Excerpt from a senior Israeli official’s diary describing stalled peace talks with Arafat and internal U.S. diplomatic tensions
Excerpt from a senior Israeli official’s diary describing stalled peace talks with Arafat and internal U.S. diplomatic tensions The passage provides a candid account of internal Israeli and U.S. negotiations, mentioning specific actors (Dennis Ross, President Clinton, Shlomo Ben‑Ami) and the strategic calculus around West Bank partition. While it offers concrete names and a timeline, it lacks new factual revelations about financial flows or wrongdoing, limiting its investigative payoff. However, it does hint at possible political pressure and decision‑making that could be pursued for deeper insight into U.S. mediation tactics. Key insights: Israeli negotiator expresses skepticism about concessions without Arafat movement.; Dennis Ross confronts the Israeli official about red‑line positions and summit ownership.; President Clinton reportedly shows increased sympathy after a meeting with negotiators.
Summary
Excerpt from a senior Israeli official’s diary describing stalled peace talks with Arafat and internal U.S. diplomatic tensions The passage provides a candid account of internal Israeli and U.S. negotiations, mentioning specific actors (Dennis Ross, President Clinton, Shlomo Ben‑Ami) and the strategic calculus around West Bank partition. While it offers concrete names and a timeline, it lacks new factual revelations about financial flows or wrongdoing, limiting its investigative payoff. However, it does hint at possible political pressure and decision‑making that could be pursued for deeper insight into U.S. mediation tactics. Key insights: Israeli negotiator expresses skepticism about concessions without Arafat movement.; Dennis Ross confronts the Israeli official about red‑line positions and summit ownership.; President Clinton reportedly shows increased sympathy after a meeting with negotiators.
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