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Ehud Barak

 
Ehud Barak
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On April 1, 1991, Ehud Barak (born 1942) was elevated to the rank of lieutenant general, becoming Israel's 14th chief of staff, and, at the age of 49, also the youngest in the history of the Israel Defense Forces (I.D.F.). In 1995, following the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin, Ehud Barak was named Israel's Foreign Minister. He became the leader of Israel's Labor Party in 1997.

A list of Barak's numerous military postings and career promotions after joining the army in 1959 traces his steady rise to the top of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) chain of command. His immense contributions to Israeli national security were signified by the awarding of an itur limofet, the army's medal for distinguished combat service, plus four other citations for valor in secret operations, the details of which remain classified.

Ehud Barak was born in kibbutz Mishmar HaSharon in 1942. Soon after his IDF induction, when nearly 18, Ehud Barak was selected for the sayeret matkal elite special operations unit, going from platoon and company leader to its deputy commander and commander. During the 1967 Six Day War he commanded a mobile reconnaissance unit; in the 1969-1970 War of Attrition with Egypt along the Suez Canal he was in charge of an armored company; and during the 1973 Yom Kippur War he directed an armored battalion.

Meanwhile, Barak's secret exploits included leading a squad disguised as airport maintenance men that successfully stormed a Sabena airliner hijacked to Tel-Aviv in May 1972, safely rescuing 97 hostages. A month later, his special operations team reportedly captured five Syrian officers who were on an inspection tour in southern Lebanon. In spring 1973 Barak participated in the daring IDF raid into central Beirut that eliminated three Palestinian extremist leaders masterminding Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) terrorist activities against Israeli, Jewish, and European targets. In 1976 Barak took part in the celebrated Entebbe rescue, and he is believed to have planned the April 1988 assassination in Tunis of Abu Jihad, the PLO's operations chief.

In 1974 Barak was appointed head of the IDF's Tank Commanders Course, and in the next six years he rotated from command of a regular armored battalion, a regular armored brigade, a reserve division and, finally, a regular division. Moving from field posts, in 1980 he directed the IDF Battalion Commander Course and then served in various staff positions, including both the General Headquarters' Intelligence Branch and the Operations Department.

In grooming him for top command as a professional soldier, the army sponsored Barak's higher education. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem in 1968, majoring in both physics and mathematics, and in 1978 he received an advanced Master of Science degree from Stanford University in systems analysis. Known for his sharp intellect and analytical skill, Barak was also an accomplished classical pianist and weekend gardener at his home in Kochav Yair, north of Tel-Aviv, where he lived with his wife and three daughters.

Barak's career took another leap on January 1, 1982, when he was promoted to the rank of major general and appointed director of the General Headquarters Planning Branch. During the 1982 "Peace for Galilee" War he returned to a field command and was deputy leader of a formation that operated in the Beka'a Valley in eastern Lebanon. From there he went on to become chief of IDF military intelligence on April 15, 1983, a position he filled until January 19, 1986, and his appointment as commander of the Central Command. After a year in that position Barak, on May 7, 1987, was chosen deputy chief of staff under General Dan Shomron, succeeding him as chief of staff four years later.

Ehud Barak pledged himself to restructuring the IDF, sensing that under the combined impact of the 1973 Yom Kippur trauma, the prolonged Lebanese intervention, and the added burden of coping with the intifada uprising in the annexed West Bank territories and Gaza Strip, the Israeli military had become a less-effective fighting machine. Convinced the army had become simply too large, too cumbersome, and too costly, he set about to fashion a smaller, more disciplined, and more mobile IDF, yet one equipped with and trained in the use of sophisticated state-of-the-art weaponry and capable of conducting multiple missions.

This agenda involved Barak in a number of far-reaching issues and decisions. First was the need to formulate a longer range defense doctrine. Second, he needed to find ways of maximizing a shrinking defense budget. Next, in conjunction with the budget, he needed to adopt a weapons procurement policy that assured a supply of modern equipment on a cost-benefit basis while sustaining Israel's own indigenous military industries and weapons development program. In the fourth place he needed to strengthen a strategic relationship with the United States. Fifth and finally, it was necessary to help define the societal role of the IDF, which was traditionally regarded as the social equalizer in Israel, and whose changing manpower needs no longer could cope with the increasing numbers of 18-year-old young adults registering for military service. In the midst of preparing the Israeli army for possible war threats beyond the year 2000, General Barak was unexpectedly summoned to cope with the more immediate security implications of the September 1993 Israeli-Palestinian act of mutual recognition. According to the joint declaration of principles and timetable, Barak's IDF were called upon to effect a phased withdrawal from Gaza and Jericho, redeploying forces while continuing to assure the safety of Israeli settlers in the disputed territories as well as of Israel as a whole.

Even before his scheduled retirement from the military, Ehud Barak was already touted as a natural contender for high political office as a prospective defense minister, and possibly even future prime minister. He made the transition to civilian life in 1994 at age 52 after 35 years of military service. The young chief of staff was taken into confidence by the late Yitzhak Rabin, then Prime Minister, who became a mentor to Barak. When Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated In 1995, Barak was appointed to the post of Foreign Minister by Shimon Peres, Rabin's successor. In 1996 Peres failed at his bid for election to the post, losing to Binyamin Netanyahu. Barak was then chosen on June 3, 1997 to replace Peres as leader of Israel's Labour Party. Barak favors a separatist compromise in the disputed territories of Israel and Palestine. He maintains an optimistic stance that a lasting peace can be realized without the sacrifice of Palestinian independence, but insists that Israel must retain an amount of the territory sufficient to insure perpetual security. He is a formidable contender to become the next Prime Minister of Israel in the elections that are scheduled for the year 2000.

Further Reading

There is little information published in English about Barak, although he is listed in The International Who's Who, 1993-1994 (1993). Also see U.S. News & World Report, December 26, 1994; December 25, 1995; June 16, 1997, and The Economist, June 7, 1997.

Columbia Encyclopedia:

Ehud Barak

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Barak, Ehud (ā'khūd bäräk'), 1942-, Israeli military and political leader, prime minister of Israel (1999-). The son of East European immigrants in Palestine, he was born Ehud Brog, later adopting the Hebrew name Barak [lightning]. Barak began his military service in 1959, became a major general in 1982, and by 1991 had risen to become the youngest army chief of staff in Israeli history. Known for his bravery, Barak led two successful commando raids, one that stormed a hijacked Belgian airliner (1972), the other that destroyed a terrorist cell in Beirut (1976). As army head, he was instrumental in building a more streamlined and technologically advanced force. He retired in 1994 and that year joined the Labor party.

Barak began his political career (1995) as interior minister in the cabinet of Yitzhak Rabin, his military and political mentor, and was (1995-96) foreign minister under Shimon Peres. He assumed leadership of the Labor party in 1997, decisively defeated the Likud prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu in 1999, and formed a seven-party coalition government; three right-of-center parties pulled out of the government in 2000. Like Rabin, another soldier turned prime minister, Barak advocated a strong, peace-seeking, and inclusive Israel (under his leadership Labor was renamed the One Israel party) and avowed a willingness to make concessions to the Palestinians and to Arab states if necessary for peace and security.

After the breakdown of negotiations with the Palestinians and the resumption of violence (Sept., 2000), as well as the splintering of his coalition, Barak resigned (Dec., 2000) to force an early election for prime minister in an attempt to regain public support, but in Feb., 2001, he was soundly defeated by Likud candidate Ariel Sharon. After his electoral rout, Barak bowed out of politics. In 2007 he made a comeback when he won the leadership of the Labor party and became defense minister under Ehud Olmert, espousing more hard-line approach to Palestinian relations. Barak continued in the post in 2009 when a coalition led by Netanyahu and Likud took office, and in 2011 he split with more dovish members of the Labor party and formed the Independence party.

