JPRS ID: 8708 NEAR EAST/NORTH AFRICA REPORT

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APPROVE~ FOR RELEASE= 2007/02/08= CIA-R~P82-00850R000'1 001 0001 7-1 .ds~ ~ ,4~ ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100144417-1 1~OIt OI~I~IC'1:11, litil~: ONI.1' JPRS L/8708 15 October 1979 ~ear East/ ' North Africa Re ort . p CFOUO 39/79) FBIS FOREIGN BROADCAST INFOE~MATION S~RVICE FOR OFF1C'IAL USF: ON1,1' APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 NOTE JPRS publications contain information primarily From foreign = newspapers, periodicals and books, but also from news agency ~ transmissions and broadcasts. Materials from foreign-language ' ~ sources are translated; those from English-language sources are transcribed or reprinted, with the original phrasing and other characteristics retained. ; Headlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed in brackets [J are supplied by JPRS. Processing indicators such as [Text] - or [Excerpt] in the first line of each item, or following the last line of a brief, iudicate how the original information was processed. Where no processing indicator is given, the infor- mation was summarized or extracted. Unfamiliar names rendered phonetically or transliterated are enclosed in parentheses. Words or names preceded by a ques- tion mark and enclosed in parentheses were not clear in the original but have been supplied as appropriate in context. Other unattributed parenthetical, notes within the body of an item originate with the source. Times within items are as given by source . _ The contents of this publication in no way represent the poli- cies, views or attitudes of the U.S. Government. For further information on report content call (703) 351-3165. v COPYRIGHT LAWS AND RF.GULA.TIONS GOVERNING OWNERSHIP OF MATERIALS REPRODUCED HEREIN REQUIftE THAT DISSEMINATION OF THIS PUBLICATION BE RESTRICTED FOR OFFICIAL USE Oi~L~Y. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USL ONLY ~ - JPR5 L/8708 15 Octob~r 1Q79 NEAR EAST/NORTH AFRI~A REPORT (FOUO 39/79) CONTENTS ~ PAGE INTER-ARAB AFFAIRS Saudi Arabia Strives To Lead Gulf Area Defense (AL-WATAN AL-'AF~RI, 13-1g SeP 79) 1 NORTFI AFRICAN AFFAIRS - Resumption of Moroccan-Mauritanian R~latio~s Possible (MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS, 31 Aug 79) 5 Editorial Denounces Moroccan Power Play in Tiris El-Gharbia (Editorial, Hassen Zenati; AFRIQUE-ASIE, 20 Aug~ 17 SeP 79) 6 ISRAEL - Quarterly Reviews Arab Education in Israel (Michael Winter; THE JERUSALF,M QUARTERLY, No 12, 197~) ~ MAURITANIA Central Bank of Mauritania Report on Ecanomic Indicators (MARCHES TROPICAUX Er MEDITERRANEENS, 1? Aug 79i.... ~0 MOROCCO 1'rime Minister D~scusses Sahara-Related Topics (MtHa.med Boucetta Interview; A~-WATAN AL-'A.RABI, 2~+-3o Aug 79) 22 RNI Leader Discusses Background to Sa:~~.ra Issue (Ahmed Osma.n Interview; AL-WATAN AL-'ARr'~BI, 31 Aug-5 SeP 79) 2~~ _ [zzz-rrE&A-i~irovo~ FOR OFFICIAL U5E ONLY E APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 i , FOR OFFICIAL US~ ONLY ~ COIVTENTS ( Continued~ page _ TUN I.~ Ill Oppos.iti.ouist Brahim Tol~o-til Ret'lects ori 5ituation in Turii.si~1 (Brahim Tobal; AFRIQUE-ASIE, 20 Aug -17 Sep 79~ 34 'Limited Pardon' of Trade Unionist Achour Called Insufficient (Anis Wahid; AFRI~UE-ASIE, 20 Aug -17 Sep 79) 3ti WESTERN SAI~IARA ! - Polisario Determined To Make Life Difficult for Morocco (JELTNE AFRIQUE, 5 SeP 79) 40 , S~Lhar~ln War Sa:i.d To Threaten Moroccan Ttirone ' _ (CA1~I0 16~ 9 SeP 79) ~~1 _ i ~ i ~ I � ~ ! - _ I i- - b - i ; _ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY f 1- . . . APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 F03 OF'FICIAL USE ONLY INTER-ARAB AFFAIRS ,1 SAUDI ARABIA STRIVES 7'0 LEAD GULF AREA D~;r'ENSE Paris AL-WATAN AL-'ARABI in Arabic 13-19 sep 79 pP 22 & 23 [Text] The Kingd,om of Saudi Arabia has d.evoted huge sllotmen~ts to its military defense agreement. Thia apecial message which AL-WATAN AL-'ARABT has received f~om Riyad sheds light on these e~eements and draws general outlinea for thr~ goais of the d,esired military defense pl~n, vhich may be summarized in clear and simple words: that the d+efeuse security of this Arab nstion xill be Saudi Arabia`s oxn security and will be bound up in its destiny with Arab security, especially the security of the sister nstions Which extend a'~ng the shores of the Gulf. Riyad - "The Arab Nation" It is no secret that, r~ith regaxd to expenditure on the building of its a~� ~d forc~s, Saudi Arabi.a is seventh among the nations of the World, _ coming af`ter the Soviet t~,~ian, the U.S.~ China, Nest Germeny, France, and Britain. Unofficiol statistics ;;-ertaining to d,efense in the ~978/~979 bua8et are estimated at about 10 'bi~lion d~llars, or slightly lesa than the defenae bud,3et of Iran last year. ; In fact~ there are many political~ geo~caphic, and economic reasons Which ~ustif~r this expansion in military expenditurea, for Saudi Arabia is a country of vast dimensions~ whose area amounts to one-third thut of Indie. F~irthermore, it poasesses huge petroleum resources, xhich put it in Pirst pl.ace aapng t,he nations of OP~C, and it must protect these resources con- stantly. Likewise, the frontiers of the country are far-flung. Ita shores face many Waters, vhich are consid,ered navigational arteri~s. The _ petrole~ tankers which traverse these xatere are exposed to nu~erous security risks and hazards. When Saudi Arabia saw the Egyptian forces being transported 3,000 ki~o- meters to land in Yemen during the first half of the 1960's~ it ~e:ceived - the need to re'vie~r its d,efense plan. ' 1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 l~'0!t U!~'1~'ICIf1.L US~ ONLY The :.ieal Building Uperatinn Aoxever, the real oporation of building the arm~ed force~, in the mil.itary sense, is a d,efenae plan which d.id not a~cusity begin till five yeers ago. The climax came in the transaction whicL the kingd,om conclud~ed With the United Stateg f~r 60 F-15 aircraft, which a~~e consid,ered the most up-to- date and strongest aircraf`t known in the U.S. and Western araenal.. Although Israel has concluded e transactian fo:~� theae aircraft, neverthe- ~ ler~s the Zionist lobby in Congress set Washinf,ton in a turmQil for Presi- dent Carter's administration on the pretext that the sircraPt which Saudi Arabis received constitute a menace to the aecurity and saPety of Israel becaus~ of their long rang~, ~ahich enables them to take off f~om their bsses in Saudi territory to boaib the hesrt of Israel. Neverthelerjs~ the Israeli and Zionist tricks have not k,ept Saudi Arabia fYom rece'ving this po~rerful weapon. 'Eae Saudi government~ in it~ pri~rate contacts With U.S. officials~ had hinted that, in case the ~ransaction should be withheld from it or canceled~ it r~ould be obliged to seek another source~ perhaps France~ to supply it xith coraparsble eircraPt. Sau.di Arabia has received small quantities of these sircraP~ regularly~ and severel groups of Saudi pi.lots have been receiving tra~ning to Ply them at the same time. ~e training of these pilots takes a long time because of the complexities o~ the weapon end. the neceasity of extremely long and rigorous training on it. Air Defense Neta ~ Seudi Ar~bia now intends to set up air d~ePense nets equipped with the ; ~ moat ad~anced electronic observation devices and surface-to-air missiles. ; S~udi Arabia posseases n~ore than 500 t~verick eir-t~-ground rock~ets, 10 ' ftawk surface-to-air rocket batteries, and a n~ber of French CHA~iINE ~ rockets, which are a developed version of the Crotale rocket. i ~ ~ For the purpose of completing the d,efense plan and insuring the neceasery defense of the far-flung f~ontiera oY the kingdam, the construction of military bases and camps is in progress. The sites for them have been selected With care to answer t~he necessary requiremeata in emergeney ~ aituatione~ The kingdpm is allotting extensive atimis for this purpose from its revenuea. T~ie expenditures on the conetruction of the said military install.ationsemounted to 16 bilZion d,~llsrs at one time. ~ . . I Direci~ng attention to the air and. ground arms cLoes xwt mean n~;~lecting ~ the building of the neval Porce, although this force is still. smsll in ~ considerstion of the leng~,h of the eeacoast of the kingcLvm and in com- j parison with +.he f.leets of other conntries. ~ ( 2 I . ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ , . I APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 I~'Ul~ I~'1' IC .L'1L Ut: I~., ~)N LY There are no official statlstics sl~owing the number of the ground forces, although estimstes range from 50,OU0 to 60,000 men and officers, who have received excellent military training. Among these forces, there are tWo aruiored brigad,es and tWO parachute battslions, in ad,dition to the Royel _ Gusrd battalion. 'Ib encourage Saudi~ tu ral.ly ar~ound the banner of the gervice of their ' country, high salaries are offered to military persoruzel~ and Prince Sultan Ibt; 'Abd-r~l-'Aziz, minister of defense and aviation~ looka af`ter his off'icers with special concern and affection. T1ae of#icers of the Saudi air force receive high-grecie training courses ebxoad, especially in the U.S., in view of the fact ~t most of the Saudi weaponry is mad,e tYiere. The White Guard - In addition to the regular arm~ed force8, to Whose training and erpansion fLll attention hes been devoted since y978, there are the forces of the national guard, or the White Guard, which is coa~and~ed by Prince 'Abd.allah Ibn 'Abd-al-'Aziz, second deputy chairman of the cabiuet. The number of these forces is eatimated at 20,000 to 30,000 officers and men, and it is possible to increase their number to ~+0,000, if need be, by calling up those whose period of training has ended, and who sre members of the de:~ert tribes which live in the highlands of the Ne~jd, the ancestral home of' the Saudi ruling family and the ob~ect of its pride and gl.ory in its pure Arab origins. Although the national guard is a small, swiftly-moving force, which is equipped With ~eapons to meet the requirements of dAmestic security~ nevertheless it can be used at the most diatant frontiera in d,efense of the nation at need. - At the same time when the regular arm,ed forces vere being d,eveloped, the national guard forcea were also being d;eveloped and equipped with mod,ern ueapons. They have been recentl.y supplied ~ith radio and telegraph equip- ment at a cost of 1.3 bil.l.ion dpllars, and their coamsend has b~come capable of making contact With its units and cti.recting them in any area of the ~ kingdom. Saudi Arabia has ambitious defense aad military programs. zt hopes to increase the s{ze of its regular forces to 3~00,000 men and tha'c of the national guard to 75,000 msn by 1985. ~e military maneuvers Which took ~~.ace at Khamis I~ushayt base near the Yemen bord,er last Jul.y showed that the regular troops Were capable and prepared to enter into combat with live ammunition in desert conditions of extreme harsYbness. The authorities concerned in Saudi Arabia say thaic the country~ which is building its armed forces With the utmost s~iftness, is di.rectin~ its ~ 3 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR 0~'FICIAL USE ONLY I atctention to the modernization and drevelo~ent wbich is in progress in the area of the Arab Gulf, and is highly d,esirous of playing, in coopera- tion with its siater Arab states, especially the Ciulf states~ the cLefense _ role which appropriate to its economic and political position. The Saudi Defense Role Contrary to the stories and official U.S. neWSpapei accounts, the Saudi authoritiea have not been beset by a~y consternation ov~er the security oY the Gulf area, including that of Saudi Arsbia, since the collapse of the regim~e of the shah of Iran, Who set himaelf up as a policeman for the Gulf. Instead, Saudi Arsbia had become exssperated to the extreme vith this role, xhich prov~ked Arabian and Islamic feelings. Consequently, the Saudi authorities Yeel that the aecurity end defense of Saudi Arabia sre firat and last the responsibility of.Saudi Arabis, inclu- ding the protection of its p~troleum fields and Wells. These sut,borities entertain no d,~ubt that the day When Saudi Arabia Will be flilly and completely confid,ent of the ability of its forces to iasure - a fti11 cover ~or its skies and its land is vcry nesr at hand. COFYRIC~iT: 1.979 aZ-Wstan sl-'Arabi CSO: 4802 ~ FOR OFFICIA.L USE ONLY _ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOh OFFICIAL USE ONLY NORTH AFRICAN AP'FAIRS RES[J1~iPTION OF MOROCCAN-MAURITANIAN RELATIONS POSSIBLE Paris MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS in French 31 Aug 79 p 2384 [Article: "Denunciation of Defense Treaties Taith Morocco"] [TextJ Mauritania's desire to otserve a"strict neutrality" in the Western Sahara conflict was reaffirmed by its minister of foreign affairs, M. Ahmedou Ould Abdallah in Dakar at a press conference held on August 21. Mauritania, he stressed, "is not a participant (in the Saharan conflict) and demands respect for its territorial integrity and its strict neutrality." It "would not be able to accept any attempt at destabilization wi~thout re- acting," M. Abdallah went on to say. Further, the CMSN (Military Co~.mittee for National Salvation) recommended that the government denounce the defense treaties signed with Morocco