| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000-09-01 | N/A | Start of the Second Intifada / 'Arik's visit' | Israel/Palestine | View |
| 2000-07-01 | N/A | Knesset No-Confidence Vote | Knesset, Israel | View |
This document is a page from a memoir (likely Ehud Barak's 'My Country, My Life', page 119) stamped by the House Oversight Committee. It details the corruption scandal surrounding Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert involving cash payments from Talansky, Olmert's subsequent resignation, and the rise of Tzipi Livni. It also covers the deteriorating security situation in Gaza, discussing rocket attacks, Hamas, and the strategic military debates involving Netanyahu, Olmert, and the narrator prior to a major operation.
This document is a page from a manuscript (likely a memoir by Ehud Barak) detailing the political atmosphere in Israel immediately prior to the Camp David 2000 Summit. It describes Barak surviving a no-confidence vote in the Knesset, his Foreign Minister David Levy refusing to join the summit, and Barak's departure from Ben-Gurion airport carrying a note of support from Rabbi Ovadia Yossef. The text reflects Barak's uncertainty about Yasir Arafat's commitment to peace.
This document appears to be a page from Ehud Barak's memoir (Exhibit 405 in a House Oversight investigation). It details the political fallout of the Talansky corruption scandal involving Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, including a $150,000 cash payment, which led to Olmert's eventual resignation and new elections set for February 2009. The text also covers the escalating security situation in Gaza, rocket attacks on Israel, and internal government debates involving Tzipi Livni and Benjamin Netanyahu regarding a potential military operation.
This document appears to be page 384 of a memoir or book by Ehud Barak (indicated by the header), included in House Oversight evidence files. The text details the political fallout after the failure of the Camp David summit, Barak's refusal to form a coalition with Ariel Sharon due to disagreements over the Oslo process, and his reliance on a 'safety net' deal with the Shas party. It describes escalating violence by Islamic Jihad and Hamas in late 2000/early 2001 and Barak's decision to continue peace talks via negotiators (Ben-Ami, Sher, etc.) despite the violence, at President Clinton's insistence.
This document is page 94 of a memoir or book draft, likely written by former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak (indicated by the header '/ BARAK /'). It recounts the outbreak of the Second Intifada in 2000, the controversial death of Mohammed al-Durrah in Gaza, internal violence within Israel, and diplomatic efforts by President Bill Clinton, Madeleine Albright, and Dennis Ross to mediate a ceasefire in Paris. The page bears a House Oversight stamp, suggesting it was collected as part of a government investigation, likely related to Epstein due to Barak's known association, though Epstein is not mentioned in this specific text.
Discussion 0
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein entity