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- WORLD, Page 38GRAPEVINE
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- STAND AND DELIVER. Benazir Bhutto, Pakistan's new Prime
- Minister, has promised a war against the country's heroin
- production, which has quadrupled since 1985. The U.S. will test
- Bhutto's resolve next month, when it plans to begin spraying
- herbicide on Pakistan's illicit poppy crop under an agreement
- with local officials. Crop-dusting pilots are already
- practicing runs over the mountainous terrain of the country's
- North-West Frontier province. U.S. officials hope that Bhutto
- will let them have enough time to finish the job. Last year a
- similar effort to wipe out poppy plants lasted all of one day
- before interests believed to have ties to the drug world
- pressured Islamabad into canceling the flights.
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- MAKING THE GRADE. The Middle East is the No. 1 breeding
- ground for international terrorism, right? Not necessarily.
- According to a survey published in Israel by Tel Aviv
- University's Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies, 23.9% of all
- terrorist acts involving more than one state in 1987 were
- committed in South America. A very close second: Western
- Europe, which played host to 23.6% of such incidents. The Middle
- East, with 18% of all international terrorist events, ranked a
- relatively distant third.
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- RUN, TONY, RUN. In a letter made public last week, ousted
- Panamanian President Eric Arturo Delvalle suggested to General
- Manuel Antonio Noriega that they end their feud and "open the
- way for national recovery." Some of Noriega's supporters have a
- better idea. Militants in the government-controlled
- Revolutionary Democratic Party are trying to persuade him to
- step down as Commander in Chief of the Panama Defense Forces so
- he can qualify legally as a candidate in the country's
- presidential elections in May. Success at the polls would serve
- the dual purpose of further embarrassing Washington and
- legitimizing Noriega's rule. But unless victory is guaranteed,
- Noriega is inclined to hold on to power in uniform.
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