News Resources - North America, Europe, and Asia:
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IAEA: No Big Change in Iran Nuclear Work under Rouhani
- Fredrik Dahl
The head of the UN nuclear agency said on Wednesday he saw "no radical change"
in Iran's nuclear program in the past three months, roughly since President
Hassan Rouhani replaced his combative predecessor.
"I can say that enrichment activities are ongoing...no radical change is
reported to me," said Yukiya Amano, director general of the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), in Vienna. Asked whether Iran was continuing the
higher-grade enrichment work, Amano said: "That's right."
The IAEA still wants access to the Parchin military base
southeast of Tehran, where it believes nuclear-related explosives tests may
have taken place a decade ago, as part of future steps under Monday's agreement
to allow access to two other nuclear-related facilities. "We would like to
visit Parchin as soon as possible," Amano said. (Reuters)
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UN Nuclear Agency Reports Slight Increase in Iran's Uranium Enrichment Program
- George Jahn
After years of rapid progress, Iran's uranium enrichment program expanded at
only a slight pace, as did construction on a reactor that will produce
substantial amounts of plutonium once completed, the UN atomic agency said
Thursday in a report. It said Iran's stockpile of uranium enriched to 20%
grew by about 10 kg. since the August report to total a little less than 200
kg., about 50 kg. less than the amount needed for a nuclear bomb.
Iran installed only 4 additional centrifuges at its main enrichment facility
since August, compared to 1,800 between May and August.
(AP)
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Text: IAEA Report on Iran, November 14, 2013
"The rate of production of UF6 enriched up to 5% U-235 remains similar to that
indicated in the previous report; the amount of nuclear material that remains
in the form of UF6 enriched up to 5% U-235 is 7154.3 kg. The rates of
production of UF6 enriched up to 20% U-235 remain similar to those indicated in
the previous report; the further processing of such material has continued; the
amount of material that remains in the form of UF6 enriched up to 20% U-235 is
approximately 196 kg." (IAEA-ISIS)
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Netanyahu "Not Impressed" by UN Report on Iranian Nuclear Slowdown
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday:
"I'm not impressed with the reports that we hear that Iran has not expanded its
nuclear facilities. And the reason for that is they don't need to. They've got
enough facilities, enough centrifuges, to develop and to complete the fissile
material which is at the core of an atomic bomb. They have that, and the test
today is not whether they add to the capacity they already have. The question
is will the international community roll back what they have. 'Roll back' means
that they dismantle centrifuges and that's not included in the proposed deal in
Geneva."
"People say: 'If we don't strike this bad deal with Iran, Iran
will walk away from the deal.' Well, I have news for you. They're not going to
walk away from this deal. It's a dream deal for them. In fact what has to be
done is to get a good deal for us, not for Iran. A good deal for security; a
good deal for peace. And you're not going to achieve that with smiles; you're
going to achieve that with pressure - sustained pressure of sanctions. That's
what's required....But I guarantee you one thing. Israel will not allow Iran to
get nuclear weapons." (Prime Minister's Office)
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Kerry: Nuclear Deal with Iran Will Be "Failsafe," Iran Will Have No Nuclear
Weapons Capability
Secretary of State John Kerry told MSNBC on Thursday that the Obama
administration wants time to negotiate a deal with Iran that would protect
Israel, U.S. interests and the region and "guarantee, failsafe, that Iran will
not be able to have a nuclear weapon." Kerry said he spoke with Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to assure him that the U.S. understands Israel's
deep concerns about Iran's nuclear program.
(AP-Washington Post)
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Israel: Sanctions Relief Worth Up to $40 Billion to Iran
- Maayan Lubell
A sanctions relief package offered to Iran as part of nuclear negotiations
could be worth up to $40 billion to Tehran, or 40% of the impact of the
sanctions, Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz said Wednesday.
Steinitz said Israel believed the sanctions put in place by the U.S. and EU
last year cost Iran's economy around $100 billion per year, or nearly a quarter
of its output.
"The sanctions relief directly will reduce between $15 to 20
billion out of this amount," Steinitz told the Jerusalem
Press Club on Wednesday.
He said that the proposed changes would also make it more difficult to enforce
other sanctions, providing a total benefit to Tehran of up to $40 billion.
"It's not the core sanctions about oil exports and the banking system, but it's
very significant relief for the Iranians." (Reuters)
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U.S. Offering $10 Billion in Sanctions Relief
- Eli Lake and Josh Rogin
The U.S. is prepared to allow Iran to recoup up to $10 billion in revenues lost
to sanctions, according to a U.S. government estimate of sanctions relief
proposed at Geneva.
