1 duplicate copy in the archive
kaggle-ho-011819
Israeli delegation planning for a secret Camp David summit with limited team members
The passage lists senior Israeli officials and mentions a closed‑door summit with President Clinton, but provides no concrete allegations, financial transactions, or misconduct. It is largely a recoll President Clinton scheduled to attend G8 summit in Japan on July 19, limiting time for Camp David ta Israeli delegation includes high‑level security and legal figures such as Danny Yatom, Shlomo Ben‑
Summary
The passage lists senior Israeli officials and mentions a closed‑door summit with President Clinton, but provides no concrete allegations, financial transactions, or misconduct. It is largely a recoll President Clinton scheduled to attend G8 summit in Japan on July 19, limiting time for Camp David ta Israeli delegation includes high‑level security and legal figures such as Danny Yatom, Shlomo Ben‑
Persons Referenced (10)
“bsence; Amnon Lipkin and Attorney-General Elyakim Rubinstein; Gilead Sher and his chief negotiating aide, Gidi”
Rafi Shlomo“. Some of my choices were automatic: Danny Yatom; Shlomo Ben-Ami, whom I’d made acting Foreign Minister in”
Bill Clinton“o be operating under a time constraint. President Clinton was due to leave for a G8 summit in Japan on July”
Crew members“. We and the Palestinians could have only a dozen members in our negotiating teams. Some of my choices were”
Chelsea Clinton“o be operating under a time constraint. President Clinton was due to leave for a G8 summit in Japan on July”
Francois Levy“Ben-Ami, whom I’d made acting Foreign Minister in Levy’s absence; Amnon Lipkin and Attorney-General Elya”
Scotty David“nally answering that question at the summit. Camp David was different from Shepherdstown. No reporters wo”
Ellis Rubinstein“bsence; Amnon Lipkin and Attorney-General Elyakim Rubinstein; Gilead Sher and his chief negotiating aide, Gidi”
Ehud Barak“/ BARAK / 62 I was confident of finally answering that q”
Hillary Clinton“o be operating under a time constraint. President Clinton was due to leave for a G8 summit in Japan on July”
Tags
Ask AI About This Document
Extracted Text (OCR)
Related Documents (6)
Israeli Prime Minister’s Camp David Statement Reflects Disappointment Over Unmet Peace Steps
Israeli Prime Minister’s Camp David Statement Reflects Disappointment Over Unmet Peace Steps The passage is a personal recollection without specific names, dates, transactions, or actionable allegations. It mentions President Clinton and Camp David but provides no concrete leads on misconduct, financial flows, or illegal activity, making it low‑value for investigation. Key insights: Speaker identifies as Israeli Prime Minister and former special‑forces commander.; Expresses disappointment that planned peace initiatives over the past 14 days did not materialize.; References a prior meeting with President Bill Clinton at Camp David a year earlier.
Israeli official recounts planning for a secret Camp David peace summit with Palestinians in 1990s
Israeli official recounts planning for a secret Camp David peace summit with Palestinians in 1990s The passage provides a personal recollection of team composition and logistical details for a diplomatic summit, but offers no concrete allegations, financial flows, or misconduct involving high‑profile actors. It merely names senior Israeli officials and mentions President Clinton’s travel schedule, without suggesting actionable leads. Key insights: Summit was to be held at Camp David with strict communication controls.; Negotiating team included senior Israeli security and legal figures such as Danny Yatom, Shlomo Ben‑Ami, Amnon Lipkin, Elyakim Rubinstein, Shlomo Yanai, and Dan Meridor.; President Clinton was scheduled to leave for a G8 summit in Japan on July 19, creating a tight timeline.
Israeli Prime Minister’s reflective statement after Camp David meeting with President Clinton
Israeli Prime Minister’s reflective statement after Camp David meeting with President Clinton The passage is a personal narrative lacking specific allegations, transaction details, or actionable leads. It mentions high‑profile figures (the Israeli PM and President Clinton) but provides no concrete evidence of misconduct, financial flows, or policy breaches, limiting its investigative value. Key insights: Speaker identifies as Israeli Prime Minister, former special‑forces commander.; Reference to a recent meeting at Camp David with President Bill Clinton.; Expresses disappointment over unspecified outcomes of the past two weeks.
Israeli delegation planning for a secret Camp David summit with limited team members
Israeli delegation planning for a secret Camp David summit with limited team members The passage lists senior Israeli officials and mentions a closed‑door summit with President Clinton, but provides no concrete allegations, financial transactions, or misconduct. It is largely a recollection of team composition and logistics, offering minimal investigative leads. Key insights: President Clinton scheduled to attend G8 summit in Japan on July 19, limiting time for Camp David talks.; Israeli delegation includes high‑level security and legal figures such as Danny Yatom, Shlomo Ben‑Ami, Amnon Lipkin, Attorney‑General Elyakim Rubinstein, Shlomo Yanai, and former Shin Bet deputy‑head Israel Hason.; Dan Meridor, former Likud member and ex‑Minister of Justice, was included for political balance.
Clinton Administration Negotiations on Jerusalem Reveal Internal Disagreements and Potential Leaks
Clinton Administration Negotiations on Jerusalem Reveal Internal Disagreements and Potential Leaks The passage details a high‑level discussion between U.S. officials (President Clinton, Madeleine Albright, Sandy Berger) and Israeli negotiators about a Jerusalem peace package, noting internal opposition and concerns about leaks. It provides specific names, dates, and a timeline that could be pursued for records of the proposed package, the list of questions for Arafat, and any subsequent communications. While not exposing new wrongdoing, it points to possible undisclosed diplomatic concessions and internal dissent that merit further investigation. Key insights: Clinton considered delaying his G8 summit departure to continue Jerusalem talks.; A proposed Jerusalem package would retain Israeli sovereignty over the Old City while granting Palestinians greater control elsewhere.; Senior officials (Albright, Berger) expressed strong objections after extensive negotiations.
Israeli officials discuss Jerusalem sovereignty with US President Clinton
Israeli officials discuss Jerusalem sovereignty with US President Clinton The passage reveals internal Israeli deliberations on Jerusalem's status, mentioning senior figures (Amnon Lipkin, Danny Yatom, Eli Rubinstein, Shlomo Ben‑Ami) and a direct report to President Clinton. While it suggests possible US‑Israeli coordination on red‑line decisions, the content is largely narrative and lacks concrete transaction details, dates, or actionable leads. It is moderately useful for investigators seeking to trace diplomatic pressure points, but the information is not novel and offers limited immediate investigative steps. Key insights: Amnon Lipkin emphasizes retaining Israeli sovereignty over the Temple Mount while limiting Arab control.; Danny Yatom (likely Mossad chief) urges pragmatic boundary solutions.; Attorney General Eli Rubinstein supports minimal Arab inclusion under Israeli rule.
Forum Discussions
This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,500+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.