in riay 1977. The CMSN, ronsisting fo 27 members, is the governing body of Maur:itania, and since the government is bound to carry out its instructions, the denunciation must be considered official. Nevertheless, one cannot rule . out the fact that the primary motive of the defense treaty's denunciation was to respond to King Hassan's declarations at his Fes press conference and, according to indications in Nouakchott government circles, Maritania would consider that it had therefore expressed its discontent sufficiently and that a resumption of negotiations with Rabat would be possible. COPYRIGHT: Rene Moreux et Cie., Paris, 1979 9475 CSO: 4400 - ~ 5 FOR OFFICIA; USE UNLY , APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 ~ ~ l FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY . ~ NORTH AFRICAN AFFAIRS - , - EDITORIAL DENOUNCES MOROCCAN I'OWER PLAY IN TIRIS EL-GHARBIA Paris AFRIQU~-ASIE in Fr~nch 20 Aug - 17 Sep 79 p 31 [Editorial by Hassen Zenati: "Rabat: The New Armed Attack"] [Text] The occupation by the Moroccan forces of aggression of Dakhla, the capital of the Tiris E1-Gharbia region, which Nouakchott had decided to - give back to the POLISARIO, according to the terms of the peace treaty signed in Algiers, took p.lace after the first article of our correspondent in Algiers, Hassan Zenati, had been published (see p 14). Here is his~ second article, which arrived 2 days agc., It completes his analysis. Blackmail, provocation, occupation... Just as in 1975, on the eve of the - signing of the Madred agreement, the same cycle is beginning again in the Western Sahara. After having thrown out the Mauritian governor of the city, the Royal Armed Forces (FAR) raised the Moroccan flag in Dakhla, the capital of Tiris el-Gharbia, which had practically been given back t~ the POLISARIO - _ by the peace agreements of 5 August 1979. A new attack, then, carried out under the pr~tection of a thick smoke screen which consisted of a"right of - preemption which Morocco would like to see prevail and of the "continuation - of the kingdom." Paying no attention to the appeal of the POLISARIO that it join "the irresistable march toward peace," Hassan II thus chose the path of war and military adventures. It was foreseeable that he would do _ "something" to save face after so many snubs received since the lamentable testimony of his diplomats before the Security Council of the UN, going ~ so far as his condemnation without appeal by the OAU [Organization of African Unity] in Monrovia andincluding his poor showing before Chadli Bendjedid, whom he had rashly "chall.enged" concerning a case he had always _ considered "closed..." "Something," that is, as usual, rushing ahead, taking another step on the way to military adventures. Insidiously, Rabat let it be knosan that the illegal occupation and pure and simple annexation of Dakhla is the result of a bargain struck with Mauritian Prime Minister Mohammed Ould Haidallah, who was subjected, on 11 August, - to outright blackmail, which recalls the black days of Nazi Germany and of . Austrian Chancellor pollfuss: Nouakchott was to close its eyes to the 6 . FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR O~FICIAL USE ONLY occtcpation of Tiris el--Gharl~ia and Hassan TI would put a gag on Col Ould Abdelkader ("Kader"), the promoter oi a dubious "committee of free officers" against what he calls the "Mauritian capitulation before the POLISARIO. If that were the case, it would be, in this instance, a new bargain of dupes. For "Kader," who just barely escaped capture by the POLTSARIO in 1977, having been evacuated at the last minute by the Moroccan secret - services so that he would not have to face justice iii his own country, which wanted to prosecute him for cor�ruption, does not have much influence in the Moruccan army. In power for 14 months, the Moroccan army is actually "firmly decided to definitively get out of this un~ust war," t.o use the words of its leaders. Whatever the case, for the moment, in this small mishap, two remarks can ~ now be made on the complicity from which Hassan II has been able, or might be able, to benefit in this new fait accompli. 1. There is no doubt that certain French circles must find it difficult to hide their satisfaction; we know, actually, that French speciaiists in dirty tricks had already last February and March strongly advised Mustapha Ould Saleck to get out of the war by handing over Tiris el-Gharbia to his Moroccan ally. They had then been sent packing, since the Mauritian leader refused t~ accept this "peace" with dishonor. A few weeks later, he was stripped of all his powers. Right after this attack, these same specialists would be tempted to suggest negotiations on a mini Saharan state, or a Saharo-Mauritian state, having given up trying to cut up the present Mauritania in order to turn over the northern bank of the Senagal ' River to his very interested neighbor. Just as in Chad, France has mcre - than one iron in the fire in this business. In any case, it would be goo~ for Paris to show itself without further delay, rather than keeping silent, which in the long run can only be interpreted as complicity. 2. The complicity of the United States in this new poker game of the king is more obvious. A fer,v months ago, already, we were pointing out Washing- ton's new interest in the Western Sahara, which coincided with the resounding attacks of the POLISARIO agair_st Tan Tan, Assa, etc. Since then, another step has been taken to help Hassan II: the establishment of an airlift for the repatriation of 1500 troops of the FAR from Shaba, the supplying uf new weapons, along with the possibility of using them beyond international frontiers recognized by rlorocco... The Moroccan lobby, which has close contacts with the lobbies of the shah and of the prozionists in Washington, are said to have succeeded in having Moroccan aggression a~cepted against the threat of the overthrow of the monarchy and imaginary "Communist and Khomeyni" dangers in Morocco. He who wants to drown his dog claims he has ' rabies... Anci now? As in 1975, the cycle is not closed, for a11 that. After the occu- pation comes the resistance. That is the sensitive spot for all those who - continue to believe (or pretend to) and act as if the Saharoui people did not exist. ~ 7 ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 FOR O~FICTAL USE ONLY evert}~eles:~, the ev:ldence o~: their existence ~.s too blinding and too deadly to their enemies for them to be treated lightly. ~'Tn 1979, as in 1975," a POLISARIO militant told me in a11 seriousness, "the struggle to impose , independence, the retsrn, peace, stability in our region, continues." And the recent offensive of the POLISARIO which inflicted heavy losses on the Moroccan troops have shown that the Saharouis are more determined than ever not to permit the monarch in Rabat to have a good night~s sleep. COPYRIGHT:. 1979 Afrique-Asie 8956 CSO: 4400 _ ~ 8 ~ , FOR OF~ICIA.L USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-00850R040140100017-1 ~ . . . . . . . ~7 '~~t FC~R OFFICIAL USE ONLY e ISRAEL QUARTERLY REVIEWS ARAB EDUCATION IN ISRAEL Jerusalem THE JERUSALEM QUARTERLY in English No 12, Summer 79 pp 112-1.22 [Article by Michael Winter of Tel-Aviv University] _ [Text ] When Israel achieved independence in 1948, it already possessed a well-developed educational system which had grown up over decades. Arab education, however, had functioned minimally un- _ der the British Mandate, and with [he War of Independence and the depar.,u~e of many Arab intellectuals and teacheis, che system fell into disarray. We shall review here how Israel established a system of ~1rab education, and how it compares to the nauonal picture as a whole, as well as that of the Ar~ coun~ries in general. _ Israel's Arab population in 1948 was overwhelnun~ly rural, Primazy schoois could be found only in some of the largervillages, _ and high schools were few and far between. Institutions of higt~er education were non-existent. During the British mandatory pcriod higher education was the domain of a privileged elite, who were sent to study abroad. In Israel today pi�ur~ary education is univer- sal, with almost total enforcecnent of the Compulsory Education Act in the Arab sector. There are kindergartens and primary schools up te grade eight in even the smallest villages, including bedouin encampments. A widespread network of academic, ~ vocational, and agricultural high schools has been developed. The 'reforIIi which was introduced into the educational system in 1968 whereby 'middle schools' (junior high schools) were set up aiid teachers trained for t~4ese classes applied equally to the Arab ' ser,tor Increasing numbers of graduates of Arab high schools with matriculation certificates continue their studies in Israel's institutions of higher learning. An Arab with a~~cond academic degree is no longer a rarity on the Israeli scene. ',here are Arabs ~ teaching at Israeli universities today who graduated from Israeli � M. Wincer teaches Islamic hiswry at Tel�Aviv University. 9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY I,- , i universities anci were scnt abroad by llu~cn f'or furtlicr study, The _ Arub 1~opulat~on i� gcnE~ral, I~;~;c:ly illitcrate in l~J~lE3, i~ow ~ E~c~ssesses a liigherdeF;re~~ oCliterar.y tJi,iu ~~revails ii~ most, if no[ ~ill, Arab cc~untries tod~iy. . It is valid to compare the Arab to the Jewish educaUonal situation ui Israel since they buth share the sarne privileges ~nd services, ' including educaeion. Att~ie same time tt~ers are a number of fac- ' tors which must be taken into account when making such a , comparison. In che fir~t place, the two cocnmu~iities did not share t.he same starting point. Thc newborn State of Israel had to build an ~ Arab educational system from sc:ratch, while Hebrew education ~ was well under way. This development ntust he viewed against a i background in which we find a Jewish populaeion ~vith a high , degree of modernizatio~i and a traclition of literacy, togecher with ! an Arab population which was largely rural and traditionally ~ ~ - placed little value on education. i The natural increase of'the Arab population in Israel is the highest in the world and far surpasses that of the Jewish poptilauon.' This ~ makes it much more dif'ficult for government and local authorities ; , to meet growing demands for more schools, teachers and f'acilities. ! Educaeion was not traditionally regarded in Arab society as an in- , - tegral nart of the life of t,5e community, in which t}~e involvement of' ~ the cicizen is both natural and desirable, but was seen rather as a service provided by the government for the passive acceptance of its citizens. This view is expressed in the attitude of t}ie Arab ; poQulation towards educacion in general, and in their limited reaciiness to invesc time, money and ei]'ort in it. However, Arab society is undergoing rapid change and modernization, and this is discernible also in changing atdtudes to education. Although Israel's Arabs were compl~tely cut off from the rest of ~ the Arab world from 1948 up to the Six Day War (and even af'ter 1967 these contacts have not been direct), there is no doubt that from a social, cultural and religious point of view they are an in- tegral part of the Arab world. Thus it is natural to compare the educational attainments of the Israeli Arabs with those of their counterparts in the Arab world, and especially in the Administered Territories which came under Israel's jurisdiction in 1967. The general picture of Arab education in Israel is far better than that in the Arab world as a whole. But t~'us does not apply to the field of higher education, where their achievements are less impressive than those of important sections of the Arab world, including the Administered Territories and Arab states bordering Israel. It is at ~ Out of 595,000 non-Jewish persons living in Israel by the end of 1978, 579,000 were Arab. They constituted between one�sixth and one-seventh of the total populadon of Israel, which numbered 3,730,000 pe~ons. While the rate of gro~vth of the Jewish population in 1978 lincluding immigradon) was 1.9 per cen4 natural inccease in the Arab secWr was 3.3 per cent (as against an average national growth rate of 2.1 per cent for 19781. [See the daily ha�Areu of January 3, 1979.1 10 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY this sla~e tliat their minorily posiuoi? is reflecled. Uii lhe onc han~l, the educational attai?unen~ti of' many ?iiii~orities are a w~~11 ~ docurnenced pk~;tnomenon - and t}iis applics to the Israeli Arah; as , well, desE~ite: ttic fact lhat th~ry ~�e a minuricy in a society which has reached a hi~;her st~ige ot' dE:veloEnnent th~u~ thi:y h~va Un thc other hand, t~~ere is no doub[ that ti~e very situauoi~ of lhe Isracli Arabs as a national and cultural minority hinders c1~e~~i i~? obtainin~ higVier education. A high school pupil in the Administered TeiTitories may con[inue his studies in an Arab state (or in the territories themselves) ~vithout havuig to overcome lhe difficulties of social, cultural and language adjuscments t'~iced by the graduate of an Arab high school 'u~ Israel en[ering an lsrae.ti institution of hi~her learning. The chaiices of the Arab university graduate in Israel of achieving professional integration seem ;ass promising t~~an the chances of a university graduate from tha West Bank or Gaza of'finding work in the Arabstates, especially in the oil � sheil:hdoms of tlie Persian Gulf. Primary Education The most in~portant educational achievement of Israel's Arabs is in the field of'pre-school and primary school education. No other Arab . society apart from Israel starts compulsory education in kindergarten, at the age oF hve. The Arab kindergarien is usually attached to the primary school. In Israel's early years, Uie unplementation of the Compulsory Education Act among tl~e Arabs met ~vith either passive opposidon or apathy. Many parents refused to send their children, especially their daughters, to school, whether because they needed their help athome or in the fields, or for fear of what might happen to the girls outside their homes, or simply because they did not grasp the importance of education. _ Dropping out was a frequent phenomenon, aiid girls especially were of'ten taken out of school whe?