Here are two stories a tale of two leaders - the former a soldier the
latter a soldier - and both ended up running Israel.

Noted both went to the British Staff School at Camberly, and presumed
this must be like the War College in USA (my brother in law graduated
from this War College).

British Staff School - then consider Clinton went to Oxford, and these
Rhodes Scholars and Rhodes Round Table - tell me, when this bunch leaves
a place, do they leave anything of value?

Now Israel is more divided than the USA.....somehow the Rabin Americans
remember does not fit the profile of the man who died with a song of
peace in his pocket.

Saba

CUT THE AID TO ISRAEL AND STOP THE WARS  - then use the money to feed
the 9 million American kids who go to bed hungry at night.

What sickened me was this friendship of Rabin with Henry Kissinger -
the man who wants to corner market on food and water - America's Trojan
Horse?

First Story of Two Stories on Israel Leaders



Ariel Sharon
(1928 - )
Ariel Sharon was born at Kfar Malal in 1928. He joined the Haganah at
the age of 14 in 1942. During the 1948 War of Independence, he commanded
an infantry company in the Alexandroni Brigade. In 1953, he founded and
led the "101" special commando unit which carried out retaliatory
operations. Sharon was appointed commander of a Paratroop Corps in 1956
and fought in the Sinai Campaign. In 1957 he attended the Camberley
Staff College in Great Britain.

During 1958-62, Sharon served as Infantry Brigade Commander and then
Infantry School Commander, and attended Law School at Tel Aviv
University. He was appointed Head of the Northern Command Staff in 1964
and Head of the Army Training Department in 1966. He participated in the
1967 Six Day War as commander of an armored division. In 1969 he was
appointed Head of the Southern Command Staff. Sharon resigned from the
army in June 1972, but was recalled to active military service in the
1973 Yom Kippur War to command an armored division that crossed the Suez
Canal.

Ariel Sharon was elected to the Knesset in December 1973, but resigned a
year later, serving as Security Adviser to Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
(1975). He was elected to the Knesset in 1977 on the Shlomzion ticket.
Following the elections, he joined the Herut party and was appointed
Minister of Agriculture.
Sharon served as Minister of Defense from 1981-83, which position he
held during the War in Lebanon. He resigned after a government
commission found him indirectly responsible for the September 1992
massacre of Palestinians at the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps by
Lebanese Christians.

Sharon remained in the government as a minister without portfolio and
then served as Minister of Industry and Trade from 1984-90 and as
Minister of Housing and Construction from 1990-92. In the 13th Knesset,
he served on the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee.
Sharon served as Minister of National Infrastructure from July 1996-July
1999, and as Minister of Foreign Affairs from October

1998-July 1999.
Re-elected to the 15th Knesset in May 1999, he served as chairman of the
Likud following the resignation of Benjamin Netanyahu.
In a special election for Prime Minister in February 2001, Sharon
defeated incumbent Ehud Barak to become the 11th person to hold that
position.
Sharon is widowed and has two sons.

Source: Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs and JTA.

*****************************************************

In Memoriam
Yitzhak Rabin: Soldier Turned Peacemaker
by Marilyn Berger
New York Times
November 5, 1995

Yitzhak Rabin, the prime minister of Israel who was assassinated on
November 4, 1995 at age 73, was a soldier turned politician, statesman,
and peacemaker. He lad his country into uncahrted territory to make
peace with Palestinians and put an end to the wars and bloodshed and
terrorism that had plagued his country since its founding.

It was Rabin, the commander-in-chief of Israel's armed forces in 1967,
who had led the lightning strike that captured broad swaths of Arab
territories.

Then, 26 years later, on September 13, 1993, it was Prime Minister Rabin
who reluctantly extended his hand to Yasser Arafat, leader of the
Palestinian Liberation Organization, to put a symbolic seal of approval
on an accord that would lead to the return of much of that territory and
to the Palestinian self-rule on the Israeli-occupied West Bank and the
Gaza Strip.

In an unusual ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House, one that
few had ever expected to see in their lifetimes, Rabin came face-to-face
with the man who had been reviled for decades by the Israelis as the
mastermind behind one attack after another on their men, women and
children.

"The time for peace has come," Rabin declared. "We, the soldiers who
have returned from battles stained with blood, we who have seen our
relatives and friends killed before our eyes,.
. .we who have come from a land where parents bury their children, we
who have fought against you, the Palestinians---we say today in a loud
and clear voice: Enough of blood and tears. Enough."

He said Israel was not seeking revenge. It was seeking peace.

The tragedy was that some of Rabin's own people were seeking revenge. As
Rabin came closer and closer to achieving his goal of peace, a wide
schism opened within the Israeli populace. The bitterness of those
opposed to the peace ended with Rabin's assassination. Rabin became the
soldier who paid the ultimate price to make peace.

The decision to come to terms with the Palestinians meant more than
making peace with a mortal enemy.

As Rabin explained in a television interview shortly after the White
House ceremony, it represented a rededication to the concept of a Jewish
state.

He said it would be alien to the democratic tradition of the Jews to
keep people under subjugation; and it would be destructive to the
meaning of a Jewish state to absorb a large Arab minority and give full
voting rights to a group that could comprise as much as 35 percent of
the electorate.

For their part, the Palestinians were ready to deal. With the end of the
Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union, the PLO was deprived of
diplomatic, financial, and military support. At the same time, the PLO
was reeling from the loss of contributions from wealthy Arab states that
were angered by Arafat's support of Iraq during the 1991 Persian Gulf
War.
Rabin had been at the center of the major events in his nation's history
for five decades.

In 1948, he fought in the siege of Jerusalem during Israel's war of
independence. In 1967, as chief of staff of the Israeli army for the
three years before the Jun war, he brought to fighting strength the
formidable force that rolled over three arab armies in six days.

Later, as ambassador to the United States, he helped assure Israel a
steady supply of sophisticated weapons. In his first term as prime
minister he negotiated the critical---and lasting---disengagement of
Israeli and Egyptian forces in Sinai that paved the way for the Camp
David accords. And as defense minister in 1986 he presided over the
withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon although he continued to
respond with force to terrorist attacks.

As a boy growing up in Palestine, Rabin wanted to be an agronomist, and
attended the Kadoorie Agricultural School in Galilee where he won the
High Commissioner's Gold Medal as the best student in Palestine.

Like many patriotic young people of his time he gave up his childhood
ambition and joined the Palmach, the elite strike force of the Haganah,
saw action in World War II, and developed into a brilliant military
tactician.

He also developed into a politician. Israelis trusted him for this
single-minded devotion to the good of the country and he was repeatedly
asked to accept high government positions.

Rabin was born in Jerusalem on March 1, 1922. His father, Nehemiah, who
came from a poor family in Ukraine, escaped from czarist Russia and went
to Palestine by way of Chicago and St. Louis.

In Palestine, he became a trade union organizer in the labor movement of
David Ben-Gurion. His mother, Rosa Cohen, born to a well-to-do family in
Gomel, Russia, was active in politics and became the dominant influence
on the young man.

With his parents often away for long periods of time, Rabin remembered
that he became a "withdrawn, bashful child." He wrote in his memoirs: "I
did not show my feelings or share them with others." It was a trait he
carried with him all his life.

He was 7 when Arabs begain attacking Jewsih settlements. Later, during
the 1936 Arab riots and general strike, he was at the Khadouri school,
where he was trained in the use of arms by Yigal Allo, who was later to
become his commander and mentor.

Five years later, during World War II, Moshe Dayan, then a young
commander in the Haganah, invited Rabin to join the Palmach. As part of
the British invasion of Greater Syria which was in the hands of the Axis
powers, Rabin was sent across the border. He was the youngest in his
unit, and it was his job to climb up telephone poles to cut the wires so
the Vichy French forces could not call up reinforcements.

In June 1945, just after the end of the war in Europe, Rabin commanded a
daring raid to liberate about 200 illegal Jewish immigrants held by the
British in a camp at Athlit, on the Mediterranean just south of Haifa.

The exploit was said to be the prototype for a similar raid in the novel
"exodus," and Rabin the prototype for Ari Ben Canaan, the here, played
in the movie version by Paul Newman. The shy Rabin always insisted that
he was not the fictional Ari Ben Canaan.

Rabin was arrested by the British and interned for six months in a camp
in Gaza. Soon after he was released, the British turned the problem of
Palestine over to the United Nations, whcih, in 1947, voted for a
partition into a Jewish and an Arab state.

