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Dear All
Following three articles published in The Jerusalem Post, San
Francisco Sentinel and The Jewish Week show how close Benazir had
become with American Jews. Dan Gillerman, Israeli Ambassador to UN suspected she
was using Jewish influence to gather support of the State Department. Regards.
Anis Zuberii
Jerusalem
Post
Dec 28, 2007
Olmert: Bhutto could have been bridge to Muslims
By
HERB KEINON AND
MICHAL LANDO
Talkbacks for this article: 33
Israeli leaders paid tribute to slain Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto
on Thursday, even though Israel and Pakistan do not have diplomatic ties.
People
carry the coffin of Pakistan's former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto at a local
hospital in Rawalpindi, Pakistan.
Photo: AP
"I saw her as someone who could have served as a bridgehead to relations with
that part of the Muslim world with whom our ties are naturally limited," Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert told The Jerusalem Post.
He said the assassination was a "great tragedy," and that he received the news
"with deep sadness."
Upon her return to Pakistan two months ago, Bhutto had stopped in London and,
through a mutual acquaintance, relayed a message that she would "in the future
like to strengthen the ties between Israel and Pakistan," Olmert said.
He called Pakistan a "very important country," and said he hoped the
assassination would not lead to anarchy there, which would not bring "anything
positive to the region or beyond."
President Shimon Peres said he was shocked by Bhutto's killing. "Benazir Bhutto
was a brave woman, who did not hide her opinions, did not know fear and served
her people with courage and rare capability," he said in statement.
"I had the chance to meet her on several occasions, in which she expressed
interest in Israel and said that she hoped to visit upon returning to power,"
Peres said. "Benazir was a charismatic leader and a fighter for peace in her
country and across the world."
Ambassador
to the UN Dan Gillerman recalled a meeting he had with Bhutto just prior to her
return to Pakistan. "My wife and I had an intimate dinner with her and her
husband," he said. "We spent over three hours with them. She was an incredibly
impressive person, one of the most impressive in terms of her intellect, charm
and charisma that I've ever met."
Gillerman said Bhutto was interested in normalizing relations with Israel. "She
was interested in me relaying that information to Washington and the US, which I
did," he said. "We were in touch since that meeting by e-mail several times and
she expressed concern about her personal safety."
Gillerman said Bhutto had spoken about her fears of Pakistan falling into the
hands of Islamic extremists. "She shared with us her plans to return Pakistan to
democracy," he said. "She was very well aware of the problems facing her; she
knew she was endangering her life by returning.
I think she met with us to share with
Israel, and through Israel, both her plans, fears and dreams."
A Foreign Ministry official said the possibility of sending a representative to
Bhutto's funeral was "not even on the agenda," because of Israel's lack of
diplomatic ties with
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San Francisco Sentinel
BY RON
KAMPEAS
28
December 2007
Pakistani
protesters chant slogans against General Pervez Musharraf following his
imposition of martial law in November 2007.
For Israelis, the assassin
that killed Benazir Bhutto removed another barrier shielding the Jewish state
from the Islamic bomb.
Israel’s media and
leadership portrayed the sniper-suicide bombing attack Thursday that ended the
onetime Pakistani prime minister’s life as a blow to hopes for a bridge to the
Islamic world. They also suggested it raised the risk of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb
falling into militant Islamist hands.
Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert called Bhutto’s death a “great tragedy,” according to the Jerusalem
Post. “I saw her as someone who could have served as a bridgehead to relations
with that part of the Muslim world with whom our ties are naturally limited,”
the newspaper quoted Olmert as saying.
Tzipi Livni, the Israeli
foreign minister, issued condolences to the Pakistani people.
Bhutto “demonstrated brave
leadership for her people,” Livni said in a statement. “Israel expresses the
hope that Pakistan will continue along the path of reconciliation, moderation
and democracy.”
The chaos precipitated by
the killing poses dangers beyond Pakistan’s immediate neighborhood, said Jack
Rosen, a past president of the American Jewish Congress, noting that Pakistan is
one of a handful of declared nuclear powers and the only Muslim country with the
bomb. Rosen, who was the first Jewish leader to host a Pakistani leader when the
AJCongress held a dinner for President Pervez Musharraf two years ago, said he
was trying to reach the leadership in Pakistan for an assessment.
“If the government fell
into extremist hands, the bomb also falls into the hands of extremists,” Rosen
told JTA “You don’t need to worry about a nuclear Iran; you have a nuclear
Pakistan in the hands of extremists.”
Israel radio led its
hourly news Friday evening quoting the Pentagon as saying that Pakistan’s
nuclear arsenal was “under control.”
Prior to her return from exile in October,
Bhutto, 54, had been reaching out to Israel as part of a broader strategy of
garnering Western support for her confrontation with the military regime led by
Musharraf. The United States had been pressing its ally, Musharraf, into
accommodating Bhutto’s push for new elections.
“She wrote me of how she admired Israel and of
her desire to see a normalization in the relations between Israel and Pakistan,
including the establishment of diplomatic ties,” Dan Gillerman, the
Israeli ambassador to the United Nations, told Ynet, an online Israeli news site
affiliated with Israel’s daily Yediot Acharonot.
According to a report in Israel’s daily Ma’ariv,
Bhutto reached out to the Mossad, among other security agencies, for protection.
Bhutto sensed that
Musharraf was not fully committed to protecting her, the Ma’ariv report said.
Among the routine protective requests Musharraf’s government denied, the report
said, were darkened windows on all the cars of her convoy and explosive
detection devices.
Israeli authorities favored helping her, said
Ma’ariv, which reported that she also had turned to Scotland Yard and the CIA
for assistance. Hesitant to offend Musharraf, Israel’s government had yet to
make a decision, the report said.
Bhutto was not always so
friendly toward Israel. Pakistan maintained its traditionally hostile posture
during her two stints as prime minister, in 1988-1990 and 1993-1996. Those were
also periods during which Pakistan’s nuclear chief, A. Q. Khan, was developing
what he dubbed an “Islamic bomb,” and, according to reports, marketing it to
Israel’s most intransigent enemies at the time, Libya and Iran.
Musharraf contained Khan,
placing him under house arrest, but only after the United States increased
pressure in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
Rosen said Musharraf still
represented Israel’s best hope for reconciliation, noting other signs of warming
since the 2005 AJCongress dinner.
“Musharraf has done a
number of things,” said Rosen, who now chairs the AJCongress’ Council for World
Jewry. “He had his foreign minister publicly meet the Israeli foreign minister.
He accepted aid from Israel for the earthquake victims.”
For Jews and Pakistanis in
America, the assassination presents an opportunity for dialogue, said Rabbi Marc
Schneier, president of the Foundation for Ethnic Understanding.
Coincidentally, Schneier
said, a meeting between American Jewish communal leaders and Pakistani officials
had been set just prior to the assassination. Now, he added, the meeting, to
take place next month, was more imperative than ever.
“Now,” Schneier told JTA,
“there is a shared experience, both in terms of the assassination” in 1995 of
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, “and in terms of the impact of extremism.”
The Global News
Service of The Jewish People
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The Jewish Week
Bhutto And The Jews: A Love Story
by Larry
Cohler-Esses
Editor At Large
Pakastani leader’s murder leaves Jewish
friends grieving; Israeli UN envoy recalls dinner.
Benazir
Bhutto, right, with Israeli Ambassador to the UN Dan Gillerman and his wife,
Janice, at recent dinner here. israeli un mission
As Pakistan’s prime
minister in the mid-1990s, Benazir Bhutto sponsored the fundamentalist Taliban
insurgency in neighboring Afghanistan — thereby bringing to power the force that
would shelter and defend Osama bin Laden.
Bhutto also unstintingly backed Pakistan’s
covert nuclear weapons program as a response to the program of arch-rival India,
including her country’s decision, while she was opposition leader, to conduct
Pakistan’s first nuclear bomb tests in 1998, bringing to fruition the world’s
first "Islamic bomb."
Yet by
the time of her murder by forces unknown last week in Rawalpindi, Bhutto had won
the personal friendship of some — and public support of many — influential
Israelis and American Jews who understood the pressures of realpolitik under
which she operated.
