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December 15, 2011

Quartet urges return to direct talks

The Mideast Quartet once again urged Israel and the Palestinians to return to peace talks without preconditions.

A U.S. State Department statement issued Wednesday said envoys of the entities comprising the Quartet—- the United States, the European Union, Russia and the United Nations—as well as its chief envoy, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, met Wednesday with officials from both sides in Jerusalem.

“They reiterated the September 23 Quartet statement and stressed the important objective of a direct exchange between the parties, without preconditions or delay, beginning with a preparatory meeting and leading to the presentation of proposals on territory and security,” the statement said. “The envoys also reiterated the call for the parties to create a conducive environment for restarting talks and urged the parties to refrain from provocative actions.”

The reference to “direct exchange” alludes to Israel’s demand, backed by the Quartet, that the Palestinians back down from a demand that Israel freezes settlement before talks resume.

“Provocative actions” refers both to continued Israeli building in eastern Jerusalem and the West Bank, and Palestinian efforts to achieve statehood recognition in the absence of talks.

The Quartet guides Middle East peace talks.

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Zohar Segev

Dr. Zohar Segev is a senior lecturer at the department of Jewish History at the University of Haifa.

Teaches and researches American Jewry history and Zionist history. His latest research deals with the Jewish World Congress in the first half of the twentieth century, and especially during the Holocaust period.

Segev published the book Israel in Diaspora Jewish Identity.

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Abraham Ben Zvi

Professor Abraham Ben-Zvi has lectured in international relations in the 1970s. He has taught at the University of Chicago, the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, Cornell University and Georgetown University, among others.

He has published numerous books and articles on international relations, including “The American Approach to Superpower Collaboration in the Middle East, 1973-1986”; “The United States and Israel, The Limits of the Special Relationship”; and “Decade of Transition: Eisenhower, Kennedy, and the Origins of the American-Israeli Alliance.

Ben-Zvi is a regular contributor to publications on the Middle East, including “Middle East Focus”; “Strategic Assessment”; and “The Jerusalem Journal of International Relations.”

He is married with one child.

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ADL, Reform group rip Lowe’s for pulling ads from show on Muslims

The Anti-Defamation League and a Reform movement group have expressed concern with a decision by Lowe’s to pull its ads from a show that depicted Muslims in a positive light.

Abraham Foxman, the Anti-Defamation League’s national director, and Rabbi David Saperstein, director of the Reform movement’s Religious Action Center, both wrote to Robert Niblock, CEO of the home supplies giant, about the decision to pull ads from The Learning Channel show “All-American Muslim.”

Foxman said his group was “disappointed” by the decision to pull advertising from the cable network’s reality show, which tracks Muslim-American families in the Dearborn, Mich., area, “since it appears that they took this action in response to an appeal that was rooted in anti-Muslim prejudice.”

A group called the Florida Family Association, backed by a number of anti-Muslim bloggers, has led a campaign calling on advertisers to pull their ads from the show.

The Florida group describes the show as “propaganda” hiding Islam’s “clear and present danger.”

Saperstein wrote to Niblock, “We are writing to urge you to clarify the rationale of your decision to pull your ad campaign, as your reported decision was vaguely based on ‘strong political and societal views on this topic.’ We hope you will make clear your commitment to religious liberty in the context of this matter by reconsidering your decision to pull advertising in the face of anti-Muslim sentiments and establish clear policies related to your advertising practices when issues of religious tolerance and liberties arise.”

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Clinton says Gingrich remarks on ‘invented people’ not helpful

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Newt Gingrich’s remarks about the Palestinians being an “invented” nation were not helpful.

Clinton was asked at a forum Wednesday on trade innovation whether she thought Gingrich’s comments, made last week during a Republican presidential debate, were helpful.

“No, no,” she said. “And I think he recognized that from what I read. I think he realized that was one of those innovative moments that happens in politics.”

Gingrich, in fact, has since said that he stands by the remarks, but news media have quoted campaign officials as saying that he does not intend on making his claim an issue going forward.

Other candidates for the GOP presidential nod have attacked the remarks as incendiary.

Polls show Gingrich, a former speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, as the front-runner in the Republican race.

Clinton says Gingrich remarks on ‘invented people’ not helpful Read More »

Rice tells Jewish leaders: U.N. engagement ‘vital’

The United States must remain engaged with the United Nations, its envoy to the international body told the Jewish community’s foreign policy umbrella.

“I hope we never let our justified frustration over the treatment of Israel blind us to the ways in which the U.N. is vital to our security and our values,” Susan Rice said Wednesday in an address to the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations. “It’s not in America’s interest to throw out the baby with the bathwater.”

Some conservative groups have lambasted the Obama administration for increasing its engagement with the United Nations, and a number of Jewish groups have been frustrated for years with its anti-Israel bias.

“Whether it’s bringing the world together to isolate Iran or North Korea; keeping the peace in conflict zones at a fraction of the cost of sending U.S. troops; saving the lives of refugees and starving children; or fostering democracy in places like South Sudan and Liberia, the work of the U.N. is fundamentally in our interest,” Rice said. “We will continue to lead, to pursue our interests and our values, and to stick up for fair treatment for Israel.”

The Presidents Conference conferred its National Service Award on Rice at a New York dinner, citing the Obama administration’s support for Israel.

Rice in her remarks referred to what she called “unprecedented” closeness in the U.S.-Israel security relationship and chided the Palestinian leadership for seeking statehood recognition in the absence of direct talks with Israel.

“We will continue to fight against any obstacle placed on the path to peace,” she said.

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