Opening door incident; mistrust regarding 'tricking' him.
Opening door incident; mistrust regarding 'tricking' him.
Discussion of concessions, negotiations, lack of trust in preparatory talks.
Described Arafat as potentially having 'matches and gasoline'
Arafat distrusts Barak's intentions; Barak receives intel on Arafat preparing for violence.
Discussions at Kochav Yair; negotiations regarding the two-state solution.
Barak discusses Arafat's intentions and negotiating tactics.
Barak expressing frustration at Arafat's lack of concessions.
Barak refusing concessions without movement from Arafat.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011821.jpg
This document is a page from a memoir or book (Chapter 22) written by Ehud Barak, stamped by the House Oversight Committee. It details the arrival and first day of the 2000 Camp David Summit, describing cabin assignments (Dogwood for Barak, Aspen for Clinton), meetings with US officials (Albright, Ross, Indyk), and the tense initial interactions with Yasser Arafat regarding the creation of a Palestinian state. While part of a document production likely related to the Epstein investigation (given Barak's inclusion in such inquiries), this specific page discusses historical diplomatic events and contains no mention of Epstein.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011815.jpg
This document appears to be a page from a memoir or draft by Ehud Barak (indicated by the header / BARAK / 58). It details high-level diplomatic negotiations involving Barak, US envoy Dennis Ross, and Secretary of State Madeleine Albright regarding a potential peace summit with Yasser Arafat. The text discusses strategic considerations regarding land swaps in the West Bank and Negev, sovereignty in Jerusalem, and the diplomatic maneuvering required to secure Arafat's attendance at a summit.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011812.jpg
This document appears to be a page from a memoir or book manuscript by Ehud Barak (indicated by the header), contained within a House Oversight file. The text details a private conversation between Barak and President Bill Clinton in Lisbon during the spring (likely 2000), discussing the deteriorating security situation with the Palestinians and Yasser Arafat's intentions. Barak presses Clinton for a new summit despite Clinton's skepticism and the previous diplomatic failure with Syrian President Assad in Geneva.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011813.jpg
This document appears to be a page from Ehud Barak's memoir (or a similar narrative account) detailing the lead-up to the 2000 Camp David Summit. It describes Barak's disagreements with President Clinton regarding pre-negotiation documents and recounts specific intelligence reports from June 16, 2000, indicating Yasser Arafat was preparing Palestinian forces for violent confrontation. The page is stamped with a House Oversight Bates number, suggesting it was included in a larger document production, potentially related to investigations involving Barak.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011864.jpg
This document is page 107 from a memoir by Ehud Barak (indicated by the header and context), stamped as evidence by the House Oversight Committee. The text details Barak's reflections on his premiership, the withdrawal from Lebanon, and the failure of peace negotiations with Arafat and Syria. It specifically mentions a phone call from Bill Clinton in the summer of 2001 and critiques a New York Times article by Deborah Sontag regarding the Camp David summit and a meeting with Arafat in Kochav Yair.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011797.jpg
This document appears to be a page from Ehud Barak's memoir (or a draft thereof) recounting diplomatic discussions with President Bill Clinton regarding Middle East peace negotiations. The text details strategic considerations concerning Syria (Assad) regarding the Golan Heights and the PLO (Arafat) regarding West Bank redeployments. It highlights Barak's hesitation to reveal specific land concession percentages to Clinton, fearing leaks to Arafat, while acknowledging the historical context of the Camp David Accords.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011836.jpg
This document appears to be a page from a memoir or manuscript by Ehud Barak (stamped with House Oversight codes), detailing the 2000 Camp David Summit. It describes intense private negotiations between Barak and President Bill Clinton regarding peace terms with Yasser Arafat, specifically mentioning tensions over Jerusalem, red lines, and Arafat's refusal to offer counter-positions. The narrative captures Clinton's frustration and a late-night 3:30 AM meeting on the terrace of the Aspen lodge at Camp David.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011826.jpg
This document appears to be a page from a memoir or manuscript by former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, marked with a House Oversight Committee evidence stamp. It details the internal deliberations and diplomatic friction during the 2000 Camp David Summit, specifically highlighting interactions with US envoy Dennis Ross and President Bill Clinton regarding Palestinian negotiations. The text focuses on the deadlock over the West Bank and Barak's refusal to offer concessions without reciprocal movement from Yasser Arafat.
Entities connected to both Ehud Barak and Yasser Arafat
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