In the
days since her death, prominent Israeli and Jewish figures, including Israeli
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Israeli President Shimon Peres, have showered
Bhutto with accolades for her fiercely stated commitment to fighting terrorism
waged in the name of Islam without quarter; her vision of a secular-oriented
future for her country; and her unabashed interest in forging closer relations
with the Jewish state. In line with this, her death is seen now by some
as a hammer blow to the very viability — not to mention pro-Western development
— of the world’s second largest Muslim population.
"I have met many people in
my life, very impressive people," said Israel’s Ambassador to the UN Dan
Gillerman, who grew close to her in the last months of her life. But Bhutto, he
said, was "one of the most impressive people I have ever met. She possessed
great leadership, tremendous charisma. She was intelligent. She was eloquent. I
really feel she was a very great leader, and I feel that had she led Pakistan
again, she would have made every effort to lead it to democracy, and to avoid it
falling to extremists."
Now, according to former Mossad chief
Efraim Halevy, the death of Bhutto at 54 is likely to affect not just Pakistan
but, in the way of political ecology, the whole region and beyond, including
U.S. relations with Iran.
"Iran holds special weight
both in the Pakistani theater and in the adjacent Afghani arena," Halevy wrote
in the Israeli daily paper Yediot Achronot. "The U.S. and Iran have very similar
interests in both those arenas and they are expected to tighten the cooperation
between them in order to prevent the collapse of the regimes in those countries.
Benazir Bhutto’s death will accelerate this trend."
Dinner At The Mandarin Oriental Hotel
Last September, Bhutto
reached out to Gillerman, whom she had never met before, even as she was
preparing to end a nine-year exile from Pakistan under a plan brokered by U.S.
policymakers. Bush administration officials were pushing her and her longtime
adversary, Pakistani President and military chief Gen. Pervez Musharraf, toward
elections and — presuming she won — a tentative power-sharing. With Musharraf’s
popularity in free fall, the plan was designed to lend his rule a veneer of
democratic legitimacy. In the midst of this,
Bhutto and her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, dined with Gillerman and his wife,
Janice, in a private room at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel on
Columbus Circle.
The
quartet chatted for three-and-a-half hours. And the next day, Janice Gillerman
lunched with Bhutto for some follow-up discussion.
"We had
a very warm, intimate conversation," recalled Gillerman. "It touched on every
aspect of Pakistani life and Israeli relations. She described to me in great
detail her plans to return. She talked about her great concern about extremists
and expressed a lot of concern about her own safety. But she was determined to
go back."
Asked why
Bhutto, whose networking was the stuff of legend, had sought him out at such a
crucial time, Gillerman was a realist. "I believe she was aiming not just at
Jerusalem but Washington, as well," he said. "Maybe Israel could be influential
in convincing Washington to give her more support. I’m not sure. It was sort of
implied."
Later,
as her sense of imminent danger in Pakistan rose, perhaps Bhutto thought
Gillerman might even influence Washington to push Musharraf on her faltering
security. After her return there, "She sent us several e-mails in which she
expressed concern and worry about her safety," Gillerman related. "They were not
really specific, but she felt Musharrraf was not living up to his commitment to
assure her safety."
Gillerman conveyed Bhutto’s message to
"the people I thought should be aware of it." He declined to say who.
"Benazir’s Jew"
Meanwhile, Mark Siegel, a prominent
Democratic Party consultant and lobbyist — and White House liaison with the
Jewish community during the Jimmy Carter administration — was getting similar
messages. But her turn to him was less surprising.
"I was
the most prominent Jew close to her," said Siegel, who was Bhutto’s
representative in Washington. "Her opponents would refer to me as ‘Benazir’s
Jew’ — a
representative of the ‘Indo-Zionist lobby.’"
