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December 13, 2016

6 comments on Rex Tillerson and Israel

…the potential appointment has some in the foreign policy and pro-Israel communities concerned… (” target=”_blank”>Max Boot)

Tillerson, it seems, is a blank slate as far as Israel is concerned, with less than favorable credentials (” target=”_blank”>J Street)

1.

Rex Tillerson, Donald Trump’s choice for Secretary of State, would probably not be Israel’s first choice for US Secretary of State. And there is nothing surprising or problematic about this. Tillerson would not be Israel’s first choice, because he does not have many Israeli ties. Because he comes from the oil industry and has ties with Arab states. Because he has close ties with Russia. Because he was recommended by James Baker, Brent Scowcroft, and Condoleezza Rice – all former officials who have had reservations concerning certain Israeli policies.

This does not mean that Israel and Tillerson are on the way to having tense relations. Former Israeli Foreign Affairs Minister and Defense Minister Moshe Arens – at the time the ambassador in Washington – likes to tell the story of him and his colleagues in the Begin government being worried as hell over the appointment of George Schultz as Secretary of State in the Reagan administration. Prior to being nominated for State, Schultz was a Bechtel executive and president. He had ties to Arab governments. He was an oil man. He was also one of the secretaries with which official Israel got along very well. 

2.

Tillerson will be Secretary of State. It is an important job, but not as important as you might think. Ultimately, the policies are determined by the president and his team, and the secretary only has as much power as the president wants him to have. Thus, in the Obama years both secretaries of state, Hillary Clinton and John Kerry, were on a short leash and the policies were clearly not theirs. In the Bush years, Colin Powell had little influence, and Rice was influential because of her previous role in the White House and her close ties to the president.

All of us remember secretaries who held great sway over policies (Kissinger, Rusk), and secretaries who held little sway over policies (Rogers, Vance – especially in the second half of his term). We often attribute the impact of secretaries to their own abilities, but truly for many of them it is a result of presidential circumstances and preference. A president with less experience or less interest in foreign affairs might rely more heavily on the secretary; a president with more experience, confidence, and interest will rely less on his secretary.

What will be Tillerson’s role in a Trump administration? He is surely an able candidate for the job, but Powell was able too, and he was still promptly marginalized. Trump, no doubt, has little experience as a political leader, but so does Tillerson.

The bottom line: it is an important appointment, but keep it in proportion. Tillerson serves the president, he is not in charge of America’s foreign affairs.

3.

Historically speaking, Israel has been a special case for a quite some time. Even more than other portfolios, presidents tend to handle the Israel portfolio from the White House. Clinton had direct and close ties with Yitzhak Rabin. Bush had good a rapport with Ariel Sharon and an excellent rapport with Ehud Olmert. Even Obama, whose relations with Netanyahu were hardly warm, kept the Israeli file under his own control. Naturally, the more a president does that, the less the secretary has influence over Israel policy.

Why do presidents keep the Israel file to themselves? Because of political calculations, because of the interest Congress takes in Israel, because of its special status as a very close, at times even intimate, ally. Trump might choose differently, but if he follows in the footsteps of most of his predecessors, Israel policies will not be handled by Foggy Bottom.

4.

It is not easy for all of us to get rid of old habits and beliefs such as: a secretary who has close ties with the Sunni Gulf states is not the one Israel prefers. Well – this was once true, but is it still? Think about the main issues concerning Israel: Iranian overreaching, chaos and terrorism in the region, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. What is future secretary Tillerson going to hear from his Arab friends on these issues?

On Iran he will get from them an even more alarmed version of Israel’s concerns.

On chaos and terrorism – these states will have sentiments similar to those of Israel’s: keep stability, forget about great ideologies and the desire for a better world.

On the Israeli-Palestinian conflict – he will get the usual complaints, but with less urgency. The Arabs have more pressing issues worrying them.

In other words: the fact that Tillerson comes with recommendation from Jim Baker does not mean that he will follow the Baker doctrine from 25 years ago. The Middle East has changed, circumstances have changed, the priorities of all countries have changed.

5.