(Daily Beast)
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Emboldened by Victory over Jihadis, Syrian Kurds Push toward Autonomy
- Alexander Christie-Miller
Emboldened by a string of victories over powerful al-Qaeda
affiliates fighting in Syria, Kurds there have taken a major step toward
autonomy.
On Tuesday, Kurdish groups announced the formation of an interim autonomous
government in Syria's Kurdish region, with elections to follow.
The dominant Kurdish organization is the Democratic Union Party
(PYD). Commanders in the PYD's armed wing are drawn heavily from the Kurdistan
Workers' Party (PKK) - a separatist group listed as a terrorist group by the
U.S. and EU that has waged a three-decade insurgency against Turkey.
Most of the PYD's victories have been in Kurdish-majority areas,
or places where it has otherwise secured the allegiance of local populations.
(Christian Science Monitor)
News Resources - Israel and the Mideast:
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IDF in Philippines: "We're Here to Help"
- Dan Lavie and Nitzi Yakov
The Israel Defense Forces' 148-member disaster relief team arrived in
northern Cebu province in the Philippines on Wednesday and immediately began
attending to the local population's medical needs.
The IDF said the field hospital "will [comprise] a children's
department, a women's department, an ambulatory care department, and a general
admission department, operated by IDF doctors, nurses, paramedics, pharmacists,
mental health professionals, x-ray technician, and lab workers." (Israel Hayom)
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Poll: Israeli Public Backs Netanyahu in Dispute with U.S. over Iran
- Herb Keinon
According to an Israel Radio poll reported on Thursday, 40% of the Israeli
public believes Prime Minister Netanyahu's criticism of U.S. policy on Iran was
both justified and in the right measure. Another 22% feel the criticism was
legitimate but exaggerated, while only 9% said the criticism was not justified.
55% said Israel could not count on the U.S. to worry about its
security concerns in the negotiations with the Iranians, while 31% said Israel
could rely on the U.S.
(Jerusalem Post)
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A Year after the Gaza Operation
- Josef Federman
A year after a bruising Israeli offensive in Gaza, southern Israel has sprung
back to life, and the frequent rocket fire that once plagued the region has
nearly stopped after Hamas agreed to stop rocket fire against Israel. "We are
still living on a hostile border," said Chaim Yelin, head of the Eshkol
regional council, which straddles the border with Gaza. Just a few kilometers
away, thousands of Hamas security men staged a massive military parade in Gaza
in a powerful show of strength.
Israel launched its offensive on Nov. 14, 2012, responding to an
upsurge in rocket fire from Hamas-controlled Gaza. The operation began with an
airstrike that killed Hamas' military leader, Ahmad Jabari. Eight
days of intense fighting ensued in which Israel carried out some 1,500
airstrikes and Hamas and other armed groups fired a similar number of rockets
into Israel. Some 161 Palestinians and 5 Israelis were killed before an
Egyptian-brokered cease-fire took hold.
Alon Davidi, the mayor of Sderot, a battle-scarred border town
that has absorbed thousands of rockets over the years, said, "On one side,
thank God, we feel that things are quieter, and that we can trust the Israeli
government and the army to do what it takes to protect us. On the other hand,
we feel that at any time everything could blow up and can turn us back into a
conflict zone." Brig. Gen. Mickey Edelstein, the Israeli military's Gaza
division commander, said the period of quiet is the result of Israeli
deterrence, not a change in Hamas' attitudes.
(AP)
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A New Wave of Palestinian Violence
- Ron Ben-Yishai
The murder of IDF soldier Eden Atias in Afula on Wednesday is part of a wave of
Palestinian violence that has been increasing since the summer. This is not
mass violence but rather a new phenomenon whose characteristics and motives
must be understood in order to form a response.
The most common and widespread part of this phenomenon is what the
Palestinians refer to as "popular resistance" - especially hurling rocks and
firebombs, mainly at Israeli residents of the West Bank. The second part of
this phenomenon - the one which saw the murder of Eden Atias - involves acts
of murder carried out by individuals driven by nationalistic and emotional
motives.
These murderers draw legitimacy from the Palestinian environment
they live in. Statements made by senior Palestinian officials as well as by
officials in the international arena against Israel create an atmosphere
encouraging the "popular resistance." We must demand that Abbas order his
people to condemn these acts much more actively. Moreover, U.S. Secretary of
State John Kerry must think twice before he warns the Israeli government and
citizens in public against a third intifada if the negotiations with the
Palestinians fail.