~ they reached adolescence. The poGcy adopted by the education auttiorides was usually one of -i ; persuasion rather than blanket enforcement of the Compulsory Education law. Ln [he first years of the state it was even accepted procedure to close the schools CIL1I'lll~; the most demanding agricultural seasons in order to enable the children to work on their parents' farms without fallin~ behind in their studies. The _ percentage of girl pupils in the Arab school system rose steadily. In 1959/60 o?ily 36.8 per cent of primaiy school pupils were girls, whereas in 1973i74 they accoutited for 45.7 per cent. This increase stemmed from a number of ~measures taken by the Ministry of Educadon and Culture: che ope~iu~g of separate primary schools fur girls wherever the demand existed - wluch was in the great majority of Arab population centres; providing them with women teachers wherever possible; and the inclusion 11 ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY � APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY of pre-vocational training for girls (sewin~, cookinE;) in school cur- ricula in order to increase their rtiotrvacion tc~ attencl school. \'ore important, however, thaii i?icentive and {x~rsuasion fi�om , al~uve was developiu6 awareness of the import~nce of education am.~ng the Arab population itself. No~ orily h~s tliere been no ~:urrence of tt~e famous incidenc duru~g the fiist years of the state ~~hen a bedouin sheikt~ used school furniture to fuel his stove, but t3~e most remote villages and bedouin encampments are nuw _ demanding local schooling of a high standard for their children. The expectations of the villagers rebarding the development of ~ local educational facilities sometimes outstrip not only available mzans, but also objective needs. - The implementation of the Compulso~}r Education Act, while not }it complete, has made great s[rides forward. In 1973 the rate of uuplementation of the law in the Arab population was 90.7 pr;r ~ cent, as opposed to 98.6 per cent of the Jewish population, i.e., a ' gap of only eight per cent, and this gap too is narrowing steadily.~ There is no Arab state which can point to similar success in the implementation of compulsory education. It must be remembered, of course, that the above statistics are based on nacional averages: sc:hool attendance is higher in the towns than in the villages and bedouin encampments, amang boys than girls, and among Chrisdan Arabs than among Muslims and Druze. The Compulsory Education Act has had a revolutionary effect in raising the educational level of the Arab population of Israel. ~ According to the population census of 1961, almost one half (49.5 per cent) of the Arabs of Israel aged fourteen or over (i.e., above the ~ compulsory education age) had received no education whatsoever Izero years of education). And even the 1361 census reflected a great advance on Israel's first years. In the 1974 census those who had received no education whatsoever were less than one quarter (24.4 per cent), i:e., the percentage ~ad been cut by half. The rate of L'teracy of the Arab population above the age of fourteen rose from 48.3 per cent in 1961 to 63.5 per cent in 1972, an improvement of 15.2 per cent; in the Jewish population during the same oeriod the rate of literacy rose by only 2.9 per cent- from 87.9 per cent to 90.8 per cent.' For pur~wses of comparison we may note that the rate of illiteracy _ in Egypt is close to seventy per cent. The percentage of literate Arabs in Israel is similar to that in Jordan, where compulsory educadon has been more successfully enforced than in any other , Arab country. 2 Sami Mar'i and Nabia Daher, Facts and Trends in the Development of Arab Education in Israe! fHebrewl, School of Education, Institute for Research and Development of Arab Education, Haifa Univecsity, 1976, p� 51 ~ lsmelStacisacalYearBook,1975(Hebrewl,CentralBureauofStatisdcs,pp,299, 601. ' ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR 6FFICIAL USE ONLY ~ Secondary Educatio~i The development of t}ie second~u~y school system h~is also been unpressive. From fourteen (sic) secondary-school pupils in 1948/~,3 the number of pupils in Arab high schools in 1974/5 reached 15,119. The most siy,nificant rise came in the sevenLies, when the number of pupils attending Arab high schools will be dou6led. Huncireds of Arab pupils attendirag Hebrew academic, vocational and agricultural high schools must also be added to the above numbers.' The number of institutions of secondary educacion in the Arab sector rose from one in 1948/9 to thirty-five in 1959/60 and to ninety-seven in 1974/5. There were sixty-oiie teaching posts in Arab secondary education in 1959/60, 286 in 1969/70 and 1,145 in 1974/5. . - Despite the impressive quantitative achievements represented by the above figures, there is no doubt that the ~avest problems facing Arab education in Israel are in ttie field of secondary education. The system suffers from flaws in its structure, administration and educationa] standards. Wh;le objective conditions are partially responsible for these flaws, they are also " - ~ due in some measure to the form of ownership of secondary education in Israel. Unlike the Arab states, the secondary school - system in Israel is i~ot state owned. While the prima.-y school system is run by the state through the Ministry of Education and . Culture, secondary schools are in the hands of non-governmental agencies, which are not always capable, in the present state of af- fairs in the Arab community, of shouldering such a burden. The Arab secondary school system is administered by municipalities, local councils, and parochial bodies. These agencies are frequently lacking in the know-how and administrative stability needed to sustain a creditable educational system. While che village school is a source o: pride to ihe local inhabitants, it is only tuo often the vic- tim of political and clan power-struggles. The parochial schools - ~ too, which play�an important part in the secondary school system (far greater than in the primary schools) often suf'fer from an even greater lack of competent staf~' than the municipal schools. The - parochial schools are generally regarded as being on a lower level than the other Arab high schooLs, although there are a number of . important exceptions to this rule. Although the above scliools receive supervision and financial assistance, this cannot - compensate for their administrative weaknesses. The main flaw in Israel's Arab secondary school system lies in the discrepancy between academic and vocational education. In ~ A muniripal high school in Haifa has been conducting a unique experiment u~ the integ~ation oCArab pupils in a Jewish educational institution since the beginning me sixties. The Arabs study in separate classes, acwrding to the Arab syllabus, but socially they are an integral part of the'.7euvish school. 1.3 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 _ FOR OFFICIA,L USE ONLY I.`. mnny cou~~tries, includinf; lhc Arab states and Israel, ttie en~phusis has shiRed f'rn~it academic to vocatiunal ecluca~ion, c~iusin~ ~i decrease in acadenuchighschoolenrolment.'I'hecoustructionand maintenance of a vocat.ional hiEh school is I'~tr more cocnplicated ~ and ea-pensive than that of an acade~�ic one. Some of tt~c vocational schools in the Arab corrut~unity art owned jointly by the � , municipality or local council and the OR'I' or Amal organizations, which maintain a large ?ietwork of Jewish vocational schools. The agricultural school in Rama is state~owned, Most of the vocadonal schools are housed in modern buildings and fiunis}~ed witti up-to-date equipment. The graduates ot'vocational schoc~ls ~ have no difficulty ui being absorbed in the labour marl:et and are far better off in this regard than the graduates of'the academic high schools. Nevertheless, the prescige and standards of the vocational _ schools in th'e Arab sector are lower than those of' the academic _ schools, and a vocational school which does not prepare its pupils for matriculation is considered inferior. Although a survey ~ conducted by Haifa University found 'a clear preference for ' technical over w}ute-collar occupations' in the Arab sector, the same survey also found that'the acquisition of'a trade takes second place (after higher educationl as a factor in ttie improvement of , socio-economic status.' In other words, a general education which , does not lead to higher education is considered inferior [o' vocadonal education which does not lead to higher education, but the aspiration (in many cases unrealistic) to higher education and the status that goes with it is strong enough to send most of the pupils (and all the good ones) to academic rather than vocational high schooLs. This situation persisted at the time of the survey despite the fact ; that all Arab pupils attending vocational schools were eligible for reductions in t~ution fees based on the size and economic ' ~ circumstances of the family - an important incentive if we take into ' account the fact that in the conditions prevailing in the Arab sector ~ this meant virtually free high school education - whereas in the ' case of academic high schools oiily those pupils who passed special ~ aptitiide tests were eligible for these reductions and the rest had to pay full fees. While the findings of the above survey regarding the attitudes of the Arabs towards vocadonal education appear to be reliable, their actual behaviour, for whatever reason, does not ap- pear to be an accurate reflecuon of these attitudes. ~ Without ignoring the differences between Arab society in Israel and those ofEgypt and other Arab states, it is worth noting that in Egypt too, if it were left to the free choice of parents and ctWdren, without the direct government intervention which limits the ~ s Sami Mar'i and Avraham Benyamin, The Attitude oj Arab Society in lsrael towards Technological� Vocational Education [HebrewJ, School of Education, ; institute for Reseazch and Development of Arab Education, Haifa University, 1975, p. 20. ! 1.~ { FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY . ~ . . I, APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY nwnbers of pupils eligible for academic hiYh school education, the ' majority would opt tur no?~-vocational education, without t~~kinf; practical considerations into account. [t ~s interestinf; w no~e el~~~t although t,tie Egyptian ~uthorities have succeeded in directinf; most of the high school population to vocational schools, they too ' have had orily limited success in raising the prestige and standard of vocational education. Vocational training may yet come uito its own among Israel's Arabs.l'he foundation exists, and with more variety in the ran~e of' subjects offered, the extension of two-yeal� to three-; ear courses, etc., there is good reason to expect progress in this tield. For many years Arab secondary education suff'ered tiom a ~hronic shortage of qualified teachers, especially in mathematics, science and English, as well as a shonage of textbooks. Towards the end of the sixties, however, Lhe textbook problem was solved, and suitable material was prepared in all subjects and at evecy level. Most academic high school students choose humanistic subjects, and only a minority choose the mathematics-physics stream. Here there is a stiortage of teachers, and tt~ose there are hold more than one teaching post - with all lhe negative effects this - implies for the standard of their teaching. Mar'i and Dat~er }iave , rightly suggested ttiat with [he increase in L'~e number of Arab uni- � versity graduates, and perhaps, too, with the rise in the acadet~uc standards of these students, an attempt should be made to L'mit Arab high school teachers to one teaching post, in order both to raise the standard of teaching and to allow university gradua~es to be absorbed in the profession.b ~ The Parochial Schools An important role in Arab secondary education is played by the Christian parochial schools, popularly (although inaccurately) known as 'missionary' schaols.' Primary and secondary sctiools ~ are often run jointly under one roof. Many of these institutions are af~'iliated with a church organization based abroad. In such cases, the formal directorship of the institution is in the hands of a foreign - priest or nun, French or Italian as the case may be, bu[ tt~~,, actual running of the school is entrusted to a local Arab principal or vice- principal. Most of these schoals are Catholic (the Greek Catholic Seminary in Nazareth, the Terra Sancta schools in Acre and Nazareth, the Franciscan convent school for girLs, etc.?, but there 6 Mar i-Daher, p. 87. 