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d-19903House OversightOther

Memo recounts personal recollections of Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat and his interactions with U.S. secretaries of state

The passage is a personal anecdote describing Erekat's background and his relationships with U.S. officials. It contains no concrete allegations, financial details, dates of wrongdoing, or actionable Author met Saeb Erekat in the late 1980s while working for Secretary of State George Shultz. Erekat wore a kaffiyeh at the 1991 Madrid Peace Conference, irritating Secretary of State James Bake Ereka

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #029698
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a personal anecdote describing Erekat's background and his relationships with U.S. officials. It contains no concrete allegations, financial details, dates of wrongdoing, or actionable Author met Saeb Erekat in the late 1980s while working for Secretary of State George Shultz. Erekat wore a kaffiyeh at the 1991 Madrid Peace Conference, irritating Secretary of State James Bake Ereka

Tags

palestinian-politicsus-foreign-policyhistorical-memoirhouse-oversight

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Palestinian side knows the substance of the issues or the negotiating history better. I first met Erekat in the late 1980s, while working on the Palestinian issue for then Secretary of State George Shultz. Back then, the U.S.-educated diplomat was already showing the brashness and outspokenness that would make him one of the most memorable -- if exasperating -- of the Palestinians with whom we dealt. He annoyed then Secretary of State James Baker by wearing his kaffiyeh around his shoulders at the opening of the Madrid Peace Conference in October 1991. And over the years, he continued to annoy the Israelis too with his fiery performances on CNN -- though to this day, key Israeli negotiators, such as Isaac Molho, continue to praise his pragmatism at the bargaining table. It was Erekat's academic bent, analytical chops, and capacity to write in English that would make him so indispensable to the only Palestinian who really counted in those days -- Yasir Arafat. Erekat was a unique figure -- neither a fighter (no nom de guerre for him), nor a PLO insider, nor an organization man from Tunis. Rather, he was a West Banker from Jericho, and he succeeded in maintaining his relevance in a Palestinian

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