(Ynet News)
Global Commentary and Think-Tank Analysis (Best of U.S., UK, and Israel):
Iran
- Iran's Record of Deception - Robert Menendez
We all aspire for a diplomatic resolution resulting in a peaceful and verifiable termination of Iran's nuclear weapons program. But we cannot substitute wild-eyed hope for clear-eyed pragmatism given Iran's record of deception. A so-called Iranian charm offensive is simultaneously matched by an actual offensive to cross the nuclear weapons threshold.
Tougher sanctions will serve as an incentive for Iran to verifiably dismantle its nuclear weapons program. When Iran complies, sanctions can be unwound and economic relief will follow. It's a necessary insurance policy, too. Should Iran fail to negotiate in good faith or abide by any agreement, the penalties will be severe.
Congress is appropriately pursuing sanctions that the P5+1 powers have long supported, letting the Iranians know what awaits if it continues its to-date unabated pursuit of a nuclear weapons capability. Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) is chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
(USA Today)
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Negotiating with Revolutionary Iran
- Elliott Abrams
Bruce Laingen, the American Charge d'Affaires in Tehran in
1979, was involved in difficult negotiations with the then-new revolutionary
government of Iran and wrote a cable about negotiating with Iran's new leaders.
He wrote, "one should insist on performance as the
sine qua non
at each stage of negotiations. Statements of intent count for almost nothing."
Yet our negotiators seem dazzled by Rouhani's soft words.
Laingen wrote, "cultivation of good will for good will's sake is
a waste of effort." Yet our negotiators appear to think good will is a key
goal. We like good meetings, earnest exchanges, and expressions of positive
intentions.
Laingen sent his message to the State Department on August 13,
1979. Less than three months later, on November 4, he was one of those seized
as a hostage in the U.S. Embassy.
The writer, Senior Fellow for Middle Eastern Studies at the Council on Foreign
Relations, served as Deputy National Security Advisor to President George W.
Bush.
(Weekly Standard)
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Will Geneva Accord Facilitate Iranian Regional Hegemony?
- Patrick Clawson and Mehdi Khalaji
Israel has good reason to worry that the economic sanctions will be eased,
reducing the pressure on Iran such that whatever the West presents as the first
temporary step is never followed by another step, meaning that Tehran never
accepts more limits on its nuclear program. Saudi Arabia has equally solid
grounds to worry that, in return for a nuclear deal, Iran would get a free hand
to pursue its hegemonic agenda in the region and consolidate its influence in
Syria and Iraq. And Iranian democrats are right to fear that any accord with
the West would herald renewed vigor for the Islamic Republic.
Patrick Clawson is director of research at the Washington Institute for Near
East Policy, where Mehdi Khalaji is a senior fellow.
(Washington Post)
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For France, Arak Is a Deal Killer
- Meir Javedanfar
As important as trying to reach a negotiated settlement with Iran is, it is as
important if not more important that such a deal creates confidence on both
sides.
Building the Arak heavy-water reactor, which could produce plutonium to make a
bomb, while the talks continue, fails to create confidence; it does the
opposite. It creates the impression that Iran is interested in maintaining the
option of making a bomb. The Iranian regime has not allowed the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to visit the site since 2011.
The demand for a halt of construction of Arak is fair and
logical. Iran believes that imposing new sanctions during talks undermines them
and hurts confidence. So does building of a reactor that could produce
bomb-making plutonium.
The writer, an Iranian-Israeli Middle East analyst, teaches contemporary
Iranian politics at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya.
(Al-Monitor)
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Armed and Dangerous: Why a Rational, Nuclear Iran Is an Unacceptable Risk to
Israel
- Steven R. David
In truth, the Iranian leadership is rational but under some conditions is
likely to be willing to use nuclear weapons. History is full of examples of
rational leaders who, when faced with the end of their regimes, did not
hesitate to seek the mass destruction of all perceived enemies.
Israel cannot rely on deterrence and needs to emphasize policies that assume
that Iran will not be deterred. Israel must be prepared to launch a military
strike to prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear power. If that approach is
rejected, Israel must focus on ballistic missile defense, give serious thought
to disarming a nascent Iranian nuclear capability, and be ready to preempt an
Iranian attack.
Unless and until Iran matches Rouhani's rhetoric with actions that deprive Iran
of the capability of producing nuclear weapons, the threat of a nuclear armed
Iran behaving recklessly remains.
The writer is a professor in the Department of Political Science at Johns
Hopkins University.
(Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies-Bar-Ilan University)
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No Natural Right to Enrich Uranium
- Editorial
Mohammed Javad Zarif, the Iranian Foreign Minister, rejected the proposed
agreement in Geneva because it did not grant to Iran a "right" to enrich
uranium. There can be no inherent or natural right to enrich uranium. Iran is a
party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and is in violation of it.
