The Human Factor review – bearhugs and murder Bill Clinton’s Middle East peace deal in gripping detail

almost 3 years in The guardian

This rigorous and nailbiting documentary examines the US president’s failure to facilitate an agreement between Palestinians and Israelis in the 1990s
In the last days of his presidency Bill Clinton took a call from the Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak. “You are a great man,” Barak told him. Clinton replied angrily: “I’m not a great man. I’m a failure. And you made me a failure.” Dror Moreh’s gripping, intellectually vigorous documentary is the story of that failure: the collapse of the peace deal brokered by the US between the Palestinians and Israelis. It’s a blow-by-blow account in measured – but nailbiting – detail, told by the American diplomats in charge of the high-stakes negotiations. You could imagine John le Carré basing a character on one of these polite, ferociously bright people.
When Clinton took office in January 1993, the Middle East was not high on his agenda, but since secret talks were already under way he hopped aboard; in September that year the Oslo peace accords were signed at the White House. Negotiators ruefully remember wrangling with Yitzhak Rabin, the Israeli PM, to persuade him to shake hands with his sworn enemy, PLO leader Yasser Arafat. Rabin insisted that Arafat not have his gun; Arafat asked if he could wear a holster without the gun. Continue reading...

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