7 The parochial schools operating in the Arab sector are not attended by Jewish pupils, and they are not to be confused with the missionary schools which operate , in ehe Jewish sector and which are noC, of course, under the supervision of the Educaoon Ministry. Christian missionaries are not and could not have been active among the Muslim popula~on, and the only missionary activity possible among the Arab population is inter�denominauonal, e.g., Protestant missionazy activity amang the Catholics or Greek Orthodox. 1.5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ are also Yrotestantsct~ools, and a Greck Orthodox school i~?Haila. While ttie majority of t}ie parochial schools are academic, thereare - also a t'ew vocational schools f'or both boys and girls. The parochial schools have played and continue to play ~in important part in vocatioi~al education (e.~., ths Silesian Don Bosko school in Nazareth) and 'ut the education of gicls (e,g., the ~anciscan . convent school, St. Joseph's, etc.l. The parochial sc}iools are accredited high schools. Although the atmosphere differs slightly f'rom that in the municipal schools - ~ with greater emphasis on discipline, uniforms, religious instrucdon for the Christian pupils, etc. - these s~hools follow the general syllabus and accept pupiLs and teachers from all denominations. Even the Greek Cacholic boys' school in Nazareth, which is stil~ classified as parochial and was originally intended to prepare candidates for the priesthood, has long been transformed . into a regular high school despite its clerical administration. The parochial primary schools are under the supervision of the Ministry of Educa[ion and Culture which grants them financial assistance according to their size. At the secondary level their status is no different from that of the more numerous public high schools run by the municipalities or local councils. Offiaal policy towards the parochial schools has always been ex- tremely liberal, in striking contrast to the situation in the Arab states. If private parochial schools are allowed at all in the Arab countries,' they are generally subjected to a variety of restrictions: the school principal, and sometimes the teachers too, must be citizens of the host state, and 'national' subjects - Arabic, civics, history, etc. - must be tauglit by a cidzen of the state in the official ~ ~ � language of the state, The schools are strictfy supervised. In Israel, - government supervision has never been imposed on Arab - ~ parochial schools (this holds true for the parochial schools in East Jerusalem, too1. On the consary, requests for supervision &om the Ministry of Education and Culture came from the schools ~ themselves, which had to prove that they met the requirements of the Ministry as regards their curricula, textbooks, staff qualifications, equipment, laboratories and buildings. On condition that the school met these requirements it received supervision - from the Minis~y as weil as its participation in tuidon fee r~ductions, and its pupils were entisled to sit tor the matriculation examinations. The majority of the parochial schools are today un- der the supervision of the A4inistry of Educadon. The schools in East Jerusalem are a special case. With the unification of Jerusale m in 1967 a combined Jordanian-Israeli syl- labus was prepared for these schools, in order to provide students with the option of sitting for either Jorda.~ian or Israeli matriculation examinations. It soon became clear that despite the � In Egypt, Cor examp~e, foreign schools weie closed down after the Suez War in _ 1956, 1.6 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY legal and poliUcal status of tl?e city, lhe Arab u~hahit~i~~ts contuwed to belonE both socially and techrucally (most opted to rer�ain Jordanian citizens) to ttie West Baril: rather tl~an to (srael, a~id saw their education as connec~ed with the West Bank ~ind the Arab worid. East Jerusalem hi~h-school ~;radu~~tes want to cantinue tl~eir studies in tiic Arab states and nc~t u~ Israel. Consequently, it has recently been decideci to tc�ansfer lhc EastJerlisalem schools to tt~e West B~nk Ii,e. t1~e Jordanian) syllabus, alttiou~h i~~stc-uction in Hebrew will continue to be provided. Teachers A great deal has been accornplisfied over the past chc�ee decades in training teachers for all stages of Arab ecl~acation in lsrael. At first there were hardly any teachers in the E1rab sector.'I'wo rneasures , ' were adopted to remedy this situation. Firstly, young Arabs with any educationa] quaiifications were appointed to [e~~chin~ posts, while at the same tur.e steps ~vere taken to ensure th;~ir profes- sioi~al advanceme~it. This is a method which has been at;~pted 'u~ - many educational systems sulleru~g f'rom a lack oF pro('es:ional , manpower. Secondly, Jewish leachers who had inuiiigrated fron~ Arab coui~;ries (niauily Iraq) with the establishmen~ of the stat~`, were appointed to teaching posts in Arab schools. Tl~ese were . qualified teachers who could not be absorbed in the Hebrew school system because of lan;uage problen~s, but w}iose laio~vlecige of Arabic made them natural candidates for teachi~ig posts in [he Arab sector. Gradually many of these teachers were uitegrated into the Hebrew school syscem or found other jobs, while ochers remained permanenily in the field of Arab education in teaching, administrative or supervisory capacities. Apart &om these emergency measures, teachers in the Arab schools are, of course, trained in teachers training colleges. in 1956 a college for Arab primary and kindergarten teachers was established in Jaff'a. Today there are two institutions for training Arab teachers in Israel - one in Haifa and one in the centre of the counUy near Netanya. Special courses for teachers iritended for the bedouin schools in the Negev have also been opened in the teachers training college in Beersheva. In 1948/9 there were 121 Arabs at teachers training colleges, in 1959/60 thei�e were 370, and in 1974/5 there were 723. Courses and examinations are also given outside these frameworks to enable working teachers to 4u~Y� - Teachers for the junior high school and secondary schools require academic qualifications which they obtaui at various universities. Arab students of education are eligible for government grants and for loans which are converted to grants on condidon that the recipient accept a teaching post stipulated by the Muustry on - completing his studies. The Arab teachers belong to the general teachers union, but have a special department to promote their 17 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY r APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ specific interesls. They also produce an Arab-language publicatiori - $~zda al-Turbiya. Glirricula and Educational Aims Vo picture of Arab education in Israel would be complete without taking into account its content and aitns, and the problems peculiar ' to the Arab schools. Their curriculum is based on the principle that , the material tau~ht in the Arab schools must be equal in quan[ity and quality to that taught in the Hebrew schools. The same ~ standards apply to both Jewish and Arab pupils sitting for examinauons. In the matriculauon examulatians, papers set in - such subjects as geography, the natural sciences, and mathemadcs, are simply translated from the original Hebrew into ~ ~ Arabic for the Arab candidates. The same means are also applie~3: streaming, modern methods of English instruction, and the junior high school system have all been introduced into the Arab schools.' ' Arabic, as the mother tongue of'the Arab pupIls and the language of [heir culture, anci also as one of the official languages of che State of Israel, is the first language, and the language of instruction, in the Arab schools. Arab pupils learn Hebrew from the fourth grade. The question of the correct relation between Hebrew and Arabic in the Arab school has aroused discussion and controversy. On the one hand, the Arab pupil has the right to be educated in his own language, culture and tradition, and on the other, he must be suf'fi- ciendy fluent in Hebrew to understand :he culture of the State of Israel, which is a Hebrew-Jewish culture, and the problems of the Jewish people - although he is not expected to have as intimate knowledge of these matters as his Jewish counterpart. An , adequate mastery of Hebrew is also necessary for the Arab citizen's integration into the economic life of the country, his j absorption in the laboui market on leaving school, or the ~ i continuation of his studies at an Israeli institudon of higher ~ learning. ' The Hebrew literature syllabus, too, has been the subject ofsome ' debate. For example, the requirement to study passages from the _ Old Testament as a source of understanding the Hebrew language and Jewish culture has provoked complaints that Arab pupils were ~ being forced to study the Jewish religion. The suitability in general of the Hebrew literature taught in Arab schools has been ~ questioned, it being argued that while the syllabus should be ~ representative, it should not dwell too closely on subjects of specifi- cally Jewish interest, which are difFicult for the Arab pupil to - understand or identify witt:. One guideline that has emerged from ' this controvecsy is that modern Israeli literature should be ' The 'reform' was appGed to the Arab sector in 1970, when four junior high ' schools were opened. In 1975/6 there were thirty-tlvee junior high schools operating with about nine thousand pupiLs. In the same year there were one ; 6undred seventy�six junior high schools in the Jewish secwr. ' 18 - FOR ~JFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - dominnnt in the material taught _n the llrab sec,~tur, while materiA! dr.alinF with Jew~sh life in thc Diaspora is es a rule unsuitable fnr cetichin~ in t}~e Arab sc:hools, The study of EnF;lish raised a practical, rather tt~a~i ideological - problem, The burden of a second forei~n language in addition to Hcbrew was felt. to be excessive,'� and a special English _ programme was accordingly worked ouc for the Arab tubh schools ~ in t~~~ early sixdes. Arab matriculation candidates may now sit for their examinations in English according to the special programme or the general one, as determined by the school. General history is taught at the same level in both Jewish and Arab scl~ools. But in the Arab schools the emphasis is shilted from Jewish history [o the history of the Arabs and Islam. In civics the Arab pupil studies Lhe structure of the state and its institudons, but not recent Jewish history and the history of Zionism, which form ~ part of the civics syllabus in the Hebrew school system. The history of Zionism, in a condensed form, is taught as pari of the history syl- labus in the Arab ~chools, There are three altarnative programmes of religious instruction in the Arab sector - Zslamic religion,.Ctu-istian religion, and the Divze heritage. �1 In the primary schools a certain number of hours are allocated to religious instruction. In high schools religion is offered as an elective subject, but it is not compuLsory. The Chrisdan parochial schools give religious instrucdon, from which the non-Christian pupils are exempt. SchooLs in en[irely Muslim areas (the 'IYiangle, at the centre of the country) generally give ~ instruction in Islam. Academic high schools in mixed areas do not provide religious instruction. Finally, the most fundamental question of all arises, concerning the aims of education' for Arabs in Israel. Obviously, the educational system cannot be separated from the political, cultural and social systems. The~sensitive situation of Israel's Arabs as a minority living in a counhy which is in a state of constant confrontation with the Arab world must inevitably be expressed in the educational system. The fact thaC the Arabs have a religion, a culture, a language and a history which differ fi-om those of the Jewish population cannot be ignored. The Arab teacher cannot be expected to educate his pupils in the spirit of Zionism and the national a.~pirations of the Jewish people. At the same time, it is understood that he must educate them to be loyal citizens of the state, to obey its laws, and to take pride in its development and achievemenis in general and in those of the Arab community in - particular. 