Bibliography

See biography by I. Kfir (1999).

1942 -

Professional soldier and Israeli politician, prime minister (1999 - 2001).

Ehud Barak, a distinguished and decorated professional soldier, will likely be remembered as the Israeli prime minister who failed in a dramatic attempt to reach a peace agreement with Yasir Arafat. Barak was born in 1942 and educated in a kibbutz. He joined the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) in 1959, became a professional soldier and rose quickly through the ranks, holding positions such as commander of the prestigious central commando unit - a position in which he personally distinguished himself in a number of audacious commando raids. One such operation was the rescue of passengers of a Sabena airliner that was hijacked at Lod Airport, in which Barak and ten other commando fighters penetrated the plane dressed as mechanics. Barak, disguised as an Arab woman, also led a squad to assassinate top-level Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) officials in Beirut.

During the October 1973 Arab - Israel War, Barak distinguished himself as a tank battalion commander on the Sinai front. In 1976 he was a member of the team that planned the Entebbe operation, in which the passengers of an Air France plane hijacked to Uganda were rescued and brought back to Israel.

In 1982, as chief of operations at the General Staff, he rose to the rank of major general. During the 1982 war in Lebanon, he was the deputy commander of an army corps fighting against the Syrians in the Biqa Valley. In 1983 he was appointed chief of military intelligence, and in 1986 he served as the commander of the Central Command in charge of the West Bank and the Jordanian front. In 1987 he became deputy chief, and in 1991 chief, of the General Staff, reaching the rank of lieutenant general.

During his military service he gained the highest number of any soldier of medals and citations for bravery and courage in battle, among them the highest Exemplary Medal. Twice during his service he was sent by the IDF to take up academic studies, earning a bachelor's degree in physics and mathematics from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and a master's degree in systems analysis from Stanford University in California.

As chief of staff he had reservations regarding the Oslo Accords but loyally implemented them and coordinated the military aspects of the first deployment of the PLO in the Gaza Strip and Jericho. He also participated in discussions with the Syrians led by Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and met twice with the Syrian chief of staff.

In 1995 Ehud Barak ended his term as chief of staff and brought to a close thirty-six years of service in the IDF. After the required "cooling-off period" of six months, he joined Rabin's government as minister of the interior. After the assassination of Rabin, Barak was elected in November 1996 to the 14th Knesset, after winning third place on the list in the Labor Party's primary elections. When Shimon Peres failed in his bid to be elected prime minister, Barak replaced him as the head of the Labor Party. For two years he led the opposition to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the Knesset and defeated him in the May 1999 elections by an impressive majority of 56 percent of the votes.

In July 1999 Barak became prime minister, heading a broad coalition. His first dramatic act was to order the final and total retreat of the IDF from the southern Lebanon "security zone," dismembering on this occasion the South Lebanese Army, which had been allied with the IDF. He also tried to arrive at an agreement with the Syrians but failed. He was ready to retreat only to the international border, and rejected the Syrian demand for a withdrawal to the lines of 4 June 1967, which would have permitted them to sit on the northeastern shore of the Sea of Galilee and to have some claim to its waters.

Barak then turned to the Palestinians and offered them the most far-reaching concessions ever offered by an Israeli prime minister. This included withdrawal from over 90 percent of the territories occupied in 1967, sovereignty over the Arab parts of Jerusalem, and recognition of a Palestinian state. But he rejected Palestinian sovereignty over the Temple Mount and was unyielding in his demand that the Palestinians publicly forgo the "right of return" of their refugees. While there is much dispute over the reasons for the collapse of the Camp David summit convened by U.S. president Bill Clinton in July 2000, Barak blamed Yasir Arafat for his refusal to accept his "generous" offer and to accede to Israel's conditions.

