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Anshel Pfeffer

ByAnshel Pfeffer, Anshel Pfeffer

Analysis

He's angry, then hugging Shakira: is Peres all right?

June 23, 2011 13:12
Peres with Shakira at his conference this week
1 min read

Shimon Peres is a president for all occasions. This week you could find him nuzzling Shakira on stage, conducting philosophical debates at his President's Conference and sounding dire warnings about the failure to revive the peace process.

It's almost as if he suffers from mood swings; one moment he is basking in international adoration, the next he fears being accused of "incessant undermining", as Yitzhak Rabin memorably described him in his autobiography many years ago.

Almost 88, Mr Peres is faced with the predicament of having to stay consensual and above daily politics, after over six decades in which he always spoke his mind. For the first four years of his seven-year presidential term, he stayed within the lines. Even acting as an ambassador around the world for his once bitter rival, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu. This week, he finally let his guard slip. Or maybe he felt that he had finally earned himself a brief moment of freedom of speech.

On Sunday he said in an interview with CNN that Israel has to get back to the negotiating table with the Palestinians. "It is very urgent," he said, "I think