Three critical questions Obama needs to answer during his Israel trip: My op-ed for Fox News website

Here’s the first few paragraphs from the op-ed I wrote for Fox News:

(Washington, D.C.) — To say that the pundits have low expectations for President Obama’s trip to  Israel and Jordan this week would be putting it mildly. Most expect a series of  photo ops, but no serious progress on the three major issues: the Iran nuclear  threat, the implosion of Syria, and the moribund Israeli-Palestinian peace  process.

“It is hard for me to recall a less-anticipated trip to Israel by an American  president,” noted Thomas L. Friedman in his recent column in the New  York Times. “But there is a message in that empty bottle: Little is expected  from this trip — not only because little is possible, but because, from a narrow  U.S. point of view, little is necessary.”

Actually, much is necessary. The president needs to “re-set” U.S.-Israeli  relations in a positive way after a contentious relationship with Israeli Prime  Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the first term. But that is the just the  beginning.

There are three critical questions the president needs to answer on this  trip….

[To read my full column, please click here.]

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“Syria rebels, regime blame each other for first alleged chemical weapons attack”: Report

A girl in Syria wounded amdist the civil war.

A girl in Syria wounded amdist the civil war.

UPDATE: Israeli sources: Chemical weapons used in Syria (Jerusalem Post)

The eyes of the world are being drawn back to Syria today, with a growing sense that a great evil has been unleashed, or is about to be. The big question at the moment: Have chemical weapons been used today in Syria? There are disturbing reports emerging from that war-torn country that this might be the case, with as many as 25 people dead and dozens wounded.

“We have seen those reports, they haven’t yet been fully verified,” Britain’s U.N. Ambassador Mark Lyall Grant told reporters on his way into a U.N. Security Council meeting on Afghanistan. “But clearly if chemical weapons were used then that would be abhorrent and it would require a serious response from the international community,” he said.

White House Press Secretary Jay Carney says the U.S. is investigating the accusations, but has not seen verification that chemical weapons have been used.

“We have been very clear to the Assad regime, but also to other players on the ground, that a red line for us is we start seeing a whole bunch of chemical weapons moving around or being utilized — that would change my calculus,” President Obama said in August 2012. “That would change my equation. . . . We’re monitoring that situation very carefully. We have put together a range of contingency plans.”

Rep. Mike Rogers, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, warned just a few days ago in an op-ed in the Washington Post about the dangers of chemical weapons being used in Syria.

The implosion of Syria and its implications for regional security is an issue the President plans to discuss with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Jordanian King Abdullah this week on his trip to the epicenter.

>> Damascus Countdown: Are Syria, Iran and Israel headed for a catastrophic war using weapons of mass destruction?

Here are excerpts from some of the coverage coming out of Damascus and the region:

“Syrian state media accused rebels of firing a chemical weapon for the first time on Tuesday in the north of the country, killing at least 25 people in the war-torn Aleppo province,” reports CBS News and the Associated Press. “Rebels quickly denied the report and accused regime forces of firing a chemical weapon on a long-range missile. Neither of the accusations could immediately be verified, and a chemical weapons expert in the U.K. told CBSNews.com there was very little evidence to suggest any actual chemical weapons had been deployed. The Syrian state news agency SANA said ‘terrorists’ had fired a rocket ‘containing chemical materials’ into the area around the village of Khan al-Assal in the northern province of Aleppo. The regime regularly uses the term terrorists to refer to rebels fighting to overthrow authoritarian President Bashar Assad.”

“The rocket which was launched from Kafr Da’el in Neirab is a grave escalation,” Syrian information minister Omran al-Zubi said in a televised statement, according to the AP. “The terrorists used a weapon that is banned in accordance with international law.”

“‘The states which are arming, financing and housing the terrorists should be questioned about this crime,’ added al-Zubi. Syrian officials said at least 25 people, most of them civilians, were killed and dozens more wounded.”

