HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011478.jpg

2.4 MB

Extraction Summary

7
People
4
Organizations
3
Locations
2
Events
2
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Memoir excerpt / house oversight committee evidence
File Size: 2.4 MB
Summary

This document appears to be a page from a memoir (likely by Ehud Barak, given the biographical details) submitted as evidence in the House Oversight investigation (labeled 011478). It recounts two specific interactions involving Yasser Arafat: a military planning discussion with Ariel Sharon prior to the 1982 Lebanon invasion regarding assassinating Arafat, and a 1995 diplomatic meeting in Barcelona where the author played a Chopin waltz on a piano before speaking with Arafat about peace.

People (7)

Name Role Context
Narrator (Likely Ehud Barak) Major General / Politician / Pianist
Author of the text, describing interactions with Sharon and Arafat.
Ariel Sharon Defense Minister
Discussed killing Arafat with the narrator prior to 1982.
Rafael Eitan (Raful) Army Chief of Staff
Present at the meeting with Sharon.
Yasser Arafat PLO Leader
Target of military operations; later met the narrator for peace talks in 1995.
King Juan Carlos Monarch
Hosted the Euro-Mediterranean meeting in Barcelona.
Ben-Gurion Historical Figure
Mentioned by Sharon as a past leader.
Dayan Historical Figure
Mentioned by Sharon as a past leader.

Timeline (2 events)

1982
Invasion of Lebanon
Lebanon
End of 1995
Euro-Mediterranean meeting and face-to-face meeting between Narrator and Arafat.
Barcelona, Spain

Locations (3)

Relationships (2)

Narrator Military Subordinate/Superior Ariel Sharon
Sharon giving orders/advice to the narrator as a Major General.
Narrator Adversaries turned Negotiators Yasser Arafat
Shift from military targeting to peace talks in Barcelona.

Key Quotes (4)

"Why the hell is Arafat still alive?"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011478.jpg
Quote #1
"When I was 20 years younger than you are, I never waited for someone like Ben-Gurion or Dayan to ask me to plan an operation. I would plan it!"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011478.jpg
Quote #2
"I must say I have spent many years watching you – by other means."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011478.jpg
Quote #3
"We carry a great responsibility... Both of our peoples have paid a heavy price, and the time has come to find a way to solve this."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011478.jpg
Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,711 characters)

A decade later, the idea would suddenly resurface. In my first meeting, as a
newly promoted Major General, with our then Defence Minister Ariel Sharon,
Sharon turned to me and the army’s Chief of Staff, Rafael Eitan, and said: “Tell
me. Why the hell is Arafat still alive?” He looked first at Raful, then at me, and
added: “When I was 20 years younger than you are, I never waited for someone
like Ben-Gurion or Dayan to ask me to plan an operation. I would plan it! Then
I’d take it to them and say, you’re the politicians, you decide, but if you say yes,
we’ll do it.” I smiled, telling him that I’d done exactly that, a decade earlier,
only to have one of his mates in the top brass say no. Sharon now said yes. But
the plan was overtaken: by his ill-fated plan to launch a full-scale invasion of
Lebanon in 1982, targeting not just Arafat, but with the aim of crushing the
PLO militarily once and for all.
I finally met Arafat face-to-face at the end of 1995. Although the Oslo peace
process had dramatically changed things, it was clear that the real prize – real
peace – was still far away. We were in Barcelona, for a Euro-Mediterranean
meeting under the auspices of King Juan Carlos, aimed at trying to re-invigorate
negotiations. The ceremonial centerpiece of the event was a dinner at one of the
royal palaces, and it was arranged for me and Arafat to meet for a few minutes
beforehand. I arrived first. I found myself in a breathtakingly opulent, but
otherwise empty, room. Empty, that is, except for a dark-brown Steinway piano.
From childhood, I have loved music. And while I am never likely to threaten the
career of anyone in the New York Philharmonic, I have, over the years,
developed some ability, and drawn huge enjoyment, as a classical pianist. I
pulled back the red-velvet bench and began to play. With my back to the
doorway, I was unaware that Arafat had arrived, and that he was soon standing
only a few feet away, watching as I played one of my favourite pieces, a Chopin
waltz. My old commando antennae must have been blunted. I may not have
become “fat”. But, undeniably, I was now a politician.
When I finally realised Arafat was behind me, I turned, embarrassed, stood
up, and grasped his hand. “It’s a real pleasure to meet you,” I said. “I must say I
have spent many years watching you – by other means.” He smiled. We stood
talking for about 10 minutes. My hope was to establish simple, human contact;
to signal respect; to begin to create the conditions not to try to kill Arafat, but to
make peace with him. “We carry a great responsibility,” I said. “Both of our
peoples have paid a heavy price, and the time has come to find a way to solve
this.”
7
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011478

Discussion 0

Sign in to join the discussion

No comments yet

Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein document