03/01/08

* Iran leader in landmark Iraq trip Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has received a warm welcome in Baghdad on the first ever visit to Iraq by an Iranian president.

* Barak mulls strikes on civilians With casualties mounting from IDF operations aimed at stemming the ongoing Kassam and Katyusha rocket fire into southern Israel, Defense Minister Ehud Barak asked Justice Minister Daniel Freidmann to examine the legality of attacking residential neighborhoods in the Gaza Strip, if those areas are being used to launch rockets.

* Strong turnout in Russian polls Russia’s presidential election has seen a turnout of nearly 60%, officials say.

* Jordanian king calls for US help Jordan’s King Abdullah II warned Friday that unless a comprehensive Israeli-Palestinian agreement is reached during the Bush administration’s final months in office, the chances for a lasting Middle East peace could be “set back”.

* Turkey urges PKK to end struggle Turkey’s prime minister has called on Kurdish PKK rebels to lay down their arms and embrace democracy.

* Barak: Hamas will bear consequences “Hamas is responsible for the deteriorating [security] situation and it will bear the consequences”.

* Hezbollah says US ship is threat A Hezbollah MP has condemned the deployment of the USS Cole warship off the coast of Lebanon as a threat to Lebanese sovereignty and independence.

* Medvedev Win Assured, So Focus Is on Size of Turnout With Dmitry Medvedev the runaway favorite in Russia’s presidential election tomorrow, the focus will be on whether he’ll do better than Vladimir Putin did when he was reelected.

* Ashkelon Katyushas Came From Iran Via Egypt Israel’s Foreign Ministry says the Grad-type Katyusha rockets fired at Ashkelon came from Iran and may lead Israel back to Gaza.

* Hamas slams ‘int’l silence’ over Gaza; Abbas urges UN debate Hamas officials on Saturday condemned what they called “international silence” over Israel Defense Forces operations in Gaza.

* Oil price surges to all-time high Crude oil has surged for a fourth day as the feeble dollar and lacklustre stock markets increased the appeal of commodities for investors.

* Iraq violence jumps in February The number of Iraqis killed by violence rose in February for the first time in several months, official figures show.

* Hamas says it’s improving rockets Hamas is improving its rocket technology, and will soon be able to “any target in Israel”.

02/29/08

* Israel prepares for assault on Gaza Defense Minister Ehud Barak and the Foreign Ministry on Thursday began preparing both Israeli and world opinion for the possibility of a large-scale incursion into Gaza.

* Hamas: Israel will flounder in Gaza like it did in Lebanon Hamas and the residents of Gaza closely followed reports of IDF forces assembling in and around the Strip ahead of a possible large-scale ground operation.

* UNSC to vote on new Iran sanctions Britain and France said they expect the Security Council to vote Saturday and approve new UN sanctions against Iran.

* Turkish troops ‘move out of Iraq’ Iraq’s foreign minister has said all Turkish troops have left northern Iraq after mounting a controversial ground offensive against Kurdish rebels.

* US sends 3 warships to Mediterranean as tensions mount The US Navy is sending at least three ships, including at least one amphibious assault ship, to the eastern Mediterranean Sea.

* Putin seeks big election turnout Russian President Vladimir Putin has urged voters to take part in Sunday’s presidential election, which his chosen successor is expected to win.

* 1st Temple seal found in City of David An ancient seal bearing an archaic Hebrew inscription dating back to the 8th century BCE has been uncovered in an archeological excavation in Jerusalem’s City of David.

* Bush rules out talks with Iran US President George W. Bush on Thursday ruled out direct talks with Teheran during his remaining months in office.

* ‘Chemical Ali’ execution approved The execution of Saddam Hussein’s cousin and henchman “Chemical Ali” has been approved by Iraq’s presidency.

* ‘Israel foils attack on Dimona reactor’ Israel recently foiled a terror attack on the Dimona nuclear reactor.

Cash-Rich, Publicity-Shy, Abu Dhabi Fund Draws Scrutiny

By: Landon Thomas Jr. – The New York Times

Abu Dhabi has about 9 percent of the world’s oil and 0.02 percent of its population. The result is a surfeit of petrodollars, much of which is funneled into a secretive, government-controlled investment fund that is helping to shift the balance of power in the financial world.

After decades in the shadows, the fund, the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, is turning heads on Wall Street and in Washington by making high-profile investments in the United States and elsewhere.

Known as ADIA (pronounced ah-DEE-ah), the fund recently formed a small team that is now buying big stakes in Western companies. This unit masterminded ADIA’s $7.5 billion investment in Citigroup, the nation’s largest bank, in November. It has also taken a large position in Toll Brothers, one of the country’s biggest home builders.

“There is an idea that Abu Dhabi should not be the underdog of the map,” said Frauke Heard-Bey, a historian who has written a book about the political emergence of the United Arab Emirates. “They have the money to buy companies that are ailing, and why should they not? Why not make a mark?”

ADIA is the largest of the world’s sovereign wealth funds, giant pools of money controlled by cash-rich governments, particularly in Asia and Middle East. But Abu Dhabi, the wealthiest of the seven Arab emirates, says little about its fund. Few outsiders know for sure where ADIA invests — or even how much money it controls. And secrecy breeds hyperbole; some estimates of the fund’s size surpass $1 trillion.

Before long, ADIA will certainly reach that mark. But for now bankers, former employees and analysts familiar with the fund peg it at $650 billion to $700 billion — an amount that is still over 15 times the size of the Fidelity Magellan Fund. In all, sovereign wealth funds in countries like the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Singapore, China and Russia control more than $2 trillion, a figure that could approach $12 trillion by 2015, analysts say.

Such riches, coupled with the more aggressive stance being taken by ADIA and other sovereign funds, has raised concern that these investors will wield their wealth for political as well as financial reasons.

ADIA’s secrecy is also drawing scrutiny. The fund has no internal communications department, although it says it is in the process of setting one up. When sovereign fund leaders from around the world descended on Davos, Switzerland, last month for the World Economic Forum, no one from ADIA saw fit to show up.

Executives at ADIA declined to comment for this article.

Last week Senator Evan Bayh, Democrat of Indiana, the chairman of the Senate subcommittee on security and international trade and finance, who has raised concerns about sovereign fund transparency, traveled to Abu Dhabi to meet with senior ADIA executives.

Also last week, a delegation led by Clay Lowery, a top Treasury official, met with ADIA executives as part of a move to formalize investment guidelines for sovereign funds.

In many ways the tension between ADIA’s elephantine size — the fund is twice as big as Norway’s, the second-largest sovereign fund — and its demure aspect is underscored by its investment in Citigroup.

Since ADIA’s genesis in 1976, the fund has followed a conservative investment approach. It has farmed out its assets to foreign money managers and taken stakes in companies based upon their weighting in benchmark stock indexes like the Standard & Poor’s 500. ADIA is also one of the largest institutional investors in hedge funds and private equity funds. This approach has served ADIA well and reflects the strongly felt notion that the fund’s ultimate purpose is to serve as a financial reserve for Abu Dhabi in times when oil revenues are less robust.

Nevertheless, guided by the advice of a stream of foreign bankers who worked at ADIA in the 1970s and 1980s, the fund has allocated a large portion of its assets to equities. It now has about 65 percent of assets, or about $450 billion, invested in stocks, according to bankers. Currently, the fund averages a yearly return of 10 to 20 percent, say people who have been briefed on the fund’s investment strategy.

With oil about $100 a barrel, bankers and analysts estimate Abu Dhabi produces a surplus of at least $50 billion a year. Given the emirate’s small population, 80 percent of which is foreign born, even the most expansive investment and welfare policies make it hard to put a dent in such a sum.

The United States is not a big buyer of Abu Dhabi’s oil, most of which goes to Asia, but the surplus is a vivid reminder of the American economy’s own fiscal imbalance, to say nothing of its diminishing global stature, a theme that underpins much of the political worry surrounding sovereign fund investments.

“In the short run, that they are investing here is good,” Senator Bayh said. “But in the long run it is unsustainable. Our power and authority is eroding because of the amounts we are sending abroad for energy and consumer goods.”

In the past, much of Abu Dhabi’s cash surplus has gone to ADIA, although the formation two years ago of a smaller sister fund, the Abu Dhabi Investment Council, has resulted in a lesser amount flowing to ADIA, analysts say.

But ADIA’s new strategic investment group represents the clearest sign that the fund is taking steps to leverage its size and influence. The division was set up in the summer of 2006 and is overseen by Saeed Mubarek Rashid al-Hajiri, a young Western-educated portfolio manager who also heads the fund’s considerable investments in emerging market economies.

In addition to Citigroup and Toll Brothers, in which ADIA took a 4.5 percent position last summer, other companies in the group’s portfolio include EFG Hermes, one of the leading investment banks in the Arab world, and Banque de Tunisie et des Emirats, a Tunisian bank.