“A Reuters photographer said victims he had visited in Aleppo hospitals were suffering breathing problems and that people had said they could smell chlorine after the attack,” Reuters reported. “‘I saw mostly women and children,’ said the photographer, who cannot be named for his own safety. He quoted victims at the University of Aleppo hospital and the al-Rajaa hospital as saying people were dying in the streets and in their houses….Syrian state TV aired footage of what it said were casualties of the attack arriving at one hospital in Aleppo. Men, women and children were rushed inside on stretchers as doctors inserted medical drips into their arms and oxygen tubes into their mouths. None had visible wounds to their bodies, but some interviewed said they had trouble breathing. An unidentified doctor interviewed on the channel said the attack was either ‘phosphorus or poison’ but did not elaborate. ‘The Free Syrian Army hit us with a rocket, we smelled something and then everyone got dizzy and fell down. People were falling to the ground,’ said a sobbing woman in a flowered veil, lying on a stretcher with a drip in her arm. A young girl on a stretcher wept as she said: ‘My chest closed up. I couldn’t talk. I couldn’t breathe…We saw people falling dead to the floor. My father fell, he fell and now we don’t know where he is. God curse them, I hope they die.’ A man in a green surgical mask, who said he had been helping to evacuate the casualties, said: ‘It was like a powder, and anyone who breathed it in fell to the ground.'”

Reuters reports that the Russian government is backing the Assad regime in its claim that the rebels have used chemical weapons. “A case of the use of chemical weapons by the armed opposition was recorded early in the morning of March 19 in Aleppo province,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said after President Bashar Assad’s government and rebels accused each other of launching a deadly chemical attack. “We are very seriously concerned by the fact that weapons of mass destruction are falling into the hands of the rebels, which further worsens the situation in Syria and elevates the confrontation in the country to a new level.”

Will Israel & Iran go to war in 2013? Exclusive interview w/fmr CIA Director Porter Goss

Interviewing former CIA Director Porter Goss.

Interviewing former CIA Director Porter Goss.

Why is President Barack Obama going to Israel this week for his first foreign trip of his second term?

White House officials say three critical issues top the President’s agenda: 1) preventing Iran from building nuclear weapons; 2) handling the implosion of Syria; and 3) jump-starting the moribund Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

That’s a tall order for a short trip — one that includes a stop in Jordan, as well — and the stakes could not be higher. Most Mideast analysts hold out little hope for a breakthrough on the peace talks on this trip. There also seems little the U.S. can do in the short term to significantly change the dynamic in tragic bloodbath underway in Syria. The big question hanging over this trip, therefore, is whether Israel and Iran are going to war in 2013 and whether President Obama is going to give Israeli officials the “green light” for preemptive military strikes on Iran’s nuclear sights.

Porter Goss served as the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency from 2004 to 2006. Previously, he had served as chairman of the House Intelligence Committee. I called him to get his insights into the President’s trip and the sobering nuclear showdown developing in the Middle East, and found his analysis fascinating and at times surprising.

Q: What are two or three things you’ll be watching for when President Obama makes his first state visit to Israel this month to meet with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu?

Former CIA Director Porter Goss: Hopefully, substance and sincerity. I’ll be looking at the chemistry between the President and Mr. Netanyahu. That’s very important, how they interact together. I don’t know if there will be a more cordial relationship than there has been over the past four years, but more trust is much needed. I’m concerned there has been a failure by the President to recognize how important our relationship is with Israel, especially given the growing threats in the region.

I’ll also be watching to see if the President makes real policy changes. The White House has a flawed concept that a “light footprint” works a lot better than what I’ll call an “assertive attention” by the U.S. in problem areas. “Leading from behind” is seen as diffident and disengaged. In Maghreb, in the Arabian Peninsula, throughout the Middle East, we’ve watched a steady spiral of instability grow into widespread violence in the last several years. The troublemakers in the region deride our efforts at diplomacy and exploit what they see as the tentativeness or weakness in our foreign resolve. They’re very accomplished at assessing our policies and determining whether we are strong and confident, or not.

So I’ll be looking to see if there any toughening by the President in his approach. And I’m not just talking about abandoning the bows to royalty in structured photo ops.  No nation has done more than the U.S. in making things better in the world, but the President seems to favor a policy of apology for the way we conduct ourselves.  His demeanor as commander in chief and his message as spokesman for American values have impact. A President is a mood setter. He sends global signals just by how he conducts himself, what he says and how he says it.