By late summer 2000, Barak's coalition was tottering and was given a death blow by the failure of Camp David and the outbreak of riots and other forms of violence that ushered in the second intifada (the al-Aqsa Intifada). Barak lost his majority in the Knesset and called for new elections, in which his party lost miserably to the Likud, led by Ariel Sharon. Barak resigned his position as Labor Party leader and also his Knesset seat. He began a new business career, but remained in the public eye, commenting frequently on issues of peace and security and leaving many with the feeling that Ehud Barak might one day return to politics.

Bibliography

Beilin, Yossi. Touching Peace: From the Oslo Accord to a FinalAgreement. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1999.

Enderlin, Charles. Shattered Dreams: The Failure of the PeaceProcess in the Middle East, 1995 - 2002, translated by Susan Fairfield. New York: Other Press, 2003.

— MORDECHAI BAR-ON

Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Ehud Barak

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Ehud Barak
Minister of Defense
Incumbent
Assumed office
March 28, 2007
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
Benjamin Netanyahu
Preceded by Amir Peretz
Prime Minister of Israel
In office
6 July 1999 – 7 March 2001
President Ezer Weizman
Moshe Katsav
Preceded by Benjamin Netanyahu
Succeeded by Ariel Sharon
Personal details
Born Ehud Brog
(1942-02-12) 12 February 1942 (age 70)
Mishmar HaSharon,
British Mandate of Palestine
Political party Labor Party (until 2011)
Independence (from 2011)
Spouse(s) Nava Cohen (divorced)
Nili Priel
Children 3
Alma mater Hebrew University
Stanford University
Profession Military officer
Religion Judaism
Signature
Military service
Service/branch Israeli Army
Years of service 1959 - 1995
Rank Lieutenant General
Battles/wars Yom Kippur War
Operation Entebbe

Ehud Barak (Hebrew:About this sound אהוד ברק ; born Ehud Brog on 12 February 1942) is an Israeli politician who served as Prime Minister from 1999 to 2001. He was leader of the Labor Party until January 2011[1] and holds the posts of Minister of Defense and Deputy Prime Minister in Binyamin Netanyahu's government.

He is a graduate in physics, mathematics, and economics from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Stanford University. He served as an officer in the Israel Defense Forces. Following a highly decorated career, he was appointed Chief of General Staff in 1991, serving until 1995.

Contents

Personal life

He was born on 12 February 1942 in kibbutz Mishmar HaSharon in Israel.[2] He is the eldest of four sons of Esther (née Godin) (b. 1913) and Yisrael Mendel Brog (1910-2002).

His paternal grandparents, Frieda and Reuven Brog, were murdered in Pušalotas (Pushelat) in the northern Lithuania (then ruled by Russian Empire) in 1912, leaving his father orphaned at the age of two. Barak's maternal grandparents, Elka and Shmuel Godin, died at the Treblinka extermination camp during the Holocaust.

Ehud hebraized his family name from "Brog" to "Barak" in 1972. It was during his military service that he met his future wife, Nava (née Cohen). They had three daughters together. Barak divorced Nava in August 2003. On 30 July 2007 Barak married Nili Priel in a small ceremony in his private residence. In his spare time, Barak enjoys reading works by writers such as Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.[3]

In 2005, he was voted the 61st-greatest Israeli of all time, in a poll by the Israeli news website Ynet to determine whom the general public considered the 200 Greatest Israelis.[4]

Education

Barak earned his bachelor's degree in physics and mathematics from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1968, and his master's degree in engineering-economic systems in 1978 from Stanford University, in California.

Military service

Barak joined the Israel Defense Forces (I.D.F.) in 1959. He served in the IDF for 35 years, rising to the position of Chief of the General Staff and the rank of Rav Aluf (Lieutenant-General), the highest in the Israeli military. During the Yom Kippur War, Barak commanded an improvised regiment of tanks which among other things, helped rescue paratrooper battalion 890 commanded by Yitzhak Mordechai who were suffering heavy losses in the Battle of the Chinese Farm.

