JERUSALEM, Jan. 9, 2006

Doctors Trying To Rouse Sharon

Hospital Says Israeli Leader Begins To Breathe On His Own

  • Play CBS Video Video Sharon's Condition Improves

    Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's doctors said that although his life is still in danger, the results of a brain scan showed slight signs of improvement. David Hawkins reports.

  • Video Medically Induced Comas

    Both rescued West Virginia miner Randal McCloy Jr. and Israel's Ariel Sharon have had medically induced comas. CBS News' Tony Guida explains the procedure.

  • Video Sharon's Stroke Resonates

    Israelis and Palestinians have very mixed opinions of what effects Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's recent stroke will have on the Mideast peace process. Allen Pizzey surveys the scene around Israel.

    • Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon listens during a meeting at his office in Jerusalem, in this March 22, 2005 file photo

      Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon listens during a meeting at his office in Jerusalem, in this March 22, 2005 file photo  (AP)

    • Director of the Hadassah hospital, Dr. Shlomo Mor-Yosef, briefs the media about the condition of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon outside the hospital in Jerusalem Sunday Jan. 8. Doctors will start bringing Sharon out of his medically induced coma Monday, and a brain scan taken Sunday showed improvement, Mor-Yosef said.

      Director of the Hadassah hospital, Dr. Shlomo Mor-Yosef, briefs the media about the condition of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon outside the hospital in Jerusalem Sunday Jan. 8. Doctors will start bringing Sharon out of his medically induced coma Monday, and a brain scan taken Sunday showed improvement, Mor-Yosef said.  (AP)

    • Workers in Sharon's office embrace outside the hospital, Jan. 6, 2006.

      Workers in Sharon's office embrace outside the hospital, Jan. 6, 2006.  (AP)

    • An Israeli soldier prays at the Western Wall, Judaism's holiest site, after rabbis called on Israelis to pray for Sharon, Jan. 5, 2006.

      An Israeli soldier prays at the Western Wall, Judaism's holiest site, after rabbis called on Israelis to pray for Sharon, Jan. 5, 2006.  (AP)

    • Acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert sits next to Sharon's empty chair at a cabinet meeting, Jan. 5, 2006.

      Acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert sits next to Sharon's empty chair at a cabinet meeting, Jan. 5, 2006.  (AP)

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    Events, key players and a history of the world's most unstable region.

(CBS/AP)  If doctors determine that Sharon is permanently incapacitated, the Cabinet would meet immediately to choose a new prime minister from the five sitting Cabinet ministers from Sharon's Kadima Party who also are lawmakers.

Olmert is seen as Sharon's potential heir.

One of Sharon's surgeons, Dr. Jose Cohen, said that while the premier's chances of survival were high, his ability to think and reason would be impaired.

"He will not continue to be prime minister, but maybe he will be able to understand and to speak," the Argentina-born Cohen said in comments published Sunday by The Jerusalem Post.

Outside experts were even less optimistic.

"There is zero expectation on my part that he will have the capacity to perform in any kind of formal way," said Siller.

"We are basically hoping he survives and that he has some kind of ability to get some rehab so he can have some useful function again. But we are talking about the basics, we are talking very basic things. The complexity of this man, and what he did for a living, this is not to even be considered now. This is absolutely unrealistic at this time."

Israel's Cabinet met for its weekly gathering Sunday for the first time since Sharon's stroke.

Olmert sat next to Sharon's empty chair, the prime minister's untouched gavel rested in the middle of the table.

Olmert told the ministers that Sharon would want everyone to get back to work on the country's pressing security, social and economic issues.

"This we will continue to do," he said. "We will continue also to carry out the wishes of Sharon, to manage affairs as necessary."

The Cabinet meeting was Olmert's first formal opportunity to persuade Israelis and the world that the nation's affairs were in good hands and that he would pursue Sharon's political program.

Shimon Peres, the Labor Party elder statesman and Nobel Peace Prize laureate who abandoned his party to join Sharon in Kadima, dispelled rumors that he might return to his former party or challenge Olmert. Addressing a gathering in Jerusalem on Sunday, he said he "fully and faithfully" supports Olmert. Later, in a CNN interview, he called on his backers to vote for Kadima.

Speaking to reporters later, Olmert expressed hope Sharon would get better.

"I pray with all the people of Israel that my tenure as acting prime minister will be short, so soon enough we will be able to see again the leader of Israel," he said.

Before his collapse, Sharon appeared headed to a landslide victory in March 28 elections as head of his new centrist Kadima Party, formed in the wake of his withdrawal from Gaza this summer. Sharon was expected in a third term to try to draw Israel's permanent boundaries, evacuating small West Bank settlements while strengthening Israel's hold over larger ones.

But it is unclear whether Olmert or any other successor would have the popularity or charisma to carry out such a plan.

Sharon had been reluctant to resume long-stalled peace talks, saying the Palestinians were not a trustworthy partner.

In the West Bank, