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ce , who the White House said would be reassigned , and by the Camp David comman der . In his letter of resignation to Presdient Cliton , Watkins defended his ac tions as `` in fulfillment of the responsibilities of my position , '' which inc ludes oversight for Camp David . He said `` there simply was no effort on my par t to use White House or military equipment for personal or recreational purposes '' and that his `` sole motivation was determining how you ( Clinton ) could ut ilize Camp David more frequently . '' WASHINGTON The Federal Aviation Administration has expressed concern about a ra sh of accidents and incidents involving China Airlines , the official airline of Taiwan , and `` invited '' the company to discuss how the United States can hel p improve it , an official said Tuesday . `` We expect very shortly that they wi ll be able to sit down with us and discuss specific assistance we can give them , '' said Anthony J. Broderick , the FAA 's associate administrator for regulati on and certification . While it couched the message in polite language , the FAA effectively put China Airlines on notice it expects the company to take action on safety-related issues . The airline , stunned by a series of incidents that a ppear to be related to poor training or unprofessional behavior , has instituted a retraining program for all its pilots . The Transport Ministry of Taiwan has also warned the airline which flies dozens of international routes including to and from the United States and owns at least 30 wide-bodied airliners to enforce Taiwanese aviation law . Tests show that drinking may have been a contributing factor in the latest crash , April 26 at Nagoya Airport in Japan , in which 264 people were killed and seven survived . The Japan Times , in Tuesday 's editions , said the head of the National Public Safety Commission has confirmed widespre ad reports that both pilots had been drinking . Commission chairman Hajima Ishii said tests showed the pilot had a blood alcohol content of .013 and the copilot , who was flying the wide-body Airbus A300-622R , .055 . If the crew did all th eir drinking on the ground before the more than three-hour flight , the copilot would have had a blood alcohol content nearing 0.1 , considered legally drunk in many countries . A preliminary report on the accident by the government of Fran ce , where the Airbus is manufactured , said the crew lost control of the airpla ne on the landing approach as the copilot attempted to descend by pushing forwar d on the control yoke , apparently unaware that he was in effect fighting the au topilot . The plane stalled twice and fell . This was the most serious of a numb er of China Airlines incidents , including the crash landing of a Boeing 747-400 in Hong Kong and an in-flight incident involving the autopilot on another 747 . `` That seems to be a number ( of incidents ) higher than one would expect from an airline this size , '' Broderick said in an interview . Broderick said the a irline seems to be taking the problem seriously , but the FAA wants to be `` hel pful '' because many Americans fly the airline and its jets fly in U.S. airspace . The FAA move is part of a growing tendency to become directly involved in wor ld aviation matters . The agency has opened new offices in several Asian countri es , and is actively involved in helping Russia deal with its mounting aviation problems . `` We place a fairly high priority on that , '' Broderick said . Alth ough the agency usually speaks softly , its suggestions carry weight because it could ban any carrier from landing in the United States on safety grounds . Coun tries often ask for U.S. help with aviation safety from the FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board . China , for example , recently requested U.S. adv ice after its newly independent regional airlines developed major safety problem s . JERUSALEM Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin told a parliamentary panel Tuesd ay that he was disappointed with recent contacts between Israel and Syria and th at the United States ' effort at mediation through Secretary of State Warren Chr istopher has `` exhausted itself . '' Rabin , reiterating Israel 's offer for a phased withdrawal from the Golan Heights , which Israel captured from Syria in t he 1967 Middle East war , complained that Damascus is `` playing for time , '' a nd added , `` We can't say right now that Syria is serious about peace . '' Rabi n 's comments to the closed-door meeting of the Foreign Affairs and Defense Comm ittee were relayed to reporters by an official . They follow a recent visit to t he region by Christopher , who carried messages back and forth between Damascus and Jerusalem and said the two sides had begun a new phase of substantive negoti ations . However , Rabin has pressed for direct , secret talks with Syria , whic h President Hafez Assad has firmly rejected . Rabin has also pressed for a phase d withdrawal in which Israel would exchange some land for a series of normalizat ion steps from Syria . But Assad has insisted on a total withdrawal in exchange for peace . Rabin said that so far Syria has not agreed to return to the peace t alks in Washington , which were interrupted after the massacre in Hebron on Feb. 25 of 29 Muslims by a Jewish settler . But he said he did not think much was be ing accomplished there . `` The Washington talks are an exercise in treading wat er , '' he said . While Israel would like Christopher