Showing posts with label tzipi livni. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tzipi livni. Show all posts

2/11/09

Tzipi Livni on the Beach


Israel's Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni (C) walks on the beach in Tel Aviv February 7, 2009 (Reuters photo). No, that is not Tzvee or neighbor Henry, with her on the beach. And yes, Tzipi Livni is Jewish, a mainly secular Jew.

We are rooting for Tzipi to form a new vibrant centrist government.

For those of you truly tasteless and awful web surfers who are looking for more revealing photos of Livni via a Google search query, that includes Tzipi Livni with the terms swimsuit, bikini, topless or nude, sorry to disappoint you.
לאלו מכם אשר מחפשים יותר של לבני חושפים תמונות באמצעות שאילתת חיפוש אשר כוללת ציפי לבני עם תנאי ביקיני, ללא חזיה או עירום, מצטערת לאכזב אותך

6/22/08

Times: Israel Dreads Peace?

Our local Jewish newspaper, The Times, confuses me with its coverage of some stories. This week as a truce with Hamas began, the Times announced that Israel entered a, "Season of Dread."

It's real silly to try to characterize the mood of a nation. Jimmy Carter effectively ended his political career by declaring America was in the grips of a malaise. Now Ethan Bronner, following the lead of editorialists in Israel, headlines the Jewish state's mood of "Dread."

To Bronner et. al. I say, Get thee to a therapist who will adjust your cognition of reality. I don't mean the reality of your moods. I mean the reality of rockets falling on peoples' heads.

Those decrying the "calm" of a truce, saying that it results in a mood of "dread" that a fearsome storm is brewing just over the hill, are alarmists, arms dealers or just plain bloodthirsty warriors.

The preferred human condition is "calm and confidence" not "fear and dread."

Bronner does call up by observation another salient facet of the Jewish condition across the ages. Living by the biblical script, the Jewish nation at once sees itself as the star case of the world's hit Broadway show or epic opera whose dramatic action alternates between the great scenes of universal destiny and the small scenes of local human dramas.

If that's how you want to live, as actors in a scripted drama, with sturm und drang, fear and dread, that's fine with me.

But I'm closing my door, pulling down my shades, and dancing a jig for every truce that is announced.

'Cause I like calm now better than storms now and I like peace today better than war today and I like no rockets and no suicide bombers better than big booms.

And I am not afraid of tomorrow. I always prepare for tomorrow's worst case scenarios and concurrently hope and work to extend today's calm and peace to tomorrow.
The World
Israel in the Season of Dread
By ETHAN BRONNER

JERUSALEM — After a year of painful violence — Hamas rockets flying into Israeli communities, soldiers killed and wounded on forays into Gaza — one might have expected the start of a six-month cease-fire with Hamas to be hailed here as good news. Yet what was the front page headline in Maariv newspaper that day? “Fury and Fear.”

That says a great deal about the mood in Israel, a widely shared gloom that this nation is facing alarming threats both from without and within. Seen from far away, last week must have offered some hope that the region was finally at, or near, a turning point: the truce with Hamas, negotiated by Egypt, started on Thursday; other Palestinian-Israeli talks were taking place on numerous levels that both sides said were opening long-closed issues; there were also Turkish-mediated Israeli negotiations with Syria, and a new offer to yield territory to Lebanon along with a call for direct talks between Jerusalem and Beirut.

But it looked very different here. Most Israelis consider the truce with Hamas an admission of national failure, a victory for a radical group with a vicious ideology. As they look ahead, Israelis can’t decide which would be worse, for the truce to fall apart (as polls show most expect it to do), or for Hamas actually to make it last, thereby solidifying the movement’s authority in Palestinian politics over the more secular Fatah. Moreover, most think that Syria should not get back the Golan Heights — its ostensible aim in talking with Israel — and that the truces and negotiations amount to little without the return of captured Israeli soldiers held for the past two years.

Indeed, the “fury” in the headline of Maariv, a mass-selling center-right paper, was at the failure, in the Hamas deal, to free Cpl. Gilad Shalit, still held by Hamas after being seized two years ago. And the “fear” was about the fates of two other Israeli soldiers, Eldad Regev and Ehud Goldwasser, who had been captured by the Lebanese militia Hezbollah. The militia seems to be on the verge of completing a prisoner swap with Israel, but most everyone here dreads that the two Israelis are dead, and the swap will involve only their remains.

The backdrop for all of this is the fear of Iran’s growing power and the world’s inability so far to stop it from working on atomic weaponry. But it is not only foreign relations that so depresses the Israeli public. It is also that their political system is in crisis with the leaders under investigation and feuding among themselves.

“It is not ‘the situation’ that darkens the mood here in Israel,” wrote Yossi Sarid, a longtime leftist politician, in an opinion article in the newspaper Haaretz. “It is the lack of exit from the situation. There is not really any hope for change. Who will rescue us from depression? Who will give us expectations?”

Mr. Sarid said Israelis envied those Americans who are pinning hopes on Barack Obama as representing a new generation of leaders; Israel, he said, is stuck with the same leaders who never go away.

Sasson Sara, a 57-year-old grocery store owner in Sderot, the town in southern Israel that should be happiest that the Hamas rockets have been stopped, seemed to confirm this contempt for the leadership when the truce with Hamas was announced. “To me, this is an agreement of surrender, like Chamberlain,” he said, referring to British appeasement of Hitler in the 1930s.

Asked if he was really comparing Israel’s prime minister, Ehud Olmert, to Neville Chamberlain, Mr. Sara said: “Olmert is a bit younger. But he is tired. He acted to save himself. All this ‘calm’ agreement will take a heavy price from us in the future.”

Mr. Sara’s use of the word “calm” (“regiah” in Hebrew) was telling. No one quite knows what to call the current accord. Many use the Arabic word “tahadiya,” which is what Hamas has chosen; the word means not quite a truce, not quite a cease-fire, but some temporary cessation of hostilities.

The Israelis have chosen the word “calm,” which Doron Rosenblum, a longstanding and offbeat Haaretz columnist, notes, “brings to mind the clichéd cinematic images of raging mental patients being brought into a hospital. Someone ran wild in the cuckoo’s nest, was given a jolt of electricity or a tranquilizer, and is now blinking quietly in his padded cell.”

One point many commentators made last week is that while there may be a state of “calm” with Hamas, there is still nothing resembling that between Mr. Olmert and his defense minister, Ehud Barak. They remain at war. And the feuding goes beyond the two of them.

Both of Mr. Olmert’s two main lieutenants, Mr. Barak and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, have called publicly for him to resign over an investigation into whether he took envelopes of cash from an American Jewish businessman. Everyone assumes there will be a new government by year’s end. Yet a vote tentatively planned for the coming week in Parliament, on whether to dissolve itself and trigger new elections, may not happen because so many parliamentarians worry they will not be re-elected.

Meanwhile, Mr. Barak spent part of Friday in a meeting with the families of the missing soldiers, the topic that has most gripped the nation. Interviews with their relatives have dominated coverage in recent days because it was widely assumed that no self-respecting Israeli government would accede to a truce with Hamas without getting back Mr. Shalit.

The Israeli Army radio station, which has a wide audience, has been punctuating nearly every hour’s broadcast with an announcement of the need to “bring our sons home.” This is not merely a turn of phrase suggesting a collective conceit; Israelis relate to one another like members of a large family, and the gnawing pain felt by Mr. Shalit’s parents is widely shared in a country where the vast majority of young people serve in the military.

In fact, one of the most striking things about Israel’s internal political conversation is how personal it is. This is a tiny country of seven million that often finds itself at the center of international debate. And while Israelis often complain about this — why aren’t hundreds of journalists and human rights activists worried about North Korea or Uganda or Saudi Arabia? — they also take an odd pride in it, as if it were evidence of their secret suspicion that world history really does revolve around the fate of the Jews and their homeland.

The result is a public discourse that amounts to a bizarre mix of geopolitics and distinctly local news. It is not out of character for the morning radio broadcast to spend 10 minutes on whether Syria is building a nuclear weapon followed by 10 minutes on a young bride whose wedding was ruined when one of the sound system speakers fell on her foot. Since both are given equal weight, it can be hard to separate out the pain of one family from the strategic needs of the state. This makes it challenging for Israelis to step back far enough to gain a view of what is happening.

Tony Blair, the former prime minister of Britain, who has spent part of the past year as an international envoy to the Palestinians, said on Thursday that it could be very hard for everyone involved to gain a grasp on this conflict.

“The view of what is happening here tends to lurch between unjustified optimism — pretty rare, actually — to unnecessarily bleak pessimism, which is more common,” he said in a conversation in his Jerusalem offices. “There is a cease-fire now and both sides think the other’s commitment is tactical rather than strategic.”

He added that, as he now understands it, what started in late 2000 when the second Palestinian uprising began and Israel counterattacked was “a complete breakdown in the credibility of peace.” For most of the time since then, he said, no one on either side took the prospect of peace seriously. Now, he argues, that must change, adding, “It is our job, step by step, to rebuild the credibility of that process.”

5/7/08

Who Will Replace Olmert as the New Israeli Prime Minister

If... Olmert resigns, who will succeed him?

Reuters roundup:
FACTBOX: Possible successors to Olmert
(Reuters) - A police investigation covered by a sweeping media gag order has sparked intense speculation that Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert might be forced to resign.

If that happened, following are potential successors:

TZIPI LIVNI - Foreign minister and chief negotiator with the Palestinians, Livni is seen as the likeliest successor from within Olmert's centrist Kadima party. The most powerful woman in Israel since Prime Minister Golda Meir in the 1970s, Livni, 49, called on Olmert to quit last year after a scathing report on Israel's 2006 war in Lebanon. He didn't. Nor did she. Daughter of a prominent right-wing Zionist, she is a former intelligence agent. Like Olmert and former prime minister Ariel Sharon, she left the right-wing Likud party in 2005 to found Kadima.

EHUD BARAK - Defence minister who leads the Labour party, the main coalition ally. Barak is not a member of parliament so could not become prime minister without first winning a seat. A much-decorated commando, top general and prime minister (1999-2001), Barak, 66, has stood by Olmert since he was quizzed by police on Friday. But when he campaigned last year for the Labour leadership, he said Olmert should quit if an inquiry found fault with him over the Lebanon war. Earlier this year, it did. But Barak said he would call for Olmert to go "at a more convenient time".

BENJAMIN NETANYAHU - Prime minister from 1996-99 and leader of the opposition Likud party since Sharon, Olmert and others bolted to Kadima. Educated in the United States and a decorated commando. As finance minister under Sharon from 2003, Netanyahu, 58, pursued economic reforms that angered the left but are credited by many for economic growth. Tops many polls as likely winner if parliamentary election, not due until 2010, is called early.

HAIM RAMON - A close Olmert confidant, Vice Premier Ramon quit the Labour party to join Kadima. He was forced to briefly resign his cabinet post following his conviction for indecent assault against a woman soldier but was allowed to return as a minister by an appeal court. He is one of the government's most active supporters of peace talks with the Palestinians.