If he continues to tentatively tiptoe down the path he has been treading in world hotspots, we’re going to see more mischief-makers emboldened to make more trouble.

Also, the narrative during the election that al Qaeda was on the run is false. Yes, damage has been done to the core of Al Qaeda, but the franchise is growing vibrantly in North Africa, sub-Saharan Africa, the horn of Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. The presence of the Radicals has grown. Carnage abounds.

Q: How would you assess the President’s approach so far towards preventing Iran from building nuclear weapons?

Goss: The President’s approach to Iran is unrealistically hopeful. It involves unwarranted trust in Iran’s negotiators and insufficient muscle in our posture.  I don’t feel that he has the inner commitment to forcefully deal with the Iranian nuclear proliferation. Indications are that the Iranians believe they have the upper hand by waiting out the intermittent resolve of Washington.

The President keeps saying, “Let’s try another round of negotiations.” But the talks aren’t working. The sanctions aren’t sufficiently effective. And I haven’t seen a lot of evidence that President Obama has stacked his senior team in this second term with strong leaders on Iran. I’m a little worried about our Secretary of Defense and Secretary of State on this score. They apparently parallel the President’s position on Iran, which is to keep talking even when the talk is going nowhere.

Mr. Netanyahu’s view is a survival type position. He understands just how serious this problem is — and the brutal consequences of getting it wrong. I do not doubt his resolve to take action if he has to.

There is also little doubt the Iranian regime aims to get the Persian Bomb. That’s what they want. They are willing to pay a high price. [Iranian President Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad leaving [office this summer] won’t make a difference. The regime – led by the Ayatollah Khamenei – wants The Bomb. That’s what is so dangerous.

Now Khamenei leaving [office] is a different story, but an unlikely scenario. He is smart and calculating. If something should happen to him, I believe the situation would instantly destabilize — big trouble.

Q: How closely do you believe Iran and North Korea are working on the Bomb? Is Pyongyang essentially being paid by Iran to be a research & development lab to build operational nuclear warheads?

Goss: Hand in glove. Of course there is a relationship. The axis of evil is an old phrase, but an apt one. North Korea’s foreign currency is coming through arms proliferation. They’re in it for the money. Activity between Pyongyang and Tehran is nothing new.  It does seem evident that North Korea is testing nuclear devices for Iran; and that makes some degree of sense from Iran’s perspective. If Iran tested, it would clearly cause a problem for their current narrative about peaceful nuclear energy in the U.N.

There is little disagreement that some of Tehran’s missile system reveals familiarity with certain North Korean rocketry, but selling nuclear hardware and know how is not restricted to North Korea. The AQ Khan network in Pakistan has been publicly exposed as a global proliferator and there is still unaccounted for fissionable material from Russia somewhere out there.  Tehran can undoubtedly find a number of sources to purchase help for their program.

Q: Do you see a war between Israel and Iran in 2013?

Goss: I told you last year I didn’t think there would be a war in 2012, and that turned out to be right. I believe the Ayatollah is cautious enough about his own well-being that he does not want to disappear in a nuclear cloud or by a hit squad. He’s playing his cards very carefully. Iran’s nuclear capabilities are growing, to be sure. But I don’t think the regime in Tehran would use a first strike Persian Bomb at this stage, which includes 2013.

It is worth noting that Iran has scheduled elections during 2013. It is hard to imagine the results will lead to significant change. Survival is paramount for Israel; the triumph of the Twelfth Imam with a Persian Bomb overwhelms sound judgment in Tehran.

Q: I understand why you didn’t think there would be a war last year, but with the red line approaching and North Korea testing a nuclear warhead with Iranian scientists present, won’t Mr. Netanyahu believe he has to strike by summer or fall or risk losing his window of opportunity?

Goss: I think it boils down to this [Obama] administration not having the will or backbone to stand up for Israel unless the Iranians are actually nuking Tel Aviv. I assess the Iranians are not going to strike first unless they contrive some weird provocation that can withstand intense international scrutiny — highly unlikely because nobody trusts Tehran these days.

