Clinton says Rabin killing torpedoed Mideast peaceFormer US president Bill Clinton on Saturday said he believes there would have been a comprehensive peace in the Middle East a decade ago if Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin not been assassinated. "In the last 14 years, not a single week has gone by where I do not think of Yitzhak and miss him terribly," Clinton said ahead of the opening of a museum and centre in Tel Aviv Tel Aviv (tĕl əvēv`), city (1994 pop. 355,200), W central Israel, on the Mediterranean Sea. Oficially named Tel Aviv–Jaffa, it is Israel's commercial, financial, communications, and cultural center and the core of its largest dedicated to Rabin. "Nor has a single week gone by when I have not reaffirmed my conviction that had he not lost his life on that terrible November night, within three years we would have had a comprehensive agreement for peace in the Middle East." Rabin was shot dead on November 4, 1995 by a Jewish extremist opposed to a peace deal with the Palestinians. Clinton's comments come as the peace process begun by Rabin, Clinton and the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat lies in tatters tat·ter 1 n. 1. A torn and hanging piece of cloth; a shred. 2. tatters Torn and ragged clothing; rags. tr. & intr.v. amid so far fruitless fruit·less adj. 1. Producing no fruit. 2. Unproductive of success: a fruitless search. See Synonyms at futile. efforts by US President Barack Obama to get both sides back to the negotiating table. He urged Israelis and Palestinians to put aside the wrongs of the past for the good of the future, calling on them to learn from the "wisdom" of Rabin's life. Rabin is revered as a national hero in Israel, both for his legendary career as army chief and for peace efforts in the 1990s that earned him a Nobel peace prize The Nobel Peace Prize (Swedish and Norwegian: Nobels fredspris) is the name of one of five Nobel Prizes bequeathed by the Swedish industrialist and inventor Alfred Nobel. shared with Arafat and current Israeli President Shimon Peres.
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