(Writing by Ori Lewis; Editing by Alastair Macdonald and Jon Boyle)

1/16/08

The Trumpet: Christian Supporter of Israel States the Case Against the Bush Policies

I don't recall reading a more clearly stated case. I can't say that I agree with it all, but I have a hard time dismissing the facts. This column comes out of the bastion of Christian followers of the stormy and legendary leader, the late Herbert W. Armstrong. The provenance of the argument is of no consequence to the impressive accuracy of the facts and reasoning it presents. And it's conclusion is alarming, "America’s breathtaking betrayal of Israel is becoming clearer by the day."
Joel Hilliker Columnist
“The State of Palestine Is Long Overdue”

The American president is traveling the Middle East promising peace between Israel and the Palestinians this year, before he leaves office.

He proposes to accomplish in 11½ months the opposite of what essentially the same strategy has wrought for 14 years.

He is endorsing a process that has repeatedly, consistently, absolutely proven to be not merely an unqualified failure, but a road map to more war. By doing so, the president is hurling logic off the same cliff his predecessor did.

Here is a promise for the next 11½ months you can count on: The more resolute, vigorous and desperate the president becomes in trying to make a mark on history, the more devastating it will be for the Jewish state.

In this quagmire, no action is eminently better than wrong action. Just look at the history.

Remember the photo that started it all: Bill Clinton smiling upon Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat as they shook hands on the first big breakthrough in the peace process. The 1993 Oslo Accords granted the Palestinians diplomatic recognition, self-government, territory and a promise of more concessions for good behavior. In return, the Palestinians agreed to end their armed struggle and to clamp down on terrorism.

Thus the pattern was set: Israelis make concessions; Palestinians make promises; Palestinians break promises.

Israelis can now fondly reminisce about pre-Oslo days. In the decade that preceded this foray into “solving” the Arab-Jew conflict, 41 Israelis were murdered. In the decade after, that statistic increased 2,305 percent.

Now 14 years of bloody failure have proven that every time Israel turns over more power to the Palestinian Authority, terrorism increases. Every time foreign governments increase aid to the PA (Palestinians have received more money per capita than anyone in history), funding for terrorist attacks against Jews also rises. Concessions to Palestinians simply do not facilitate the dream of two states peacefully coexisting; instead they increase the body count of Israelis—and of Palestinians who die when Israel tries to defend itself.

Time and again, ambassadors and politicians have tried to reinject themselves into this mess to try to stop the bleeding. As with Olso, America has largely been the driving force. And for 14 years, it has pushed for “peace” using the same failed pattern. In an effort to be “evenhanded,” Washington has funded, armed and trained the Palestinians; it has required that Israel use restraint in defending itself; it has smiled upon Israeli leaders offering extraordinarily generous packages of incentives and concessions (which Palestinians responded to with more violence); it has encouraged the Palestinian democratic process that brought Hamas into power; it has urged Israel to relinquish control of the Gaza-Egypt border, which enabled Gaza to become an armed terrorist stronghold.

And now, after hosting the humiliating Annapolis conference (at which U.S. officials accommodated the request by Arab leaders that Jews not be allowed to use the same entrance they did), the American president is visiting Jerusalem with this message: “The establishment of the state of Palestine is long overdue. The Palestinian people deserve it. And it will enhance the stability of the region, and it will contribute to the security of the people of Israel.”

Why “long overdue”? If Palestinians hadn’t waged war to eliminate Israel the day after it came into being, they’d have had a state 60 years ago. Then as now, they lack it because of rejectionism and warmaking. Why do they “deserve it”? Their efforts at governance are marked by economic corruption and unrestrained violence; they leave the Palestinian people hopeless, impoverished and seething with Jew-hatred (standard in government-funded school curricula). How will it “contribute to … security”? Is there a shred of evidence of this—aside from the same old Palestinian promises that are broken as quickly as they are made?

There is plenty of evidence of the opposite. A Palestinian state, of sorts, already exists: in the Gaza Strip. Israel conceded that territory in pursuit of “peace,” gifting it to Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah government. Then Hamas staged a coup, and Fatah fled the scene and retreated to the West Bank. Hamas proceeded to transform Gaza into a terrorist haven from which it regularly launches missiles into Israeli territory.