That gets us to Netanyahu. I do not think he can get first strike approval from this administration under almost any circumstance. Therefore, he has to calculate whether it is better for Israel to forsake US support by unilateral action, or whether in the long run Israel is better off with the USA as a constant ally. At this point, and thru the rest of 2013, I do not see a direct enough provable threat that Netanyahu can convincingly use. I do not think pre- empting a likely threat is enough to justify global approval for first strike in a hot war. This does not preclude taking other steps short of war to create disincentives and obstacles for the Tehran regime to ponder. And that’s what I would expect.

Bottom line: Goss does not see Israel launching a massive preemptive military strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities in 2013. Is he right? I hope so. I, like many Americans, are praying for the peace of Jerusalem. But with Iran so close to getting The Bomb, and North Korea apparently working “hand-in-glove” with the mullahs in Tehran, we may be in for a surprise this year, and a catastrophic one at that.

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Israel prepares to receive President Obama: Here’s the itinerary.

Official logo of the state visit, developed in Israel.

Official logo of the state visit, developed in Israel.

>> UPDATED NOTE: I’ll be in Austin on Friday for meetings, but I won’t be speaking at an event. However, I will be speaking at Green Acres Baptist Church in Tyler, Texas on Palm Sunday morning (March 24th). Then I’ll be discussing Bible prophecy, Mideast trends, and my new book, Damascus Countdown, during their Sunday evening service. Please join us if you can. Also, on Wednesday evening, March 27th, I’ll be speaking in Tucson. On Wednesday evening, April 3rd, I’ll be speaking on Sanibel Island, Florida. On April 6-7, I’ll be speaking in Naples. Would love to have you join us and love to say hi to you and sign your books. I’ll be posting other speaking events soon. In the meantime, please consider coming on The Joshua Fund’s “Prayer & Vision Tour” of Israel and the 2013 Epicenter Conference.  The tour will go from June 25 to July 7. The Epicenter Conference will take place on Friday, July 5th. We would be deeply honored to have you join us.

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Israelis are busy finalizing preparations to welcome Air Force One on Wednesday. President Obama will arrive with an entourage of some 500 Secret Service agents and others White House and State Department staff and advisors for a state visit that will last through Friday, when they head to Amman, Jordan.

Here’s some of the latest coverage of the preparations:

Man to watch as new Israeli government takes office: Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon. Here’s why. (Hint: he once called war with Iran “inevitable.”)

Interviewing Yaalon at the 2010 Epicenter Conference in Philadelphia.

Interviewing Yaalon at the 2010 Epicenter Conference in Philadelphia.

Members of Israel’s 33rd (modern) government took the oath of office in Jerusalem today. Below is a list of the key players. But after the Prime Minister himself, the man to watch is new Defense Minister Moshe (“Bogie”) Yaalon.

Those who have watched the Epicenter documentary film will recall that Yaalon told me that war with Iran is “inevitable.”

“The problem,” he said, “is a lack of clarity in the West. Actually, Western people are sleeping [to the threat of jihadist attack]….Only a few leaders understand it. And we need to wake up. We need an awakening. Otherwise, it will be too late.”

“The confrontation with this regime [in Iran] is inevitable,” Yaalon noted. “And it’s going to be a military one, rather than a political one, because of the lack of determination when it comes to the international community to deal with it with economic and political means. And we can’t avoid it.”

Those who attended the 2010 Epicenter Conference in Philadelphia will recall that Yaalon was our keynote speaker, and received three standing ovations. In his message, and in my interview with him following his remarks, Yaalon noted that a war between Israel and Iran may not be far off and warned Iranian leaders to choose “The Bomb” or “survival.” Yaalon said at the time that he agreed with the U.S. assessment that Iran is between one and three years away from acquiring a nuclear weapon. He said there was still time to stop Iran, but time was running out.