Although the treaty does say that the parties have an inalienable right to
develop nuclear energy for peaceful purposes, that passage is unmistakably set
inside the framework of the treaty as a whole. And that treaty is about
restricting the spread of nuclear weapons.
The NPT requires the parties to enter into agreements with the
International Atomic Energy Agency to establish safeguards and provide
verification that they are in compliance. Iran's unwillingness to provide
anything approaching adequate verification makes it eminently suspect.
Consequently, the country is not allowed to keep enriching uranium or plutonium.
(Globe and Mail-Canada)
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Iran: Deal in the Making, or Persian Carpet Ride?
- Chuck Freilich
The best estimates today put Iran as little as two months from having enough
highly enriched uranium for a bomb, but it is clear to all that Iran is almost
there and disagreement is about months, not years.
A diplomatic deal is clearly preferable for all sides, none more than Israel,
which will be left with only two options should the negotiations fail: living
with a nuclear Iran through a policy of deterrence, or a military strike,
neither of which is a particularly attractive alternative.
It is far from clear that Israel would be willing to accept the first option,
even as part of a broader American strategy of deterrence and containment, and
a military strike will likely achieve no more than a two to three year
postponement of the Iranian program; Iran already has the technology and the
various installations could be rebuilt within this period of time.
Most analysts appear to believe today that a complete dismantlement of the
Iranian nuclear program is not achievable, and that if we are to reach any
agreement that caps and rolls it back, but does not completely eliminate it,
Iran will have to be allowed to retain an enrichment capability at the civil
level. For Israel the stakes are existential, but a perfect agreement may be
the enemy of a problematic but acceptable one.
A favorable final agreement that not only the P5+1 but Israel and the Sunni
Arab states could live with would have to ensure that Iran remains at least
two to three years from a breakout capability, hopefully a sufficient amount of
time for the international community to respond to a renewed Iranian nuclear
program.
The writer, a senior fellow at Harvard's Kennedy School, was a deputy
national-security adviser in Israel.
(National Interest)
Other Issues
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Israel vs. the Iran-Hizbullah Axis
- Yaakov Lappin
In southern Lebanon and the Beka'a Valley in eastern Lebanon, Hizbullah is
pointing over 80,000 rockets and missiles at Israel, representing a new level
of threat to the Israeli home front. The scale of Hizbullah's offensive
arsenal has been made possible by Iranian funding, arms shipments,
and use of Syria as a transit route.
In Israel, a military response to this challenge is being
prepared, designed to
quickly deliver a devastating knock-out blow to Hizbullah. The IDF plans to
implement a combination of unprecedented air power capabilities and a swift
ground maneuver to eliminate Hizbullah as a fighting force for years to come.
This approach is predicated on new intelligence resources, and an air force
strike power - which has not yet been used to full capacity - that enables
fighter jets to destroy hundreds of targets a day with precision-guided bombs.
The ground forces have been preparing
for a new conflict with Hizbullah by drilling a blitz invasion of southern
Lebanon and the destruction of Hizbullah infrastructure using a massive
combination of tanks, infantry, artillery, and the engineering corps.
(Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies-Bar-Ilan University)
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Israel Increasingly Courting China as an Ally
- Dan Levin
As an Israeli diplomat, Dore Gold has sat down with Palestinian negotiators
in search of that elusive solution to the Middle East conflict.
But the shifting tides of geopolitical power brought Mr. Gold to China this
month, where he found himself hosting a Sabbath dinner with guests not
traditionally invited to this Jewish gathering: Chinese officials.
That Mr. Gold, a former Israeli ambassador to the United Nations,
was in Beijing explaining the Hebrew prayer for wine and the need for
defensible borders to Chinese military brass reflects a growing desire by
Jerusalem to bring a rising China over to Israel's side of the negotiating
table on Iran and the Palestinians.
He was joined in Beijing by retired Gen. Uzi Dayan, a former deputy chief of
staff for the Israel Defense Forces and a former national security adviser.
Together they spent several days meeting with Chinese military officers,
becoming the first Israelis to speak at the Academy of Military Science of the
Chinese People's Liberation Army.
The Israelis came prepared with materials translated into Chinese, vital for an
audience largely unfamiliar with the details of Israel's security requirements.
That meant framing the situation in ways the Chinese could understand, like a
map of 263-mile-long Israel juxtaposed on a map of China. At one meeting a
Chinese official asked Gold: "Who is Israel with, the United States or us?"
"I was very clear in my discussions with the Chinese that the United States and
Israel are allies," Gold said. "But nothing in international affairs says you can
only be friendly with one state." (New York Times)
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So Exactly How Did Yasser Arafat Get So Rich?
