EFTA00986446.pdf
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From:
To: Jeffrey Epstein <jeevacation@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: March 20 update
Date: Fri, 21 Mar 2014 14:39:10 +0000
Thank you!!
On Friday, March 21, 2014, Jeffrey Epstein <jeevacation@gmail.com> wrote:
-------- Forwarded message
From: Office of Terje Rod-Larsen
Date: Fri, Mar 21, 2014 at 8:34 AM
Subject: March 20 update
To:
20 March, 2014
Article I. AI'
Jailed militant key to Mideast talks
Mohammed Daraghmeh
Article 2.
Wall Street Journal
The Failure of the Mideast 'Peace Process'
Melanie Phillips
Article 3.
The Washington Post
Obama doesn't grasp Putin's Eurasian ambitions
Editorial Board
Article 4.
The Christian Science Monitor
Condoleezza Rice: US can't step back and let others lead
Nathan Gardels
Article 5.
The Brookings Institution
Obama Mending Fences in Riyadh
Bruce Riedel
Article 6.
Al-Monitor
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Look for more assertive Russia in Middle East
Dr. Vitaly Naumkin
Article 7.
The Diplomat
Chinese Foreign Policy: A New Era Dawns
Anne-Marie Brady
Article 8.
The New York Review of Books
Most of Us Are Part Neanderthal
Steven Mithen
.‘nicle I
AP
Jailed militant key to Mideast talks
Mohammed Daraghmeh
March 19, 2014 -- Ramallah, West Bank (AP) — A prominent Palestinian
uprising leader imprisoned by Israel could soon emerge as the key to
keeping fragile U.S.-led peace efforts alive.
According to several top officials, the Palestinians are seeking the
freedom of Marwan Barghouti, who is serving multiple life sentences for
his alleged role in killings of Israelis, as part of any plan to extend
negotiations with Israel beyond an April deadline.
A release of Barghouti, a popular figure among Palestinians, could inject
new life into the troubled peace process, boost embattled Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas, and even provide the Palestinians with a
plausible successor to their 78-year-old leader.
But Israel seems unlikely to approve the request, setting the stage for a
possible breakdown in the talks.
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Under heavy U.S. pressure, Israel and the Palestinians restarted
negotiations last July, setting a nine-month target for wrapping up a
comprehensive peace deal establishing a Palestinian state and ending a
century of conflict. After realizing this was unrealistic, U.S. Secretary of
State John Kerry scaled back his ambitions and said he would aim for a
"framework" peace deal by the April deadline.
With even that more modest goal in question, the sides are now searching
for a formula that will allow the talks to continue.
The Palestinians have been skeptical about the chances of success,
distrusting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. A prolonging of
the talks means continuing shelving of their previous plans to press for
recognition, even without a peace deal, with various international bodies.
The Palestinians have two demands for an extension: a freeze in Israeli
settlement construction in the West Bank and east Jerusalem and the
release of the most senior prisoners held by Israel, first and foremost
Barghouti, two Palestinian officials told The Associated Press — senior
official Nabil Shaath and Prisoner Affairs Minister Issa Qaraqi.
Israel was already forced to release dozens of prisoners convicted of
deadly violence to make the current round of talks possible, but Barghouti
remains jailed.
With Israel not expected to halt settlement construction, the Palestinians
say they will drive a tough bargain on the prisoner issue. Palestinian
officials and Barghouti's family said Abbas raised the issue of Barghouti's
release in his White House meeting this week with President Barack
Obama.
"President Abbas demanded the release of the political leaders in jail like
Marwan Barghouti, Ahmad Saadat and Fuad Shobaki," said Qaraqi, the
prisoner affairs minister.
Barghouti's wife, Fadwa, said Abbas is "exerting his efforts to release
Marwan and he is very serious about it."
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Israeli officials said the matter has not yet come in the talks. They spoke
on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss
the peace efforts with the Palestinians.
Saadat heads a faction that killed an Israeli Cabinet minister in 2001 and
is serving a 30-year sentence for allegedly participating in attacks.
Shobaki, a former top Palestinian official, is the alleged mastermind of an
attempt to smuggle a large shipment of weapons to the Palestinians on a
ship that was intercepted by Israeli naval commandos in 2002.
But no prisoner is more prized by the Palestinians than Barghouti, who
was a rising star in the dominant Fatah party before he was captured by
Israeli troops in 2002. Israel says Barghouti, 54, was a leader of the
violent uprising in the West Bank early last decade. He is serving five life
terms for alleged involvement in the deaths of four Israelis and a Greek
monk.
The Palestinians say Barghouti is a politician who had no direct
involvement in any of the killings.
Barghouti's release could be critical for Abbas. The Palestinian leader has
seen his popularity plummet due to the lack of progress in peace talks.
Winning Barghouti's freedom would be a huge moral victory for him.
And at almost 79, Abbas has recently acknowledged he cannot serve
forever. Yet he has never designated a successor and is facing a rising
challenge by an exiled former aide, Mohammed Dahlan. Barghouti is
perhaps the only member of Fatah's next generation of leaders with the
gravitas to confront that challenge.
Palestinian analyst Hani al-Masri said Abbas desperately needs
Barghouti's release, both to justify continued talks with Israel and to
finally have a clear successor.
Fadwa Barghouti said her husband remains intimately involved in
Palestinian affairs from his cell in an isolated bloc of the Hadarim prison
in central Israel.
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She said he shares a cell with two other men and is allowed to go
outdoors into a courtyard twice a day — one hour each time — for
exercise and a walk. She said he starts his day with exercise and then
reads four Israeli newspapers. In addition to his native Arabic, Barghouti
speaks Hebrew and English.
As a member of Fatah's leadership, Barghouti is briefed on the
negotiations through his wife, who is in close contact with the Palestinian
leadership and visits him twice a month.
"He was hoping that the U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry would
succeed in striking a deal based on the Israeli commitment to end the
occupation on the 1967 borders," she said.
Barghouti, like other Palestinian leaders, wants to establish an
independent state in all of the territories captured by Israel in the 1967
Mideast war: the West Bank, east Jerusalem and Gaza Strip, she said.
Several past Israeli offers, by more moderate governments than
Netanyahu's, seemed to come close, but ultimately fell short.
The fate of the roughly 5,000 prisoners held by Israel is deeply emotional
in Palestinian society. Virtually every Palestinian has a friend or relative
who has served time in Israel, and the prisoners are revered as freedom
fighters.
But the issue is equally emotional for Israelis, who see prisoners like
Barghouti as terrorists.
At the outset of talks last July, Israel agreed to release 104 long-serving
prisoners in four stages. But the fourth and final stage, scheduled later
this month, is suddenly in jeopardy.
The previous releases, including dozens of men who were convicted in
deadly attacks, have been accompanied by jubilant celebrations by
Palestinians and attended by Abbas himself, angering many in Israel. On
Tuesday, Israel's chief peace negotiator said the final release was not
guaranteed unless there was progress in the talks.
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For that reason, the release of Barghouti could become a contentious
issue in the coming weeks. Israeli officials have rejected repeated
attempts to include him in past prisoner releases.
Still, Israel could be tempted. During the peace talks of the 1990s,
Barghouti was generally liked by the Israelis, had many friends among
them, and was considered a moderate interlocutor. With many Israelis
concerned that Abbas will be followed by more radical nationalists or
Islamists, a Barghouti ascension, despite his supposed actions during the
uprising, might not seem like the worst option.
Without a significant gesture, the Palestinians could soon walk away from
the negotiating table.
Shaath gave a glimpse of what could lie ahead, saying the Palestinians
would soon resume a campaign for U.N. recognition if Israel does not
carry out the final scheduled prisoner release. Israel bitterly opposes the
U.N. campaign, since the Palestinians have said they will use their
enhanced international status to press for anti-Israel action. The
Palestinians halted the campaign in exchange for Israel's pledge to free
prisoners.
"We committed to not applying to the U.N. agencies and Israel committed
to release 104 ... prisoners in four batches," he said. "That was the deal. If
Israel breaches it, we will too."
Article 1
Wall Street Journal
The Failure of the Mideast 'Peace Process'
Melanie Phillips
March 19, 2014 -- The Middle East peace process seems all but doomed.
Although U.S. President Barack Obama said he remained "convinced" it
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could still succeed when he met Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
this week, Secretary of State John Kerry has said trust between the
Israelis and the Palestinians has reached a "nadir."
David Cameron visited Jerusalem and Bethlehem last week, his first visit
to the region after four years as British Prime Minister. His government
has kept the Middle East at arm's length. It is Secretary Kerry who has
made all the running in this latest peace process, endlessly shuttling
between the two sides.
Ostensibly, both the U.S. and the U.K. are urging both sides equally to
take "tough political risks," as Mr. Obama put it, for peace. Alas, such
exhortations seem to elicit merely disdain from both Jews and Arabs.
A poll by the Israel Democracy Institute and Tel Aviv University revealed
last week that 64% of Israelis do not trust Mr. Kerry to treat Israel
Jeffrey Epstein
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