Every administration is a battlefield. People with strong personalities and convictions, and with great ambition and egos, fight for influence, for the president’s ear, against rivals. If Tillerson is Secretary of State and John Bolton is – as reports say – Deputy Secretary, three things can happen. They can agree on most policies and have a great relationship. They can disagree on many policies and fight for influence. Or they can both have their own responsibilities for different portfolios, with each of them focusing on the things that matter most to him. For instance, Tillerson could be the one focused on American economic interests, while Bolton could be the one focused on the war against terrorism.

Will they work in harmony and agree on policies toward Israel? Iran? ISIS? The Palestinians? One thing for sure, if Bolton is Deputy Secretary (and with 6 comments on Rex Tillerson and Israel Read More »

In the Trump era, imams and rabbis struggle with a strategy to counter anti-Muslim hostily

A year ago, when several dozen Washington-area Jewish and Muslim religious and lay leaders jostled for spots in a group picture, the mood was convivial.

The most novel item on the agenda for that November 2015 confab was bringing in non-Middle Eastern Muslims into the Jewish-Muslim dialogue. The meeting and the venue — an Indonesian-American Muslim center in Silver Spring, Maryland — helped “dispel the myth that Muslims are inherently of Middle Eastern descent,” a release said.

On Sunday, the meeting of the third Summit of Greater Washington Imams and Rabbis was better attended – a hundred or so leaders were on hand at Tifereth Israel, a Conservative synagogue in the District of Columbia, about 30 more than last year – and the group picture was just as friendly. But in that anxious “we’re in this together” way.

Following an afternoon packed with tales of Muslims enduring taunts, vandalism and bullying in schools, the host rabbi, Ethan Seidel, sang a Hasidic melody to calm the rabbis, imams and lay leaders as they scrambled into place (“short folks in front!”).

What changed? The name some said they could hardly mention: Donald Trump, the president-elect.

“Think of the rhetoric of a person I won’t name,” said Ambereen Shaffie, a co-founder of the D.C. chapter of the interfaith Sisterhood of Salaam Shalom, addressing the group after the photo shoot.

Shaffie described Thanksgiving break at her parents’ Kansas City home, when all 40 people in her extended family said they encountered hostility in recent months, from bullying in schools, where younger relatives were called “terrorists,” to a fire set on her parents’ porch, to a bullet through the window of a male relative’s home.

She blamed Trump’s campaign, and his broadsides against Muslims, which included what an aide described as launching a database of immigrants from Muslim-majority countries, a ban on all Muslims from entering the United States, a pointed religious-based attack on the family of a Muslim-American Army captain killed in Iraq and Trump’s unsubstantiated claim that he saw “thousands and thousands” of Muslims cheering as the World Trade Center collapsed on 9/11.

Similar tales of harassment and threats against Muslims abounded at the summit, an initiative of several local dialogue groups and the New York-based Foundation for Ethnic Understanding.

Imams, rabbis, and Jewish and Muslim lay leaders posing for a group photo at Congregation Tifereth Israel in Washington, D.C., om Dec. 11.

And throughout the event, the Trump impact was often implied, if not explicitly cited.

The first session broke the gathering into lunch groups, and participants found printouts on their tables asking them to discuss how Jews and Muslims should “respond to the present social and political climate.”

“Basically, they want us to react to the results of the last election,” said Dr. Ira Weiss, a physician who is involved in the Jewish-Islamic Dialogue Society of Greater Washington, tossing the printout back onto the table. “Some of what Trump said during the campaign was not only intolerant but dangerous.”

The coming-together, where rabbis and lay leaders represented the spectrum of Jewish religious streams, was “especially significant at a moment of increased bigotry, when both communities are feeling vulnerable,” Seidel said in the release announcing the summit.

Police in Maryland’s Washington suburbs have reported a spike in vandalism, particularly in schools, that invokes Nazi imagery. Nationally, the Anti-Defamation League and the Southern Poverty Law Center have reported an increase in incidents since the election targeting blacks, Muslims, immigrants, the LGBT community and women. The latest FBI hate crimes report showed a 67 percent rise in the number of anti-Muslim hate crimes in the past year.

In the roundtable discussions and in plenary sessions, participants struggled to pin down what they could do to ameliorate the current climate.

Participants described initiatives, like mosque and synagogue twinnings, that began after the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, when there was more of a national consensus that Muslims in America deserved protection from counterattacks. But these initiatives had been in place for years and had not prevented the acceleration of anti-Muslim sentiment in the country.

What went wrong? Participants seemed at a loss to understand.

Rabbi David Shneyer said his progressive congregation, Kehila Chadasha, had a post-election meeting with a strong turnout – 50 members from a 100-family community – and that one of its conclusions was to “hold media more accountable.”

“What does it mean, holding media more accountable?” Seidel asked.

“I can’t explain at this point,” Shneyer said.

Some participants said the rabbis, imams and lay leaders needed to break out of their bubbles of mutual affection and travel to the America that had elected Trump.

“We need to reach out to communities where the likelihood of a difference of opinion exists at a higher rate,” said Abdul Rashid Abdullah, representing the National American Muslim Association on Scouting and sporting a scoutmaster’s shirt.

Abdullah said he had been raised a Roman Catholic and converted to Islam when he was 18.

“I came from a household that’s probably supporting Trump,” he said. “By God’s will, I’m not on that route – but I could have been.”

Rabbi Sid Schwarz, a senior fellow at Clal: The National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership, outlined to the larger group what his lunch table came up with, including volunteering to register as Muslims should Trump make good on his campaign proposal to set up a national Muslim registry. (The ADL’s CEO, Jonathan Greenblatt, proposed the same idea last month at his organization’s plenary in New York.)

But Schwarz also voiced a sense of helplessness that permeated the discussion.

“There’s got to be a more proactive agenda to counter the way Trump has characterized Islam as radical,” he said.

“How do you get out of the vacuum?” a participant asked.

“Reverse freedom rides,” someone else said. “We take our bubble into the hinterlands.”

Some practical ideas emerged, including synagogue members appearing outside mosques during Friday prayers bearing signs expressing support, and setting up volunteer systems that would accompany children to school who had been subjected to harassment there.

Rabbi Jason Kimmelman-Block, the director of Bend the Arc Jewish Action, spurred participants to sign his group’s petition urging President Barack Obama, before he leaves office, to dismantle the National Security Exit-Entry Registration System, an existing structure that Trump could use to facilitate a Muslim registry.

Walter Ruby, the Muslim-Jewish relations director for the Foundation for Ethnic Understanding, said a 10-person steering committee would be chosen from those attending the meeting. Rabbi Gerald Serotta, the executive director of the InterFaith Conference of Metropolitan Washington, circulated an outline of a rapid response system should hate crimes occur.

Ambereen Shaffie of the Sisterhood of Salaam Shalom addressing a Muslim-Jewish gathering at Congregation Tifereth Israel on Dec. 11.

Shaffie said Muslims and Jews should set an example by broadening the current paradigm of “utilitarian” collaborations — joining in legal challenges, for instance — to establish deeper friendships. She described how the women in her group, the Sisterhood of Salaam Shalom, visit each other’s homes “when babies are born, when someone passes.”

“Loving someone else for the sake of God,” she said, is a means of “standing together as protectors, not defined by common victimhood, but a common heritage of dignity and love.”

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Both sides looking for a safe space

Whether I’m speaking to Trump voters or Clinton voters, their emotions are off the charts. I know Trump voters who think he’s a miracle who saved America from disaster, and I know Clinton voters who think he’s a devil who will bring disaster to our country.

When emotions run so high, we need to be around people who feel as we do. This is what is happening right now with the winners and losers of this election — each side is finding comfort in their ideological bubbles, in that safe space where people only hear what they want to hear. 

If you’re on the side that is depressed about Donald Trump, you’ll find plenty of emotional sustenance in the media, which has been full of reports, analyses and editorials criticizing the president-elect and warning about a Trumpian future. When a major news source like The New York Times agrees with you, it makes you feel better.

What doesn’t make you feel better is to be contradicted, especially when you’re already depressed about the results. In this fragile and angry state, what you need more than anything is a massive dose of ideological confirmation.

Trump lovers are also looking for this confirmation — but in their case, it’s to celebrate. Their emotional sustenance is a mix of schadenfreude and the thrill of having dodged a bullet. 

The point is this: We are human beings with intense emotions. We get worked up about things. In a free country like America, where power can shift so easily from one party to another, this can rattle the nerves if your party loses.

My friends who voted for Clinton got used to seeing their country through a progressive lens. After eight years of Obama, the prospect of going from an Obama America to a Trump America is emotionally unbearable. They know that a president has enormous power, and that no matter how much they will fight and resist, they won’t get their way on many issues dear to their hearts.

It’s the opposite with Trump voters. The ones I’ve spoken to hate pretty much everything about the Obama years. They feel America got soft, weak and lost its way. Their key sentiment is, “Thank God we won’t get another four or eight years of this.” There is a huge sense of relief that the country is now trying a different direction. Trump is their version of “hope and change.”

Whether celebrating or grieving, both sides are looking for a safe space where they can unleash their emotions.

This need to be with like-minded people is not new. It’s human nature. It has accelerated, though, in recent years as we have become more and more polarized. Now, with an election that has shaken people on both sides, we seem to need our cozy human bubbles more than ever.

Of course, we pay a price for the comfort of bubbles: If all we do is seek confirmation of our beliefs, how do we expand and improve?

If Democrats stay in their funk and keep blaming everyone but themselves for their loss, they will fail to make the changes necessary to regain the power they so enjoyed during the Obama years.

If Republicans fall into a state of hubris and triumphalism, they will overreach and potentially turn off millions of centrist voters.

Regardless of ideology, when we dig in, our minds contract. And right now, everyone seems to be digging in. Trump haters can’t imagine anything good coming from his presidency, so many of them have decided to just fight. Fighting is important, but it’s still not a substitute for honest self-reflection and courageous engagement with other views.

Trump lovers also are digging in. They seem too giddy to care about what anyone else thinks. They have all the power now. This feels so good that they don’t need to engage with disagreeable views that will diminish their joy.

The truth is, so much of our lives comes down to doing what feels good inside a safe space.

For those of us running a community paper and devoted to real news — not the fake stuff and not advocacy — our goal is not to provide a safe space, if by safe space one means a place where your feelings and opinions will never be contested. That wouldn’t be journalism.

The challenge of our time is to hold fast to our values, seek what is true, and remain open to different perspectives. That openness to the uncomfortable can only happen if we have the courage to step out of our safe spaces and live a little dangerously.

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Report: Trump transition team checking possible locations for Jerusalem embassy

The transition team for President-elect Donald Trump is already checking into possible locations in Jerusalem for the U.S. Embassy, according to an Israeli news channel.

Channel 2 reported Monday night that officials from Israel’s Foreign Ministry had begun checking into possible sites on behalf of the Trump team. The news came hours after Kellyanne Conway, a top Trump adviser, told conservative talk radio host Hugh Hewitt during his show that moving the embassy was a “big priority” for Trump.

“It is something that our friend in Israel, a great friend in the Middle East, would appreciate and something that a lot of Jewish Americans have expressed their preference for,” Conway said. “It is a great move. It is an easy move to do based on how much he talked about that in the debates and in the sound bites.”

Foreign Ministry officials last week reportedly met with officials from the Immigrant Absorption Ministry to discuss the availability of the Diplomat Hotel in the Talpiot neighborhood, a privately owned building that is home to 500 elderly immigrants from the former Soviet Union, according to Channel 2. The building reportedly will not be available until 2020, however.

Some political and security officials in Israel are expressing concern over Trump’s expected move to transfer the embassy to Jerusalem because of the expected response of the Arab world, Channel 2 reported. The report also said the action is being undertaken without coordination with the current administration of the U.S. State Department, which does not agree with the move.

Maen Rashid Areikat, the chief representative of the Palestine Liberation Organization in the United States, told The Wall Street Journal that the Palestinians hope the incoming Trump administration will keep the embassy in Tel Aviv. He said moving the embassy would make it more difficult to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

“We expect the incoming administration and the president-elect to understand the sensitivity of the issue of Jerusalem and to understand that Jerusalem hasn’t been recognized by any administration, Republican or Democrat, as the capital,” he told the Journal.

On Tuesday at a news conference in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said a Trump decision to move the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem would be “great.”

Congress passed a law mandating the move in 1995 that included a presidential waiver that lapses every six months. Each president since then has exercised the waiver, with President Barack Obama doing so as recently as last week, less than two months before he leaves office.

The waiver requires that the president assess that moving the embassy would pose a national security risk to the United States. U.S. administrations for decades have said that such a move would precipitate anti-American violence in Muslim lands.

