The Jewish Herald-Voice (Houston, Tex.), Vol. [51], No. [1], Ed. 1 Thursday, March 29, 1956 Page: 14 of 52
fifty two pages : ill. ; page 14 x 10 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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it the former President summed
BORIS SMOLAR
by
and Britain would stop wooing
T
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HOLIDAY
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up his feelings not only toward
Israel, but also toward the Jews
in general . . . “What you have
received at the hands of the world
has been far less than was your
due,” he wrote to Israel’s first
President . . . He also reveals
how strongly he had distrusted
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out specific authority from him
. . . The second volume of Mr.
Truman’s memoirs—carrying the
title “Years of Trial and Hope”—
contains many pages on Jews and
on Israel which will become an
integral part of Jewish history.
MRS. HENRY GREENFIELD
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the proclamation of Israel ... In ment to regard themselves as the
» t j men who really make policy and
run the government . . . They
j
Egypt, the Arabs would not be as the State Department “experts”
impertinent as they are . . . They with regard to their opinions and
suggest concrete action which the action on Israel ... He plainly
United States and Britain could states that some of them were “in-
take to make Egypt less belliger- dined to be anti-Semitic,” while
ent . . . They believe, for in- others were just pro-Arab.. To
stance, that Britain and the Unit- some of them Truman’s announce-
ed States can agree on a joint oil ment giving de facto recognition
policy which would not play into to Israel came as a surprise, but
Egypt’s trouble-making hands and “it should not have been, if these
would also put the king of Saudi men had faithfully supported my
Arabia in his proper place . . . policy,” Truman writes ... He
They suggest that British evacu- throws light on the ambition of
ation from the Suez Canal base career men in the State Depart-
------
Memorable Memoirs: Whether
you have read Harry S. Truman’s
memoirs in installments in the
press, or not, I advise you to read
in full the second volume of these
memoirs which deal with the
years 1946-52 . . . You will find
there much more interesting reve-
lations on Truman’s attitude and
action on Israel than the abbrevi-
ated installment in the press . . .
Especially fascinating is the full
text of a “personal and confi-
dential” letter which Truman
wrote to Dr. Chaim Weizmann on
November 29, 1948 — the first
anniversary of the United Nations
partition resolution which led to
be suspended as a warning to
Egypt • - • They are certain that
American and British economic
sanctions could cause a great deal
of dislocation of Egyptian trade
even if Egypt could sell its cotton
to the Soviet Union . . . They
foresee other possibilities for
checking the growing Arab ag-
gressiveness against Israel and
against the Western Powers . . .
The question is only whether the
State Department in Washington,
and Sir Anthony Eden in Eng-
land are inclined to make use of
these possibilities.
—
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Fi • • .f33
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United Nations Moods: Western-
minded diplomats at the United
Nations are beginning to see the
light in the Arab-Israel crisis . . .
They are no longer inclined to
trust statements by Col. Nasser,
Egypt’s ruler, that he means no
war against Israel . . . Some of
them are wondering why Israel
does not offer a military air base
to the United States . . . This,
they think, would protect Israel
from Arab air attack better than
United Nations resolutions and
appeals . .. They feel that Egypt
would not dare to attack Israel
knowing that there were Ameri-
can bombers on an air base in
Israel leased to the United States
. . . What they don’t know is that
the State Department has brushed
aside any suggestion of an under-
standing with Israel for the estab-
lishment there of an American air
base . . . Opinion among delegates
of neutral countries to the United
Nations is that Britain and the
United States have been favoring
Egypt against Israel in fact, if
not by intention . . . And these
delegates ask: Why not recognize
that Israel is the real friend of
Britain and the United States and
act accordingly? . . . Some of
them feel that if the United States
look upon the President as “just
a temporary occupant” and seek
to impose their own views instead
of carrying out his policy, he says
. . . Truman had his hands full
with such career officials when it
came to the creation of the Jewish
State ... At one time he had to
issue specific orders to the State
Department requesting that “no
statement be made or action taken
on the subject of Palestine” by
any member of the American dele-
gation to the United Nations with-
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White, D. H. The Jewish Herald-Voice (Houston, Tex.), Vol. [51], No. [1], Ed. 1 Thursday, March 29, 1956, newspaper, March 29, 1956; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1527533/m1/14/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .