Cablegate: Israel Media Reaction
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Carol X Weakley 12/07/2006 04:14:32 PM From DB/Inbox: Carol X Weakley
Cable
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UNCLAS TEL AVIV 04752
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INFO: POL DAO DCM AMB
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APPROVED: PAO:HKFINN
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CLEARED: AIO:GJANISMAN
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RUEHAD/AMEMBASSY ABU DHABI PRIORITY 1328
RUEHAS/AMEMBASSY ALGIERS PRIORITY 8091
RUEHAM/AMEMBASSY AMMAN PRIORITY 1184
RUEHAK/AMEMBASSY ANKARA PRIORITY 2095
RUEHLB/AMEMBASSY BEIRUT PRIORITY 1311
RUEHEG/AMEMBASSY CAIRO PRIORITY 9008
RUEHDM/AMEMBASSY DAMASCUS PRIORITY 2033
RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON PRIORITY 8953
RUEHFR/AMEMBASSY PARIS PRIORITY 9397
RUEHRB/AMEMBASSY RABAT PRIORITY 6073
RUEHRO/AMEMBASSY ROME PRIORITY 3452
RUEHRH/AMEMBASSY RIYADH PRIORITY 8331
RUEHTU/AMEMBASSY TUNIS PRIORITY 2565
RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK PRIORITY 4472
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STATE FOR NEA, NEA/IPA, NEA/PPD
WHITE HOUSE FOR PRESS OFFICE, SIT ROOM
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SECDEF WASHDC FOR USDP/ASD-PA/ASD-ISA
HQ USAF FOR XOXX
DA WASHDC FOR SASA
JOINT STAFF WASHDC FOR PA
CDR USCENTCOM MACDILL AFB FL FOR POLAD/USIA ADVISOR
COMSOCEUR VAIHINGEN GE FOR PAO/POLAD
COMSIXTHFLT FOR 019
JERUSALEM ALSO ICD
LONDON ALSO FOR HKANONA AND POL
PARIS ALSO FOR POL
ROME FOR MFO
E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: OPRC KMDR IS
SUBJECT: ISRAEL MEDIA REACTION
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SUBJECTS COVERED IN THIS REPORT:
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1. Iraq Study Group Report
2. Iran
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Key stories in the media:
-------------------------
Leading media (banner in Ha'aretz) cited the recommendations of the
Iraq Study Group (a.k.a. Baker-Hamilton committee), which were made
public at the US Senate on Wednesday. Ha'aretz quoted President
Bush as saying that the US administration will reflect on the
recommendations but that it does not pledge to adopt them. The
media said that the Group's report called for a "Madrid Conference
framework," referring to the 1991 Madrid Conference, as well as
direct Israeli-Syrian negotiations that could lead to a return of
the Golan Heights. The Group said that the US must support PA
Chairman [President] Mahmoud Abbas and the creation of a Palestinian
national unity government. Leading media reported that PM Ehud
Olmert's bureau and other GOI officials are not concerned about
President Bush modifying his Mideast policy. Olmert said in a
speech today that the report is primarily a domestic American issue,
and that President Bush and senior US officials recently assured him
that they do not support Israeli-Syrian talks over the Golan
Heights. The Jerusalem Post quoted senior diplomatic sources in
Jerusalem as saying on Wednesday that the White House will not
pressure Israel into talking to Syria. The media also cited the
main recommendations of the report: shifting the role of US forces
in Iraq from fighting to training the Iraqi military, diminishing
the number of American soldiers in Iraq, and encouraging direct
talks between the US and Iran and Syria. The Jerusalem Post
reported that Knesset members from across the political spectrum
noted how drastically relations between Israel and the US had
changed in the past year.
Yediot reported that Deputy Defense Minister Ephraim Sneh (Labor
Party) was an adviser to the Iraq Study Group.
Israel Radio quoted Defense Secretary-appointee Robert Gates as
saying at a Senate confirmation hearing on Wednesday that Israel has
nuclear weapons. Yaron Dekel, the radio's Washington correspondent,
said that Gates infringed the ambiguity policy that had been
maintained by all Israeli governments and embraced by successive US
administrations.
Maariv quoted senior GOI sources as saying that Israel accepts the
original Saudi initiative (as made public at the time by New York
Times newsman Thomas Friedman, among others). The newspaper
reported that the US and Israel are holding confidential contacts in
order to adapt the "Arab initiative" to Israel's diplomatic
limitations and reach an agreed-upon formula that would the start of
negotiations with the "Arab Quartet" composed of Saudi Arabia,
Jordan, Egypt, and the United Arab Emirates. Maariv wrote that
those four countries are involved in the contacts. Maariv quoted
Saudi sources as saying that, should Israel accept the principles of
the Saudi initiative, this would change the entire region and Saudi
Arabia would lead that change.
Israel Radio quoted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak as saying on
Wednesday en route to Europe that the negotiations over the release
of kidnapped IDF soldier Cpl. Gilad Shalit have reached their last
stage and that Hamas's assent is being awaited. However, Mubarak
was quoted as saying that other elements are intervening -- in
contradiction with the Palestinians' interest. Ha'aretz reported
that among those whose release Hamas intends to demand is Abbas
Sayed, the mastermind of the massacre at the Park Hotel in Netanya
over Passover in 2002, in which 29 civilians were killed. Israel
Radio quoted the Palestinian daily Al-Ayyam as saying that
Palestinian factions in Gaza, with the exception of Hamas, have
devised an expanded "tahdiya" (calm period) for 2007, during which
Israeli forces would pull out from Palestinian cities and make other
concessions.
Major media cited an IDF report released on Wednesday that IDF
soldiers Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev are thought to have
suffered serious injuries-- one of them critically -- at the time of
their abduction last July by Hizbullah. The media cited the
dissatisfaction of the abductees' families over Olmert's recent
statements that they may not be alive.
Ha'aretz and Maariv reported that French President Jacques Chirac
told FM Tzipi Livni in Paris on Wednesday that Israel should stop
flying warplanes over Lebanon in what Israel says is an effort to
gather intelligence on Hizbullah arms smuggling. The Jerusalem Post
quoted French FM Philippe Douste-Blazy as saying at a press
conference with Livni that the overflights cannot be considered a
separate element of UN Security Council Resolution 101, and that all
elements need to be implemented. Maariv cited Livni's belief that
the crisis over the overflights is over. Various media reported
that Livni told Chirac that the flights are for intelligence
purposes only.
Maariv reported that Olmert will meet next week with Pope Benedict
XVI in the Vatican, and that the two are expected to discuss Iran's
nuclear program and the situation in the territories. Olmert's trip
will include Germany and Italy.
The Jerusalem Post quoted a member of the Hamas-led PA government as
saying on Wednesday that Hamas officials have managed to smuggle
more than USD 66 million in cash through the Rafah border crossing
in the past eight months. Citing the Palestinian news agency Maan,
Hatzofe quoted a Hamas source as saying that several European
countries, including the UK and France, have started a channel of
talks with Hamas. Hatzofe quoted Palestinian Legislative Council
member and chair of the Palestinian prisoners' committee Issa Karaka
(phon.) as saying that the Palestinian government has paid hundreds
of thousands of shekels to Israel (one shekel equals approximately
USD 0.24) for the release of Palestinian cabinet ministers who were
detained in Israel.
The Jerusalem Post and Maariv reported that serious unexplained
technical glitches are plaguing the Iranian nuclear program. The
newspapers cited a Western assessment that the malfunctions will be
fixed in two months. Ha'aretz, Yediot, and The Jerusalem Post
reported that Iran's Foreign Ministry will hold a conference next
week at which scholars from 30 countries will discuss the scale of
the Holocaust and whether the Nazis really used gas chambers to kill
Jews.
Major media reported that in a report he presented to the IDF's
General Staff in November, Maj. Gen. Amiram Levine was highly
critical of the conduct of Northern Command during the recent war in
Lebanon.
The Jerusalem Post reported that Israel plans to set up a 160
million-shekel (approximately USD 38 million) private equity fund to
help develop the businesses of the country's Arab citizens over the
next decade.
Ha'aretz printed a Reuters story about heart surgery performed by
Israeli doctors on Palestinian children.
----------------------------
1. Iraq Study Group Report:
----------------------------
Summary:
--------
Washington correspondent Shmuel Rosner wrote on page one of the
independent, left-leaning Ha'aretz: "About half the report covered
something allegedly unrelated to the matter at hand -- a
comprehensive solution to the Middle East problem centered on an old
idea that never loses its vitality."
Foreign News Editor Arik Bachar wrote in popular, pluralist Maariv:
"The message conveyed in the recommendations of the Iraq Study
Group] Report is weakness -- American exhaustion in the face of the
fanatical determination of Islamic extremists."
Zalman Shoval, senior Likud member and former ambassador to the US,
wrote on page one of the conservative, independent Jerusalem Post:
"Israeli diplomacy ... must now make a major effort to resist the
attempts to 'Palestinianize' the situation in Iraq, with Israel
being asked to pay for it."
Washington correspondent Orly Azolai wrote in the mass-circulation,
pluralist Yediot Aharonot: "Bush now has the opportunity of showing
how much he loves Israel."
Military correspondent Alex Fishman wrote in Yediot Aharonot: "The
report that was submitted on Wednesday by Baker and Hamilton about a
change in American policy in the region reflects the process in
which the momentum of the extremist Shi'ites in the region has
gained strength, while the 'American regional order,' which peaked
in 2003, is in decline."
Arab affairs correspondent Zvi Bar'el wrote on page one of Ha'aretz:
"The solution must be found within Iraq, among the various political
and ethnic forces that constitute that nation."
Block Quotes:
-------------
I. "Old Idea Still Fresh"
Washington correspondent Shmuel Rosner wrote on page one of the
independent, left-leaning Ha'aretz (12/7): "About half the report
covered something allegedly unrelated to the matter at hand -- a
comprehensive solution to the Middle East problem centered on an old
idea that never loses its vitality: Resolving the Arab-Israeli
problem is the key to stabilizing the entire region. US
administrations from Eisenhower to Clinton have thought so, James
Baker apparently thinks so, having proven it throughout his term as
secretary of state. The report could be seen as a policy proposal,
SIPDIS
but no less as the chair's ego trip as well. Baker proposes a
summit 'like Madrid' and refers positively to the measures of the
early '90s. The Baker Report undermines everything Bush and his
aides have believed, everything they have declared in recent years.
The question is how they will neutralize the clauses that bother
them without angering a public thirsty for new solutions."
II. "Call When You Find a Serious Palestinian Leadership"
Foreign News Editor Arik Bachar wrote in popular, pluralist Maariv
(12/7): "In an uncharacteristic outburst for the No. 1 American
diplomat, [then Secretary of State James] Baker made public the
phone number of the White House in 1990 and told the Israelis:
'Please call when you are serious about the peace process'.... The
message conveyed in the recommendations of the Iraq Study Group]
Report is weakness -- American exhaustion in the face of the
fanatical determination of Islamic extremists chasing the West from
all sides. When America is tired of fighting, it is easy to look
for solutions under the streetlamp, especially if it is in some
negligible Israeli settlement in Samaria [the northern West Ban].
This is easier than understanding that the enemy facing the United
States will not express his thanks for solving the Palestinian or
Iraqi problem, and return to his cave.... We can only tell [James
Baker] that the phone number of the Prime Minister's Office in
Jerusalem is 02-6705555. Let him call when he finds a serious
Palestinian leadership."
III. "Israel Must Not Pay Price For Iraq Mess"
Zalman Shoval, senior Likud member and former ambassador to the US,
wrote on page one of the conservative, independent Jerusalem Post
(12/7): "Though common sense should show that the Palestinian
problem or the Golan have nothing to do with Iraq -- the combination
of Arab fears of a Shi'ite Crescent and European attitudes in
general (as we saw in the recent Spanish-French-Italian initiative)
and American frustration over Iraq could lead to a situation in
which, in the absence of real solutions for Iraq, attention will be
shifted to matters directly affecting us. Israeli diplomacy, which
has not been too successful in recent times in making its positions
clear -- including with the Europeans but also with the victorious
Democrats in Congress and perhaps even with parts of the
administration -- must now make a major effort to resist the
attempts to 'Palestinianize' the situation in Iraq, with Israel
being asked to pay for it."
IV. "Bush's Opportunity"
Washington correspondent Orly Azolai wrote in the mass-circulation,
pluralist Yediot Aharonot (12/7): "President Bush's personal and
political history shows repeatedly that the moment he understands
that he is about to lose everything, his stubbornness dissolves as
well and he makes a U-turn.... Bush now has the opportunity of
showing how much he loves Israel. This is what Israel's supporters
on both sides of the political arena in the United States believe.
If he adopts the Baker-Hamilton document, he will be able to present
an initiative that will lead to two routes of enmity: against the
Palestinians and Syria. Should he decide, however, to throw the
recommendations away, this would be akin to pointing a gun at his
temple and pressing the trigger."
V. "An Iranian Victory"
Military correspondent Alex Fishman wrote in Yediot Aharonot (12/7):
"An analysis of the mood in the Iranian leadership shows that the
Iranians feel that no effective front is forming against them -- on
the contrary. Israeli security establishment officials say that the
Iranians were pleased to hear the statements that were made by the
incoming secretary of defense, Robert Gates. Gates' statements --
during a Senate hearing this week -- that the US would use military
force against Iran only as a last resort, strengthened the sense in
Iran that they had bought themselves some more time in which they
could to continue to work on acquiring nuclear weapons without any
impediment. And that is precisely what they have been doing, said
Israeli security officials, at a heightened pace. The security
officials said that the current round of American-Iranian
arm-wrestling ended with an Iranian victory.... As a rule, note
political officials in Jerusalem, the Iranian influence in the
region has been on the rise, while the American influence has been
fighting a rearguard action. The report that was submitted on
Wednesday by Baker and Hamilton about a change in American policy in
the region reflects the process in which the momentum of the
extremist Shi'ites in the region has gained strength, while the
'American regional order,' which peaked in 2003, is in decline with
the entanglement of the American warfare in Iraq. This process will
have an impact on all the countries in the region, including Israel,
say the political officials."
VI. "Iraq Will Solve Iraq's Problems"
Arab affairs correspondent Zvi Bar'el wrote on page one of Ha'aretz
(12/7): "Following the excitement stirred by the Baker-Hamilton
report, because it referred to Iran and Syria as essential partners
to solving the problem in Iraq, a small question remains: Will these
two be willing to voluntarily take this role upon themselves?
Without asking for something in return? And, can the countries of
the region, Egypt and Saudi Arabia foremost among them, help Iraq in
view of the chaos there?.... The solution must be found within Iraq,
among the various political and ethnic forces that constitute that
nation."
---------
2. Iran:
---------
Summary:
--------
The conservative, independent Jerusalem Post editorialized: "Now it
falls to President Bush to reveal whether Gates' thinking reflects
his own, or whether he is still committed to preventing the world's
most dangerous regime from obtaining the world's most dangerous
weapons."
Block Quotes:
-------------
"Gates' Shocking Thinking on Iran"
The conservative, independent Jerusalem Post editorialized (12/7):
"[Defense Secretary-nominee Robert] Gates assures us that although
Ahmadinejad may be wacko, his Iranian leadership higher-ups have got
to be more responsible. These moderate, reasonable, Iranian
leaders, Gates calmly explains, have perfectly understandable
reasons to want nukes to defend themselves. Not to worry, it's just
the Cold War Iranian-style. Israel, the US, and Pakistan have nukes,
why not Iran? But what if this sunny analysis is wrong and Iran
lobs a weapon of mass destruction at Israel? Well, that's a risk
that Gates seems willing to take.... Gates has now made the case for
tolerating an Iranian nuclear weapon and against taking military
action to prevent that eventuality. In doing so, he elicited no
discernible alarm from his Senatorial inquisitors. We wish one of
them had pointed out that an Iranian nuclear weapon would
dramatically increase both Tehran's capability to inflict increasing
damage against US interests and the likelihood of Iran doing just
that. Now it falls to President Bush to reveal whether Gates'
thinking reflects his own, or whether he is still committed to
preventing the world's most dangerous regime from obtaining the
world's most dangerous weapons."
JONES