Peace is Possible: Conversations with Arab and Israeli Leaders from 1988 to the Present
Books / Hardcover
Books › Political Science › Peace
ISBN: 1557047022 / Publisher: Newmarket, March 2006
American businessman Abraham, in his capacity as the founder of the Center for Middle East Peace and Economic Cooperation, has traveled to the Middle East numerous times to meet with Israeli and Arab leaders since 1988, often in the company of the late Utah congressman Wayne Owens. Meeting with such figures as Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat, and Israeli Prime Ministers Binyamin Netanyah and Ehud Barak, among others, has convinced them that there is enough common ground to achieve peace in the Middle East. He finds the main impediment to peace to be the issue of borders and believes that eventually Israel will come to accept that it must limit itself to existing within its 1967 borders. Annotation ©2006 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
Read More
A first-hand personal account of American businessman and Slim Fast founder Danny Abraham's more than 15 years of peacemaking efforts in the Middle East and the reasons he believes peace is possible.For more than fifteen years, entrepreneur Danny Abraham, founder and former chairman of Slim Fast, chose to utilize his considerable resources to facilitate Mideast peace. Together with Utah Congressman Wayne Owens, Abraham made more than sixty trips to the Middle East between 1988 to 2002, meeting with Arab leaders Hosni Mubarak, Hafez Assad, Crown Prince Abdullah, and Yasser Arafat, and Israeli prime ministers Yitzhak Shamir, Yitzhak Rabin, Shimon Peres, Ehud Barak, and Ariel Sharon.Using his business experience with difficult negotiations, Abraham took an active behind-the-scenes role, setting up critical one-on-one meetings between key figures. He urged these leaders to articulate not what they wanted, but what they needed, to make peace, fostering significant advances in the peace process. Since Owens' untimely death in 2002, Abraham has continued to arrange peacemaking meetings on his own.Drawing from meeting transcripts, diary entries, and extensive handwritten notes, Abraham writes in the first person about these extraordinary, often private meetings, giving us rare "you are there" insight into historically significant events. In his pragmatic and hopeful book, he writes, "I am a great optimist, particularly about a region of the world that usually brings out people's most pessimistic inclinationsIsrael and its neighbors." Foreword by President Bill Clinton. 16 page color photo insert, maps, chronology, index.
Read Less