- Frederick Forsyth
I have seen acres of breast-beating journalism about Palestinian
misery but never an examination into where all the donated money has gone over
the years. For this is certain: Arab donors and a generous non-Arab world have
donated many billions to the Palestinian cause.
For example, since the founding of Israel in 1948 literally billions of pounds
have been donated to help Gaza's people have a decent life.
If it had been invested shrewdly and well, Gaza today could be a mini-Monaco.
It could have a deepwater freight port, a flourishing fishing port and a
leisure harbor crammed with the yachts of wealthy visitors. It could have
resort hotels on the sea and farms, ranches and orchards in the hinterland.
It has nothing of these. It is a failed state of poverty, misery and violence.
So what happened to all that money?
A lot went on guns, explosives for bombs and material to build rockets to
launch at Israel. But the bulk has certainly suffered the fate of most wealth
in that neck of the woods.
It has simply been embezzled, not by Israelis but by
Palestinians and above all by their leadership cadres.
The donations continue to flow in... and disappear.
(Express-UK)
Weekend Features
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Canada's Greatest World War 2 Air Ace Also Hailed as Hero in Israel
- Nelson Wyatt
Flight Lt. George (Buzz) Beurling, Canada's deadliest air ace in the Second
World War, earned the nickname "the Falcon of Malta" after his eagle eyes and
quick trigger finger sent a record number of attacking German and Italian
pilots spinning to the ground in flames.
Hailed in Canada for racking up 31 aerial dogfight kills, he's also a hero in
Israel after signing up to fight in that country's 1948 War of Independence.
In 1948 he was sought out by the Arabs, who offered him large
amounts of money to train their pilots, but he turned them down because his
sympathies lay with Israel, though he was not Jewish.
The Israelis were reluctant to take him on, however, because he had been
approached by the Arabs.
Former RCAF ace Sydney Shulemson, who was locating planes and
recruiting pilots for the fledgling Israeli Air Force at the time, said that
Beurling quoted Bible passages when he asked him why he wanted to fly for the
emerging state. He replied he believed the Jewish people were supposed to go
back to Israel.
"He wanted to be part of it," Shulemson said.
George Beurling was finally accepted and was to teach tactics to
Israeli recruits. One of his first duties was to ferry a new aircraft to
Israel from Italy. The plane burst into flames shortly after getting airborne
on May 20, 1948. The Canadian government asked his family if they wanted to
return him to Canada at their expense. They opted to go with a heartfelt offer
from Israel saying it would be their honor to inter the pilot in their country
because he was an "inspiration."
He was laid to rest in Haifa and is still honored by the Israeli military
decades after his death.
(Canadian Press)
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Israel Beats Guinness Record for Donating Hair to Cancer Patients
- Meital Yasur Beit-Or
Israel has broken the Guinness world record for donating the most
hair to cancer victims in a single drive, producing 53.1 kg. (117 pounds) on
Monday. The previous Guinness record was 48.7 kg. (107 pounds).
About 250 women, several of them cancer survivors, arrived at
Jerusalem's Malha Mall on Monday to donate their hair.
The Zichron Menachem Association for the Support of Children
with Cancer and their Families organized the drive.
(Israel Hayom)
Observations:
The U.S. Can Lead the Free World and Still Write Off the Middle East
- Martin Kramer (Commentary)
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We have become used to the notion that U.S. preeminence in the world and the
Middle East is a constant. But it isn't so. The simple truth is that Israel
cannot rely on the U.S. to do just the right thing at just the right time.
That's at the heart of the crisis of confidence between the U.S. and Israel
over Iran.
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More than six years ago, before Obama even declared his candidacy, I told the
Conference of Presidents that "America's era in the Middle East will end one
day," and that "it is possible that in twenty years' time, America will be less
interested and engaged in the Middle East. What is our Plan B then?"
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Obama accelerated that timetable, but the long-term trend has been clear for
years. The U.S. can lead the Free World and still write off the Middle East,
which isn't part of it. That's precisely the mood in America today.
-
Israel and the U.S. have had an extraordinary run. But history stands still for
no people. However enamored we are of the status quo, Israel needs a Plan B.
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The State of Israel must be agile enough to survive a power outage of any ally.
Israel's future depends upon its ability to read the changing map of the
world, to register the ebb and flow of global power, and to adapt as necessary.
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Let us pray for the perpetuation of America's power to do good in the world.
Let us prepare for something less.
The writer, President of Shalem College in Jerusalem, is former director of
the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies at Tel Aviv
University.
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