to be involved , Rabin sai d , `` in fact Washington has exhausted itself '' with the shuttle missions . Ra bin 's comments seemed to run counter to statements from the Clinton administrat ion suggesting that Christopher was making progress . On Friday , the Los Angele s Times quoted President Clinton as saying in an interview that `` we 've got de licate negotiations in the Middle East right now '' and `` the secretary of stat e is involved and . . . the last thing in the world I need to be doing is consid ering changing my team . '' Privately , Israeli officials have faulted Christoph er for what they describe as episodic involvement in the Israeli-Syrian negotiat ions . Some officials would like to see a greater American involvement , althoug h Rabin has made clear he wants to get the Gaza-Jericho agreement with the Pales tinians implemented before pressing ahead with territorial concessions on the Go lan Heights . Rabin was asked about a comment made by Egyptian President Hosni M ubarak to American newspaper editors this week . Mubarak reportedly said Rabin h ad told him Israel `` doesn't intend on keeping one centimeter of the territory which was occupied from Syria in 1967 but is demanding in exchange from Syria fu ll peace with all its components . '' Rabin said there was `` no way '' he had s aid this , and he reiterated his proposals for a phased pullout , saying the fir st stage would not involve removing any Jewish settlements . MOSCOW A delegation of U.S. senators on Tuesday sought to defuse anti-American sentiment by proposing that joint military exercises , which were to be conducte d in Russia , take place instead on American soil . The United States and Russia agreed to the maneuvers in September , with both governments categorizing the e xercise as a dry run for possible future peacekeeping operations . The drill was to take place in July at the Totsk testing ground in the Ural Mountains . Its s ignificance was to be more symbolic than military , as the entire operation was to involve only 250 soldiers from each side , no heavy equipment and no live fir e . Still , communists and nationalists here seized on the notion of `` Yankee ' ' soldiers on Russian territory as further evidence of what they see as a contin ued attempt by the United States to impose its will on a weakened Russia . `` Ru ssia cannot be made a training ground for the American Army , '' lawmaker Pyotr P. Shirshov , an army officer from Bryansk , said in a heated debate last month . Faced with stiff opposition in Parliament and in the Urals , the Russian gover nment on Friday quietly asked the United States to postpone the exercises . On S unday , a bipartisan delegation from the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee ar rived to learn that the maneuvers , meant to showcase the new cooperation betwee n the old adversaries , had instead fallen victim to resurgent Russian nationali sm . Some conservative Russians interpreted the American push for the exercises as , ` ` ` We won the Cold War and now we 're going to show you our stuff ' whic h is not at all what it was meant to be , '' said Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison , R- Texas . Given the `` sensitivity '' of the issue , Armed Services Committee Chai rman Sen. Sam Nunn , D.-Ga. , said the seven senators visiting here will recomme nd to President Clinton and Defense Secretary William J. Perry that the planned U.S.-Russian maneuvers be held in the United States . Nunn suggested that the Na tional Training Center at Fort Irwin , Calif. or several bases in his home state of Georgia might be just right for the job . Hutchison said she is sure Texas w ould be pleased to host the exercises . Russian politicians welcomed the America n proposal . `` All these hysterics about the exercises in the Totsk firing rang e are simply comical , '' said liberal economist Yegor T. Gaidar , complaining t hat hard-liners have told people that American troops would use the opportunity to seize Moscow . `` Nevertheless , the opposition managed to use this as a pret ext for violent anti-Western propaganda . '' Ironically , the United States and Russia first agreed to hold the maneuvers in Germany . But officials had neglect ed to consult the German government , which nixed the idea . Next , the United S tates proposed hosting the exercises , but Russia balked at their $ 2 million co st . ( Optional Add End ) Sergei N . Yushenkov , chairman of the Defense Committ ee of the Duma , or lower house of the Russian parliament , said the maneuvers ' cost could still be a problem . And he said that members of the far-right party , led by Vladimir V. Zhirinovsky who had at first insisted that the exercises n ot be held in Russia were already finding new excuses Tuesday to oppose holding them in America . Zhirinovsky supporters have formed an alliance with other nati onalists , Communists and conservative Agrarian lawmakers . They often command a majority in the Duma . `` They do not want equal partnership ( with the West ) and they are not really interested in promoting a stable , firm and reliable int ernational security system , '' Yushenkov said of the hard-line opposition . High grades go to two segments from Wednesday night 's latest news-magazine pre miere , CBS News ' `` America Tonight , '' anchored by Deborah Norville and Dana King . One is Norville 's on-scene report of a commando raid by a mother to ret rieve her American-born son from a Tunisian father who kidnapped the child to Tu nisia . The other is Bob