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F6

04/22/05 10:59 PM

#28007 RE: F6 #28002

Analysis: Putin heads to Israel

By Joshua Brilliant
UPI Israel Correspondent

Jerusalem, Israel, Apr. 22[, 2005] (UPI) -- Russian President Vladimir Putin is due in Israel next week and it is not clear why is he coming now and what the visit will produce.

Russian and Israeli diplomats say the visit as "historic." The visit will be the first time a Russian head of state visits the Middle East. Putin was in Israel in 1997 and 1998, before he became president.

He will be in Cairo next Tuesday and arrive in Israel Wednesday evening for a red carpet reception but no fanfare. Deputy Prime Minister Ehud Olmert will receive him at the airport. Thursday he will meet his official host President Moshe Katsav, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, and Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom. He will visit the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial, which has become a must for foreign dignitaries, meet Jewish Red Army World War II veterans, Russian Orthodox clergy, and visit the Russian Church in Gethsemane whose onion-shaped gilded tops will probably remind him of home.

On Friday, he will meet Palestinian Authority leaders, including President Mahmoud Abbas and leave in the area in the mid-afternoon, back in Moscow for the May Day celebrations.

As far as diplomatic niceties go, Putin accepted an invitation that Katsav extended when they met in Poland in January. Sharon who occasionally talks to him over the phone also invited him.

The Russians asked if a visit in April would be good. The Israelis said, "Yes," but it wasn't quite so. Next week the Jews are celebrating Passover and government officials have the week off. Now some of them can forget about spending that time on the beach.

In an interview to the Yediot Aharonot newspaper, published Friday, Sharon said he believed the Russians are eager "to become an empire once again."

People, especially in the West, are "not so well-versed on the subject of (Russian) national pride, the desire to return to an influential front line position," he told Israel Radio.

Russian-Israeli relations have fluctuated. Moscow helped the Jews get arms from Czechoslovakia and tip the scales during the 1948 Israel-Arab war. However, from 1955 to the mid-1970s, it strongly backed the Arabs. Russia threatened to attack Israel during the 1956 Sinai Campaign, as it did in the 1973 war when the United States kept it in check. Russian pilots flew sorties over Egypt and after they hit an Israeli Skyhawk, Israeli pilots ambushed them and downed five. There were no diplomatic relations for years.

"I am sure they have no intention to return to the Middle East in the way they have been involved then," Sharon said.

The spokesman for the Russian Embassy in Tel Aviv, Alexei Drobinin, maintained the visit is designed "to promote relations between the two countries, discuss the whole range of issues relating to the bilateral cooperation and the Middle East process."

There is no sign of a new Russian initiative, a senior Israeli Foreign Ministry official said.

"There is not even the beginning of a thought or a hint (of it)," he told United Press International.

Apparently U.S. and European diplomats are not aware of any such plan either.

Russia, along with the United States, the European Union and the United Nations, is a member of the Quartet that drafted the "road map" for peace that calls for reciprocal Israeli and Palestinian confidence building measures. Those should lead to the creation of an independent Palestinian state that would live in peace with Israel.

Amnon Sella, a professor of International Relations at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya, said he believed Putin's visit sends a message: "We're here. You can't ignore us."

"Usually visits are made when there are common interests ... I found no common interests. Sometimes one comes when there is a unilateral interest ... and when Putin invites himself, one cannot refuse, one should not refuse," Sella said.

There is no chance Israel would agree the Russians play a significant role in the core issues dividing it and the Palestinians.

"The prime minister never had an intention to let anyone, except the Americans, have a foothold in the political process," Haaretz newspaper noted.

In an interview in Moscow to Israel's Channel 1 TV this week, Putin said Russia intends to go ahead and sell Syria SA-18 anti-aircraft missiles. Then Israeli planes will no longer be able to create sonic booms over Syrian President Bashar Assad's palace in Latakiya as they had done several years ago to warn Syria against involvement in attacks on Israel.

