Difference between revisions of "Daniel Levy"
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[[Image:DanLevy.png|right|Daniel Levy]] | [[Image:DanLevy.png|right|Daniel Levy]] | ||
− | Daniel Levy is a former adviser to Ehud Barak (elected prime minister of Israel in 1999). ('' | + | Daniel Levy is a former adviser to Ehud Barak (elected prime minister of Israel in 1999). (''Not to be confused with the [[Daniel Levy (IDC)|Daniel Levy]] at the [[New School of Psychology]] at [[IDC Herzliya]]'') |
As a Senior Fellow at the [[New America Foundation]] and [[The Century Foundation]], he directs their respective Middle East Peace policy initiatives. A staunch proponent of Israeli withdrawal from the Occupied Palestinian Territories, he served as an official negotiator and as lead Israeli drafter of the informal Geneva Initiative peace plan<ref>[http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/daniel_levy/profile.html Guardian profile]</ref>. He is the son of New Labour fund-raiser [[Michael Levy]]. | As a Senior Fellow at the [[New America Foundation]] and [[The Century Foundation]], he directs their respective Middle East Peace policy initiatives. A staunch proponent of Israeli withdrawal from the Occupied Palestinian Territories, he served as an official negotiator and as lead Israeli drafter of the informal Geneva Initiative peace plan<ref>[http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/daniel_levy/profile.html Guardian profile]</ref>. He is the son of New Labour fund-raiser [[Michael Levy]]. |
Revision as of 06:01, 11 September 2009
Daniel Levy is a former adviser to Ehud Barak (elected prime minister of Israel in 1999). (Not to be confused with the Daniel Levy at the New School of Psychology at IDC Herzliya)
As a Senior Fellow at the New America Foundation and The Century Foundation, he directs their respective Middle East Peace policy initiatives. A staunch proponent of Israeli withdrawal from the Occupied Palestinian Territories, he served as an official negotiator and as lead Israeli drafter of the informal Geneva Initiative peace plan[1]. He is the son of New Labour fund-raiser Michael Levy.
In an important article published in the Israeli daily Haaretz in 2006, Levy became one of the most prominent names to endorse the thesis presented by John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt on the influence of the Israel Lobby over US foreign policy.[2][3] Levy has since signed on to J Street, a lobby group that aims to counter the American Israel Public Affairs Committee's (AIPAC) influence over US Congress.[4]
A few days after Tony Blair's appointment as the Quartet's Middle East peace envoy -- an appointment deemed inappropriate by many because of his role in the Iraq war and forestalling ceasefire during Israel's abortive invasion of Lebanon in 2006 -- it was revealed that Levy would join him as a secretary.
Affiliations
- New America Foundation – Senior Fellow; Director, Middle East Policy Initiative
- The Century Foundation
- Economic Cooperation Foundation (Tel Aviv) - Former Director
- International Crisis Group - Former Analyst
- J Street - member of Advisory Council
Resources
- Daniel Levy v Shmuel Rosner, The Intra-Israeli Mideast Peace Debate, Bloggingheads.tv, April 2008.
- New America Foundation biography (accessed 9 June 2007)
- List of Guardian (Comment is Free) articles
Notes
- ↑ Guardian profile
- ↑ Daniel Levy, So Pro-Israel It Hurts, Haaretz, 25 March 2006
- ↑ Daniel Levy, Deal With It, Haaretz, 7 October 2007
- ↑ Michael Brendan Dougherty, Turning on to J Street, The American Conservative, 19 May 2008