If America insists that the West Bank form the bulk of a new Arab nation—the U.S. president says he wants the state of Palestine to be “viable, contiguous, sovereign, and independent”—what’s to prevent Hamas from taking over there as well? The West Bank is hardly a bastion of Fatah support: The unofficial capital city, Ramallah, recently elected a Hamas mayor. Hamas official Mahmoud al-Zahar says it’s “only a matter of time” before his organization conquers the West Bank—and history is on his side. At present, Fatah’s only guarantor of survival against Hamas is Israeli security forces.

That’s right: Fatah presently relies on Israel to protect it from being overrun by an Iranian-sponsored terrorist group. And still Washington says Israel will be more secure if Fatah is given statehood. Logic has been hurled over the cliff.

The real trouble is, Abbas, Fatah and the majority of Palestinians have never given Israel statehood. The mainstream Palestinian view—most vigorously expressed by, but by no means limited to, extremist groups like Hamas—is that Jews have no right to a state on Middle East soil. Abbas’s chief negotiator, Saeb Erekat, said last month that the Palestinians will never recognize Israel as a Jewish state. Polls show that the majority of Palestinians reject Israel’s existence. Abbas’s weak credibility among his people would be even feebler if he didn’t accommodate this popular spirit of anti-Israelism.

That is the core issue at the heart of Arab-Jew conflict: two states cannot peacefully coexist when one wants to obliterate the other.

The “peace” process fails because in order to proceed, it must sidestep that reality and pretend that the “core issues” are other things. Aboard Air Force One with the president en route to the Middle East, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said, in the words of the Washington Times: “The ‘road map’ for peace, conceived in 2002 by Mr. Bush, had become a hindrance to the peace process, because the first requirement was that the Palestinians stop terrorist attacks. As a result, every time there was a terrorist bombing, the peace process fell apart and went back to square one. Neither side ever began discussing the ‘core issues’: the freezing of Israeli settlements in the West Bank, the rights of Palestinian refugees to return, the outline of Israel’s border and the future of Jerusalem.” Yes—just get rid of that pesky “hindrance to the peace process”—requiring that Palestinians stop the terrorism—and boom, problem solved, you can go straight to the “core issues.” Why didn’t we think of it before?

Reports are that, in the wake of the president’s visit, Israel Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and Palestinian negotiator Ahmed Qurei are now talking about the “core issues.” The Jerusalem Post says, “This is the first time Israeli and Palestinian negotiators have tackled the core issues—Jerusalem, refugees, borders, settlements, security and water—since the breakdown of the Camp David talks in July 2000.”

Negotiate they may, but Mahmoud Abbas at one time or another has already made clear his stance on these core issues. On Jerusalem, full sovereignty of the Temple Mount to Palestinians. On refugees, Israeli acceptance of “right of return” for millions of Arab immigrants, a move that would wipe out the Jewish nature of Israel. On borders and settlements, complete Israeli evacuation of the West Bank.

Strong demands. And what can Abbas offer Israel in return? Precisely nothing. He surely couldn’t keep a straight face and offer what Arafat offered at Oslo—to end the armed struggle and to clamp down on terrorists—when he already depends on Israel to protect his own government from those very terrorists.

So what will 11½ months of intensive “peace” processing accomplish? It’s no mystery. It will accomplish exactly what 14 years of “peace” processing accomplished before: more violence.

The post-Oslo total now stands at 1,700 dead Jews. In a nation with only 5.4 million Jews.

Think about that number. The “peace” process has yielded a death rate for Israel almost seven times higher than the Iraq war has for the U.S. military. And that’s mostly among civilians, not soldiers.

Liberals in the United States wanted to pull out of Iraq long ago. But they insist—they demand—and now with the backing of the White House—that Israel keep sacrificing the blood of its people in the trenches of this failed effort perversely called the “peace” process.

America’s breathtaking betrayal of Israel is becoming clearer by the day.