So who is Moshe Yaalon and why do his views matter so much? I don’t see Yaalon as eager to go to war, but he is ready if it’s necessary. Indeed, I believe he is the right man for this job at this time. Here is a quick snapshot of why he is now the man to watch:

  • Yaalon is a thoughtful, reserved, brilliant and principled man who would oversee Israel’s war(s) with Iran, Syria, Hezbollah and Hamas, should they be necessary.
  • A highly experienced and decorated officer and commander in the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF).
  • Served as head of military intelligence.
  • Served as IDF chief of staff under Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, but left office when he sharply disagreed with Sharon’s decision to unilaterally surrender the Gaza Strip.
  • A highly-trusted counselor to Netanyahu.
  • Served as Vice Prime Minister and Minister for Strategic Affairs in last government.
  • A hardliner against making hasty and unwise concessions to the Palestinian Authority.
  • While not opposed in principle to a preemptive strike against Iran, Yaalon has been a voice of caution to Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Ehud Barak about moving too fast, and moving without American support and coordination.
  • Here’s his official bio.
  • FYI: January 12th blog: “With elections fast approaching, will this man be Israel’s next Defense Minister?”

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THE NEW ISRAELI GOVERNMENT

  • Benjamin Netanyahu (Likud) – Prime Minister
  • Moshe Ya’alon (Likud) – Defense Minister
  • Avigdor Lieberman (Yisrael Beiteinu) – Foreign Minister-designate [Under indictment on corruption charges; cannot become Foreign Minister unless he is cleared of all charges, or convicted of lesser charges and not guilty of “moral turpitude.”]
  • Yair Lapid (Yesh Atid) – Finance Minister [see blog: “Who is Yair Lapid? And how did he suddenly become the 2nd most powerful man in Israel?”]
  • Gideon Sa’ar (Likud) – Interior Minister [a solid and widely respected leader within the Israeli political world, close confidante of Netanyahu, previously served as Education Minister; spoke at the 2008 Epicenter Conference in Jerusalem]
  • Shay Piron (Yesh Atid) – Education Minister
  • Naftali Bennett (Habayit Hayehudi) – Economy and Trade Minister [see blog: “Who is Naftali Bennett & why is his party climbing so fast in the polls?”]
  • Tzipi Livni (Hatnua) – Justice Minister
  • Yael German (Yesh Atid) – Health Minister
  • Yisrael Katz (Yisrael Beiteinu) – Transportation Minister
  • Gilad Erdan (Likud) – Communications and Home Front Defense Minister
  • Silvan Shalom (Likud) – Regional Development, Water and Energy Resources Minister
  • Uri Ariel (Habayit Hayehudi) – Housing Minister
  • Yuval Steinitz (Likud) – Minister for International, Intelligence and Strategic Affairs
  • Uri Orbach (Habayit Hayehudi) – Minister for Pensioners Affairs
  • Meir Cohen (Yesh Atid) – Welfare Minister
  • Yaakov Peri (Yesh Atid) – Science Minister
  • Amir Peretz (Hatnua) – Environmental Protection Minister
  • Sofa Landver (Yisrael Beiteinu) – Immigrant Absorption Minister
  • Uzi Landau (Yisrael Beiteinu) – Tourism Minister
  • Yair Shamir (Yisrael Beiteinu) – Agriculture Minister
  • Yitzhak Aharonovitch (Yisrael Beiteinu) – Internal Security Minister
  • Limor Livnat (Likud) – Culture and Sports Minister
  • Eli Ben-Dahan (Habayit Hayehudi) – Deputy Minister for Religious Affairs
  • Mickey Levy (Yesh Atid) – Deputy Welfare Minister
  • Danny Danon (Likud) – Deputy Defense Minister
  • Zeev Elkin (Likud) – Deputy Foreign Minister

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“Damascus Countdown” hits USA Today & Publishers Weekly best-seller lists

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This week, Damascus Countdown formally hits the New York Times hardcover fiction best-seller list at #7.

It also hits the Publishers Weekly list at #9.

And the USA Today list of all books — fiction and non-fiction, business and childrens’ books — at #22.

Thanks to everyone who is enjoying the book, Tweeting about it, telling their friends about it, and reviewing it on their blogs, Facebook, and various bookseller websites, including Amazon, Barnes & Noble.

Obama says Iran “year or so” away from nuclear bomb. Did he imply U.S. might hit Iran? Is it a credible threat?

