May 01, 2011
President Obama's speech on Middle East peace (1967 lines)
| Name | Type | Mentions | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Barack Obama | person | 886 | View Entity |
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030274.jpg
This document appears to be page 7 of an article or op-ed written by Alan Dershowitz (identified by the footer promoting his book 'The Trials of Zion'). The text offers a critical analysis of President Obama's negotiation strategy regarding the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, specifically arguing that Obama's call for a return to 1967 borders backfired and forced Prime Minister Netanyahu into a defensive posture during his visit to Washington. The document is part of the House Oversight Committee's files.
Events with shared participants
U.S. Presidential Election where Barack Obama won re-election. The article refers to it as happening on "Tuesday" of that week.
2012-11-06 • United States
U.S. Presidential Election, resulting in the re-election of President Barack Obama.
2012-11-09 • United States
President Barack Obama gives his re-election victory speech.
2012-11-09 • United States
2012 U.S. Presidential Election, where Barack Obama won re-election. The article refers to it as happening on 'Tuesday'.
2012-11-06 • United States
President Obama's re-election victory speech, mentioned as occurring 'Early Wednesday morning'.
2012-11-07 • United States
U.S. Presidential Election, which resulted in the re-election of Barack Obama over Mitt Romney. The aftermath of this event is the central theme of the document.
2012-11-06 • United States
President Obama's re-election victory speech. The article refers to it as happening on "Early Wednesday morning".
2012-11-07 • United States
U.S. Presidential Election, won by Barack Obama over Mitt Romney.
2012-11-06 • United States
House Speaker John Boehner gave a speech vowing to be cooperative with President Obama following the election.
2012-11-07 • United States
An opportunity for the Obama administration to advance the Israeli-Palestinian peace process due to the leadership of Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad.
2009-01-01 • Middle East (implied)
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