ACCESSION NUMBER:00000 FILE ID:96031303.NNE DATE:03/13/96 TITLE:13-03-96 WOOLSEY URGES PRESSURE ON IRANIAN SUPPORTERS IN EUROPE, JAPAN TEXT: (Concerned about terrorism threat on U.S. mainland) (670) By George S. Hishmeh USIA Staff Writer Washington -- President Clinton's first director of the Central Intelligence Agency urged the U.S. government to apply pressure on "our friends in the European Union and Japan" so that they in turn compel Iran to curtail its alleged sponsorship of terrorism worldwide. The only European country he named was Germany. R. James Woolsey also voiced concern that the terrorism that is now being aimed at derailing the Middle East peace process could very well "come home." He did not cite any evidence for that except to recall the anti-American views of the Iranian leadership. Woolsey was speaking at a panel March 12 on "Terrorism, the Peace Process and U.S. Policy" at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. The panel was organized as the "Summit of Peacemakers" was under way in Egypt in the wake of recent terrorist attacks in Israel that left about 60 persons dead. He said: "The funding of the Iranian debt, which relieves Iran of the type of pressure it should be under with respect to its sponsorship of terrorism abroad, is an extraordinarily unfortunate feature of European, particularly, German, policy and, from time to time, Japanese as well." Iran's economy is by any measure in shambles and the country owes about $30,000 million to several European nations and Japan. Woolsey also was critical of the Damascus government for its allowing Syria and Lebanon to remain "a base for operations for terrorism in and around Israel" at the hands of the pro-Iranian Hizballah guerrillas in southern Lebanon. Six Israeli soldiers were killed earlier this month in the so-called Israel security belt there. The former CIA director noted that the funding of the two Palestinian fundamentalist groups -- Islamic Jihad and Hamas -- "has migrated in recent years and months (toward) heavy Iranian support" as well as backing from Gulf Arab "expatriates living in the Sudan." He did not identify the latter or provide any amounts for the funding. Woolsey was not certain whether the incarceration of several operatives from the Hamas and Islamic Jihad by the Palestine Authority in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank was the best approach. After noting that the growth of Hamas was encouraged by Israel in the early eighties, Woolsey said this month's roundup en masse of several hundred fundamentalist supporters is "a mixed bag." It may undermine support for the fundamentalist groups, but at the same time, it could build up "substantial resentment." He said the arrest of eight of the 11 senior Hamas military leaders was more significant. "It is unfortunate and curious" that the Palestinian Authority has not done this earlier since it has been possible "for some time." Woolsey said the best approach to combat terrorism is to infiltrate its ranks "since espionage ... in many ways is the only line of defense" in this respect. A paper distributed by the Washington Institute reported that the relationship between Iran and Hizballah was in flux. Although the fundamentalist group was being supported to the tune of about $100-150 million a year in arms and financial aid, the paper claimed that "Tehran appears to be reducing its aid to Hizballah as the latter prepares to play a role as a mainstream political party in the new Lebanon and in anticipation of an Israel-Syria peace agreement that could further reduce Hizballah's freedom of action." As a result, the paper alleged, Tehran's support for Hizballah is down to about $65 million and "much of the difference has been diverted to the Palestinian Hamas and Islamic Jihad." Additionally, it quoted unnamed U.S. officials as saying the two groups receive military training, "including instruction in bomb construction techniques." The paper was written by Michael Eisenstadt, a military affairs fellow at the Institute and author of a forthcoming book titled "Iranian Military Power: Capabilities and Intentions." NNNN