10 The study oC clasacal Arabic, which difTe~s considerably from spoken Arabic, poses an additional problem for the Arab pupil, and there are some who argue that it should be taught almost as a foreign language. ' The pruze religion itselfis not, of course, taught in school due to its esoteric nature and the fact that its secrets a~ not disclosed even to all the members of the ssct ~ itself. ~ COPYRIGHT: The Middle East Institute, Jerusalem cso: 4s2o lg FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 I FOR OFFICIAL U:'iE ONLY MAURITANIA CENT'RAL BANK OF MAURITAIVIA REPORT ON ECONOMIC INDICATORS Paris MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS in French 17 Aug 79 pp 2270, 2271 [Article: "Recent Factors In Mauritanian Ecoaomic Qutlook"] [TextJ The Central Bank of Mauritania recently released its latest report on economic indicators (May 1979). Foreign trade represented, in millions of ouguiyas: . lst trimester lst trimester April - 1978 1979 1979 Imports CAF 2,271.4 2,289.5 845.3 Exports FOB 1,894.4 1.696.7 419.5 For imports during the first 3-month period of 1979, consumer goods accoun~ed for 50 percent (especially foodstuffs) and motor fuel comprised 21 percent of the total. France remained in first place among the suppliers. Export~ for the same 3-month period included iron ore: 23 million tons (up 0.9 tons over the first 3 months of 1978) at a cost of 1.4 billion ouguiyas (up 0.5 billion); and fish, at a cost of 0.3 billion ouguiyas (down 0.1 billion). Copper ore exports ended in mid-1978. As in 1978, France was the main purchaser of Mauritanian iron ore (741,OC~0 tons), followed by Belgium (435,000 tons), Italy (354,000 tons), Spain (204,000 tons), England (197,000 tons), West Germany (166,000 tons), and Japan (126,000 tons). For the first 3 months of 1979, fish was exported to Japan (76 percent), Spain (12 percent) and Italy (11 percent). During the first 3 months of 1979, iron ore mining reached a greater level with 2.1 million tons, compared to 1.6 million tons for the same 3-month neriod in 1979. April 1979 production had as its object 0.8 million tons, and by the end of April stocks had reached.l million tons. In all, 22,000 tons of fish were unloaded at Nouadhibou during the first 3 months of 1979 (compared to 16,500 tons in 1978), and 4,600 tons were brought ashore in April. 20 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FUR OFF'ICIAL U5E ONLY At the end of April 1979, the si.x most important public works projects of _ Nauakchott took up 2.1 billion ouguiyas, from which 0.6 billion ouguiyas for works remained to be implemented. During the first 3 months of 1979, the port of Nouadhibou recorded a trade - ~f 8,600 Cons of imported merchandise (not including fish), and 8,300 tons of exports. During the same period, the wharf of Nouakchott handled 53,700 ~ tons of imported merchandise. Purchases of oil products in the first 4 months of 1979 comprised 198 mil.lion ouguiyas (710 million for all of 1978). Wirh regard to domestic trade, the state company, Sominex's (National Import-Export Company) sales of. major necessities (sugar, tea and rice) showed a marked progression during the first 2 months of 1979: 0.9 billion ouguiyas. Over a base figure of 100 in January 1975, the general price indicaror of consumption for a European-type family increased to 151 by the end of April 1979 (up 10 percent over the end of March 1978). By March 31, 1979, currency and notes in circulation totalled 2 billion ouguiyas (up 10 percent over the end of March 1978). The total number of bank deposits reached 3.5 billion ouguiyas (up 0.1 billion over the end of March 1978), credit to public organizations accounted for 0.6 billion at the end of March 1979 (down 0.2 billion). Likewise at the end of March 1979, the Central Bank of Mauritania held a credit of 2 billion ouguiyas in terms of authorized advances (compared to - 1.8 billion at the end of March 1979). _ The incurr.ence of economy credits as a resulC of the banks' offers totalled 8 billion ouguiyas at the end of March 1979 (up 0.8 billion over the end of March 1978). The incurrence of economy credits as a result of the banks' offers totalled 8 billion ouguiyas at the end of March 1979 (up 0.8 billion over the end of March 1978). Furthermore, the banks' consolidated position takes into account 0.5 billion ouguiyas in credits which are questionable or involved in lawsuits. For amounts of credit allowances used, trade is in first place (2.7 billion ouguiyas), with mining in second place (1.4 billion). Mauritania's indebtedness abroad has worsened: 3.4 billion ouguiyas at the end of March 1979, compared to 3 billion a year before. _ COPYRIGHT: Rene Moreux et Cie., Paris, 1979 9475 CSO: 4400 21 FOR OFFICIA,'. USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100144417-1 FOR OF'FICTAL USE ONLY P10ROCC0 1'RIMG hIINISTER DI5~U3SES SAHARA-REI,AT~;p mnPIi:S Paris AL-WATAN AL-'ARABI in Arabic 24-30 Aug 79 pp 28-2g ~ rIni:erview with Forei~n Minister M'Hamed Boucetta, Conducted by Faruq Abu-'Lahr~ [Text~ Morocco's Foreign Minis~Der M'Hamed Boucetta is also secretary general of the Istiqlal Party, the number-txo political force participating in the gov- ernment. It is the party founded by the late national leader 'Allal al-Fasi~ and it played its ma.jor historic role in resisting French colonialism. M'Hamed Boucetta is known for his vehement~ patriotic stand on the Sahara issue. He has called for ariaing the citizens in the regions alcng the Al.~erian and Maw^itanian borders, and hris also called for mobilization in order to meet fu- ture eventualities. , A correspondent from AL-WATAN AL-'ARABI met with the Moroccan minister on his return from a surprise visit to Nouakchott, whexe he held negotiations with Mauritanian officials. I began n~y interviex by asking the Morocca.n diploma.tic chief, "Some observers feel that the coup which ousted Mauritanian Eresident Mokhtar Ould Daddah in July 1978 augured the stand which the pre~ent regime adopted on 5 Au~;ust 1979~ whic:h culminated in the signing of the agreement with Polisario for giving ul~ ` Tiri$ E1-Gharbia,. Do you believe that this is the correct analysis? (Ansxer] 41e expressed our stand at that time. Our view was that what happened in P~:ai.sitania last year~ in particulzr on 10 July 1978, was an internal Mauri- tanian issue. ?ut it soon became clear to us, from the stands talcen by rla.uri- " tana.an officials~ that this line augured a cha.nged with respect to the Saharan issue, which became apparent from the statements ma,de by the officials in Noua.kchott all last year in:spite of the relations and treat ies linking Mauri- tania and Morocco. Other parties interfered in the matter~ one of them the so-called Polisario front, which bega,n exerting strong pressure on the members of the r9111tary Com- mittee for National Salvation in Mauxitania,. 22 FOR,OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-00850R040140100017-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY M'H~.med Boucetta was silent for a moment, and then resumed speaking sadl,y. "Rec:ent Ma~uritanlan statements ,~e during the OAU conference in Monrovia con- flic~t with the apirit of firm relations with Morocco. iKauritania voted fo.r and abid.ed by ~t;he recommendations presented by tne arbitration committee. This be- came more obviotu~, and perhap~ in a questionable manner, xhen the ao-called Algi.ers ~greement was signed with t{~e Polisario. We feel that there is no basis to j.t~ nelther from the legal nor the international standpoints~ and not even from the standpoir,t of its cainciding xith the real factors of the region~ be- causa it doesn't take~ into consideration the clauses of the treaty c~ncluded be- tween Morocco and Mauritania." [~~uestion~ What were Mauritania's motives for signing the Algiez~s agreement on 5 August? [Answer] ~Ia~~;.~itania says that it is working for peace and to finish with this issue. We don't dispute this~ but there is ar~other way of evading responsibility. i We Yiave told our Mauritanian brothers plainly that the im~ortant thing is for the - relations betweEn our two countries to remain on such a level as to maintain and ensure the well-being of the two states. I want Mauritania to agree xith us on this point. We Hope the A].gerians Understand Our Position - [~auostion] After recent developments~ from the Algiers agreement to the raieing of t;he Morocc~,n flag oyer the city of al-Dakhila.h~ the capital of the Rio de Oro region, the ball appears to be in the Algerian court. Ho~r do you evaluate the Alg~:rian position? [Answer] You have seen the spontayeous responses of the Rio de Oro inhabitants after the s3.gning of the Algiers agreement. It xas thes~ reactions Hhich ma.d~ us adopt some necessary measures so that the authorities managing the r~gion's ' affairs xould not get into probleles xith the local inhabitants, Hho had expres- sed their attachment to their Mor~ccan-ness. After tha,t they came to Rabat to ; pa.y homage according to the prevailing traditions of that area and of Islamic , countries in general. And now the region faces a new situation, although it is the natural one. Our most urgent~ greatest desire is that Algeria understand this situa.tion, so that there can be stability and so that we ca,n build a real peace in the future. ~'his will not be achieved by driving a w~age which people call Polisario, which is generating a serious problem which none of us need. _ Morocco's genuine desire ie to build up the region economically and socially~ and to establish a political ra.pprochement confirming this desire. We also hope ' ~::~,t th~ Algarian ~fficials ryill ca~~ or~ ~r,a ~c~.la whic~ M~iocc~ is striving , to aci,i~ve. We certainly don't Hant them to take the opposite line~ the road to expa,nsion and hegemony at Mo~occo's expense~ for this is something xe will i definitely not accept. ' rauestion] It is said that the Algerian forces have entered the Nouadhibou re- ~ gion on Mauritania's northern borders with Morocco. Is this true? , 23 . i FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIA:L USE OM,~' � [Answer~ I don't know anything about this. 5ume o~' tk~e tlaws agencies have - reported something on that order. ~auestinn] It is said that there is a feeling of anger on the part of Morocco tawards ~he American refusal to supply you w3th arms~ In fact, there are some American circles which call _�oz~ nat glving Morncco arms because, accbrding to their claims, that would encourage the army to escal.~.te the military situation and expand the scope of the fighting. [Answer~ ~We cannot look at the problem this way. Thexe were some questions among American circles a year ago~ espec.ially about the difference Y,ween ad- _ ministration and sovereignty, but after the ~ta~emerits ~xid contacts made with American officials, and after tl~e King of Norocco�s visit to the United States, the American position softened and relations resumad their normal cowcse. I , don�t know if there is any American opposition to ~lorocco which refuses to supl~ort it and ~ive it the good.s and arms it neecis ~ [4~u~stion] Does that mean tha,t the United States has responded to Morocco's ' reqixest to be supplied with arms? [An~wer~ Yes. [~uestion~ Some international circles have proposed the internationalization of i:he Sahara issue, by bringing in other interna.~iona.l pa.rties in an attempt to find a compromise. CAnawer~ We feel that this issue has gotten more attentior~ than ii deserves in the international sphere, The fact is that it is a completely internal issue. If in tha past we have brought it up before internat:tonal circles, tha,t was in order to elimina,te the colonialism which was so claaxly connected with a certain ~uropean colonialist state. Hawever, as soon as -the oxiginal inhabitants return- ed to their natur2,1 situation~ they plain~y exprESSed their viexs. We pla,yed our part by carrying out our interna.tional commitment--fulfilling the Security Couricil's call for conducting n~gotiations witl-, the colonialist states accord- in~ to the provi.sions of Article 33 of the UV cha.rtex. Anything else is an infringament of ~Ioroccan internal af.fairs. In the future ~ Morocco will conduct itself in this manner in everything pertaining to this if~sue. The Required Dialog With Algeria ~~uEStion~ There are direct Moroccan contacts with the i~auritanian side~ and there are direct contacts between Algeria and Ma.uritania. Are there any direct or indirect con~acts between Morocco and A7.geria,? [Answer] As of now~ I don't knGx. But in the pa,st, before the death of Presi- dent Boumediene, there were contacts on the possibility of arranging a high- level meeting between the King ~,~nd the la,te Fresideni;, Then this pa.ge was turned. [~uestion~ And during the last QAU con.ference? 24 � FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL U5E ONLY ~ [An:~wer~ There were no contacts in the real sense of the word, but there were per,~onal contacts~ although not to study the problems existing between the two countries. Tha nornlal situation, as expressed by some African atates~ is that no ~ceal, decisive solution can be reached without a constructive dialag between Morucco and Algeria. ~Question] But are there Moroccan precondi~tions for direct contacts with ' Algeria? [Answer~ No, there are no preconditions for contacts, or for sitting doxn at one�table to build an Arab North Africa. This is our rea'1 conviction~ and we axe convinced that there will be no progress or mutual understanding without a peaceful environment among the parties of the region. [~uestion] Or~ the other ha.nd, are there Algerian conditions for opening the dooi to discussion? [An~wer] In President Chadli Bend3edid's statement, Algeria stipulated a con- dition we cannot except--giving up the Sahara. rQuestion] Obviously the region is on the edge of explosion. Or can that be avoided? ~Answer~ We don't want war~ but you must understand, on the other hand, that ~ we will not stand by with our arms folded in the face of aggression and the exez~tion of force agai_nst our territorial integrity. [Question~ In your capacity as leader of one of the major I~Ioroccan political blocs~ what do you think is the domestic stand towards the Sahara issue? [Answer] We feel: that terxitorial integrity and the Saha,ra are the causes of ` the entire people. There is complete concensus among the various political groupings about supporting and ba,cking ~:ing Hasan II's stand. We feel that this is one of the fundamentals revealing the true face of t~orocco, something which our eneiqy does not have. Insistence on territoria,l integrity reveals ,just how attached the IYioroccans are to their Sahara~ although they ~liffer on other issues. _ [~Quest3on~ Do you believe that recent developments in the region call for the establishment of a national federal government comprising all Morocca,n political trends? ~ r L [Answer~ This is a secondary question, We are not a,gainst a na.tional federal ' government aiming at adding other elements not present in the existin~ coa,lition I ~overi~;;:ant. But everyone, inside or outside the ~overnment~ has a z.inified stand ~ on the national issue. i ~5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY � _ . . I. - , - . . .1. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 Dl/1\ Vl'1'1V1c11~ U~Jli V141_~1 t~etween Rumor and Faci. ~Que,~,E,~.on~ Has there been any talk abo,it ;:abint:t ~,ha.ri~.;e? [Answer] There are rumors, which outnumber what is ~ic~ually being done in official circles on this matt~r, [~uestion] There are those who accuse Moraccari d~~~l~rr~~.cy uf weakness and hes1~ tancy~ and who feel that the htonrovia con~'er.~nce rnsol.utions and the recommenda- tions of the arbitratiori cornrnitte~ were a. d~;l:'eat; far Mc~ror,co. [An:~wer] As for. the recommendations of the arbitxatiun r,ommitte~~ they didn't ast~~nish us, As for the OAU's stand, it is a_repel.j:~.io~~ of :previous resolutions about self-determination. We tried to mak~ ~those pc:c~E,le tinderstand that this principle had actual~}r been applied~ and had been ar,hi.eved with the Saharans' demand to return to Morocco. This is what we wo~~ild I~ava done origina,l~~ ~ if ~ things ha,d go.r.e along without chaos and tumul�~. If the recommendations made by the arbitra~tior~ comrnl~L~ee had concentrated on finding sound ways of eliminating the t~nsion ~.n the x~;ion, and Ezad tried to remove the causes of ~ossib].e con:frontation bettireen rioror,co and A].~eria, we woul.d have welcomed these recommendations with oF~;ri armU, We told the committee, the formation of which wa,s recommended by the OAU~ tl,~at the xight to self-d.eter- mination is a subsidiary fac~tox� as far as we are cc;ncernad, because the matter ~ here pertains to our territorial integrity, Nanethel~ss, in compliance with their wishes ~ we are ma.king it pla,in to them ~tha,t tr~e ri~ti-~ to self-determination _ has been legitimately applied through the electiar~s he)..d in the region, and the residents of the region have fully expressed their. d~sii~eo Hwever, we feel that the recommendations xere fox7ntiJa,�ted in a cha.otic atmosphere spread by some states during the Monrovi.a coriference, and that the resolution of the arbitration committee was an irresponsible one. 4Ie are most definitely unconvinced that Moracco has bc~can~e dipl omatically iso- la.ted since the Monrovia conference. On the contrary, the states which enjoy some degree of equilibrium will return to suppoz~t our stand. At present we are makj.n.g contacts on various levels, and we are receivi.ng encouraging support from everyone. ~urope Is Ileutral ~auostion] And is there encoura$ii~ support :frorn Europe as well? , [Answer~ No, the Western states pref~r to remain noutral The Moroccan mini.ster lau~hed and said ~"Tha.t' s the hay it 3.s . But as the Ptoroccan stand becomes clearer, so will matters ~ecorne cJ.earer. We have stres- sed. the need to continue brotherly contacts between us and Mauritania, affirming our desire to continue providing the aid which we h~.ve pxovided in the past~ on 26 FOR OF`FICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 I rvn ur~r'l1:1k1L U~~; U1VLY - condition that Mauritania not become a center of emnity towards us. 't'he of- ficials have stre~sed their desire to continue re]ations with Morocco~ ca111ng ~ for finding a peaceful solution to the Saharan issue." COPYRIGHTs 1979 "AL-WATAN AL-ARABI`~ 8559 CSO: 4~02 C ' 27 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 P'OR C)FF1CII~L USE ONLY MQRO~:CO Rr1I IEADER nIS~USSE5 ~AC~;GROUN'i3 TO SAHARA I: S,~ Par~�s AL-WATAAI AL-'ARABI in Arabic 31-Aug-~ Sep 79 2,~~ ~?OT~1 ~Ini:erview With RNI Leader Ahmed Osman, Conducte,3 by l~~ar~.iq Abu�-`Lahr~ [Exr.erpts~ AL-W~1TAN AL-'ARABI is continuin~ a_~,s exa.minatiion into the opinions of Moroccan officials and politicians on the S~t~ara issue, and is ~toclay pub- lishing an intervieK with Ahmed Osma.n ~ the leader ~f ~th~ ma.in party in the gav- ernment coalition. There ha,s been a new esca].a~tion of' developments with the Pol~sario attack on the Moroccan town of al~Buwayrat duxing the 'Id al-Fitr holiday. AL-~~ATAN AL-'ARABI met with Ahmed Osmano former Norocca~a prime minister and heacl of the National Ra11y of Independents (RN~), the ~.argest po].itical force in the parliament, Hhich constitutes a ma.jority in ~i:h~ present government coa,l- _ ition, AL-'rIATAN AL-'ARABI also met with the Socialist Unior~ o~' ~'eople's Forces, the largest political force in the opposition, represented by Mohra�med E1 Yazghi, the number-two man after its Secretary Genex~al Abderx~ahim Bou~.bid, who is in ~,urc~pe undergoing treatment. Here is the text of tl~e interview with Osman, and :t.~ t~e next issue we will publlsh the discussion with E1 Yazghi. The re~.der ,~i7.1 perhaps observe the simllarity in the stand on the Sahara, issue between the govQrnment supporters and the opposition, which is an expression of the consistent national Noroccan stand towards this fateful issue. Weapons Are Not For Everyone I said to Ahmed Osma.n, "You led the Green March in 1975, and were one of the first to ca11 for distributing arms to the people of the Sahara. Was that a r*a,rning and a herald from you of what is now happeni.rag? [Answer] In general, at all festivals I, in the name of the RNIj would ca.ll for arming the citizens living along the borderg, because we xere starting from a clear-cut theory--that however strong the regima's .farces~ they must be strengthened and supported by the Moroccan peo~le, :for 'this will make our 28 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY I' forces always superior to the ene~y forces. But we must give arms only to certain tribes~ not to everyone. These tribes are known for their courage~ and we have complete trust in them. In another context~ Ne have called and a.re still calling for the formation of light units--I don't say commandos~ for that is not the right xord. I don't want to impose any solution on the military coaimand~ but it Hould be nice if ~ thex~e were rapid units intermeshed with and supporting the Moroccan ar.med for- ~ ces, for We are anticipating an escalation in the situation and we must fortify ! - ourselves~ even~though we are a peaceable country and we don't ~aant to att~,ck anyune. [~uQStion~ There was a call to ~stablish a Saharan entity in the area under ' Mau.ritanian administration, but you had an opposing opinion. Why? LAnsKer] This concept was current a year ago. I don't lrnow Khere it started-- Europe? Africa? Some people here and abroad see a solution in it, whereby the ter:citory of Tiris El-Gharbia would be given to th~ Polisario or to Algeria, acc~~rding to an agreement guaranteed by the superpowers, and thereby the problem ; would be ended. I feel that this proposal is childish, first because Algeria xill not be satis- ~ fied with this portion because it would not enable it to reach the sea except through the Western Sahara. Secondly~ assuming that they are content with that region~ it would definitely ba a jumping-off point for aggression against us and Mauritania. i?nfortunately, the rulers of Mauritania are obviously naive ar~d don't understand the situation. They would be the first victim, for the region would be changed , into a red-hot arena of problems and stability~ just as we see here and there in _ Afr:Lca. Naturally~ this would concern all the states of the region~ especial~y i~lauritania, and rrould also concern the superpowers. I I personally am opposed to this solution. In ~yr view it doesn't make sense for I us f,o accept a soiution depending ~n Tiris F1-Gharbia without ftnding a solution , to the Sahara, issue as ~ xhole. ~ , [~~uestion~ How do you envisage the peaceful solution to the Western Sahara? [Answer~ ~~ie agree to negotiations with Algeria, for the ma.tter basically de- . pends on good neighbnrliness bet~een the two countries. Colonialism left the . reg:Lon in November 19?5, and we are ready to consult and negotiate in order to ; improve the region's circumstances and to fulfil its states' aspirations to ! build a greater Arab Morocco in xhich brotherliness and cooperation prevails. After that~ the 'oorder issue becomes secondary. The starting point is respect for the natural territory of each country. We will never dispute the matter ; of the Algerian Sahara~ and in the past we opposed General Gharles de Gaulle's ; plan aimed at separating the Sahara from the rest of Algeria by means of a ~ referendum organized by the French administrati~n. We opposed the notion, ~ . 29 ' FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY , APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY saying that Algeria must liberate all of its Sahara. Algeria ought to accept _ this lo~ic; with respect to the Western Sahara. [y~,uestion,] Iz~t'~ ~o back t,o the pravious agreements between the two countries. For examp:?e, why xasn't the Ifrane agreement eigned in 1972 lmplemented? [AnsNer~ What happened at Ifrane was merely a cooperation and solidarity agree- ment. There was a more important agreement signed between Morocco and Algeria after the 19?2 African summit conference in Rabat. It dealt with the territor- ial integrity and the issue of cooperation, two ma,tters which are firmly linkad~ for Algeria cannot apply one and reject the other. This is what actual~y hap- pened. Algeria si~ned the agreement after a short time~ and we are waiting for the parliament to ratify it. - What happ~:ned was that A].gerf.a. violated the sp].rit and text of the agreement on a number of occasions. Only two months later, during the regular UN session, the Algeri.an maneuvers over the Sahara issue began. During the 1q72 session Algeria introduced the notion of "concerned pa,rties" into the matter~ claiming tha~t it was concerned with the issue. Naturally~ that led to a halt in activ- ity on the economic and cooperation side. Qs we see it, the agreement no longer exists. Morocco Opens the Tindouf Dossier ~~uestion~ '~11th respect to the current situation, Morocco is considering ceding the Tindouf (border) region, and the agreement basically means giving up this rich region... Osma.n interrupted me, asking, "We are ceding Tindouf? You cannot say that. Nat~lrally, the implementation of the agreement might call for that~ but it is not being applied. Each party to the agreement has the right to act." [Quastion] Meaning that the border problem still exists? [Answer~ The border problem actually still exists between Morocco and Al~eria. This much is clear. The agreement is not being applied. His Highness King Hasan II gave a valuable opportunity to his neighbors~ but they wasted it. [~uestion~ In your capacity as head of the largest ga.rliamentary bloc, do the current events call for the establishment of a national federal government? [AnswerJ Right now we have a coalition government incorporating a considerable number of the country's pa,rties. Alongside the government exists a very import- ant or~anization, the P�1a~ional Security Co,~u~~~2e, ::ea,3ed by riis Hi~hness~ which includes all the political authorities. Events oblige us to defend our tc?-r.itory, to drop side issues, and to dedicate al1 our efforts to protecting an~ safegua.rding the nation. 