11/26/07

JTA: A new low for reporting

Leslie Susser reaches a new low for journalists today. He reduces the authorized representation of the State of Israel to the Annapolis peace talks to a group of three self-aggrandizing opportunists ("Israel's top 3 hoping summit can boost careers"). Now they may or may not be that. But it is the job of a journalist to report not to judge. Shame. Susser should lose his credentials for this story. Shame
Israel's top 3 jockey at Annapolis
Leslie Susser

For Ehud Olmert, Ehud Barak and Tzipi Livni, the trip to the Annapolis summit not only signals Israel's seriousness about peacemaking but also provides the bitter political rivals an opportunity to jockey for Israel's top job.

Published: 11/23/2007

JERUSALEM (JTA) -- By sending its top three leaders to the Annapolis peace summit, Israel is hoping to make a statement about the seriousness of its approach to peacemaking with the Palestinians.

But a more complex reality lies under the surface of this diplomatic show.

The big three -- Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, Defense Minister Ehud Barak and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni -- have much different notions about what can be achieved with the Palestinians and how best to go about it.

Furthermore, they are bitter political rivals: All three want to be prime minister and hope to use Annapolis as a steppingstone toward keeping, regaining or winning the top job.

Olmert's peacemaking ideology is based on a view of a Middle East that is growing more dangerous by the day. He argues that although Israel faces serious risks if the peace process in which it is engaging fails, doing nothing would be far worse.

In Olmert’s view, simply maintaining the status quo would result in a Hamas takeover of the West Bank, the elimination of moderate Palestinians as a political factor and increased calls for a one-state solution. Based on the principle of one man, one vote in a single state comprising Israel, the West Bank and Gaza Strip, eventually this would bring a Palestinian majority to power.

Olmert argues further that by going to Annapolis and showing good will, Israel will not be blamed for failure. Instead, Israel will be in a better position to press for stronger international action on Iran.

The prime minister has domestic considerations, too. In a best-case scenario, progress on the Palestinian front would enable him to call an election some time next year from a position of strength. However, if the two sides make little headway, Olmert is counting on keeping the process going for as long as he feasibly can to buy more time as prime minister.

Either way, Olmert hopes an ongoing Palestinian process will help him through his domestic troubles: the upcoming Winograd Commission report on his performance in the 2006 Lebanon War and a string of corruption allegations currently under investigation.

Ironically, of the three leaders, Barak takes the hardest line, even though he heads the traditionally peace-minded Labor Party. He sees virtually no chance of a peace deal with the Palestinians, and believes the likely outcome of the current process will be more violence and terrorism.

That was the outcome the last time Israel engaged in a major peace push with the Palestinians, when Barak was prime minister and U.S. President Bill Clinton’s proposals at Camp David in 2000 were followed by the launching of the second Palestinian intifada.

Now, Barak says, as far as he is concerned, the "Clinton parameters" of December 2000 -- Clinton's peace proposal after the failure of the 2000 Camp David negotiations -- are no longer on the table.

At one point in recent months Barak warned against going to Annapolis, but he later came around to the view that Israel should do all it can to avoid being blamed for failure.

Barak also takes a tough line on dismantling unauthorized Israeli outposts in the West Bank, a move Israel is supposed to make early on in the process.

"I also admire the settlers in the illegal outposts," he declared recently. "There, too, we will have to provide for their everyday needs."

Left-wing leader Yossi Sarid charges that Barak is out to prove no one can succeed where he failed at Camp David in 2000.

"He is going to Annapolis not to save the conference but to bury it," Sarid said.

Barak anticipates a future contest for prime minister against the Likud Party's Benjamin Netanyahu, and pundits say his hawkish posturing is calculated partly to attract votes from the center and center-right away from Netanyahu, also a former prime minister.

Ideologically, Livni takes the middle ground. She strongly advocates "two states for two peoples" on the condition that the Palestinians have responsible leadership.

