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Arab-Israeli Peace Process

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March 12, 1979 - Forever Middle East.

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I don't think a week has gone by in history without some crisis developing, or some settlement reached with regards to the Middle East.

On March 12th in 1979 talks were going on in Israel between Menachem Begin and Jimmy Carter, with an emergency session being held on this day. Speculation among Middle East watchers was President Carter to spend an extra day trying to hammer something out.

And to go along with the negotiations were reports of continued violence in the West Bank, anti-Carter riots around Jerusalem and a general feeling of tension while some sort of peace process was being arrived at.

And if that weren't enough, talk on Capitol Hill centered around what was being described as a disastrous Energy policy and a looming crisis by way of Arab Oil. Only time would tell on that one.

Meanwhile, news from overseas, aside from the Peace talks, centered around continued Rhodesian attacks on rebel bases in Zimbabwe and the Women of Tehran turning out en masse to protest the latest edicts from the Ayatollah regime regarding a severe curtailing of civil rights for women and a reintroduction of the Chador as required apparel for all Iranian Women.

And when the talk wasn't focused on the potential energy crisis or the Middle East, Capitol Hill was focusing on calls for a Constitutional Amendment to the Balanced Budget, with John Stennis leading the charge. And if Jimmy Carter didn't have enough trouble, Republican Presidential hopefuls Howard Baker and Bob Dole were busy making political hay from calls for an investigation of the Carter Family Peanut business based on an FBI investigation that alleged Prodigal Brother Billy was busy cooking books at the warehouse.

And so spiraled this March 12th in 1979 as reported on CBS Radio via their 8:00 am-9:00 am (PST) network news and The World Tonight.



November 4, 1995 - The Yitzhak Rabin Assassination

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Fifteen years ago today Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was gunned down by a right wing extremist while attending a peace rally in Tel-Aviv, moments after joining in singing A Song To Peace to the assembled crowd. Within minutes of his death, news flashed all over the world that the gunman, Yigal Amir, was a right-wing extremist, frustrated by the direction the Arab-Israeli peace talks were going and acted alone in his killing of the Prime Minister. However, as with all assassinations, conspiracy theories persist and some say Amir acted on orders of Rabin's successor, Shimon Peres who felt Rabin was selling Israel out.

Regardless of what the real story is, Yitzhak Rabin was dead, the world mourned and the peace process got set back several years.

Fifteen years ago tonight.

Here's the first few announcements of the death of Rabin and reports from the scene via NPR and CNN.



November 4, 1995 - The Assassination of Yitzhak Rabin

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(A little hate goes a long way)

Something about November 4th - it must be the moon.

Frank Stasio (NPR News): “Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin has been shot and killed. Rabin was shot to death as he was leaving a peace rally in Tel-Aviv. Police have arrested an Israeli Jew, a man in his twenties who is said to be a member of a little known right-wing extremist group. The alleged gunman is identified as Yigal Amir. According to Israeli Television he is a law student at Bar-Ilan University and had been involved in right wing causes. Government spokesman Uri Dromi said that a Jewish organization which is anti-government and which is against the peace process took responsibility. He said the group identified the gunman as acting for them.”

The gunman later claimed to be acting "on God's behalf". Little comfort in knowing insanity is universal.