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- WORLD, Page 33World NotesISRAELHeavy Turbulence
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- If Israelis appear surprisingly calm about the possibility
- of an Iraqi missile attack, it is largely owing to their faith
- in the air force, the elite military branch. Last week that
- trust was deeply shaken when air force Brigadier General Rami
- Dotan, former chief of logistics and Israel's leading expert on
- aircraft engines, started talking about his role in the biggest
- bribery scandal ever to rock the defense establishment.
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- Dotan, who was arrested in October after a lengthy
- investigation, has allegedly confessed to pocketing more than
- $10 million in kickbacks, bribes and fictitious charges from
- American and Israeli defense firms over an eight-year period.
- Four other Israelis, including the air force's chief
- quartermaster, have also been detained.
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- The government says the money was siphoned from the hefty
- military aid that Washington gives Israel ($1.8 billion this
- year), and officials fear the scandal will further strain
- relations with the U.S. Others have called for air force chief
- Major General Avihu Bin-Nun's resignation. For now, that seems
- unlikely, especially given the gulf crisis. In an apologetic
- letter to his staff last week, Bin-Nun wrote, "I trusted Rami
- Dotan in exactly the same way that I would trust the aircraft
- technician from whom I receive a plane before a flight."
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