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d-32300House OversightOther

Former Israeli official recounts diplomatic negotiations with Clinton, Blair, Chirac and Arafat post‑Camp David

The passage is a retrospective narrative of diplomatic outreach after the 2000 Camp David summit. It mentions high‑profile leaders but provides no new factual leads, financial details, or allegations Claims personal contacts with President Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, and Jacques Chirac regarding Arafe Describes a diplomatic mission involving Israeli officials Shlomo‑Ben Ami, Amnon Lipkin, Yossi Bei

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #028225
Pages
1
Persons
2
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a retrospective narrative of diplomatic outreach after the 2000 Camp David summit. It mentions high‑profile leaders but provides no new factual leads, financial details, or allegations Claims personal contacts with President Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, and Jacques Chirac regarding Arafe Describes a diplomatic mission involving Israeli officials Shlomo‑Ben Ami, Amnon Lipkin, Yossi Bei

Tags

diplomacyforeign-influencepolitical-negotiationcamp-davidmiddle-easthouse-oversightisraelpalestineun-summit

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/ BARAK / 91 the diplomatic equivalent of the battlefield, triumphant against the odds. It was the role he liked and played best. His next move was to take the show on the road: to Arab, European and world capitals, pleading that he had been the “victim” of summit chicanery in which President Clinton and I had presented him with a deal no self-respecting Palestinian could accept. He was also campaigning for international support for a move, in contravention of the final Camp David communiqué, to “declare” a Palestinian state unilaterally in mid-September. I spoke personally to Tony Blair and French President Jacques Chirac, and also dispatched Shlomo-Ben Ami, Amnon Lipkin, Yossi Beilin and Shimon Peres, who was Minister of Regional Cooperation in the coalition, on a series of diplomatic visits to make sure the true story of what had happened at the summit was understood. As a result, the globetrotting Arafat received an almost unanimous rebuff for the idea of a unilateral declaration of stateheood. He was told that if he really wanted a state, he should return to the negotiating table with Israel. By the time I went to New York in early September — joining the largest collection of world leaders ever assembled, for the UN’s Millennium Summit — there seemed little chance of that happening. I met privately with a number of world leaders before delivering a brief address to the more than 150 presidents and prime ministers. I was at pains to take the high road. None of the foreign leaders I met had expressed any doubt that we’d gone much further than they had expected at Camp David, and that the onus for putting diplomacy back on track rested firmly with the Palestinians. Looking straight at Arafat from the UN podium, I said: “We are at the Rubicon, and neither of us can cross it alone.” Jerusalem, “the eternal capital of Israel,” was calling out for a “peace of honor, of courage and of brotherhood” — a peace recognizing that the city was also sacred to Muslims and Christians the world over. When Arafat spoke, it was almost as if the summit had never happened. “We remain committed to our national rights over East Jerusalem, capital of our state and shelter of our sacred sites, as well as our rights on the Christian and Islamic holy sites,” he declared. He didn’t mention Jews, beyond a bizarre reference to the 2,000" anniversary of the birth of Christ “in Bethlehem, Palestine.” I couldn’t resist remarking to one of the American negotiators that I’d always thought Jesus grew up as a Jewish boy, making thrice-yearly visits at festival time to the temple in Jerusalem, at a time when there was not a church, much less a mosque, in sight. 377

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