30 FOR OFF'-1CIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY We Lack Money and Allocations [Qu~jstion; Does it a].so demand development of the Moroccan arnpr's resources? [M~wer] The Moroccan arn~y is continually being developed. ~+~uestion] And as for the difficulty in acquiring American arms? : [Ansxer] By God, the question is not one of difficulty in acquiring arms~ but is one of al3ocations and money. The arms Rre there xhenever i+e want them~ and in general it can be said that our arn~y is in a ~tate of continual devel- opwnt. The fact is that the Green March was protected by our armed forceso xhir.h actively participated in it. [Question~ After the Monrovia summit conference and the recommendations of the "arbitration committee~" some people accused Moroccan diplomacy of failure and indecision. [An~r+er] I don't like to criticize~ but it must be recognized that there are shor.tcomings. The least that ca.n be said is that at the Monrovia conference we could have done more to succeed. Fir~t, with respect to the arbitration committee~ perhaps we should have de- nounced its formation. For exa.mple~ xe accepted Tanzania's membership in the committee, Imoxin~ that it supported the ca~np hostile to us. We should have rejected its membership as soun as it recognized the Polisario. Tanzania has become an adversary~ not an arbiter. As for the other member~ Mali, xe should have rejected its membership as xell~ eapecial~jr after its forei~n minister's visit to Algeria and the statements ~ he made in support of the Algerian point of viek. ile ahould have had reserva- tions about the vs~lidity of the committee as a?rhole. ~ I don't Imow if the xidgspread chaos in the Monrovia conference Kas the reason for the Moroccan delegation's i.nability to explain the facts. It ~?as said to me that the president of the conPerence refused to give the head of the Moroc- can delegation the right to speak. In addi~ion, according t~ the agreement made during last year's Khartoum African suna~it conference, the report of the arbitration committee should have been presented during the extraordinary con- ference. What happened xas that the recommendations xere presented during the regul.a.r conference i:~ the Liberian capital. As for the voting in the OAU, it is unimportant because it is neither a parlia- r ment or a governmerit. Efforts aust be made to reach some settlement~ and an attea~t muat be made to convinced the parties concerned xith the natter. It is meaningless for the delegate of Botaxana to vote alongside the rebels and determine the fate of an entire nation. We tried to establish an arbitration committee during the Libreville conference~ and xe made a personal effort to do so. At the same time, Algeria Kas against , the idaa at the ~~?artoum summit. Unfortunately, the committee exceeded the task assigned to it. 31 - FOR OFFICIA.L USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OI`FICIAL US~ ONLY The Sahara Issue Is an Arab One ~Question~ Can the Arab League play a desi~na.ted role in the atruggl~? [AnsHer] Above all the issue is an Arab one, betxeen two Arab Moslem countries. We muet not forget that the Arabs lzari their say during the 19?4 Rabat conference. President Doumeciiene had his say as well, but he changed his mind, ~s he himself acImoxledged. He said, "Actual],y~ in 1974 I spoke of Morocco's right to the Sahara, but nox we have a new policy. We support the Saharan people and the polisario now~ and xe will supp~jr them xith equipment and men." This was an unfortunate position~ for the question is basically one of good- neighborliness or unneighborliness~ the balance between some states in the re~ gion~ and the relations between them--strong ones perhaps~ but not good neighbor re ]a,t ions . ~ As fo.r the talk ~.bout the right to self-d.etermination~ I ask~ "Where in the xorld has this principle been applied? (Here the former Moroccan prime minister had a long laugh.) [Question~ You said that Mauritania xould be the greatest victim of xha.t hap- pened recently. What do you mean by that? [Ansxer] Mauritania is threatened Kith an explosion. The fact is that he~ciing this na.ti.on today is a group of people who are unfamiliax xith a.ffairg of state. By God, this is strange, for this is the first time in history that a group heading a nation sacrificed territory xithout recompense, the first time that a sta~te aba.ndoned territory so easily Hithout losing it in a Har, for examplQ. We have offered countless support, in view of its limited means and the depri- vation it suffers from. We must point out the exemp].ary conduct of the Moroccan arn~y in Mauritania. Our soldiers are always offering aid to the Mauritanian citizens--provisions and medicines as well as dai]y necessities. The Moroccan arn~y did not interf'ere in internal matters during the first and second coups. [~uestion] Let us go back again to the issue of establishing a nationa,l feder- al government. Do you personally agree to its establishment? [Answar] Naturally~ the governiaent is an important tool for facilitating af- fairs of state, but the matter depends on His Highness, He might maintain the existing government or bring in another government. But the important thing is to avoid discord. The Moroccan officia.ls do not rra,nt the people to live in want. Perhaps the tiern has come to review some of the ways we live. This is a bitter fact. We mwst anticipate ba.d things from adversariea. The moroccan people are prepe.rod to sacrifice, prov~ded that in this case the way be ma,de cleax to them. This is our duty as a government and as political authoritie~. Our people are ready _ for conscription. All these ma.tters depend on His Highness, xhose experience . 32 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY I t has been proven through hia wisdom and experience. My final xord is that ' ever.yone must bo mobilized in deed~ not xord, to face the aituation and the futiire posaibilities. , COPYRIGHT ~ 1979 "AL-WATAN AL-J1RA~3I" 8559 cso: ~oz - 33 FOR OFFTCIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFTCI:AL USE ONLY TUNISIA ~ OPPOSITIONIST BRAHIM TOBAL REFLECTS ON SITUATION IN TUNISIA Paris AFRIQUE-ASIE in French 20 Aug - 17 Sep 79 pp 29,30 � [Article by Brahim Tobal: "Destour: What Congress?"] [Text] The congress of the Destour party, which meets next 5 September, has :tnspired the following reflections by Mr Brahim Tobal, the leader of the national Tunisian opposition, reflections which mirror the concerns of - the people. Little tactical maneuvers to win over the undecided--as in the case of Bouraoui--going so far as using the army against the trade union demonstra- tors of the UGTT [General Federation of Tunisian Labor], the Destour regime, which finds itself today facing several impasses, has used every means to assure its survival. But cahat it is proposing is ridiculous. A brilliant idea, certainly, which _ offers us, in order to get our of the crisis, nothing more than this, the reinstatement of totalitarian regimes: the institutionalization of the single party, which is dying and is so discredited that its own secretary , general had to denounce it not long ago as the den of opportunists and unscrupulous people of all sorts. Another brilliant idea is the electoral list on whick~ there are twice as many candidates as there are seats in a national assembly which is, by its - mission and its nature, a recording body. This idea is an old one of Tahar Belkhod~a, the former minister of the interior, at the very mom~nt when the Destour congress, which will open next 5 September, is being organized. And what showmanship and solemnity went into the announcement of the release--conditional, of nine prisoners, grossly and un~ustly condemned for their political opinians, an act which cannot make us forget that dozens of other political militants and trade unionists are rotting in the miserable jails of the regime and which cannot, either, make us accept the label, dear to those in power, of a moderate and eemperate Tunisia. This spectacular gesture is a vain one because everyone knows that the release of Habib Achour was not due to presidential clemency but to international _ pressure and to internal struggles which have continued since 26 January 3~+ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ ~ , APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY 1978. Because we know also that Achour will remain the hostage of the government as long as his companions in the executive office of the UGTT remain in prison. No. We do not see in that a demonsCration of clemency but rather a detzat- able Machiavellism. Out of all that, one thing atands out clearly: every- thing atarts with Bourguiba and everything comea back to him, whatever they say of his illnesses and of his withdrawal from the affairs ~f state. He is the only one in ~charge, even if, like Pontius Pilate, he has to wash � his hands and find the necessary alibis. Prime Minister Hedi Nouira and the director of the Sayah Party are only, in the final analysis, the exe- cutors of the will of the master, which is right in the Destour tradition, which consists in dividing responsibilities in order to direct better the crises of the system. The retirement of Bourguiba and the death of his regime will. inevitably coincide, whoever his designated heir might be. And he knows this, since he keeps saying: "I am the system." The Crucial Problems _ Founding a strategy on a possible "contir.uator" is to move, in our opinion, directly toward failure. To take charge of the post-Bourguiba period is to begin already to challenge all the claimants coming out of this regi~rie, whoever they may be. That being the case, if ~he problem of Bourguiba's successor as chief of state and of its various mechanisms, constitutes the background on which the Destour congress will take place, the crucial problems faced by the Tunisian people will remain steadfastly ignored. Rereading the abundant literature which, on the eve of the meetings, is being circulated in Tunis, one notices, certainly, that the Nouira government (which has been strengthened since Dece~ber by the addition of a few techno- crats) not only is not in control of the social and economic situation, but also does not know how to say what are, and what might become, its nature and its political continuation. They say this crisis is a consequence of the world economic depression, of the wild consumption by Tunisians (of whom about two thirds are on the verge of malnutrition), even that it is due to weather conditions! The government ought to admit, however, that the wage freeze (which is causing a sharp decrease in the buying power of the masses), that the facilities granted by the EEC to textile exports, that the flow of petrodollars brought in by "tourists" from the gulf and from Saudi Arabia have not, to say the very least, contributed to lessening the effects. On the contrary, the crisis is worsening and is disproving the alibi of the government, which ~ claims in this way to justify "infitah" [translation unknown]: the crea- tion of jobs. The los~ search for "social peace" is merely the necessary political counter- part of the economic policy followed since 1970 by the regime and which consists, because of the laws of 1972 and 1974, of making Tunisia a"tax paradise" for foreign investors (particularly French and West German) of making rdom for imperialism and neocolonialism and of inserting the Z'unisian 35 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-00850R040140100017-1 FOR Ob'FICIAL USE ONLY economy into the world capitalist market, by 3nvoking the class~c pretexts of under-industrialization and export industr~.es which are tightly controlled by the multinationals. A plan for society, the one which will be proposed to the Destour congress, underlies the whole structure: building a"median society." It must be emphasized here that since the word "class~' was banned from the official political vocabulary, this terminology was quickly invented to avoid speaking of a"middle class society." Ten years later, Tunisia is at the same point. It is certainly not blocked. But it is marking time, and time is inescapably playing against the carrying out of this "grand plan" of the regime. The delays registered in all areas, the deficits in the trade balance and foreign financing, domestic tax pres- _ sure which is weighing heavily on national praducers, the exhorbitant rates paid by the government (using public funds) to foreign investors, without getting anything in exchange, etc., are the obvious signs of a fatigue which the regime can combat only by giving up a little mnre national sover- ~ ~ eignty and reducing the standard of living of the people. The official explanation of this economic morass (the world crisis) is not enough. If the crisis has effects.i*~ Tunisia, it is not because of a blind mechanism, it is the result of a deliberate choice which dates from 1970. All the developing countries are not being affected by the world crisis in the same way, precisely, but according to the political and economic choices that they made in the preceding years. The fault with the official explana- tion, a classic fault, comes from the fact that they want to attribute to a"strange phenomenon coming from somewhere else" what should be attri- buted immediately to internal decisions taken to serve precise class interests and to assure the success of strategies of domination. The result is that today one sees a few foreign investors pull aut with juicy profits and one sees the resignation of local business buyers on which Nouira was claiming to found his economic system. They left behind them- selves a padded bill, which the Tunisian people are still paying off. ~ Another result: more than ever the "median society" has become one of the illusions maintained by official propaganda; more than ever the gap between the mass of poor Tunisians and the minority of rich Tunisians is widening; more than ever the split between the workers and the bosses who are exploiting them is deepening. Even the uwdest rights of the retired workers to social security and to family allocations are, today, the object of middle class attacks.on the part of the bosses and of the govemment, which finds they are too high. The �ailure is due essentially to the organized and canscious refusal of the workers in the UGTT to accept national and social subservience. We see it today: the major concern of the government is to end the popular and trade union resistance, which is continuing in spite of political trials and massacres. In