Sharon tried to persuade Putin not to sell the missiles. A senior military source told UPI the army was mainly concerned those missiles would reach Palestinian militants in the West Bank who would use them against civilian airliners.

"Israel cannot oppose Russian arms sales to Arabs," Sharon acknowledged. "Everybody sells arms, Israel and the United States too."

However, he told Yediot Aharonot, he was concerned those missiles could reach Hezbollah or other terror organizations.

"Palestinian terror organizations have (already) managed to smuggle less advanced shoulder missiles," he old Israel Radio.

Sharon said he intended to raise the issue with Putin. The senior Foreign Ministry official said he believed "no deal is finalized until the missiles are there (meaning in Syria)."

Analyzing Putin's remarks in the TV interview, Sella said the Russian president signaled the deal is done, it does not threaten Israel and "consequently it is not a topic for deliberations."

The second issue that has been festering for years is Russia's help to Iran's nuclear program.

"Iran is making every effort to become a nuclear power," Sharon said and the senior Israel diplomat noted Iran openly calls for Israel's destruction. The Russians "understand" Israel's position but attempts to persuade them to cease assistance have failed, the diplomat noted.

On other matters, the going may be smoother. Both countries are concerned with the threat of terror and the head of Israel's National Security Council, Giora Eiland, has been to Russia twice. According to one report, Israel was advising Russia how to combat urban terror.

"It is natural the countries that suffer from terrorism talk to each other about terrorist issues. We talk to them about these issues as well," the senior Foreign Ministry official said.

Trade between the two countries had been increasing, fast. In 1997, six years after the two countries renewed diplomatic relations, bilateral trade (excluding fuel) totaled $390 million. Last year it reached $1.2 billion.

"That is more than Russia's trade with all the Arab sates together," the senior official noted.

Sharon intends to raise the issue of anti-Semitism following recent "harsh signs" of it in Russia, the prime minister said.

Russian Jews have been among Israel's founding fathers since the late 19th century when some could not identify with rising Russian nationalism and came to Palestine to express their own. Sharon's parents fled Soviet rebels in Georgia in 1922 and came to Palestine. Sharon speaks Russian.

He attended a Likud Party rally in Hadera Wednesday night and was introduced to the mayors of surrounding communities. "Yosefov," the announcer said.

"At last there is (someone from the) Caucasus here," Sharon quipped and the audience laughed.

Cultural ties are close. Some 1 million people emigrated from the former Russian-speaking countries in the last 15 years affecting the social and cultural character of the Jewish state.

Sharon said he believed Putin may "want to spread his wings over the people who left Russia ... and tighten ties with them." Sella doubted Israel would welcome that.

Some Israelis noted the Russian Orthodox Church will celebrating Easter next weekend. A visit to its church in Gethsemane on the eve of the holiday would be almost perfect timing, they suggested.

Copyright 2005 United Press International

http://washingtontimes.com/upi-breaking/20050422-090421-6505r.htm (emphasis added)
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F6

04/25/05 3:22 PM

#28080 RE: F6 #28002

(COMTEX) B: Rice Redefines Role As Secretary of State ( AP Online )

WASHINGTON, Apr 25, 2005 (AP Online via COMTEX) -- Condoleezza Rice skips
across time zones and consumes miles with the same gusto she applies on the
treadmill before the sun comes up.

Three months into her job as secretary of state, Rice has pretty much defined
herself as a tireless, stylish blur. She's been out of town the equivalent of
one month, her more than 73,000 miles in the air amounting to almost three
circles of the globe.

She walks fast, talks fast and packs her schedule, from her ritual exercise at
5:30 a.m. to phone calls late at night. She glides on the thin ice of diplomacy
in a whirl between continents, a former competitive skater who gave up the sport
because it was too solitary.

"The secretary's philosophy is there should be no wasted motion," said senior
adviser Jim Wilkinson, one of the aides who moved with Rice to the State
Department when she left the White House as President Bush's national security
adviser.

