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World Bank chief to help broker pullout from Gaza
   James Wolfensohn, the departing president of the World Bank, will become a special coordinator to help Israel carry out its handover of Gaza to the Palestinians, the Bush administration has announced. The appointment of Wolfensohn, who has mobilized financial aid and worked with Israeli and Palestinian leaders for 10 years at the World Bank, was made Thursday with the support of the European Union, the United Nations and Russia, the other members of the quartet of powers behind the Middle East road map to peace.
Israel launches 'hasbara' campaign against Syria
   As the March 1 London conference devoted to the re-building of the Palestinian Authority approaches, Israel has launched an informational "hasbara" campaign to shed light on Syria's involvement in terror orchestration. Delegations from the Israeli defense establishment embarked Monday to Washington, Paris and London, in order to present intelligence information which Israel has collected against Syria revealing its role in the deadly bombing in Tel Aviv Friday night, which killed five people.
by Gil Hoffman and Margot Dudkevitch, Jerusalem Post
28-02-2005

Princeton's Anti-Israel Jihad
   It’s common knowledge that Middle East Studies programs at America’s elite universities have become ground zero for violent anti-Israel incitement, featuring professors, courses and conferences that excuse—and in some cases, even support—Palestinian terrorism. It comes as no surprise, then, that Princeton University’s Institute for the Transregional Study of the Contemporary Middle East, North Africa, and Central Asia, created in 2003 and originally financed by the royal family of Morocco, is offering a new fellowship based on the righteousness of the Palestinian cause and the illegitimacy of Israel.
The Next Arafat
   It is deja-vu all over again. A decade of Palestinian terror and corruption seems to be wiped clean from the memory of both the American and the European governments. Apparently, merely having an election following Yasser Arafat’s death inspires instant confidence in the corrupt Palestinian leadership.
Shalom: Take Syrian Gestures Seriously
   Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom said peace signals from Syria should be taken seriously, not ignored, but reiterated a precondition that Damascus stop harboring Palestinian militants first. Syrian President Bashar Assad recently conveyed willingness to resume talks with Israel for the return of the occupied Golan Heights. But Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has shown scant interest, believing Syria cannot be trusted.
Like banging my head against the wall
   You know, folks, sometimes I feel that I am banging my head against the wall. I want to think that the world is not so stupid as to just not "get it". Israel? It is not in an intifada; the entire world, everywhere, is in a war. A war, damn it, with a savage subculture that I believe is truly out to kill everyone who is not part of it - a war against Islamist crazies.
By Arlene Peck, Arutz Sheva
26-11-2004

Sadat's secret pipeline to Kissinger
   Thirty-one years have gone by since the Yom Kippur War, yet there are still occasional new revelations about the conflict. Henry Kissinger's telephone calls during the war, the transcripts of which appear in his book, "Crisis: The Anatomy of Two Major Foreign Policy Crises," have produced such a revelation.
By Ze'ev Schiff, Ha'aretz
19-11-2004

PA: Window for war
   You have to hand it to the Palestinians. They have gotten away with fabricating a nationality where none existed prior to Yasser Arafat's terrorism-backed strutting on the world stage. They have enjoyed global successes in staking historical claims to territory that clearly post-dated those of the Jews.
By Frank J. Gaffney, Jr., The Washington Times
17-11-2004

Dutch Death
   As we know, Van Gogh was shot several times as he cycled along a busy boulevard in broad daylight in Amsterdam. When he fell, mortally wounded, the murderer dressed in a djeballah crouched over him, calmly slit his throat and then plunged two knives into deep into his chest, one of them with a note attached.
By Alexis Amory, FrontPageMagazine.com
11-11-2004

Has the lesson been learned?
   The assassination of prime minister and defense minister Yitzhak Rabin, the attack on Israeli democracy and the nation's fundamental values, will not be dimmed by time and its turbulent events. The black letters, the astounded images of grief-stricken citizens, the many thousands of candles lit by young people, the tears of mourning, the inscriptions on the city streets and in the square - all these will not fade away from the chronicles and the history books.
By Shaul Mofaz, Israel Insider
04-11-2004

Disengagement plan halted by settler mass-conversion
   Although the planned Israeli withdrawal from Gaza - the largest deportation of Jews from their homes since Poland 1944 - passed a legislative hurdle in last week's Knesset vote, it has not been definitively approved and may yet be subject to a nationwide referendum. The retreat, however, may have just been stopped in its tracks.
By David Zion,Israel Insider
04-11-2004

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