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San
Diego Jewish World
Saudi arms deal
opponents organize
troops
in
And despite
assurances to the contrary,
"We need to send a
crystal clear message to the Saudi Arabian government that their tacit approval
of terrorism can't go unpunished," said Weiner. "
"It is critical that
Congress block the sale of these high tech weapons to Saudi Arabia given its
abysmal record in combating terrorism and unwillingness to crack down on
extremists," said Wexler. "
Reps. Weiner, Wexler
and
For each of the last
four years, Rep. Weiner has passed amendments in the House of Representatives
banning U.S aid to (Return to top)
![]() Left: Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates and Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice meet with President of Egypt Hosni Mubarak in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt, July 31, 2007. Gates and Rice were in Egypt to meet with the president and the minister of defense to discuss regional affairs and the U.S.A's long-term relationship with Egypt. Right: Rice and Gates answer questions from reporters during a media briefing in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt, July, 31 Defense Dept. photos by Cherie A. Thurlby
U.S.,
Egypt, Jordan, Gulf States announce SHARM EL-SHEIK, EGYPT (Press Release)—Following is the text of a joint communique issued today by the foreign ministers of Egypt, Jordan, the Gulf Cooperation Council and the United States: The Foreign Ministers of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), Egypt, Jordan, and the United States met today in Sharm El-Sheik to consult as partners and friends and to coordinate their efforts to promote regional peace and security. The participants reaffirmed their shared vision of a stable, peaceful, and prosperous Middle East and their commitment to work together to achieve this common goal. This meeting follows the meetings previously held in New York, Cairo, at the Dead Sea and in Kuwait city.
The participants emphasized the importance of dialogue and diplomacy and
affirmed that disputes among states should be settled peacefully and in a manner
consistent with international law, including the Charter of the United Nations,
and that relations among all countries should be based on mutual respect for the
sovereignty and territorial integrity of all states, and on the principle of
noninterference in the internal affairs of other nations. The participants
expressed their steadfast support to any Gulf states in facing external threats
to its sovereignty and territorial integrity. Agreeing that the peace and
security of the Gulf region are critical to the health of the global economy and
international stability and the need to continue the stability of the Gulf as a
vital national interest for all, the participants resolved to continue their
longstanding cooperation against such threats. Agreeing on the importance of a just, comprehensive peace to the prosperity, stability and security of the Middle East, the Foreign Ministers reiterated their commitment to the two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and noted that the foundation for such an outcome includes UN Security Council resolutions 242, 338, 1397, and 1515, and the Arab Peace Initiative, to end the occupation since 1967 and establish a Palestinian state that is viable and contiguous and living in peace and security with all its neighbors. They also emphasized the work of the International Quartet in this context. The participants expressed deep concern about the humanitarian conditions of the Palestinian people, particularly in Gaza, and affirmed the necessity of continuing assistance and support to the Palestinian people and the Palestinian Authority under the leadership of President Abbas and his government. Participants denounced all acts of violence and called for law and order under the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank and Gaza. The participants urged Israel and the Palestinians to meet all previous commitments. They undertook to support efforts to create an environment conducive to progress on the bilateral tracks for a just and comprehensive settlement and in that context welcomed the joint visit by the Egyptian and Jordanian Foreign Ministers to Israel on July 25, 2007, to discuss the Arab Peace Initiative as mandated by the Arab League’s Arab Peace Initiative Follow-up Committee. The participants welcomed the commitment expressed by U.S. President George W. Bush in his July 16, 2007, speech to strengthen political and diplomatic efforts to achieve peace between Israel and the Palestinians and the establishment of a viable and contiguous Palestinian state, and promised to support efforts to this end.
While calling on the government of Iraq to respect its commitments, the participants underlined the urgency and importance of implementing the principles agreed upon in Sharm El-Sheikh during the May 2007 Ministerial Conference of the Neighbouring Countries of Iraq and Egypt with the Permanent Members of the UN Security Council and the G-8, and reiterated their commitment to prevent the transit of terrorists to Iraq, arms for terrorists and financing that would support terrorists and for strengthening cooperation in this regard, and called on all of Iraq’s neighbors to take all necessary steps to interdict such transit, and call on Iraq and its neighbors to exchange information regarding the fight against terrorism. Acknowledging that a unified, democratic, and stable Iraq that is at peace with its neighbors and itself is a shared, critical objective, the participants pledged to continue to support Iraq, and expand their financial and political support. The participants agreed that the international community also must demonstrate its support for Iraq, including through the International Compact with Iraq, and that all of these efforts must supplement Iraq’s own efforts. Underscoring that every political community leader in Iraq has a role to play in national reconciliation efforts, the ministers called on all Iraqis to work together through the political process to build a brighter common future. They reiterated to the Iraqi government the need to undertake national reconciliation efforts by ensuring a fair and inclusive political process that engages all Iraqis, fosters economic reform, and provides security and services to all Iraqis. The participants called for the disbanding of all militia immediately in order for Iraqi security forces to grow stronger and for an immediate cessation of all acts of terrorism and sectarian violence in Iraq that exacerbate the suffering of the Iraqi people and undermine regional security and stability. Participants encouraged the Arab League and the United Nations to continue their effort to work with the Government of Iraq and the Iraqi people to help Iraq’s leaders forge a common national vision that will advance Iraqi national reconciliation.
With regard to Iran’s nuclear activities, the participants reiterated their strong support for international diplomatic efforts and called on Iran to comply with international diplomatic efforts and called on Iran to comply with all its NPT obligations, including its safeguards obligations. They hope that the talks between the IEA and the government of Ira will be positively pursued. The participants also reiterated the rights of all the parties to the Treaty to use nuclear energy for peaceful purposes in conformity with the nonproliferation obligations in Articles I, II, and III of the Treaty.
The preceding
transcript was provided by the U.S. State Department. A
joint news conference held by Egypt's Foreign Minister Aboul Gheit and U.S.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice may be found below in the "News Sleuths"
section.
NEW YORK, N.Y.
(Press Release) The Zionist Organization of America (ZOA) has described as
"deeply mistaken" plans announced by the Bush Administration to conclude a $20
billion arms deal with Saudi Arabia on account of continuing Saudi support for
Islamists waging jihad against Israel and the West, its lavishing of funds on
Islamist institutions disseminating hatred of Jews and other non-Muslims and
rewarding suicide bombers who murder Israelis. The arms package for Saudi Arabia would also include satellite-guided bombs. Israeli defense establishment officials have warned that the sale of satellite-guided missiles to Saudi Arabia has the potential to constitute a strategic threat to the state of Israel. According to these experts, these advanced weapons would grant Saudi Arabia the capability to accurately fire missiles at strategic sites and installations in southern Israel .
A senior Israeli
Defense Ministry official has disclosed that "We do not have a way to defend
ourselves against this weapon." The official also warned that the Saudi regime
could be toppled and the advanced American weaponry fall into the hands of worse
extremists. Senior defense officials also said that the JDAM sale to Saudi
Arabia was still enough to destabilize the strategic military balance in the
Middle East (Jerusalem
Post, July 30). The proposed arms package also includes a 25% increase in U.S. military aid to Israel, from an annual $2.4 billion to $3 billion a year, guaranteed for 10 years, plus an additional $13 billion for Egypt in the same period. Members of Congress vowed yesterday to oppose any deal to Saudi Arabia on grounds that the kingdom has been unhelpful in Iraq and unreliable at fighting terrorism. King Abdullah has called the U.S . military presence in Iraq an "illegitimate occupation," and the Saudis have been either unable or unwilling to stop suicide bombers who have ended up in Iraq.
