Certain benefits
A side effect of being the Fodor’s Jerusalem writer for hotels, restaurants, shopping and other fun activities — at least to me — is becoming a kind of reviewer. I say ‘kind of’ because with Fodor’s, I update details about a place, offer comments as to its amenities and services, but I’m not a reviewer per se. That said, places are included or left out of the guide based on my recommendations. Yes, power on a very, very small scale.
And there are also the perks. They don’t pay well, but in order to review a hotel or restaurant, you do need to pay a visit once in a while. See how the menu is faring, check out the rooms, and when necessary or possible, stay in said hotel. When you live in Jerusalem, it can feel strange to stay in a hotel that’s just five minutes from home. But that geographical proximity has its benefits as well. No long rides, a 24-hour vacation just minutes from home, and you get to spend all your time relaxing and very little time mapping and navigating.
So when Fodor’s recently asked me to pay another visit to the King David, nominated for its Grande Dame category, I thought, why not? Didn’t stay there last time, have never stayed there, but why turn down a great opportunity? Off we went, my husband and I, for a new version of the staycation in town. A five-minute ride brought us to the front door of the King David, and we then spent a great 21 hours inside the historic walls of this particular Jerusalem hotel. We learned a lot. For instance, did you know that they redid the pool and added a kind of jacuzzi section at one end? That there’s a new, young chef at the restaurant who is adding wasabi, beet and corn sorbets — delicious, really — to the dessert menu. And, that they recently added a 250-square-meter duplex room at the top of the hotel that includes a gym — looking to fend off the competition from the soon-to-be-completed Waldorf Astoria down the block?
But they’re pretty calm about the local competition, and get along quite well with the other hotels. They utilize each other’s space whenever there’s an overflow of regular guests and royalty or political leaders. The King David and American Colony Hotels, the only two Israeli hotels that are part of the Leading Hotels of the World club, let each other know when a LHW staffer in disguise is lurking around. And, bottom line, there’s nothing like sitting in the King David lobby, taking in the crowd around you. On our night there, U.S. envoy Dennis Ross was making notes on a sheaf of paper, while two ‘shidduch’ couples were drinking OJs and several families of tourists gathered to review their day.
And on my way out the door, as I was heading to take a bus home, I bumped into U.S. Ambassador Dan Shapiro, as he and his crew drove up in their big black Chevrolets. Only at the King David.
The next prime minister of Israel – Dennis Ross?

Ross - Ammunition both for and against Bibi
With the major parties – Kadima and Likud – frothing at the bit after being held up due to the the ‘national unity’ displayed during the war in Gaza, they’re now finally unleashing the campaigns that their spin doctors and media specialists have been cooking up these last few weeks.
And, strangely enough, they’re using some of the same strategy, courtesy of a one-time aide to Bill Clinton who is set to make a comeback under President Barack Obama – Dennis Ross. The former Middle East negotiator, who’s expected to be appointed as US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s point man on Iran, was up to his elbows in the Israel-Palestinian issue during the 1990s and he knew all the players involved.
That’s why both Kadima and Likud are planning to use quotes from Ross’s published memoirs to both praise and bury Likud leader Bibi Netanyahu, according to Gil Hoffman writing in The Jerusalem Post.
“Bibi rarely seemed to know how to act on his ideas – how to present them, to whom, and even when to do so,” Ross wrote about Netanyahu in a quote from his book, The Missing Peace, that was distributed by Kadima. “Translating an idea into action seemed beyond his grasp. It was not lack of intelligence… it was the lack of judgment… but there was something more: Often he would come up with ideas simply to get himself out of a jam.”
The Likud, by contrast, focused on Ross quotes that were policy-oriented and not personal. They distributed interviews with Ross and articles he wrote in which he regretted not insisting upon reciprocity with the Palestinians as Netanyahu had advised him.
“Rather than trying to resolve issues like Jerusalem and refugees, we would have focused on expanding the scope of Palestinian independence from Israeli control, developing and investing in the Palestinian economy, and expanding the connections between the Israeli and Palestinian societies,” Ross wrote in The Wall Street Journal in June 2007, sounding very much like Netanyahu’s current “economic peace” diplomatic plan.
How the new prime minister of Israel will work with the Obama administration is playing a big role in the election propoganda.
Likud officials said they hoped Kadima would continue to portray Netanyahu as someone who would have a difficult relationship with the Obama administration, because they believe this would help Netanyahu win more support among the public. Both Kadima and Labor have already started warning that Netanyahu would have an adversarial relationship with Obama, according to Hoffman.
“Whoever thinks that it will be easy for Israel with Netanyahu as prime minister is wrong,” Welfare and Social Services Minister Isaac Herzog told Army Radio on Friday. “It will be hard because it seems that Netanyahu’s policies will be in direct contrast with those of Obama.”
So while Americans can now relax in the knowledge that the election is over and Obama is firmly ensconced in the White House, here in Israel, the charismatic leader is still smack in the middle of the election campaign.











