http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/29/world/middleeast/obama-and-shimon-peres-fast-friends-who-found-peace-out-of-reach.html 2016-09-29 02:25:20 Obama and Shimon Peres: Fast Friends Who Found Peace Out of Reach They were an international odd couple with seemingly little in common when they first met, but somehow Barack Obama and Mr. Peres hit it off. === JERUSALEM — They were an international odd couple with seemingly little in common, a 40-something African-American born in Hawaii and an octogenarian Zionist born in a shtetl in Poland. But somehow When they met, Mr. Obama was still a junior senator on the rise, and Mr. Peres was in the twilight years of a storied career that spanned the lifetime of his nation. Mr. Obama asked for advice. Mr. Peres urged him to disregard the notion that the future was for the young. “Leave the future to me,” Mr. Peres said. “I have time.” Mr. Peres’s time ran out on Wednesday as he died at 93, two weeks after a stroke. Mr. Obama finds his own time running short, at least his time in the world’s most powerful office, and he is contemplating a second act, always a specialty of Mr. Peres’s. In the end, they had more in common than might have been imagined, two Nobel Peace laureates who found peace maddeningly out of reach. Mr. Obama’s response to Mr. Peres’s death on Wednesday was striking. He “I will always be grateful that I was able to call Shimon my friend,” Mr. Obama said in the statement. “Shimon,” he added, “was the essence of The American president was hardly the only world leader on Wednesday to pile on praise. Presidents, prime ministers and the pope all hailed Mr. Peres as a champion of peace. Many of them will also attend the funeral at Mount Herzl, the Israeli national cemetery, including heads of state or government from France, Canada and Germany. Joining Mr. Obama will be former President Bill Clinton, who hosted Mr. Peres, Yitzhak Rabin and Yasir Arafat in 1993 on the White House lawn for the signing of the Oslo peace accords. But admired as he was at home and abroad, Mr. Peres was seen as a more complicated figure among Mahmoud Abbas But leaders of “He is a criminal who committed massacres against the Palestinian people and justified wars in Gaza,” Hazem Qasem, a spokesman for Hamas, said by telephone. “He is one of the founding leaders of the Israeli occupation that caused the displacement of millions of Palestinians.” In a way, though, Mr. Peres was the Israeli leader Mr. Obama wished he had had as a partner. Never enamored of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Mr. Obama clearly would have had a better connection with Mr. Peres. “Peres was the last Israeli political leader who wholeheartedly believed in and advocated for a negotiated two-state solution between Israelis and Palestinians,” said Tamara Cofman Wittes, a former deputy assistant secretary of state for the Middle East under Mr. Obama. Even now, Mr. Obama is considering laying down his proposed parameters for peace after the November election, despite Mr. Netanyahu’s objections. For Mr. Obama, Mr. Peres’s death is an opportunity to prod Israel to fulfill its former leader’s legacy. “I can think of no greater tribute to his life than to renew our commitment to the peace that we know is possible,” Mr. Obama said. Some Israeli analysts said they expected Mr. Obama to use the occasion to make a new pitch for a peace settlement, but they doubted that Mr. Peres’s death would change the political dynamics. “Just by appearing here, he’ll probably want to make a speech that will mention the two-state solution,” said Zalman Shoval, a two-time Israeli ambassador to the United States and a member of Mr. Netanyahu’s Likud Party. “On whom will this have an impact is another question. On the Israeli public? I don’t think so. On the Palestinians? They have their own problems.” Mr. Obama does not harbor any illusions about making great progress in the few months he has left in office. “Obama doesn’t believe that peace is possible with the current leadership in Israel and the Palestinian Authority,” said Martin S. Indyk, his former Middle East special envoy. Instead, the idea would be to lay down a marker for the future Mr. Peres talked about. When Mr. Obama first met Mr. Peres, they traded notes on how dysfunctional each of their political systems really was. “They took an immediate liking to each other,” said Einat Wilf, then an adviser to Mr. Peres, who was at the meeting, “and had a sense that they both shared the same fundamental attitude of optimism, the belief in the ability of humans to shape their future through their own actions, and that the arc of history bends toward progress and justice.” After Mr. Obama’s inauguration in 2009, Mr. Peres made a point of visiting him at the White House before Mr. Netanyahu did. Three years later, Mr. Obama awarded Mr. Peres the Presidential Medal of Freedom and hosted a gala East Room dinner for him. A year later, Mr. Obama visited Israel and spent time with Mr. Peres again. “He had a special relationship with Obama, no question about it,” said Yehuda Ben Meir, a former Israeli deputy foreign minister now at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv. “Although they were totally different in background and personality, evidently there was some mutual admiration of each other and an understanding that each one was a special person.” Indeed, Mr. Peres was protective of Mr. Obama, who has been criticized fiercely in Israel for his handling of the Palestinian conflict and for his accord with Iran intended to curb its The regard went both ways. “A light has gone out, but the hope he gave us will burn forever,” Mr. Obama said. “