New
York Sun
journalist Youssef Ibrahim reports that "Senior American officials expressing
'frustration with the Saudi government' and accusing it of both 'significant
efforts to undermine the Iraqi government' and 'obstructing a number of other
American foreign policy initiatives.'" Ibrahim also notes that the 1987 founding
of the terrorist group Hamas, whose leaders once resided in Saudi Arabia, was
overwhelmingly a Saudi-financed project undertaken by Islamic charities,
including those of Sulaiman Al-Rajhi, a reclusive Saudi octogenarian with a
personal fortune of $12 billion and his own Islamic bank with 500 branches in
Saudi Arabia and a few more around the Muslim world. EN ROUTE TO SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt – A military sales package for Arab countries estimated at $20 billion represents a tangible symbol of the United States’ commitment to the region and its long-term security, a senior defense official said Monday on background. The arms, the bulk to be sold to Saudi Arabia, are expected to help promote stability in the Persian Gulf, including Iraq. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who released a statement about the plan before leaving for a trip here with Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, said the package "will help bolster forces of moderation and support a broader strategy to counter the negative influences of al Qaeda, Hezbollah, Syria and Iran." "We are helping to strengthen the defensive capabilities of our partners and we plan to initiate discussions with Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf states on a proposed package of military technologies that will help support their ability to secure peace and stability in the Gulf region," the statement said. The nature of the package, including dollar figures attached to it, will be on the table here as Rice and Gates meet in Sharm el-Sheikh with members of the Gulf Cooperation Council. Congress must approve the sales package before it is formalized. The package will consist of missile defenses, including early-warning and air capabilities; maritime capabilities, with enhancements to Saudi Arabia’s eastern fleet; weaponry to counter unconventional threats; and enhanced counter-proliferation capabilities. “It’s a very broad package,” an official said. Arms deals demonstrate that the United States values its long-term relationships in the region and has a long-term interest in its security, the senior official said. “We have been here 60 years and we’re going to be here a lot longer, and one of the reasons for these arms deals is to reaffirm that long-term shared interest in the shared security and stability of the region,” he said.
Saudi Arabia, the biggest buyer, has been
a close ally of the United States for decade, he noted. “They have been in
important partner in the war on terror. They have been especially effective in
going after al Qaeda, particularly after the attacks within Saudi Arabia
itself,” he said.
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HOLON, Israel—My granddaughter Lee, 13, organized for my wife Heather, daughter Ingrid and grandson Ben, 10, an excursion to the museum “Dialogue in the Dark” in this Tel Aviv suburb. It was a most remarkable experience of “seeing” the world through Blind eyes. This museum is one in about 17 countries that experiences the “world of the blind”. It teaches us to use all our senses . In particular, touch, smell and hearing come into play all the time. Our guide, Meier, 36, who has been blind from birth, gave us canes and with his help and guidance, we experienced over the next hour a virtual world without pictures. In a room so dark we didn’t need blindfolds to feel sightless, we walked through a virtual city where sounds were helpful at the traffic lights (beep, beep,). We used our canes to warn us where the sidewalk ended. Cars honked, dogs barked and we stumbled on. We also visited a market where we had to feel the fruit to distinguish between potatoes, tomatoes, oranges, etc. “Mind Your Step” – and carefully we stepped into a small boat. We felt the rocking – the engine noise, the wind and the spray. We stepped out into a park and heard birds and the rustle of the wind in the trees, smelled the flowers too. Ben “hopped” on to a bicycle that was parked there – rang the bell and we all could feel the frame and wheels, etc. All these experiences taught us that being blind means the exclusion from many everyday things we, the seeing world, take for granted. On the other hand, the lack of vision is compensated by another kind of “seeing” whereby everyday life assumes a different quality, namely that of a non-visual nature. We were asked to learn to see by not seeing – by touch, feel, smell, and so forth. That is how “Dialogue in the Dark” was born, an exhibition which tries to take as a starting point the ideals and non-visual perceptions of blind people, in order to discover the unseen within and around us. This museum is well worth the time. You must call and reserve a time with an English speaking guide. The number in Tel Aviv 650-3010.
(Return to top) JERUSALEM—On 27 June 2007, a new forum called the Council of Religious Community Leaders in Israel was inaugurated in Jerusalem. The conference was the culmination of months of work by a steering committee, set up at the initiative of the Ministries of Foreign Affairs and the Interior, for the purpose of improving inter-religious dialogue and promoting issues of common interest to all the religions in Israel. Representatives from the Jewish, Muslim, Druze, Greek Orthodox and other Christian denominations, Bahai, Ahmadiyya and Samaritan faiths attended the conference. Vice Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Tzipi Livni sent the following message, which was read at the conference: "Heads of the Religious Communities in Israel, Chief Rabbis, I wish to congratulate you on the convening of this important meeting of the Council of Religious Community Leaders in Israel. Dialogue and interfaith understanding have an honored place in establishing good relations between countries and peoples. Israel is a unique place from an historical and religious perspective. Here are to be found the holy sites for the members of the three major faiths, and almost every stone has symbolic significance to them. My hope is that this conference will serve as a basis and as a framework for promoting cooperation among the various religious communities which constitute the diverse mosaic of Israel, and will serve as an example for similar cooperation between Israel and her neighbors. Well done!" At the meeting, the religious leaders adopted the following covenant:
Covenant of the Heads of the Religious Communities in Israel We, the Heads of the Religious Communities in the State of Israel, having come together to establish a council for cooperation between us, declare our faith in the Creator of the Universe who rules His world with grace and mercy, and who demands that we human beings live with each other in peace and respect. Therefore, we hereby declare: We are committed to doing all we can in order to fulfill this important command, especially in the Holy Land which is so dear to all of us. First and foremost, we declare our commitment to the sanctity of human life and denounce all violence against the innocent, especially when this is done in the name of religion, which constitutes sacrilege. In order to establish peace and mutual respect among the various religious communities in our country, we must educate our children and our communities accordingly, and avoid any affront to the sensibilities and beliefs of others. The holy sites are a legacy from the past, which requires their preservation as religious and cultural heritages. This also is in accordance with the law of the state regarding the preservation of the holy sites; the integrity and special character of the holy sites must be safeguarded, and they must be protected from all violence and desecration. It is our responsibility, as religious community leaders, to strengthen this approach and to call upon our communities not to harm the holy sites of other religious communities. Accordingly, and in keeping with the religious commandments and prohibitions of the various faiths, free access must be guaranteed for all believers to their holy sites, and the relevant authorities must assure this. Our religious heritages teach that peace and tranquility, doing what is right and just, are the commandments of the Holy One Blessed Be He, and as religious community leaders we bear the responsibility to be attentive to the cries of the weak among us and to work together for a just and fair society. Bearing a prayer to the One Most High, we thank the Creator of the Universe who enabled us to gather today in order to work together and bring a blessing to all the inhabitants of the State of Israel.
The preceding story was provided by
Israel's Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Pensioners, Palestinians and politics JERUSALEM—Here are a couple of stories for those cynics who are sure that politics is something for the uncivilized, and enjoy occasional proof. In the last Israeli national election, large numbers of voters turned up their noses at all the established parties. Predictions were, and eventually realized, for record low turnout. Close to election day, a sizeable number of people discovered the Pensioners' Party. It had run several times in the past, but never got enough votes to make it into the Knesset. Now, however, it seemed to have an energized leader. Rafi Eitan is a wizened 80+, with eyeglasses that look like the bottom of coke bottles. But he has an impressive record, and remains vibrant. Not all of his accomplishments are widely viewed as positive. The best was his leadership of the team that snared Adolph Eichmann. Less popular was his management of Jonathan Pollard, and according to Pollard and his supporters, abandoned him to capture and a life sentence in the United States. Pre-election predictions were that the Pensioners' Party might win enough votes to get over the threshold for entering the Knesset. As a result of publicity on the news programs, more and more Israelis, including young adults, saw it as a way to cast a protest vote that might just improve the condition of the country's aged and other poor folks. The results gave the Pensioners seven seats, and made them an attractive target of Ehud Olmert's efforts to construct a governing coalition. He made Eitan the head of a new program to deal with pensioners, gave another new old MK the Ministry of Health, and passed out some other goodies. After the election, commentators wondered what would come of the Pensioners' Party. Except for Eitan, people knew very little about its Members of Knesset. Would they demonstrate parliamentary skills, and do something that would allow them to repeat their electoral success? Eitan has enhanced his reputation as a wise man who speaks frequently and intelligently on national issues, especially those concerning security. He has shown himself to be a good soldier, loyal to Olmert. The Ministry of Health never was very much. It usually caves in to the more powerful Health Maintenance Organizations and hospitals, and enforces few of the regulatory powers at its disposal. A year and one-half after the election, there is no evidence that the condition of the country's aged has improved as a result of the Pensioners' Party's activities. But the party has provided us with a couple of juicy stories. For a month, the police have been investigating a charge of sexual harassment. The wife of one Pensioner MK accused another Pensioner MK of enticing her into a bedroom, and of telling her that she had a nice ass. Now there is a financial scandal. The police are being asked to look into a conspiracy among party leaders to remove from one of their number the authority to co-sign party checks, and to put another person's name on the authorized check-signing list without following normal procedures. Party leader Eitan is claiming that all is well, but he is refusing to answer journalists' questions.
One public
opinion survey showed the Pensioners' Party likely to get three
seats in the case of an election, down from the seven won the last
time. An even more recent poll showed them barely at two seats, and
marginal to the minimum percentage that would entitle them to any
seats.
(Jump to continuation)
WARSAW (Press
Release)—Israel’s ambassador to Poland, David Peleg, has called on
Catholic leaders and the Polish government to condemn a
controversial priest for making anti-Jewish comments.
Rydzyk's comments were made
public earlier this month in the Polish weekly magazine “Wprost." He
has responded to criticism by saying he never meant to offend
anyone. However, “Radio Maryja” has a history of airing anti-Semitic
commentaries. Peleg asked prime minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the president's twin brother, to condemn Rydzyk’s remarks, but the president and prime minister have so far withheld comment, saying they first needed to verify the authenticity of the recording obtained by “Wprost."
The preceding
story was provided by the World Jewish Congress Two weeks ago, another Jewish cemetery was desecrated near the northeastern Czech town of Ostrava. Jirina Garajova, head of Ostrava's Jewish community, said that 25 tombstones had been overturned at the Jewish cemetery in the nearby town of Bohumin.
The preceding story was provided by the World Jewish Congress
SÃO PAULO, BRAZIL—The São Paulo Jewish community has donated 10,000 winter coats to a government-sponsored campaign. Representatives from the São Paulo State Jewish Federation presented the donation last week to Brazil’s first lady, Monica Serra, who heads the annual Coats Campaign in which coats, blankets and pillows are collected and donated to the poor. Some 200 young Jewish volunteers collected the coats last week in Higienopolis, a neighborhood where many Jews live. Sixty other drop-off locations were established in Jewish institutions and Jewish-owned establishments. "This is a duty that the Jewish community has to the society," the federation’s president, Boris Ber, pointed out. “All those who were engaged have given a lesson of sympathy,” Serra, the wife of president Lula da Silva, added. São Paulo is home to about half of Brazil’s 120,000 Jews. The preceding story was provided by the World Jewish Congress
on Darfur divestment bill passage ______________________________________________________________ (In a related development, the United Nations Security Council voted to expand peace keeping operations in Darfur by creating a hybrid United Nations-African Union, peacekeeping force prompting U.S. Senator Russell Feingold (Democrat, Wisconsin) to make a statement on the floor welcoming protection for people of Darfur but questioning the Bush administration's willingness to compromise with the government of Sudan. Here is a link.) ___________________________________________________________________ WASHINGTON, D.C (Press Release) – In response to today’s passage of the Darfur Accountability and Divestment Act, Rabbi Marla Feldman, director of the Commission on Social Action of Reform Judaism, issued the following statement: We applaud the passage today in the House of Representatives of H.R.180, the Darfur Accountability and Divestment Act. This legislation works to starve the resources of the genocide by protecting the rights of states to divest from Sudan. It also requires the federal government to publish and maintain a list of companies that do business in or with the government of Sudan, prohibits U.S. government contracts with these companies and authorizes states to do the same. Since the start of the violence in Darfur in 2003, approximately 400,000 civilians have lost their lives and 2.5 million have been displaced from their homes. During that same time, the Sudanese government’s revenue stream has continually increased, specifically through investment by foreign firms and particularly those in the oil sector. The Darfur Accountability and Divestment Act is a crucial step towards cutting off this revenue that funds the horrific violence in Darfur. A moral approach to divestment should seek to undermine the perpetrators of the violence while ensuring that humanitarian programs remain intact and civilians are not further made to suffer; this legislation does that. Jewish tradition teaches that “whoever can prevent any person throughout the world from committing a sin but does not, is responsible for that person’s sin” (Babylonian Talmud, Shabbat 54b), yet blood continues to be shed on Sudanese soil. Our obligations to our neighbors include the use of conscientious investment and spending policies as a tool for positive social change. We recognize that divestment is a specific tactic to be used only in extreme situations. Yet we also recognize the failures of the diplomatic process thus far and support targeted divestment from Sudan. The circumstances in Darfur are such that divestment is timely, appropriate and likely to be successful. We commend the House of Representatives for its vote today and hope the Senate similarly will recognize the importance of divestment as a step to ending the tragic violence in Darfur. We hope and pray that this and other positive courses of action, including the deployment of a hybrid UN-AU peacekeeping force and a renewed dedication to the peace process, will soon stem the flow of innocent Darfuri blood. T he preceding story was provided by the Religious Action Center for Reform Judaism(Return to top)
Adam Bronfman commented, “It was exciting to bring together so many important thinkers, writers and leaders from the Jewish world in order to explore and learn from the weighty and timely topic, why be Jewish? We are honored to have had such a great response and look forward to continuing these kinds of events as part of the Bronfman Vision Forum.” As an extension of the Foundation’s recent work, The Bronfman Vision Forum will serve as the institutional home for a set of communal learning initiatives and programs that are an expression of the core belief that Jewish Renaissance is grounded in Jewish learning. Commenting on the launch of the Bronfman Vision Forum, Dana Raucher, executive director of The Samuel Bronfman Foundation, said, “The Why Be Jewish gathering embodies our belief that Jewish content and study should be at the very heart of Jewish identity conversations. We plan to continue to offer venues for promoting a robust exchange of ideas about Jewish life.” The goal of the Bronfman Vision Forum is to expand the network and reach of these programs by providing a space for Jewish communal conversations, facilitating an environment where ideas can grow and develop for the enhancement of Jewish life. Those programs include:
The preceding story was provided by the Samuel Bronfman Foundation (Return to top) NCJW magazine garners three national awards NEW YORK, NY (Press Release)— The NCJW Journal, the flagship magazine of the National Council of Jewish Women, has received three awards this summer for its outstanding communications efforts: two Communicator Awards in the 2007 Print Competition and a 2007 Gold Hermes Creative Award. The Winter 2006 NCJW Journal -- Women, Equality, and Empowerment Today and the Summer 2006 NCJW Journal -- Facing the Crisis in Women's Health each won a Communicator Award of Distinction in the 2007 Print Competition, an international award honoring excellence in communications. The Winter 2006 issue also brought home a Gold Hermes Creative Award, which is administered by the Association of Marketing and Communications Professionals. Both annual competitions, judged by industry experts, identify companies, organizations, and individuals whose talent exceeds a high standard of excellence and whose work serves as a benchmark for the field. Thousands of entries were submitted in each of the competitions.
"Every time
the NCJW Journal receives formal recognition for its excellence, I know
that NCJW's powerful message is having an impact. Our magazine keeps
members and supporters engaged, informed, and inspired," said NCJW
President Phyllis Snyder. "By spotlighting pressing issues -- the health
care crisis, gender inequity, and threats to religious liberty -- the
NCJW Journal serves as an ambassador for our campaigns and programs, and
keeps NCJW members where they need to be: at the forefront of social
change."
*Woody Allen, commenting on the death of Ingmar Bergman, said yesterday the Swede was "the finest film director of my lifetime." The story by movie critic David Elliott is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.*Paulina Geibel-Kravz, a Russian immigrant with an innovative approach to teaching English, is one of many women in the north of Israel being assisted by the New Israel Fund. Beneficiaries of the program are both Jewish and Arab women. The story by Lydia Aisenberg was carried by the J-Post. *Los Angeles Planning Director Gail Goldberg says computer modeling for Los Angeles' traffic problems relies too heavily on cities with far more developed rapid transit systems and less urban sprawl. As a result, requirements placed on developers to mitigate traffic impacts may not be sufficient to deal with them, she said. The story by Sharon Bernstein is in today's Los Angeles Times. *A bankruptcy court has awarded to the family of Ron Goldman the rights to O.J. Simpson's fact-or-fiction If I Did It, finding that family had a superior claim to the family of Nicole Brown Simpson, the other slaying victim in the famous O.J. case. The story by Curt Anderson of the Associated Press is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune. *U.S. Rep. Tom Lantos (Democrat, California) was author of a resolution calling on the government of Japan to formally apologize to the women that were forced to be sex slaves serving Japanese troops during World War II. The resolution was adopted yesterday. The Associated Press story is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune. *Dr. Kevin Schreiber, a New York pediatrician who just made aliyah with his family, also brought along a 250-year-old Torah scroll, originally from Krakow. The story about the Nefesh B'Nefesh program was carried by Y-Net News. *U.S. Rep. Henry Waxman (Democrat, California), chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, says dramatic differences between a draft report on world health by former Surgeon General Richard Carmona and one suggested by the White House raises concern about the politicization of various federal offices by the Bush administration. The story by Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar is in today's Los Angeles Times.
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Date: July 31, 2007
Place: Sharm el-Sheikh
Spokespersons: Egypt's Foreign Minister Aboul Gheit and U.S.
Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice
Subject: Miscellaneous MIddle East topics
FOREIGN MINISTER GHEIT: (Via interpreter) We had today a
meeting, the group of the GCC plus Egypt and Jordan. We
convened that meeting with Dr. Rice, the Secretary of State,
and the meeting truly was one of the important meetings. We
have covered a wide variety of regional issues and we agreed
on a statement that will be issued and it will cover six
points.
Obviously, the statement as well as the discussions cover the Middle East issue, the issue of Iraq, the Iranian nuclear issue, the issue of Lebanon, as well as the issue of terrorism, and lastly the nonproliferation and issues of weapons of mass destructions.
The meeting was very fruitful and we have exchanged clearly a variety of views. It was a frank discussions and we believe that there’s a great deal of understanding between the U.S. Secretary of State on the one hand and the other participants on the other hands.
The U.S. Secretary of State explained to us in details and with clarity the American vision and the American views to move and advance the Middle East peace process and the conference or the meeting that President Bush called for and expressing the American desire to advance a Palestinian-Israeli settlement that would lead to the establishment of a viable Palestinian state and contiguous Palestinian state.
We also heard with a great deal of interest the American vision and the American views about Iraq regarding the upcoming period, which is the next 17 months the life of the Administration.
That was briefly what we have discussed. The U.S. Secretary of State and the U.S. Secretary of Defense, they will both be honored to meet President Mubarak after this press conference. Thank you.
SECRETARY RICE: Well, thank you very much, Minister. Thank you very much for arranging this meeting of the GCC plus Egypt and Jordan and the United States. This is the fifth time that we have met in this configuration, beginning with the meeting that we held during the UNGA last September. And I think it is a sign of our intensifying political dialogue that we have met more frequently, and I believe we are continuing to find this forum an excellent way to address the many challenges and opportunities that we have.
And today, we indeed, as you said, discussed a number of those challenges, particularly how to support a unified Iraq in which all Iraqis can live in peace and security. We talked about the challenges facing Lebanon and how we can support the democratically elected Government of Lebanon. But we also talked at some length, as you said, about the opportunities that may be there now to advance the two-state solution.
I thank you very much for welcoming, as did the other members of the GCC, Egypt and Jordan, the President’s statement of July 16th. And I look forward to the consultations that we will have in advance of the convening of an international meeting sometime this fall. I said to the minister and to others that I expected to be frequently here in the efforts to prepare that meeting because we also need to enhance and work to accelerate progress on the bilateral track between Israelis and Palestinians.
So thank you very much for inviting us here, and it was a very fruitful discussion.
FOREIGN MINISTER GHEIT: Also to comment on what Dr. Rice said, we have also told Secretary Rice that we’ll always welcome her here in Egypt and in the region.
The Jewish Grapevine
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AUTHOR, AUTHOR—
Eugene Telser has published a new book, How to Become President of the United States, which is now available on Amazon. He says the novel "is a rather bawdy perhaps vulgar and lewd novel which depicts a fundamental political hypothesis. Namely, that in order for a man to be elected to important political office he must demonstrate to the electorate that he is, to put it bluntly, on the make. It does not deal with what characteristics a woman must make clear to the public. The recent flap over Hillary Clinton’s cleavage, the attention given to Barack Obama’s suits and John McCain’s sweater suggest that how a candidate projects himself or herself is drastically more important than what he or she stands for on issues."
BUSINESS BRIEFS—
IN MEMORY—
Freida Bitner, a past president of the Tifereth Israel Synagogue Sisterhood, has died. Her funeral will be conducted at 10:30 a.m., Thursday, August 2, at Greenwood Cemetery in San Diego...
LOS ANGELES (Press Release) – Insurance Commissioner
Steve Poizner today was joined by GEICO officials to announce his approval of their 10.8% rate reduction in personal auto insurance policies. This enormous reduction translates to a whopping $65.8 million in overall savings for GEICO customers. Commissioner Poizner also announced today GEICO’s early compliance with the Department of Insurance auto rating factor regulations, rewarding good drivers for their behavior.
Commissioner Poizner ordered the Department of Insurance (CDI) Rate
Filing Bureau to process GEICO’s rate reductions quickly, so he could
approve the reductions and put money back into the pockets of GEICO’s
436,000 California policyholders. Under the reduced rates, GEICO
customers will save an average of $150 per policy. The new rates will
go into effect August 30.
Additionally, GEICO has filed to become 100% compliant with CDI’s auto
rating factor regulations, one year earlier than the mandated deadline.
Under these regulations, rates will be based primarily on three factors:
driving record, number of miles driven, and years driving experience.
Under old regulations, rates were heavily influenced by other optional
rating factors, such as marital status, gender, and zip code. GEICO’s
timely compliance with the auto rating factor regulations will help
reward good drivers through lower premiums, instead of penalizing them
for where they reside.
“How a person drives is more important than where a person lives, and I
applaud GEICO’s efforts to accurately evaluate customer premiums by
fully implementing our auto rating factor regulations,” added
Commissioner Poizner. “GEICO has set an example of leadership and
excellent customer service for all insurers in California. This is
great news for policyholders.”
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