The two met in 1984,
shortly after Bhutto was allowed to leave Pakistan by an earlier military
dictator, Gen. Muhammad Zia ul-Haq. A close U.S. ally who funneled millions in
American aid to Afghan Muslim fundamentalists then fighting the Soviet Union’s
occupation of their country, Zia had deposed Bhutto’s father as prime minister
in a 1977 military coup. Despite worldwide appeals for him to grant Zulfikar Ali
Bhutto clemency, Zia executed him in 1979 after putting him on trial for
conspiracy to murder a political opponent. Benazir and other family members were
detained.
These were the dramatic events that set
Benazir Bhutto’s own drive to power into motion.
Bhutto redeemed that drive
in 1988, after Zia died in a mysterious airplane crash and his military
successors called elections that Bhutto returned to contest, and win, as head of
the center-left Pakistan People’s Party founded by her father. But in 1990,
after just 18 months as prime minister, she was dismissed from office by
Pakistan’s president on corruption charges for which she was never tried.
Elected prime minister again in 1993, she was dismissed again on corruption
allegations three years later. Reviews of her governance during these two
tenures are highly mixed. Zardari, her husband, was tried and convicted on
corruption charges and spent eight years in prison. Bhutto herself went into
exile in Dubai from 1998 until her return in October.
It was a return that saw
the Pakistani populist greeted by hundreds of thousands after her landing in
Karachi International Airport — and an attempt by two suicide bombers to kill
her enroute to the city that left 134 dead but Bhutto unhurt. In November, amid
protests from the country’s lawyers over his dismissal of most of the Supreme
Court when he thought they were set to rule against him, Musharraf effectively
declared martial law, and put Bhutto under house arrest when she announced her
intent to lead a rally against him. She was released the next day.
Urgent E-Mails
Born to wealth, daughter of
a major landowning family in a largely feudal society in Sindh Province, Bhutto
knew both prison and privilege. During the late 1970’s and early ‘80s, after a
stint at Oxford, she went to Radcliffe, where she grew close to Peter Galbraith,
son of the Harvard economist John Kenneth Galbraith and later himself a
prominent U.S. ambassador. This was how she came to know Siegel.
"I was asked by Peter to
throw her a dinner party" when she came to Washington after Zia released her,
Siegel recalled. "We invited members of the press, members of Congress. It was a
small, intimate dinner party. From then on, we were just extremely close."
The two
were in almost constant e-mail contact when she returned to Pakistan, Siegel
related. And on Oct. 26, in a message from her Blackberry titled "MOST URGENT
ATTENTION," Bhutto wrote Siegel:
Nothing will, God willing happen. Just wanted u to know if it does in addition
to the names in my letter to Musharaf of Oct 16th, I wld hold Musharaf
responsible. I have been made to feel insecure by his minions and there is no
way what is happening in terms of stopping me from taking private cars or using
tinted windows or giving jammers or four police mobiles to cover all sides cld
happen without him.
(Jammers
are electronic devices that block radio signals meant to set off Improvised
Explosive Devices or IEDs.)
Among
those to whom Siegel relayed this message, at her request, was CNN "Situation
Room" anchor Wolf Blitzer. On the day of her assassination, Blitzer read her
e-mail on the air, saying, "This is a story she wanted me to tell the world on
her behalf if she were killed." Siegel, he explained, had sworn him to silence
except in the event of her being killed.
Now, Siegel is rushing to press with a
book that is the result of his collaboration with her during these last few
months. Entitled, "Reconciliation: Islam, Democracy And The West," it is, in
effect, her last public testament.
"We’ve been working on this
under the most difficult conditions," he said. "Two assassinations, house
arrest, martial law. It must have been God who let us finish it. On 2 a.m. the
day she died, she sent me the final chapters."
Siegel said the book dealt with what she
saw as the "two central tensions of the new millennium: the tension between
democracy and dictatorship and between extremism and moderation. She was
determined to write about the Islam she knew."
Bhutto’s death hit Siegel hard, leaving
him struggling for words at one point during an interview. "We had our
discussions about Islam, Christianity and Judaism. We had the same sense of
humor. We were buddies. She was the most tolerant person I know."
Asked
if he ever brought her into his Jewish life, Siegel began, "She was at my
daughter’s bat mitzvah. Her husband came to my daughter’s wedding." He abruptly
stopped. "No. It’s too personal," he said.
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