he is well known within israel. there is no doubt that the israelis have a reason to be nervous about the long term, shall we say durability of the treaty, given the unpopularity of it, despite what we hear today from the military. interesting. michael? we were showing video earlier of a prodemocracy march that the police stopped. do you think leaders across the arab world are vulnerable to revolutions right now? if so, where do you think is the most ripe area in the region for an uprising like we saw? egypt? i think we have to keep in mind that each one of these countries has its own circumstances. for example, in the gulf states, i think that they have a very different style of governing in those countries compared to say egypt which enjoys more legitimacy i think you would have to look for the countries that are unpopular where the people are really sort of
they are helping clean up debris after the 18 days of demonstrations. prodemocracy activists have vowed to remain in that square until they see the agenda is i agreed to. how do you see this playing out and how long is it going to take to get there? that is really up to the egyptian people. you have seen some movements. first and foremost making sure that no previous or present members leave the county.
and in 1928, it s now led by mohamed badi. the movement brotherhood says it rejected violence decades ago. the main opposition figure is mohamed elbaradei. for his work, he won the nobel peace prize. he s seen as a prodemocracy reformer. despite death threats, elbaradei returned to egypt and is now under house arrest. a big following among egypt s extremists, experts say al zaw with ahari may make some comments regarding the protests. right now, we want to show you
or not this resolve can be broken during the next few hours. and we know some of the reasons behind it, that poverty, many of these protesters see corruption in government. they wanted more open issues, say, less autocratic government. but the president mubarak has ruled there for decades. and he has been a crucial u.s. ally. what is your concern in terms of the united states and the stability of the region and our relationship with hosni mubarak? it creates a unique dilemma for the united states. we continue to promote our ideals, which is prodemocracy, more openness, free press, etcetera. at the same time, we know we want to protect our interests. at the same time, president mubarak has been helpful. he has a peace agreement with israel. he s been very helpful in trying to block the flow of weapons
profreedom and prodemocracy. that was the big e movement of conservative in my time. i didn t agree with president kennedy on most things but when he cut taxes everyone gained from expanding economy. even the government. if i m elected, we ll do it again. not everybody became supply-side. we had criticism. i was called a witch doctor, and dangerous river boat gambler. that was just coming from republicans. reagan s main competitor, george w.h. bush, former congressman, c.i.a. director and u.n. ambassador hoped to steal the front runner mantle with surprise win in the iowa caucus. promising to cut taxes by 30%. balance budget, increase spending and stop inflation at the same time. it just isn t going to work. what i call a voodoo economic popsy policy. reagan did lose in iowa.