largest group in the P.L.O. after Fatah, withdrew from the P.L.O. executive council after bitterly attacking the moderate leadership of Yasser Arafat (see box). Another fedayeen group, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine -General Command, has also threatened to leave. The P.L.O...
...cannot forget what [former Defense Minister] Moshe Dayan said before he resigned-that dangerous, barbaric statement that there was nothing left for Palestinians except death. We have to add what [Yitzhak] Rabin said when he became Prime Minister: that there was "no room for Palestinians among us." Recent decisions of the Israeli Cabinet proved beyond any doubt that the designs and the mentality have not changed a bit. They still ignore the major problem...
...Washington's most familiar and delicate routines: negotiating with an Israeli Premier over U.S. military aid to Israel while simultaneously trying to persuade the Israelis to take a less intransigent attitude toward peace negotiations. This time the diplomatic fencing match was even more difficult than usual. Premier Yitzhak Rabin thoroughly understands all of Washington's political nuances after his recent five-year term as ambassador to the U.S. Moreover, as a former chief of staff of the Israeli army, he is professionally knowledgeable about the arms for which he deals...