Ehud Barak with Legion of Merit (1993)

During his service as a commando in the elite Sayeret Matkal, Barak led several highly acclaimed operations, such as: "Operation Isotope", the rescue mission to free the hostages onboard Sabena Flight 571 at Lod Airport in 1972; the 1973 covert mission Operation Spring of Youth in Beirut, in which he was disguised as a woman in order to assassinate members of the Palestine Liberation Organization; Barak was also a key architect of the June 1976 Operation Entebbe, another rescue mission to free the hostages of the Air France aircraft hijacked by terrorists and forced to land at the Entebbe Airport in Uganda. These highly acclaimed operations, along with Operation Bayonet led to the dismantling of Palestinian terrorist cell Black September. It has been alluded that Barak also masterminded the Tunis Raid on 16 April 1988, in which PLO leader Abu Jihad was assassinated.[5]

Later he served as head of Aman, the Military Intelligence Directorate (1983–85), head of Central Command (1986–87) and Deputy Chief of the General Staff (1987–91). He served as Chief of the General Staff between 1 April 1991 and 1 January 1995. During this period he implemented the first Oslo Accords and participated in the negotiations towards the Israel-Jordan Treaty of Peace.

Barak was awarded the Medal of Distinguished Service and four Chief of Staff citations (Tzalash HaRamatkal) for courage and operational excellence. These five decorations make him the most decorated soldier in Israeli history (jointly with close friend Nechemya Cohen).[6] In 1992 he was also awarded the Legion of Merit (Commander) by the United States.[7]

Political career

On 7 July 1995 Barak was appointed Minister of Internal Affairs by Yitzhak Rabin. When Shimon Peres formed a new government following Rabin's assassination in November 1995, Barak was made Minister of Foreign Affairs (1995–96). He was elected to the Knesset on the Labor Party list in 1996, and served as a member of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee. Following internal elections after Peres' defeat in the election for Prime Minister in 1996, Barak became the leader of the Labor Party.

Prime Minister of Israel

Barak at the Pentagon (1999)

In the 1999 Prime Ministerial election, Barak beat Binyamin Netanyahu by a wide margin. However, he sparked controversy by deciding to form a coalition with the ultra-Orthodox party Shas, who had won an unprecedented 17 seats in the 120-seat Knesset. Shas grudgingly agreed to Barak's terms that they eject their leader Aryeh Deri, a convicted felon, and enact reform to "clean up" in-party corruption. Consequentially, the left wing Meretz party quit the coalition after they failed to agree on the powers to be given to a Shas deputy minister in the Ministry of Education.

Ehud Barak shaking hands with Yassir Arafat, joined by President Clinton (1999)

In 1999 Barak gave a campaign promise to end Israel's 22-year long occupation of Southern Lebanon within a year. On 24 May 2000 Israel withdrew from Southern Lebanon. On 7 October, three Israeli soldiers were killed in a border raid by Hezbollah and their bodies were subsequently captured. The bodies of these soldiers, along with the living Elhanan Tenenbaum, were eventually exchanged for Lebanese captives in 2004.

The Barak government resumed peace negotiations with the PLO, stating that “Every attempt [by the State of Israel] to keep hold of this area [the West Bank and Gaza] as one political entity leads, necessarily, to either a nondemocratic or a non-Jewish state. Because if the Palestinians vote, then it is a binational state, and if they don’t vote it is an apartheid state.”[8] As part of these negotiations, Barak took part in the Camp David 2000 Summit which was meant finally to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict but failed. Barak also allowed Foreign Minister Shlomo Ben-Ami to attend the Taba Summit with the leadership of the Palestinian Authority, after his government had fallen.