Instead of passively tracking indexes, this unit actively picks investments in hopes of generating market-beating returns. It is a method of stock picking practiced by most hedge funds and asset management companies, and the Citigroup investment, with its size and attendant risk, is a good example of this approach.

Compared with the overall fund, the assets within this group are small at about $30 billion, according to people who have been briefed on ADIA’s strategy. As with all its investments, ADIA adopts a long-term, passive approach and does not seek board seats. These people say that outsiders still manage 80 percent of ADIA’s assets, proof that the fund’s commitment to making direct investments is only in its early stages.

This hesitation partly reflects the lack of a strong individual within the organization who has the combination of investment experience, trust of the royal family and a bit of international swagger to assume a larger public presence.

The fund’s chairman is Sheik Khalifa bin Zayed al-Nahyan, the president of the United Arab Emirates and the ruler of Abu Dhabi. He has a cautious and reserved disposition and does not take an active role in ADIA. When Citigroup’s chairman, Robert E. Rubin, traveled to Abu Dhabi last November, his courtesy call was made to Sheik Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan, crown prince of Abu Dhabi and the point person for the United States-Abu Dhabi relationship.

The fund’s managing director is Sheik Ahmed bin Zayed al-Nahyan, a half-brother of Sheik Khalifa who maintains a full-floor office in ADIA’s sleek 40-story headquarters. People familiar with ADIA management, however, say the sheik, who has worked at ADIA for 10 years, delegates significant authority to Jean-Paul Villain, a publicity-shy French money manager who directs investment strategy and asset allocation.

Mr. Villain, the most senior foreign-born executive at the fund, joined ADIA in the early 1980s from the French bank Paribas. While other expatriates have come and gone, Mr. Villain has stayed, except for a brief period in the mid-1980s. More so than the other foreigners, Mr. Villain, whose wife is Syrian-born, has gained the royal family’s trust.

One view is that ADIA’s penchant for secrecy stems from its experience during the scandal at the Bank of Credit and Commerce International in the early 1990s, during which ADIA is said to have lost hundreds of millions of dollars. The al-Nahyan family became embroiled in regulatory investigations, although no charges were ever brought against them.

But people who worked at ADIA from its earliest days in the late 1970s and 1980s say that the fund’s reticence dates to its formation. Some see this as a reflection of Abu Dhabi’s small size, insular culture and geographical vulnerability, a sense that the less that is known about the specifics of ADIA’s hoard, the better.

“ADIA does not answer to a wide public at home,” said David L. Mack, a former United States ambassador to the United Arab Emirates. “They are a small country in an area with some nasty countries like Iran that can make trouble for them. They don’t like to advertise.”

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Abbas: ‘Armed resistance not ruled out’

By: – The Jerusalem Post

PA President Mahmoud Abbas on Thursday said that he does not rule out returning to the path of armed “resistance” against Israel and took pride in the fact that he had been the first to fire on Israel and that his organization had trained Hizbullah.

In an interview with the Jordanian daily al-Dustur, Abbas said that he was opposed to an armed struggle against Israel – for the time being.

“At this present juncture, I am opposed to armed struggle because we cannot succeed in it, but maybe in the future things will be different,” he said.

The PA president also expressed pride both in himself and in his organization, Fatah, for trailblazing the path of resistance.

“I had the honor of firing the first shot in 1965 and of being the one who taught resistance to many in the region and around the world; what it’s like; when it is effective and when it isn’t effective; its uses, and what serious, authentic and influential resistance is,” Abbas said.

“It is common knowledge when and how resistance is detrimental and when it is well timed,” he added. “We (Fatah) had the honor of leading the resistance and we taught resistance to everyone, including Hizbullah, who trained in our military camps.”

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02/28/08

* Abbas: ‘Armed resistance not ruled out’ PA President Mahmoud Abbas on Thursday said that he does not rule out returning to the path of armed “resistance” against Israel.

* Gates pressures Turkey on Iraq Defense Secretary Robert Gates said he told Turkish leaders on Thursday that Ankara should end its offensive against Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq.

* PM: Palestinians ‘testing our patience’ “The Palestinians are testing our patience to the limit and are pulling us to the limits of our tolerance,” Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said.

* Iran ‘number one world power’: Ahmadinejad President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad declared on Thursday that Iran was the world’s “number one” power.

* UN criticised over ‘Darfur silence’ The UN security council’s silence over the crisis in Darfur has been labelled as “shameful” by Human Rights Watch (HRW).

* Kenya rivals agree to share power Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga have signed an agreement to end the country’s post-election crisis.

* Cash-Rich, Publicity-Shy, Abu Dhabi Fund Draws Scrutiny Abu Dhabi has about 9 percent of the world’s oil and 0.02 percent of its population.

* Sadr anger over Iraq law setback The faction loyal to Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr has reacted angrily to the rejection by Iraq’s presidency council of a draft law on regional powers.

* Barak: Hamas will pay Over 60 Qassam rockets have landed in Sderot, Ashkelon and the western Negev over the past two days and the barrages continue.

* Sizing up Medvedev, the next Russian president Dmitri Medvedev, the man chosen to be the next Russian president, sat surrounded by soldiers.

02/27/08

* Obama: Israel’s security sacrosanct Senator Barack Obama on Tuesday night voiced unreserved support for Israel, but clashed with Senator Hillary Clinton over campaign tactics and the war in Iraq.

* Euro hits record high against dollar The euro climbed to a record high of $1.5070 in midmorning European trading on Wednesday as sentiment increased that the U.S. Federal Reserve would continue its rate cut campaign.

* IDF W. Bank chief: Hamas could take over in days “Without the massive IDF presence in the West Bank, Hamas would take over the institutions and apparatuses of the Palestinian Authority within days.”

* US to seek end to Turkey assault US Defence Secretary Robert Gates has said Turkish operations in northern Iraq must end as soon as possible.

* Abbas: Qaida, Hamas cooperating in Gaza Al-Qaida operatives are cooperating with Hamas in the Palestinian territories.

* Hamas Kids’ TV Rabbit: We Will Kill the Danes A Hamas-run children’s TV program aired recently encouraging hatred of Denmark, the West and Israel.

* Israel, Japan to cooperate in space research Israel and Japan signed a joint statement Wednesday, which includes Japanese support for the peace process between Israel and the Palestinians, but no reference to Iran.

* Kenya opposition calls off protests Kenya’s opposition has called off planned street protests intended to pressure the government into agreeing to a power-sharing deal.

* Gold Rises to Record; Silver at 27-Year High on Dollar’s Slump Gold rose to records in London and New York and silver gained to a 27-year high as the dollar’s all- time low spurred demand for precious metals as a hedge against inflation.

* Automated killer robots ‘threat to humanity’: expert Increasingly autonomous, gun-totting robots developed for warfare could easily fall into the hands of terrorists and may one day unleash a robot arms race.

02/26/08

* Abbas: Peace in 2008 or never Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas urged the US on Monday to make good on its promise to work for a Middle East peace settlement by the end of the year.

* Khamenei hails Iran ‘nuclear win’ Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has hailed Iran’s “great victory” over its nuclear program.

* France, Gulf states begin war games under Iran’s eye France, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates have begun joint military drills in the shadow of the crisis over neighboring Iran’s nuclear program.

* Gaza’s Christians fear the future Fourteen masked gunmen burst into Gaza City’s YMCA library last week, overpowered two guards and laid explosive charges.

* ‘Al-Qaida entered Gaza during breach’ Al-Qaida operatives managed to infiltrate the Gaza Strip after Hamas breached the border with Egypt in January.

* Iraq denounces Turkish offensive The Iraqi government has denounced a Turkish incursion into northern Iraq in some of the strongest terms heard since the operation began last week.

* Costa Rica recognizes ‘Palestine’ Israel has postponed a planned meeting with Costa Rican officials over the Central American nation’s decision to formally recognize a Palestinian state.

* Yasser Arafat commemorative center inaugurated A ceremony will be held in Cairo, Egypt on Tuesday evening to mark the inauguration of an institute for the preservation of former Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat’s legacy.

* Mughniyeh’s widow points finger at Syria The fact that the Syrian government is not allowing an extensive investigation of Imad Mughniyeh’s assassination proves that Syria was involved in the killing.

* Pakistan lifts the ban on YouTube Pakistan’s telecoms regulator has lifted the restrictions it imposed on video-sharing website YouTube.

02/25/08

* Russia pledges support to Serbia The man tipped to become the next Russian president has vowed his country will “stick to” its support for Serbia in opposing Kosovo’s independence.

* Military Technology Changes the Rules The Israeli Air Force has acquired upgraded weapons systems that have improved its ability to strike terrorists with minimal or no collateral damage.

* US urges short Turkish campaign US Defence Secretary Robert Gates has urged Turkey to keep its military campaign against Kurdish militants in northern Iraq as short as possible.

* Could Russia’s “dream team” turn into a nightmare? Some Kremlin-watchers have described it as a dream team: Russia’s outgoing President Vladimir Putin moves into the prime minister’s job and his protege Dmitry Medvedev takes over as head of state.

* Raul Castro named Cuban president Raul Castro has been unanimously selected to succeed his brother Fidel as leader by Cuba’s National Assembly.

* A spry Farrakhan sings Obama’s praises In his first major public address since a cancer crisis, Nation of Islam Minister Louis Farrakhan said Sunday that presidential candidate Barack Obama is the “hope of the entire world”.

* Thousands of Darfuris ‘desperate’ More than 50,000 people are suffering in the latest cycle of violence in Sudan’s West Darfur region, says the UN humanitarian affairs agency, Ocha.

* Gaza’s ‘human chain’ a few links short Despite concerns that Palestinian demonstrators against the continued blockade of the Gaza Strip would attempt to storm the border with Israel during a “human chain” demonstration Monday.

* Leading Scientists and Yeshiva Students Working Together Students of the Mei HaShiloach Yeshiva High School in the Jordan Valley, together with leading scientists, are researching new possibilities for growing strawberries.

* Franco-German summit postponed amidst speculation of rift A planned meeting between the leaders of France and Germany for 3 March has been postponed until June.

2/23/08

* Iraq warns Turkey over incursion Iraq’s foreign minister has warned that any escalation of Turkey’s operation against Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq could destabilise the region.

* Serbia: U.S. to blame for violence Serbian prosecutors said Saturday they were hunting rioters who targeted the U.S. Embassy in Belgrade leaving one person dead while a senior Serbian minister reportedly blamed Washington for the violence triggered by Kosovo’s breakaway.

* Putin warns West over Kosovo dispute Russian President Vladimir Putin issued a sharp warning to the West on Friday about the consequences of recognizing Kosovo’s independence, saying the decision would “come back to knock them on the head.”

* Arab leaders: Peace initiative in danger Arab officials are warning they could withdraw their landmark offer of peace and full ties with Israel in exchange for a return of Arab lands, unless Israel explicitly accepts the initiative.

* ‘Israel’s disappearance inevitable’ Hizbullah head Hassan Nasrallah on Friday said Israel’s “disappearance” is an inevitable fact.

* Volleys fired on Baghdad Green Zone Baghdad’s heavily protected Green Zone has been hit by mortar bombs or rockets, but there have been no immediate reports of casualties or damage.

* Barroso to open ‘Noah’s Ark’ for seeds Next week will mark the official opening of what has been referred to as both the ‘Doomsday Vault’ and more optimistically as the ‘Noah’s Ark’ for seeds.

* Rice: UN has strong case for sanctions The United States wants quick action to punish Iran for refusing to roll back its disputed nuclear program, and a new report by the UN nuclear agency strengthens the case for additional sanctions, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Friday.

* Super-speed Internet satellite blasts off in Japan Japan launched a rocket Saturday carrying a satellite that will test new technology that promises to deliver “super high-speed Internet” service to homes and businesses around the world.

* Ramon: Push forward ‘evacuation-compensation’ for settlers east of fence Deputy Prime Minister Haim Ramon says ‘evacuation-compensation’ for West Bank settlers east of security fence will prove to world, Palestinians that Israel is serious about peace.

World-Renowned Bernard Lewis Delivers Concluding Lecture

By: Hillel Fendel – Arutz Sheva

The Jerusalem Conference concluded Wednesday night with a packed-house lecture by Bernard Lewis, a world-renowned expert on Islamic history and the relationship between Islam and the West. An author of 30 books, Lewis coined the phrase “clash of civilizations” in his work The Roots of Muslim Rage, written 11 years before 9/11.

Lewis, who was present throughout the two days of the Conference, provided, in his lecture, a general survey of the geo-political situation in and regarding the Middle East. Among the leading external factors, he first named Europe – “instead of asking what role Europe will play in the Middle East, we now have to ask what role the Middle East will play in Europe.” Then the United States: “Some complain about American imperialism, but this displays only ignorance… When they complain, they are really complaining that US does not fulfill its imperialist role well enough.”