McKeown 's frightening look at how unconscionable mail- order munitions dealers sell lethal arms to anybody whose check is good . Not av ailable for preview : a commentary by Susan Estrich on date rape , stories by Pe ter Van Sant on the Filene 's Basement annual bridal gown sale in Boston and by Bill Geist on the `` fingernail industry . '' `` America Tonight 's '' big mista ke is a planned weekly , unscientific telephone `` poll '' ( the 900-number call s cost 50 cents each ) that CBS News President Joe Peyronnin Tuesday defended as a way to `` empower '' audiences to be part of the show . -0- Peter Jennings ' excellent blending of the military 's D-Day decisions and tactics with survivors ' personal recollections airs as a 90-minute `` Turning Point at Normandy : The Soldiers ' Story '' on ABC Wednesday night. .. . At a special time Wednesday , NBC 's `` Now With Tom Brokaw and Katie Couric '' has an emotional reunion of tw o vets who had not seen each other for 50 years after having become friends duri ng battle in World War II . -0- Dan Rather 's `` 48 Hours '' Wednesday night giv es us a spirited overview of Scotland Yard , with its tradition of the unarmed b obby appearing to be on the wane as violence increasingly overtakes British soci ety . Among the segments is one about how British royalty simply refuse to have strict security that will keep its members from being close to the people . -0- So much of the original programming on cable 's Comedy Central isn't funny . Suc h as Wednesday night 's five-minute `` Briefs Encounter : Jones v. Clinton , '' a dramatization from `` Comedy Central News '' of the sexual-harassment complain t by Paula Jones against President Clinton . The complaint is read verbatim by c ivil right attorney William Kunstler , who , whatever his other qualities , has never shown himself on TV as a barrel of laughs . The segment is part of the cha nnel 's special `` Battle of the Sexes '' edition of the `` Short Attention Span Theater . '' WASHINGTON An institution already bruised from a succession of scandals got ano ther black eye Tuesday with the indictment of Rep. Dan Rostenkowski , D-Ill. , a nd Republicans got a campaign issue for this year 's midterm elections . The 17- count indictment against the powerful Chicago Democrat embodies the contempt man y Americans long have made against Congress , that its members enjoy perks and p rivleges not available to ordinary citizens and have used their positions for pe rsonal enrichment rather than the public good . Rostenkowski proclaimed his inno cence and vowed to fight the charges . But many Americans already have found the Congress guilty , and the case outlined by U.S. attorney Eric Holder Tuesday li kely will feed public cynicism regardless of how the legal battle turns out . `` People are going to sit back and watch this trial and say , `` I always thought that politicians used public office for private gain and now I know it 's true , ' ' ' said Democratic pollster Mark Mellman . `` If you multiplied the $ 600,0 00 allegedly embezzled ( by Rostenkowski ) by 435 members of Congress , you woul d get an idea of how big this is in the eyes of the taxpayers , '' said Rep. Ern est J. Istook Jr. , R-Okla. , who won his seat two years ago by defeating a scan dal-ridden Republican in the primary . `` Rightly or wrongly , it gives fuel to people who believe that everybody in Congress is a crook . '' That cynicism has put incumbents on the defensive , spawned the term limits movement in America an d helped to give rise to Ross Perot and his followers . Even before Tuesday 's i ndictment , incumbents were nervous about the voters ' mood this year . The assa ult on Congress 's image has come in many forms over the past five years : the s candals over the House bank and post office ; the resignation under a cloud by f ormer speaker James C. Wright , D-Texas ; a stream of television reports on the junkets and goodies enjoyed by those in office . Polls continue to show an overw helmingly negative view of Congress as an institution . Four in five voters say members of Congress quickly lose touch with people back home and three in five d isapprove of the job Congress does . The fallout of declining public confidence in Congress and of demands for ever-stricter ethics laws and tigher regulations on public behavior also have led to a record number of resignations by House inc umbents over the past two election cycles , and Republicans signaled Tuesday the y would try to make Rostenkowski part of their arsenal of attack against Democra ts this fall . `` It 's more than an indictment of a man , it 's an indictment o f a system of political boss control of Congress for 40 years , '' said Rep . Bi ll Paxon , R-N.Y. , chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee . `` Nothing 's going to change in Congress until the public changes the party i n control . '' Paxon said Rostenskowski `` absolutely '' will be an issue in the fall campaigns . `` It already is a key part of the fall message , '' he said . But freshman Rep. Peter Deutsch , D-Fla. , a former state legislator , said tha t voters are not likely to hold any one party responsible for political corrupti on when members from both parties have had their problems . `` This fall , I thi nk the attitude will be `` a plague on both your houses , '' ' said Deutsch . `` This indictment is a personal tragedy for Rostenkowski and it 's not good for A mericans to have this kind of cynicism ( about their government ) . But just as I think the impact of