April 1990, Page 40
California Chronicle
A Congressman's New Realism and a Senate's Old
Cliches
By Pat McDonnell Twair
More than 140 Arab Americans who traveled to the Anaheim Hilton
Hotel March 3 to hear Republican Representative Christopher Cox,
who represents the Newport Beach congressional district, were gratified
to hear a politician who seems genuinely interested in a just solution
to the Palestinian-Israeli dispute.
Although Cox does not serve on the House Foreign Affairs Committee,
he demonstrated to the Arab-American Republican Club of Orange County
that he follows Middle East events closely.
"Many believe the problems in the Middle East are profoundly
intractable and so complex that there can be no solution,"
he said. Then, citing recent events in Eastern Europe and Nicaragua,
Cox commented, "If these things could happen, it seems the
unsolvable problems in the Middle East could be solved if we have
a foreign policy based on even-handedness and human rights."
It seems the California state legislature is out
of step with Washington.
Answering questions from the audience, Cox said he favors the United
States giving refugee status to more Soviet Jews, and Soviet Christians,
as well as to Vietnamese refugees in Hong Kong.
Several questions dealt with the annual approval by Congress of
a $3 billion aid package to Israel. "I don't believe in a constant
increase in foreign aid," Cox said. "What Eastern Europe
needs, for instance, is foreign enterprise and private investment."
At present, he said, Congress looks at the former year's budget
with the attitude of whether or not to increase it. "An actual
cut would send a shock wave to all recipients and enable Congress
to have more leverage."
When asked why Congress doesn't initiate a movement to get Israel
to the peace table now that the PLO's Yasser Arafat has complied
with every demand of the US government, Cox said: "The key
to the problem is if Secretary Baker can overcome the Jews' fearful
image of Arafat."
This is not the first time the Orange County Republican Arab-Americans
have hosted a congressman. "We're taking part in the political
process by bringing our issues into mainstream politics, and we're
looking forward to reaching out to more congressmen in our area,"
dinner chairman George Hanna explained.
California Resolution Favors Israeli Peace Plan
On June 26, the California Senate initiated a resolution praising
Shamir's peace plan. It went through the Senate Rules Committee
within three days, even as Arab American groups were writing letters
of protest to Sacramento. The resolution lay dormant until Feb.
15, when Arab Americans were notified by phone that it would be
heard Feb. 20 by the Assembly Rules Committee.
Victor Ajlouny, a founding member of the Silicon Valley Congress
of Arab-Americans, says he was notified by the office of Tom Bane,
chairman of the California Legislature Rules Committee, that those
supporting and opposing the resolution would each have 20 minutes
to testify. The resolution had been renamed "Relative to the
Israeli Plan for Free and Democratic Elections," and much of
the original wording had been deleted or changed.
On Feb. 20, Ajlouny and Hamdy Saleh, counsel for the Egyptian Consulate
in San Francisco, testified, along with representatives of the American
Israel Political Affairs Committee and the Jewish Community Relations
Committee of Los Angeles.
Of eight changes recommended by Ajlouny and Saleh, six were adopted.
These included deleting references to Israel as the "sole democracy
in the Middle East" and "the democratic state of"
Israel. "We were trying to develop a resolution that talked
about the first step for a just and lasting peace," Ajlouny
explained.
Nonetheless, it seems the California state legislature is out of
step with Washington. While Secretary of State Baker was inviting
Yitzhak Shamir to send his foreign minister to discuss his own election
proposal with the foreign minister of Egypt and Baker, Sacramento
was still pasting together AIPAC's words in praise of Shamir in
Resolution 40, which still must be passed by both state houses.
Pat McDonnell Twair is a free-lance writer based in California. |