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Want to know a Cruise Ship Secret?

The Eye Roll

Sometimes I catch my girls rolling their eyes at me. I hate it. All my hard learned skills fly out the window, and I become the girl on the school yard wondering what the other girls might be saying about me.

I was at a workshop this weekend and I caught myself, barely into the first hour, rolling my own darn eyes behind the teacher’s back. Now, no one forced me to be there. I took it willingly, took time out of my weekend, time away from my family, and my own funds to attend, and here I was, doing the eye roll. I had to take notice.

The eye roll, I realized, is an attempt to roll away information that might otherwise scare you to integrate. Yes, there is something to be said for being an adult, and being then able to identify what feels superfluous. I am a firm believer, however, that you can learn something from everyone out there, so to roll my eyes only keeps their information away from me. I will never be able to review information as helpful or non-helpful if I immediately react  with a gesture of dismissal.

I realize how adept we have all become at the eye roll. It shows up everywhere. We speak before someone is finished with their thought. We listening with our own agenda. We multi-task during phone conversations, if phone conversations even exist any more. The same disrespect I experience when my girls eye-rolling begins, I perpetuate on myself and others as soon as I tune anyone out due to fear or judgment.

I got a lot out of the weekend workshop. It was not easy to stay present. It was not always fun or interesting or filled with the answers I thought I was looking for. It was filled with many, many others instead. I am grateful to have stilled my eyes long enough to receive them.

Let’s Practice this week and next, and then maybe take  off January 1st week.

WEDNESDAY  12/14     9:15 am

FRIDAY             12/16     8:15 am

In admiration for all of you and your practices,

Michelle

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Black Tie Kids keeps youngest guests engagedolg

Mollie Yarsike, the owner of Black Tie Kids, was among a crowd of jubilant guests at a dinner party when she spotted a 5-year-old girl who looked lonely as her parents socialized with their friends. 

 “I could tell she felt really sad and left out because no one wanted to interact with her,” Yarsike said. “Her parents were busy and her siblings were playing on their own.” 

Yarsike started talking to the girl, trying to cheer her up. After spending some time with the young guest, the 24-year-old marketing professional had landed on her new business venture: entertaining children at weddings and social events. 

 “Children can feel special and enjoy their night even though they are surrounded by adults,” said Yarsike, who works from her home in the Pico-Robertson area. 

In July 2015, Yarsike launched Black Tie Kids wedding and event camp (blacktiekids.com), which engages children in games while parents enjoy weddings and other events. 

The idea became an instant hit among parents and event planners like Mendel Simons, a founder of Young Jewish Professionals. He invited Yarsike to work with children at a Yom Kippur service this year that hosted more than 500 people at the Beverly Hilton hotel. While parents were involved in prayer, the kids were busy doing arts and crafts.

 “It was exactly what I was looking for,” Simons said. “Mollie was very well prepared, the kids were all over the moon and wanted to stay longer.”

While growing up in the suburbs of Detroit, Yarsike baby-sat for her younger brother, and she continued to baby-sit to earn money after enrolling in the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York. 

 “I like working with kids,” she said. “It’s refreshing to be around children, and I find it therapeutic to see the world through
their eyes.” 

In 2014, Yarsike moved to Los Angeles after graduating from college with a major in advertising and communications to pursue her dream of working in the fashion industry. But she took a different career path and was a full-time marketing assistant at the Mount Sinai Memorial Parks and Mortuaries in Hollywood when she started Black Tie Kids. 

Launching the business was inexpensive, Yarsike said, because crafting materials are low cost and last a long time. To fund her business, she took $200 from her savings and ordered some games, markers and pencils. 

At a typical weekend event, Yarsike arrives 30 minutes before a party starts, carrying a bag of supplies, pencils and stickers. Through the day, she keeps children busy by crafting dreamcatchers out of paper plates or making unicorns out of shopping bags. 

Usually, one or two baby-sitters, known as day camp counselors, supervise a group of 10 children of all ages. If a child starts crying, a team member sends a text message to the parents to let them know the child needs their attention. 

Yarsike, who is certified in CPR and first aid, usually works with one or two others, each of whom has gone through a background check. Their strict rules for the children don’t allow the use cellphones or the raising of voices during sessions. Prices for the child care services range from $10 to $15 an hour for a child, depending on the child’s age. 