US President Barack Obama being interviewed by Channel 2's Yonit Levy Photo: Courtesy US Embassy/Jerusalem Post

US President Barack Obama being interviewed by Channel 2’s Yonit Levy Photo: Courtesy US Embassy/Jerusalem Post

As his trip to Israel draws closer, President Obama gave an interview to Israeli Channel 2 news in which he spoke directly to the Iranian nuclear threat. He discussed how much time the world may have to prevent the mullahs from getting The Bomb.

One thing is clear: the President thinks there is still “a year or so” until Iran builds an operational nuclear bomb. By contrast, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu has said the “red line” will be reached by spring or summer, and both are coming up fast.

Some commentators believe the President implied in the interview the U.S. might hit Iran if other options fail. If he did, the real question is whether he is serious.

I‘m cautious, to say the least. After all, if Mr. Obama is serious about hitting Iran, why did he choose a Defense Secretary who once called such a strike a ridiculous “Alice in Wonderland” fantasyland? Why did the President pull a carrier battle group out of the Persian Gulf region?

I don’t want to be cynical. But at the moment, based on the President’s history, I’m skeptical that he will take decisive action. He was opposed to military force in Iraq. He’s been committed to removing U.S. forces from Iraq and Afghanistan. Do we really believe he is going to start a war with Iran? To the contrary, I’m concerned the President is more likely to miscalculate and wait too long. That is what Damascus Countdown is about: a novel in which a fictional President who waits too long and the Iranians get not just one nuclear warhead but a small arsenal. Then Israel decides it cannot wait any longer and launches a massive preemptive strike that sets the whole region aflame, against the President’s wishes.

The stakes are high for the President’s upcoming visit. It will be fascinating to see what unfolds.

>> Obama Sets Timeline on Iran Nuclear Bomb: Ahead of Israeli Visit, U.S. Leader  Says Tehran Is a Year or More Away from Atomic Weapon; Netanyahu Has Different View (Wall Street Journal)

“US believes that right now it would take Iran ‘over a year or so’ to develop a nuclear bomb if it decided to do so, US President Barack Obama said in an interview aired Thursday, six-days before his much anticipated trip to Israel,” reports the Jerusalem Post.

“In the White House interview with Channel 2’s Yonit Levy — Obama’s first shot at talking directly to the Israeli public, something widely acknowledged as one of the main purposes of his visit – the president said the US did not want to go down to the deadline with the Iranians,” noted the Post.

“Obviously we don’t want to cut it too close,” he said.

“Obama deflected the notion that part of his message to Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu will be to try and reign in any possible Israeli military action, saying ‘my message will be the same as before: If we can resolve this diplomatically, that is a more lasting solution; and if not, I continue to keep all options on the table….When I say all options are on the table, all options are on the table, and the US obviously has significant capabilities. Our goal is that Iran does not possess a nuclear weapon that could threaten Israel or trigger an arms race in the region that would be extremely dangerous.”

The Times of Israel is reporting that President Barack Obama implied in the interview “that should diplomatic efforts fail this year or early next year, America will be forced to carry out military action against Iran. Contrary to statements by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the moment of truth concerning Iran’s nuclear program was spring 2013, Obama said that the US estimates that Iran can produce a bomb only in about a year given its current rate of progress.”

>> Obama’s visit to Israel criticised as a ‘maintenance trip’ without peace plan: President’s three-day Middle East trip heavy on sight-seeing but will not involve any new drive for peace, White House confirms (The Guardian)

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New Pope known for warm relations with Jews. Shimon Peres offers invitation to visit Israel.

New Pope known for warm relations with the Jewish people.

New Pope known for warm relations with the Jewish people.

“Jorge Mario Bergoglio, the Argentinian cardinal who was elected pope late Wednesday and will take the name Francis I, is said to have a good relationship with Argentinian Jewsl,” reports the Jewish Telegraphic Agency and the Times of Israel. “Rabbi David Rosen, the director of interfaith affairs for the American Jewish Committee, told JTA that the new pope is a ‘warm and sweet and modest man’ known in Buenos Aires for doing his own cooking and personally answering his phone.”

“He also has worked with the Latin American Jewish Congress and held meetings with Jewish youth who participate in its New Generations program,” notes JTA. “‘The Latin American Jewish Congress has had a close relationship with Jorge Bergoglio for several years,’ Claudio Epelman, executive director of the Latin American Jewish Congress, told JTA. ‘We know his values and strengths. We have no doubt he will do a great job leading the Catholic Church.'”