"We can't just throw the keys over the fence and hope for the best," she says.

In Livni's view, establishing a Palestinian state must be seen as the fulfillment of the national aspirations of all Palestinians; in other words, Palestinian refugees return to Palestine, not Israel. She sees Jerusalem as a major negotiating card, possibly to be used in a trade-off on the refugee issue, but recently was critical of Olmert confidant Haim Ramon for playing it too early.

Livni clearly hopes to emerge from Annapolis with her prime ministerial credentials enhanced, having shown signs of negotiating smarts and a coherent worldview.

The foreign minister made a major political mistake in April when she called on Olmert to resign after a preliminary Winograd Commission report in the spring. Since then, Livni has been carefully repositioning herself to take over as leader should Olmert slip up again.

For now the polls are on her side.

One in Yediot Achronot’s Friday edition put her ahead of Olmert and Barak. Twenty-four percent of those surveyed said they had confidence in Olmert, 29 percent in Barak and 52 percent in Livni.

No doubt the way Annapolis plays out will affect the pecking order.

1/28/07

Video: People Power v. the Arab-Israeli Conflict

How to end the Arab-Israeli conflict in the Middle East? Using every means available!

This grass roots effort - One*Voice - deserves your support.


A session was held at the WEF at Davos with this agenda:

While there is clear popular support from both Israelis and Palestinians for a two-state solution, negotiations have stalled. Join this message from citizens of Israel and the Palestinian Territories, broadcast with the support of OneVoice Movement, and participate in the debate as political leaders of both sides respond. This will be a frank discussion on the proposed Arab Peace Plan and what it will take to achieve sustainable peace based on a two-state solution.

1. What major obstacles remain to negotiating a peace settlement? What steps can be taken to build trust and momentum towards a resolution?

2. What should Israeli and Palestinian politicians do to catalyse non-violent sentiments in their societies and bring an end to the self-perpetuating cycle of violence?


The plenary session paticipants were:

* Mahmoud Abbas, President of the Palestinian Authority; Chairman of the Palestinian Liberation Organization Executive Committee
* Gordon Brown, Chancellor of the Exchequer of the United Kingdom
* Tzipi Livni, Vice-Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Israel
* Shimon Peres, Vice-Prime Minister of Israel
* Chaired by Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman, World Economic Forum

The video of the session is just over an hour. See it here.

1/17/07

Davos Leaders: "Enough is Enough" in the Middle East

The AP Reports that the Middle East will get plenty of attention at the World Economic Forum. With no-content session titles like, "Enough is Enough" - expect a lot of rhetoric to be generated and no substantive proposals to emerge. Anyway, don't the oil companies want the turmoil to continue to keep supplies low and prices high?
Middle East Big Issue at World Forum
By Bradley S. Klapper, Associated Press Writer

Middle East Turmoil to Take Center Stage at World Economic Forum

GENEVA (AP) -- Middle East turmoil will take center stage at this year's World Economic Forum in the Swiss ski resort of Davos, with Israeli and Palestinian officials, Middle Eastern leaders and Iraqi politicians attending, organizers said Wednesday.

The lineup for this year's meeting lacks a big-hitter from The White House, but several Bush administration officials and presidential hopefuls will attend. The guest list includes Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, Jordan's King Abdullah II, Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora and key Shia, Sunni and Kurdish politicians from Iraq.

Israel will be represented by Vice Prime Minister Shimon Peres and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni at the Forum, which begins next Wednesday just a couple of weeks before a meeting between Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert as part of a U.S. effort to breathe life into moribund Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts.

"The Middle East issue is the most crucial issue for the world at this moment," said Klaus Schwab, head of the foundation that hosts the annual meeting of more than 1,000 business and political leaders and officials in Davos.

One Middle East session is titled "Enough is Enough." Another on the future of the region includes European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana and ex-Iranian President Mohammad Khatami, a frequent guest...