
Acting Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert speaks at the opening rally for the Kadima Party election campaign in Jerusalem, January 31, 2006. The Kadima Party was founded by Ariel Sharon, who has been in a coma for over three weeks. Recent election polls show Kadima leading in the election race slated for March 28. (UPI Photo/Debbie Hill)
Ariel Sharon is the subject or is mentioned in the following stories:
Gaza: The Calm Before the Storm
The minor escalation of hostilities this past week between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip did manage to make some noise amid the epochal cacophony of the global financial crisis. The headlines in the international media, however, had less to do with the limited border skirmishes, rocket launches, air strikes, and border closures which transpired, than with the fact that the nearly five-month ceasefire between the Palestinian militant group and the Jewish state appeared to be unraveling.
Israeli Intelligence Warns of Settler Uprising
JERUSALEM -- Yuval Diskin, the head of Israels domestic intelligence agency, the Shin Bet, warned the Israeli government during an emergency cabinet meeting on Sunday that a violent uprising by extremist right-wing Israeli settlers is possible.
Who in Israel Will Break the Vicious Circle?
MOSCOW -- The election campaign began in Israel when its foreign minister, Tzipi Livni, elected the leader of the Kadima party last September, failed to form a government coalition supported by a majority of the Knesset, Israels parliament.
U.S. Raid Into Syria is Bad Timing
The raid by U.S. military helicopters on a Syrian village close to the Iraqi border that Damascus claimed killed several Syrians comes at a bad time for the U.S. administration of George W. Bush. Given the precariousness of the Middle East with the war in Iraq tying down U.S. forces, the conflict in Afghanistan gaining momentum, Israeli-Palestinian peace talks deadlocked, Iran defiantly pursuing its nuclear program, and Lebanons political situation uncertain with tens of thousands of Syrian troops camping on its border, the last thing Washington needs right now is to ignite another front.
Olmert's About Face
What do Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and former U.S. President Bill Clinton have in common? Not much one might guess, and this is generally true. But when one examines their careers closely one would be surprised that the two lame-duck leaders attempted in the few weeks before they left office to resolve once and for all the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.
Syria, Egypt Launch Surprise Attack on Israel, 35 Years Ago
Monday marks the 35th anniversary of the fourth Arab-Israeli major conflict, the 1973 October War — or, as it is known in Israel, the Yom Kippur War.
Olmert: Israel Should Pull Out From Occupied Lands
A statement by the retiring Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has provoked a shock reaction in Israel and restrained joy among Arabs. "I am saying what no previous Israeli leader has ever said: we should withdraw from almost all of the territories, including East Jerusalem and in the Golan Heights," Olmert said in an interview to the Yediot Ahronot on the eve of the Jewish New Year.
SPECIAL REPORT: Forget Palestine? Surely You Jest.
Okay. The Israeli-Palestinian peace talks are getting nowhere fast. Some experts are starting to say that maybe its time to look at the future of Palestine with a completely set of new lenses. The paradox in the comatose peace negotiations is that although the details calling for a two-state solution are generally accepted by all sides, a solution is not truly desired by either the Palestinians or the Israelis for various reasons. See the Sept. 15 issue of the Middle East Times
Livni the Dove May Turn into a Hawk
Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni has been elected the leader of the ruling Kadima party, beating her opponent, Transport Minister Shaul Mofaz, by a mere 2 percent.
Israel's Kadima to Choose Olmert's Successor
JERUSALEM -- A top peace negotiator and a hawkish former general battle it out on Wednesday in a party vote that could give Israel its next prime minister and determine the course of Middle East peace efforts.