Robert Tait, the Telegraph’s Middle East correspondent, reports that Shimon Peres, the Israeli president, in a meeting with leaders of the Polish Catholic church this morning, invited the new Pope to come to Israel: “I would like to take this opportunity to invite the newly elected Pope to pay a visit to the Holy Land at the earliest possibility,” Peres said .”He’ll be a welcome guest in the Holy Land, as a man of inspiration that can add to the attempt to bring peace in a stormy area. All people here, without exception, without difference of religion or nationality will welcome the newly elected Pope.”

Meanwhile, the Telegraph reports that “the office of Israel’s chief rabbinate today said it hoped Pope Francis would continue a ‘fruitful dialogue’ that had begun between it and the Vatican.”

“Over the past twelve years there has been a rich and fruitful dialogue between the Holy See and the Chief Rabbinate of Israel on primary issues such as banning terrorism in God’s Name, the sanctity of life, the sanctity of the family unit, etc,” the chief rabbinate said in a statement. “This dialogue has led to significant achievements over the years, such as Holy See’s decision to heed the Chief Rabbinate’s request and suspend Holocaust-denier Bishop Richard Williamson, and the modification of sections of the Good Friday liturgy that were harsh and insulting towards the Jewish People.

“It has been stated by the Holy See that Jews are the elder brothers, and even the parents, of Christian believers. Statements by the two previous Pontiffs have played a significant role in the fight against anti-Semitism in Europe and beyond. The Chief Rabbinate of Israel is confident that Pope Francis, whose good relations with the Jewish People are well known, will keep the same spirit, and strengthen and develop the Roman Catholic Church’s connections with the State of Israel and the Jewish People.”

>> See: New pope hopes for ‘renewed collaboration’ with Jews (Times of Israel)

>> See also: Peggy Noonan’s column about the new Pope: “Go and Repair My House” (Wall Street Journal)

“Damascus Countdown” to debut at #7 on New York Times list

NYT_home_bannerThanks so much to everyone who is enjoying the new novel, blogging about it, Tweeting about it, endorsing it, and reviewing it on Facebook, Amazon, BN, and in other places.

Thanks to all those who have interviewed me about the book and its parallels to real life. Thanks to all the brick & mortar bookstores, on-line and ebook retailers, and audio book retailers who have backed the novel so enthusiastically.

It was fun to find out last night that Damascus Countdown will hit the New York Times hardcover fiction best-seller list on March 24th at number seven. (the lists are printed in the Times several weeks after the initial numbers are compiled, which explains the delay).

My wife, Lynn, and I are very grateful for the enthusiastic response to this novel. We wish we could express our thanks personally to each of you individually, but for now I hope this will suffice. God bless you.

Breaking: New Israeli governnment coalition formed

Yair Lapid (left), Benjamin Netanyahu (center), and Naftali Bennett (right) appear to have formed new Israeli government.

Yair Lapid (left), Benjamin Netanyahu (center), and Naftali Bennett (right) appear to have formed new Israeli government.

“Six weeks of coalition talks drew toward a successful conclusion Wednesday evening, when the Likud finally conceded the Education Ministry to Yesh Atid’s Yair Lapid, and Lapid reportedly accepted the other terms of Likud’s compromise offer,” reports the Times of Israel. “Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was set to meet with Lapid, Jewish Home leader Naftali Bennett and former foreign minister Avigdor Liberman to confirm the terms.”

“’This government will be good for Israel,’ Bennett said Wednesday night. The necessary legal documents were to be drawn up and signed Thursday, leaving Netanyahu free to formally inform President Shimon Peres on Saturday night — the final day of the six weeks allocated to him — that he has mustered a Knesset majority. The coalition will comprise four parties: Likud-Beytenu (31 seats), Yesh Atid (19), Jewish Home (12) and Hatnua (6), for a total of 68 members in the 120-seat Knesset. The outgoing government is set to hold a final meeting on Sunday, and the new government will be sworn in Monday — some 48 hours before the scheduled arrival of Barack Obama on his first presidential visit.'”