US and Iraq
Obviously we cannot know what the upcoming US elections will bring, Lewis said, but noted there are two possibilities regarding Iraq: Either the US will finish the job it started there, or, based on a false comparison with Vietnam, will leave as quickly as it can, “even though it might mean the betrayal of a few hundred thousand people, but that doesn’t bother [those who are calling for a US withdrawal].”

“A third external factor of importance is the UN and the international community, where we have found an incredible level of discrimination against Israel ever since its foundation and even before that. For instance, compare the way the world treated Israel’s involvement in Sabra/Shatila and later in Jenin – whereas in 1982, the world basically ignored Syria’s massacre in Hamra of tens of thousands of people…”

Russia, India, China
Other external factors of some importance, Lewis noted, are “the problematic role of Russia, which cannot be expected to remain a passive observer of the Middle East… and also India and China, which will inevitably become more and more involved – particularly India with its very large Muslim minority – the 2nd largest Muslim population in the world, after Indonesia.”

Iran Doesn’t Mind Getting Nuked Back
He then turned to the “regional factors shaping the course of events here. First is Iran. It’s not an Arab country, but rather a Muslim country, ruled now by a Muslim theocracy, which calculates its policies not by Iranian national interests, but by what is good for Islam. It is actively pursuing nuclear power; even a non-nuclear Iran is dangerous for Israel, and it must be carefully watched.”

“Iran’s leadership comprises a group of extreme fanatical Muslims who believe that their messianic times have arrived. This is quite dangerous; though Russia and the US both had nuclear weapons, it was clear that they would never use them because of MAD – mutual assured destruction. Each side knew it would be destroyed if it would attack the other. But with these people in Iran, MAD is not a deterrent factor, but rather an inducement. They feel that they can hasten the final messianic process. This is an extremely dangerous situation of which it is important to be aware.”

He also negated the school of though that says that the Israel-Palestinian conflict is the root of all strife: “In fact, we see that wherever you have Muslims, you have violence, such as in the Balkans, Russia, central Asia, Kashmir, Timor… Nearly 30 years ago, Bin Laden issued a directive saying Americans should be killed, and he gave three reasons. The two major ones were the American presence in Saudi Arabia and in Iraq at the time – and then he added two and a half lines saying that it was also because of the ‘petty little state of the Jews.’ This shows how unimportant he felt Israel was as an issue for them. Since then, of course, he has adapted his strategy…”

Nationalism Into Patriotism
“A couple of other developments that should be noted: Some Arab countries have undergone or are undergoing a process of nationalism transforming to patriotism. Nationalism is more applicable to countries in the making, while patriotism is when the citizenry truly feels it already has a country. Turkey, Iran and Egypt already have patriotism, and these tend to be less hostile to Israel… In addition, women are becoming more of a factor in Moslem countries; these could, in the future, become important factors for better communication and understanding in the future.”

Israel’s Edges Being Eroded?
“Now let us turn to Israel: It is, and is likely to be in the future, surrounded by enemies. Its survival depends on its qualitative edge in military superiority. But this edge is being eroded, as we see when we compare the Six Day War, the Yom Kippur War, and the last war in Lebanon. Something must be done about this. Also, regarding Israel’s technological edge – I hear many complaints from my Israeli friends about Israel’s declining educational standards and the gradual lowering of the school system; teachers must be better paid.” [Applause from the audience]

Electoral Reform
“The third aspect in which Israel has an advantage is in its democracy. With all its faults, it is vibrant and active and thriving; the Arabs here have better rights than even majorities do in the Arab countries – and the Arabs in other countries know this. But Israeli democracy, like its other edges, is in danger – and here I would like to put in a word for electoral reform. There is no direct election here, and therefore the representatives are not held accountable to anyone other than their party leaders and directorates. In addition, minor splinter groups are granted more importance than they deserve proportionally, and the entire system encourages corruption.”

On the Positive Side
Lewis concluded by noting two positive features of the present situation. “The first is what I call the Sadat gambit. The late Egyptian president, Anwar Sadat, made peace with Israel not because he suddenly saw the merits of Zionism, but rather because he realized Egypt was becoming a Soviet colony… There are signs that some Arab countries are making similar calculations regarding the growing strength of Islamic extremism and of Iran. Some Arab countries were actually quietly disappointed when Israel did not defeat Hizbullah in 2006. In addition, there is a slow, small-scale, tentative rise of democratic ideas in the region. An increasing number of Arabs in the region even see Israel as an example and a model to be followed in developing their own democracies.”

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