the indictment on health care reform will be zero , the im pact on other races around the country will also be zero . '' But the indictment put Democratic leaders in a particularly difficult position because of their co nflicting desires to show loyalty to a man who is both enormously powerful and h ighly popular on Capitol Hill and to protect the image of the institution . Hous e Speaker Thomas S. Foley , D-Wash. , and House Majority Leader Richard A . Geph ardt , D-Mo. , issued cautious statements underscoring their respect for the Hou se Ways and Means Committee chairman and reminding the public that he is innocen t until proven guilty . But their statements were more telling for their brevity , as if the less they said the less likely the public would try to connect Rost enkowski to other Democrats . Other Democrats tried to show sympathy for Rostenk owski : `` It hurts in the legislative sense and it hurts in the personal sense , '' said Rep. Charles Schumer , D-N.Y. . `` This is not just an ordinary member getting into trouble , but one who was very respected . '' But privately some D emocrats were gloomy about the fallout and candid about the demoralizing effect of the indictment . `` Everyone 's going to run away from him like crazy , '' on e House Democrat said . `` This is a no-winner . '' Gephardt tried to draw a par allel with the indictment of Rep. Joseph McDade , R-Pa. , as evidence that the R ostenkowski damage will be limited . `` The ( Republican ) minority has had a ra nking member of the Appropriations Committee under indictment and it hasn't impa ired their ability to say anything , '' Gephardt said . But Frank Luntz , who po lls for Republicans , said the indictment itself will `` allow Republicans to po int the finger at another major Democrat '' and make it easier for Republicans t o make `` the case for change '' this fall . With more incumbents running for re election , Democrats may pay a higher price for the perceived sins of the instit ution , but even some Republicans acknowledged that the public may not make much a distinction between the two parties . `` As a Republican , I don't take any j oy in this because I think it will reflect badly on the whole institution , '' s aid freshman Rep. Michael Castle , R-Del . `` My impression is that Congress 's image had begun to improve in the last year or so , and then this happens .. . . This reflects on everybody to some degree . '' ROME Launching a nostalgic pilgrimage to salute the World War II victory over f ascism , President Clinton flies Wednesday into a swirling , bitter European con troversy with echoes from those desperate days half a century ago : Are the poli tical heirs of Benito Mussolini trustworthy partners in a new Italian government ? Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi , a billionaire businessman on the defensive over the inclusion of neo-fascists in his two-week-old government , pledged ane w on Tuesday that there was no threat to democracy . In a 50-minute meeting , Be rlusconi reassured a delegation from the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles that he would support their call for the extradition from Argentina of Nazi war criminal Erich Priebke . `` Berlusconi said he was personally committed to see P riebke brought to trial in Rome , '' said Rabbi Abraham Cooper , associate dean of the center who headed the delegation . `` I spoke directly about concerns ove r neo-fascists in government , and I was very satisfied with Berlusconi 's respo nses . '' Clinton arrives around midnight for his first visit to Rome , a planne d-to-the-minute extravaganza that will include talks Thursday with Berlusconi an d a meeting with Pope John Paul II . On Friday , the president delivers a major address at the American military cemetery in Nettuno , south of Rome . Clinton w ill honor soldiers who died in fighting after the 1944 amphibious landing at Anz io , one of the savage battles that marked the beginning of the end of World War II . On Saturday , the 50th anniversary of the liberation of Rome , Clinton fli es to England , and continues to France for D-Day ceremonies on Normandy beaches Monday . In assaying the new-look government of one of its closest allies , the United States has proved more sanguine about the five neo-fascist members of Be rlusconi 's Cabinet than Italy 's partners in the European Union . `` Berlusconi has been elected . Let 's see if he knows how to do his job . Let 's give him a chance and support him , '' Clinton told Italian reporters in Washington in an interview televised over the weekend . The 57-year-old self-made tycoon , one of Europe 's richest men , entered politics in January , led a right-wing electora l alliance to victory in March and won confirmation by Parliament in mid-May . S ince then , however , Berlusconi has been repeatedly rebuffed by European partne rs for the neo-fascist elements in his coalition , and discomfited by allies at home in his efforts to effectively launch Italy 's first right-wing government s ince the war . On Tuesday , in the latest of a long line of incidents , Socialis t Party members of the European Parliament asked conservative colleagues to help bar neo-fascists from joining the assembly after European elections later this month . Returned to office after more than four decades as pariahs on the extrem e right-wing of the many-splendored Italian political universe , extremists amon Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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