spite, also, of the "public relations" operations ~36 _ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ _ _ , , APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100144417-1 FOk OFFICIAL USE ONLY ; which cannot fool seasoned mil~.tants who have tnadP up their minds to�give a political and economic content to the struggle of the Tunisian people - for their Cotal independence and to obtain by force autonomy for the UGTT in order to make it a dPmocratic and combative union. ' Let no one be mistaken; the independence of the country and trade union independence are the major stakes in all the struggles, active and passive which are being led today. The crisis was born out of that and it is on the battleground of these struggles that it will be solved or not,, in some sort of political context, even if it is that of the congress of a Destour which has, more than ever, its future behind it. ~ COPYRIGHT: 1979 Afrique-Asie 8956 CSO: 4400 I , i i , ! I ; ~ ; I . i 1 ; ? ~ 37 ' FOR OFb'ICTAL USE ONLY ; ~ I APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICTAL USE ONLY TUNTSTA 'LIMITED PARDON~ OF TRADE UNIONIST ACHOUR CALLED INSUFFICIENT ~ Paris AFRIQUE-ASIE in French 20 Aug - 17 Sep 79 p 30 [Article by Anis Wahid: "A Pardon but Not Amizesty"] [Text] In deciding on a limited pardon, Bourguiba has not responded to the requirements of the situation. Mr Habib Achour, the rightful secretary general of the office of the UGTT [Tunisian General FederaCion of Labor], ~ who was sentenced on 10 October I978 to 10 years at hard labor, was released on 3 August on the occasion of the 76th birthday of President Bourguiba. Expected for a long time, in Tunisia as well as abroad, the belated pardon will now have the appearance of a limited release. Mr Achour is reported to have been placed under house arrest in his villa in E1 Menzah and entry to his home is denied to all visitors, except his children. _ It is undeniable that the freeing of the secretary general of the UGTT is due, to a great extent, to national and international pressure, which has never weakened since the massacre on 26 January 1978. Internal considera- tions also played a role, since this action was taken a few weeks before the opening of the tenth cc+ngress of the Destour Socialist Party. The opera- tion daes not seem, however, to have yielded the anticipated results: most of the political and labor organizations, which praised the release of Mr Achour, deplore the continued imprisonment of a hundred or so political and trade-uni.on prisoners. Certain European socialist parxies invited by the ~ ` Destour party made it known that they would not participate in the work of the lOth Congress of the PSD [Destour Socialist Party]. None of the union officials (all of whom were members of the Executive Bureau of the UGTT prior to 26 January 1978, and who received sentences at the same time as Mr Achour of from 5 to 10 years in pr3son, haue been released, which has greatly r~duced the effect of the presidential clemency, which is believed by some to have been motivated more by humanitarian con- sidnratiQns than by political ones (at 76, Mr Achour suffers from hyper- _ tension and diabetes). For its part, the Movement for Popular Unity (MUP) feels that the measure "translates the embarrassment of the governa~ent, since it has rreed the 3$ - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 I . FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY person it has always cla~med, wxongly, was xesponsible for the bloody evenCs . of 26 January 1978, while 3.t continues to hold 3n custody the other officers of the union." Announced by the chief of state in person, the pardon was extended to the five oldest political prisoners in Tunis3a, now called by them "the forgotten men of Bord~ er-Roumi." Militants from the group , known formerly as "Perspectives," and later as "E1 Amel Tounsi," they have : spent more than 10 years in prison, after Bourguiba had withdrawn 5 years ago a decree which pardoned them. Weakened pfiys3ca11y, they are uow free, thanks in particular to the international campa3gn (3n wh3ch this newspaper participated) conducted on their behalf a few months ago. What Opening? Freeing these pr:tsoners shows, certainly, a retreat on the part of the government. Indeed, it would be hasty and premature to consider this action _ as a harbinger of political change in Tuni~ia, and even less as the beginning of a political liberalization. Certainly, Mr Chatty and Mr Kooli, the f~nrmer ministers of foreign affairs and of health, respectively, who had resigned a fe~w weeks before 26 Januazy 1978, rushed to the palace at Carthage at the call of President Bourgui'oa to make honorable amends and to return to th~ Destourian bosom, while Mr Taher Belkhodja was also said to be getting ready to be received by the "Supreme Combattant." What is more, certain people, who obviously do not understand the true ; nature of Bourguiba's power, now seem to be thinking of an "opening" and, because of that, have taken a dead end. For the Tunisian Government is still not willing to give up the instruments of repression. ' General and unconditional amnesty for all political and trade-union prisoners, which has been called for by all the political sectors in Tunisia, has not taken place. Nevertheless, only that, as the respect for rights and i the return of the union officials to the posts they held before 26 January I 1978, can bring Tunisia out of the political impasse in which it has been I for many years. COPYRIGHT: 1979 Afrique-Asie f ~ 8956 CSO: 4400 ~ 39 FOR OFFICIAL US~ ONLY. . APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 F01: OFFICIAL IISL ~NLY WESTERN SAHA~tA i POLISt1RI0 DETERMINED TO MAICE LIFE DIFFICULT FOR MOROCCO Paris JEUNE AFRIQUE in French 5 Sep 79 p 21 [Arti.cle: "Sahara: War at its Heels"] [Text] The Battle of Biranzaren (J.A. No 973) had aot yet finished teaching its lesson when a new attack was launched by the POLISARIO on Friday, August 24, against Lebouirate, a village located 150 km inside uncontested Moroc:co. The confrontation was brutal: for the first time it was favorable to the Saharan fighters who occupied the territory and, according to their account, killed 230 Moroccan soldiers. This outcome, if confirmed, repre- sents pretty accurately the effectiveness of the Moroccan Armed Forces entrusted with the defense of Lebouirate. Without citing figures, Rabat acknowledged the extent of the operation, and pointed out nevertheless that the garrison commander "had not used suitable means in resisting the enemy, and who even abandoned his defense positions as well as part of his weaponry." The Moroccan authorities added that "the guilty will be punished," and have announced that Lebouirate has been recaptured by relief forces. Ttie acts of aggression at Biranza~en and Lebouirate, committed within 15 . days of each other, indicate to what extent the POLISARIO is determined to make life difficult for Morocco, after the latter's recovery of the ~ former Tiris el Gharbia--a recovery which further accentuates that kingdom's isolation on the African chessboard. The recent recognition of the SDAR (Saharan Democratic Arab Republic) by the new Ghanan regime is one proof of ttiis. During that time, King Hassan II did not appear at all discouraged, having always been the recipient of his people's unconditional support. His appeals for recnr.ciliation concerning Algeria are multiplying, and his charm tactics with regard to the United States, from whom he has requested new arms shipments, are becoming more persistent. While awaiting the U.S. Senate's decision on such shipments, Morocco has already gotten its "installment": six Augusta Bell combat helicopters manufactured in Italy under a U.S. license. COPYRIGHT: Jeune Afrique GRUPJIA 1979 9475 CSO: 4400 FOR OFFICI6~L USE UNLY ~ ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY FlFSS~FRN SAHARA . SAIiARAN WAR SAID TO THREATEN MOROCCAN THRONE Madrid CANffiIO 16 in Spanish 9 Sep 79 p 41 [Text] The impression that the Sahexan war is being fraged with almost catastrophic results for Mor~cco was confirmed onl,y 7 days after Kin~,Iiassan . II announced to 200 newsmen from all over the world, that the stru~3~,le to defend the annexation of the former Mauritanean Sahara will continue to the end. According to an announcement issued in Algiers, the city of Lebourite in the southeastern region of Morocco--1956 border--and 150 km from Tind.ouf, the guerrilla base on Al~erian territo ry, was in the hand of the Polisario gue- _ rril.las for 24 hours on Friday 2~+ August. In the entire history of the cons'lict, this was the most daring Folisario action and victory. The death toll funon~ PQoroccan troops was estimated at almost 800. Wounded and prisoners were also in the hundreds. The capture of weapons--7 Strela missiles, 81 mortars, 100 machine guns and 51 trucks--was spectacular. The seriousness of the disaster forced the Rabat government to report it officially and with harsh details, blaming the defeat on the post cotrrtnander in chief, Azelmat, and announcing that an investigation would be~in to determine responsibilities. The Army is Uneasy If the Rabat government carries out its purpose, it is sure that the malaise, alreac~y present within the army, will increase. The army, in addition to feeling uneasy `ri.th what the Moroccan officers consider inefficiency of th~e central government, knows that it is at a disadvantage in desert warfare. This disadva.ntage, in principle is one of morale, and is the result of a series of successive defeats. The Moroccan numerical superiority is offset by the e::perience of the Polisario guerrillas, used to this type of combat in which they are veterans. For any Moroccan soldier it is necessary to go through desert warfare training before he can go into combat. ~+l FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY . . . _ f APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Tf this were not enough, the spectacular escalation oF Polisario armament-- whose Sam-7 missiles ~;ive them decisive advantage in air control--is threatening to make come true the forecast that the war would b ecome the grave of Hassan II. In addition, the Alaquite monarch is on the eve of suffering another serious diplomatic defeat at the Conference of Nonalined Nati~ons in Havana, where the recent condemnation by the African surrm~?it in Monrovia will be repeated and will be harsher in tone. ftassan's diplomatic counteroffensive began at the same time. The kinq has the unconditional support of all Moroccan political forces, united without divisions in the case of annexation of Sah ara. Ruinc~us War Socialist leader Abderrahim Bouabib, however, in recent statements said with alarm that Morocco perhaps would not be able to pay or withstand the price of the rrar. Military expenses for 1979 are estimated at a billion dollars. The Sahara conflict daily swallows 160 million pesetas of the public treasury. The civilian morale is also beginning to suffer. The king's messa~e on the nay of the Revolution of the FCin~ and People was followed with obvious indifference on the streets of Rabat. Hassan, thus, is at a critical moment in spite of never havin~ had in the history of his reign such unanimous domestic public support. Howev~r, the battle has to be won abroad, especially in Washin~ton which maintains its policy of arms embargo against Morocco. In an int erview granted t~o U. S. weekly NEWSWEII:, Hassan opened fire touching a sensitive spot, especially in U.S. leading circles. � The Alaquite monarch ,justified the annexation of Sahara, adducing that there ~ was real danger of Cuban intervention in the Mauritanian administration zone. In the same interview, Hassan II insinuated that the possibility was not bein@; discarded of a meetin~ with Algerian President Chadli Ben~edid, to try to re~ch an agreement. The sharp verbal artillery of Hassan was aimed now against T~ibya, indicatin~ that "millonaire" Colonel Q,adhdhafi "did not mind" the bloodlettin~ of the war. Al~eria could not maintain a war with Morocco. According to experts, a direct confrontation would necessarily be limited to bord.er skirmishes, for economic reasons. _ Therefore, now Hassan is trying to create a splii: among the Algerian forces who support the Polisarios. As a sign of good will, the king has suggested the possibility that Nbrocco ~ede a corridor in Sahara to ~ive Algeria an outlet to the Atlantic. ~+2 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000100104417-1 r I FOR GFFICIAL USE ONLY For his part, Carter is facing a seY�ious dilemma., comparable to the one he was facin~, when the Shah was tottering, accordin~Z to a well-informed statement by the infliiential U.S. newsman Arnaud de Aorchgrave. On the s~me pa,~;es of NEWSWI;EK, Borcharave recalls that Morocco i~ the oldest ally of the ifiited State~ and ~zaxns of a possib].e debacle that Hassan's downfall would mean for the West, ati event that woulci inexorably follow a defeat in the war. :tassan's support to the Shah in his most difficult days would now be rewarded. Now Hassan is knocking at the doors of the White House. COPYRIGHT: 1979 Informacion y Revista, S.A. ~ 11635 ~ CSO : 4410 ~ i , , ; f' ~+3 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY : , , 't ~ ~ . ~ , APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000100100017-1