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INDEX OF THIS ISSUE

FEATURES
     College programs, policies help busy students meet challenges of keeping religion in their lives
     What a strange year
     5758 in Review - The Valley of the Sun
HOLIDAY SPECIAL FEATURES
     Take time to make holidays more meaningful for kids
     Teaching children how to forgive Jewishly a key family issue
     Italian town with no Jews hosting New Year festival
     Leader of tiny Jewish community mobilizes aid for Russian prisoners
     Thoughtful entertainment
VALLEY
     Local rabbis don't plan to discuss Clinton in holiday sermons
     Federation's Israel Office welcomes new shaliach
NATION
     Religious-rights reforms running into obstacles
     New Jersey group fights plan to poison, bury cats in Israeli city
WORLD
     Iraq may have Scuds, nuclear-capable bombs
     Volkswagen establishes $11.7 million fund for slave laborers
ISRAEL
     Efforts stepped up to deport foreign workers
     Officials brace for Hamas retaliation
OPINION
     Editorial - One and one
     Commentary - Does fate of Saul or David await bill?
     Commentary - The call of the shofar
     Commentary - Get out your crystal ball
ARTS
     Local pianist signs up for two-year gig with Scottsdale Symphony
BUSINESS
     OU offers advice for employing disabled
TORAH STUDY
     Look to see opportunities

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Iraq may have Scuds, nuclear-capable bombs

MARK J. JOFFE
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
NEW YORK - Iraq could still have Scud missiles capable of striking Israel and may even have three nuclear bombs, despite eight years of U.N. disarmament efforts.

Richard Butler, chairman of UNSCOM, the U.N. Special Commission charged with Iraqi weapons inspections, raised the possibility that Iraq still possesses Scud missiles, in remarks he made Sept. 9 at a briefing sponsored by the Middle East Forum, a New York-based think tank that publishes the journal Middle East Quarterly. He spoke a day after the U.N. Security Council unanimously approved a resolution delaying any possible review of sanctions against Iraq until Baghdad resumes cooperation with UNSCOM inspection activities. Iraq suspended such cooperation last month.

Butler also refused to comment on an Israeli media report that Iraq is hiding three "technologically complete" nuclear bombs that lack only the fissile material to make them operational. The Israeli daily Ha'aretz reported that the existence of the bombs was disclosed recently at a closed-door meeting of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy by Scott Ritter, a ranking member of the Iraqi inspection team who recently resigned from UNSCOM in protest.

Ha'aretz also reported Sept. 9 that Iraq is believed to still have between five and 12 Al Hussein ballistic missiles and parts for another 25. Butler said he was not going to comment on intelligence documents that might give the Iraqi government a precise idea of what information UNSCOM currently possesses about Baghdad's weapons capability.

The Ha'aretz report about nuclear-capable bombs and the possibility that Iraq still possesses Scuds capable of hitting Israel are important because they appear to indicate that Baghdad remains a greater potential threat to Israel than has generally been believed. The prevailing view has been that most, if not all, of Iraq's Scud missiles were destroyed soon after the Gulf War ended in 1991, and that Baghdad's nuclear capability has been virtually, if not totally, eliminated.

The UNSCOM chief said that his commission had accounted for 817 of the 819 Scud missiles that Iraq had imported from the former Soviet Union - leaving doubts about the whereabouts of the other two missiles.

In addition, he said his commission had failed to obtain any information from Baghdad about any Scuds the Iraqis may have produced indigenously.

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