The Arabs attacked, and, as hostilities intensified between the Jews and
the Arabs, Allon, then the commander of the Palmach, appointed Rabin his
deputy.

During the 1948 Israeli war of independence, Rabin commanded the Har-El
Brigade, a makeshift unit that failed to take Jerusalem for Israel but
kept open the crucial supply lines between Jerusalem and the sea.

When Rabin disclosed in his 1979 memoir his role in forcing 50,000 Arab
civilians to leave their homes at gunpoint during the war of
independence, there was a furor in Israel, where officials had long
denied that Arab civilians were pushed out of their lands.

Upon publication of the book, Rabin's former commander, Allon, said he
had never given orders for what Rabin described as one of the most
difficult actions he ever undertook.
In the middle of the war, on August 23, 1948, Rabin married Leah
Schlossberg, who had joined the Palmach and served in his battalion.
They had two children, a son, Yuval, and a daughter, Dalia, and three
grandchildren. All survive him.

In 1953, having finally committed himself to a career in the army, Rabin
went to England to study at the British Staff College at Camberly.

Back home, he went on to hold a series of high posts in the Israeli
army, mainly involving manpower training, and was named chief-of-staff
in 1964.

He became Israel's top expert on military matters. With his formidable
memory he could recite budgets, the history of each unit, the name of
each officer, where a unit was posted, and where it would be posted. As
he rose through the ranks, he became known as the man who knew more than
the generals.

Eventually, he became a lieutenant general.
The army that gought the six-day war in 1967 was essentially Rabin's
army. Shab'tai Teveth, professor of history at Tel Aviv University,
said: "It was the army he trained, planned, built, and armed in his
three years as chief of staff." But, he added: "There his glory ends."

His "glory" ended when, on the eve of the fighting, Rabin had a nervous
collapse. A story was circulated that he had nicotine poisoning, but,
according to Zeev Schiff, the military editor of the newspaper Haaretz,
it was a breakdown.

In 1968, Rabin was appointed ambassador to the United States, where he
became known as an effective advocate for Israel and a master at
procuring American Phantom jets and other sophisticated material.

In his five years as ambassador he developed a close relationship with
Henry A. Kissinger, President Nixon's national security advisor and
later his secretary of state.

 Kissenger called on him for intelligence about troop movements in the
Middle East and even consulted him on Vietnam. On one occasion, he said
Rabin was the only general who was able to forecast precisely where the
forces of North Vietnam would strike.

Shortly after he returned to Israel in 1973, Rabin entered national
politics for the first time. Then, on Yom Kippur, while the country was
in the middle of an election campaign, Syria and Egypt launched a
surprise attack.

The country's leaders---Prime Minister Godla Meir and her minster of
defense, Dayan---were held responsible for the country's lack of
preparedness in that October war, but the Labor Party won enough votes
to form a new government. Rabin won in his first attempt at election and
was given the post of minister of labor.

Within a month of forming her Cabinet, Meir resigned and the party
turned to Rabin, who was out of power at the time of the war and
therefore untainted by the heavy casualties.
Rabin won a narrow majority in the party vote and in 1974, became
Israel's fifth prime minister, and, at 52, its youngest. "the time has
come," he said, "for the sons of the founders of the state to take over
their role."

During his term as prime minister, Rabin faced down terrorists who
hijacked an Air France plane en route from Tel Aviv to Paris.

At first, he was seen as vacillating and weak because he waited several
days before dispatching an assault group to Entebbe, Uganda, where the
plane and almost 100 Israeli citizens were being held hostage. When he
finally approved a military operation, and when the daring raid
succeeded, he was hailed as a hero.

In 1977 an Israeli newspaper disclosed that he and his wife had violated
currency laws by maintaining bank accounts in the United States after he
had returned home.

He was forced to step down, opening the way for the victory of Menachem
Begin and the Likud party. Rabin accepted responsibility for the bank
accounts which were used mainly by his wife, Leah.

The Rabin's paid a fine imposed by an Israeli court, but six months
after Rabin resigned, the currency regulations were rescinded.

Rabin returned to government as minister of defense in a Labor-Likud
national unity coalition that presided over the Israeli pullout from
Lebanon. His was the policy of the "iron fist," which promised swift
retaliantion for guerrilla raids against Israelis withdrawing from
southern Lebanon.
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