Renee Dalo, a wedding planner and owner of Moxie Bright Events, said Yarsike’s services have helped her plan chaos-free wedding parties. 

 “When Mollie told me what she did, I was like, ‘I need your help to keep the kids occupied so they are not destroying the furniture and property,’ ” Dalo said.  

After working with the Black Tie Kids team, Dalo recommends the service to all her clients. 

 “They are taking an interest in the children,” she said. “They talk to them and play crafts. Now I want Mollie to be at every wedding.” 

 Juggling a full-time job and running her own company doesn’t come without challenges, but Yarsike says she finds ways to manage her work.  

 “It comes with experience,” she said. “I might have fourth-graders and preschoolers together in the same room and have a good time.” 

Yarsike said she dreams of expanding her company and taking the next big step by hiring more camp counselors.

“I hope one day we will attract big investors who are interested in our business,” she said. “But for now, I’m putting my foot forward every day and trying to expand my business.”

Black Tie Kids keeps youngest guests engagedolg Read More »

Modern twists on wedding gifts

With the average age of brides in California just north of 28 and older than 30 for grooms, many affianced couples already have all the basics: the toaster and towels, linens and wine glasses. Sure, you could always give cash, but why not gift a statement piece, something that will forever recall that special day?

” target=”_blank”>jonathanadler.com

” target=”_blank”>okthestore.com

” target=”_blank”>lostandfoundshop.com

” target=”_blank”>uncommongoods.com

” target=”_blank”>shop.skirball.org

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Girls Lost Film

Girls Lost is an unusual and fascinating film, another gem distributed by Wolfe Video.  It tells the engaging story of three extremely close-knit high school girls.   They are miserable in school though — bullied and tormented by the punk high school boys.  The three soon discover a magical flower that can transform them into boys, and, being adventurous high school kids, they decide to drink its nectar.   Voila, the bullying stops, and the boys on the sports field not only stop tormenting them, but also befriend them as equals and friends.
Girls Lost is a unique tale told from the perspective of high schoolers, but will appeal to anyone who has ever wanted to fit in, wondered about their identity, or wished they could somehow even for a day be someone else.  The acting is extremely good — natural and unforced, despite how challenging it must have been.  Surprisingly, for most of these young actors, it is their acting debut.

It’s a film that combines elements of sci fi, paranormal, drama and humor.  You will be impressed with the movie’s originality and well-crafted filmmaking.  The soundtrack is also quite good.

Writer/director Alexandra-Therese Keining (Director of the film Kiss Me) handles these diverse elements with skill and seamlessly blends them all together in an enjoyable and thought-provoking film.  In Swedish with English subtitles.  Released today 12/13/16 in the U.S. and Canada via Wolfe Video and available on DVD, Video on Demand and through iTunes, Vimeo on Demand, WolfeonDemand.com, and in many major retailers.

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Netanyahu to visit Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will visit two Muslim countries, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan, in a bid “to strengthen diplomatic, security and economic relations.”

Netanyahu left Tuesday morning for the trip to what he called “two large and significant countries in the Islamic world.” It will be the first visit by an Israeli prime minister to Kazakhstan, he said, and the second to Azerbaijan. Netanyahu was the first to visit Azerbaijan nearly two decades ago, during his first term as prime minister, when he met with the father of the current leader.

[ROB ESHMAN: The mysteries of Azerbaijan]

“In complete contrast to what is heard from time to time, not only is Israel not suffering from diplomatic isolation, Israel is a country that is coming back,” the prime minister said as he boarded the plane. “These countries want very much to strengthen ties with Israel and, following the strengthening of our relations with the major powers of Asia, with countries in Africa and with countries in Latin America, now come ties with important countries in the Islamic world.”

Netanyahu added: “This is part of a clear policy of going out to the world. Israel’s relations are flourishing in an unprecedented manner.”

Azerbaijan, a secular state with 98 percent of its population Muslim, has a long border with Iran. Netanyahu is scheduled to meet with members of the Jewish community there. The Jewish population of Azerbaijan is about 20,000.

Netanyahu also will meet with representatives of the Jewish community in Kazakhstan, his second stop on the trip. Estimates of the number of Jews in the country range as high as 30,000.

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