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- WORLD, Page 56GRAPEVINE
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- CHECK-OUT TIME. Remember the "arms supermarket" revealed by
- the Iran-contra hearings, a stockpile of hardware that the CIA
- said was financed by drug money and secretly cached in Honduras
- to supply the Nicaraguan contras when U.S. official aid ran out?
- Looks like the supermarket may have found an ironic new
- customer: El Salvador's leftist guerrillas. The Salvadoran
- rebels have recently been toting Soviet-style AK-47s in addition
- to their usual captured American-made M-16s. Publicly, the U.S.
- says it is likely that the weapons came from the Sandinistas.
- But intelligence officials privately believe that free-lancing
- Honduran military officials, in partnership with professional
- arms traffickers, have been peddling the AKs from their huge
- unused stash.
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- WARMER NONRELATIONS. In Jerusalem they keep wondering when
- Moscow will finally restore diplomatic relations broken over
- the Six-Day War in 1967. Might be soon. Then again . . . The
- good news is that the Israelis have received quiet permission
- to reopen their onetime embassy on Bolshaya Ordynka Street --
- not as an embassy, or even a consulate, but only as a
- diplomatically inferior interest section. Still, that will allow
- Israel to process its own visas for emigrating Soviet Jews, one
- of several housekeeping chores handled over the past two decades
- by the Dutch.
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- INSIDE SKINNY. As the Bush Administration goes through the
- exercise of reviewing policy on how to deal with Moscow,
- officials have accumulated a few first impressions. Most
- prominent: the regime of Mikhail Gorbachev has no
- well-thought-out game plan and is very concerned that George
- Bush may be less willing than Ronald Reagan to negotiate. "Much
- of what they're doing is ad hoc, and they are pressed," said a
- ranking U.S. official. That combination, he concluded happily,
- "offers the U.S. some good opportunities if we play our cards
- right."
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