Domestic issues

In August 1999, Barak appointed the Tal committee which dealt with the controversial issue of ultra-Orthodox Jews' exemption from military service. Riots in October 2000 led to the killing of twelve Israeli-Arabs and one Palestinian by Israel Police and one Jewish civilian by Israeli Arabs.

Resignation

In 2001 Barak called a special election for Prime Minister. In the contest, he was defeated by Likud leader Ariel Sharon, and subsequently resigned as Labor leader and from the Knesset. He left Israel to work as a senior advisor with United States-based Electronic Data Systems. He also partnered with a private equity company focused on "security-related" work.

Return to politics

In 2005, Barak announced his return to Israeli politics, and ran for leadership of the Labor Party in November. However, in light of his weak poll showings, Barak dropped out of the race early and declared his support for veteran statesman Shimon Peres. Following his failed attempt to maintain leadership of the Labor party, Barak became a partner of the investment company SCP Private Equity Partners, Pennsylvania. He also established a company "Ehud Barak Limited" which is thought to have made over NIS 30 million.[9]

After Peres lost the race to Amir Peretz and left the Labor party, Barak announced he would stay at the party, despite his shaky relationship with its newly elected leader. He declared, however, that he would not run for a spot on the Labor party's Knesset list for the March 2006 elections. Barak's attempt to return to a prominent role in Israel politics seemed to have failed. However, Peretz's hold on the Labor leadership proved unexpectedly shaky as he was badly damaged by negative views of his performance as Defense Minister during the 2006 Lebanon War, which was seen as something less than a success in Israel.[10]

In January 2007 Barak launched a bid to recapture the leadership of the Labor party in a letter acknowledging "mistakes" and "inexperience" during his tenure as Prime Minister.[11] In early March 2007, a poll of Labor Party primary voters put Barak ahead of all other opponents, including Peretz.[12] In the first round of voting, on 28 May 2007, he gained 39% of the votes, more than his two closest rivals, but not enough to win the election.[13]

As a result, Barak faced a runoff against the second-place finisher, Ami Ayalon, on 12 June 2007, which he won by a narrow margin.[14]

Barak has been critical of what he sees as racist sentiments that have recently been expressed by some Israeli rabbis and rebbetzins; he views such statements as a threat to Israeli unity and that they may lead Israeli society into a "dark and dangerous place".[15]

Defense Minister

Ehud Barak and Condoleezza Rice (2007)

As head of the Labor Party

After winning back the leadership of the Labor party, Barak was sworn in as Minister of Defense on 18 June 2007, as part of Prime Minister Olmert's cabinet reshuffle. However on 1 July 2007, Barak led a successful effort in the Labor central committee to stipulate that Labor would leave the government coalition if Olmert did not resign by September or October 2007. At that time the Winograd Commission would publish its final report on the performance of the Israel Defense Forces and its civilian leadership. The preliminary Winograd report released earlier this year laid most of the blame on Olmert for poorly planning, executing, and reviewing war strategies in the 2006 conflict against Hezbollah.[citation needed]

During December 2008 through January 2009, Barak led (as defense minister) Operation Cast Lead.

Labor won only 13 out of the 120 Knesset seats in the 2009 elections, making them the fourth largest party. Barak and other Labor officials initially stated they would not take part in the next government. However, over the objections of some in the Labor party, Barak later[when?] reached an agreement under which Labor joined the governing coalition. Barak retained his position as Defense Minister.

Leaving the Labor Party

In January 2011, Labor Party leader Barak formed a breakaway party, Independence, which enabled him to maintain his loyal Labor's MK faction within Netanyahu's government, and prevented the departure of Labor party as a whole from Netanyahu's coalition-government. Labor previously threatened to force Barak to do so. After Barak's move, Netanyahu was able to maintain a majority of 66 MK (out of 120 in the Knesset), previously having 74 MKs within his majority coalition.