Her latest trip, which begins Monday, is another geography-defying workout, a
north-south-north-south zigzag to four South and Central American countries over
four days.

Following the immensely popular Colin Powell into the job, Rice quickly has
emerged as one of the most recognizable of Bush's senior circle and the only one
mentioned as a possible candidate for president. Rice has said she does not want
that job - NFL commissioner would be more to her taste - but not everyone buys
that.

A CNN-USA Today-Gallup poll put Rice's job approval at 61 percent, higher than
her boss's 50 percent rating. Still, she is well below the rating for Powell,
who was approved by about three-quarters of Americans late last year.

Whatever people think of Rice's diplomacy, they treat her as something of a rock
star. Everywhere she goes abroad, Rice occupies front-page real estate in the
local papers. At home, it is possible her clothes and hair are under closer
scrutiny than her job performance.

"I mean, that's the true issue that America has to face," Queen Latifah cracked
on public radio. "It ain't Iran. It ain't Iraq. It's Condoleezza and can she get
in my salon and can we really lay a hot comb to that head?"

The first black woman to be America's chief diplomat, the 50-year-old Rice seems
comfortable as the object of curiosity.

She was brave enough to stride through a U.S. Army base in Germany wearing a
long, high-necked coat and black stiletto boots.
She laughed off stares and
admiring comments when she wore a daring red ball gown to a staid Washington
dinner.

"I very often am asked questions about, 'Do you act differently because you are
a female or do you act differently because you are black?"' Rice told Korean
bloggers recently. "I always say to people, 'I'm a package. I'm black and I'm
female and me."'

Even before this week's trip, she had visited 21 countries on three continents.
All of the travel aside, whether she will end up as a consequential secretary of
state remains to be seen.

Rice is an academic by training and it shows.

She likes the give and take of a setting like the political science academy
Sciences Po in Paris, where she gave a speech in February. Centerpiece of a
fence-mending trip to Europe, the speech was mostly notable for its location - a
hotbed of French academic liberalism.

While breaking no new ground, Rice was charming and sharp in answering
questions, impressing scholars not easily swayed by U.S. arguments.

Rice manages to look perfectly put together almost always. Bobby pins keep that
modified 1960s flip hairdo in place.

A minor exception: her occasional appearance on her plane wearing a velour track
suit. But even that is a step above the polyester track suit Powell used to
wear, which appeared to be chain-store quality and Reagan-administration
vintage.

Rice even managed to look dignified, if startled, when a former Japanese sumo
star enveloped her in a bear hug on the tarmac in Tokyo.

She is deeply religious and says so. She said she has never missed a Palm Sunday
service and insisted on attending services in China last month - at a
state-approved church. She could have worshipped in South Korea instead and
still kept her perfect attendance record; doing so in China was a subtle poke at
the atheistic communist leaders.

On just one of her jam-packed days, in February, Rice started before dawn in
Jerusalem after a late-night dinner with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.
She went by heavily armed motorcade to the West Bank, on to Ramallah to meet
newly elected Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, then back to Jerusalem and on
to Rome, where she toured the Pantheon before the day was out.

Some in the crowd of paparazzi shouted "con dolcezza," the Italian musical term
from which her unusual first name is derived. It means to play "with sweetness."

---

On the Net:

A map of Rice's travels is available at:
http://wid.ap.org/series/insidewash/ricetravels.html

State Department background on Rice: http://www.state.gov/secretary/

By ANNE GEARAN
AP Diplomatic Writer

Copyright 2005 Associated Press, All rights reserved

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[F6 comment -- geez louise, what a completely ridiculous and outrageously full of it puff piece on dubya's always perfectly loyal and amoral little liar/workout partner/dominatrix (see emphasis above)/house-slave -- from AP, no less -- I'm not sure even Moon's UPI at its worst could (or would) stoop to match this truly embarrassing piece of utterly shameless and nonsensical propaganda . . .]