In February 2011, Barak attended a ceremony at the UN for the International Day of Commemoration in memory of the victims of the Holocaust. Barak told the UN General Assembly: “an independent, strong, thriving and peaceful State of Israel is the vengeance of the dead. On this day, when we remember the six million victims, let us also remember two lessons: first, ‘the Holocaust – never again.’ And second – an independent, strong, thriving and peaceful State of Israel is the vengeance of the dead.”[16]

Barak stated during an American television interview that he would "probably" strive for nuclear weapons if he were in Iran’s position, adding "I don’t delude myself that they are doing it just because of Israel".[17] This comment has been criticized and compared to Barak's comment in 1998 during a television interview when he said that if he were a Palestinian he would probably have joined one of the terror organizations.[17]

References in popular culture

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitics/Article.aspx?id=203937
  2. ^ Biography and Video Interview of Ehud Barak at Academy of Achievement.
  3. ^ 'All my rivals are gone' By Gidi Weitz, Published 10:54 09.05.11
  4. ^ גיא בניוביץ' (20 June 1995). "הישראלי מספר 1: יצחק רבין – תרבות ובידור". Ynet. http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-3083171,00.html. Retrieved 10 July 2011. 
  5. ^ Long history of Israel's 'covert killing' BBC News
  6. ^ Offer Drori, גיבורי ישראל מרובי העיטורים – צדק היסטורי, 04.02.2009 (Hebrew)
  7. ^ An image of Barak receiving the award on 14 January 1993 in the Pentagon. Note that according to IDF regulations foreign medals are not worn on the uniform.
  8. ^ New York Times, 12 April 2012, "Don't Give Up on Middle East Peace," http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/13/opinion/dont-give-up-on-mideast-peace.html
  9. ^ Ehud Barak Ltd Haaretz
  10. ^ http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?newsid=MTA3OTE5NjI0NA==
  11. ^ Former Israeli PM Barak in New Leadership Bid Reuters, 7 January 2007
  12. ^ "Poll: Barak, Ayalon lead Peretz in the Labor leadership primaries" Haaretz, 3 March 2007
  13. ^ "Peretz loses Israeli party vote". BBC News. 3 January 2010. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/default.stm. Retrieved 30 May 2007. 
  14. ^ "Barak wins Labor Party primary election: party officials" International Herald Tribune, 12 June 2007
  15. ^ Mualem, Mazal (29 December 2010). "Barak: Anti-Arab letters by rabbis and rabbis’ wives leading Israel into dark place". Ha'aretz. http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/barak-anti-arab-letters-by-rabbis-and-rabbis-wives-leading-israel-into-dark-place-1.334093. Retrieved 1 January 2011. 
  16. ^ "Barak on Shoah: Strong Israel is vengeance of the dead". Jerusalem Post. http://www.jpost.com/JewishWorld/JewishNews/Article.aspx?id=207716. Retrieved 10 February 2011. 
  17. ^ a b Irish Times, 18 Nov. 2011, "Barak Criticised over Iran Comments," http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/world/2011/1118/1224307767384.html
  18. ^ Dargis, Manohla (23 December 2005). "An Action Film About the Need to Talk". The New York Times. http://movies.nytimes.com/2005/12/23/movies/23muni.html. Retrieved 18 January 2009. 

Bibliography

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Benjamin Netanyahu
Prime Minister of Israel
1999–2001
Succeeded by
Ariel Sharon
Party political offices
Preceded by
Shimon Peres
Leader of the Israeli Labor Party
1997–2001
Succeeded by
Benjamin Ben-Eliezer
Preceded by
Amir Peretz
Leader of the Israeli Labor Party
2007–11
Succeeded by
Shelly Yachimovich


 
 

 

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$copyright.smallImage.alttext Gale Encyclopedia of Biography. Gale Encyclopedia of Biography. © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2012, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
$copyright.smallImage.alttext Gale Encyclopedia of the Mideast & N. Africa. Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa. Copyright © 2004 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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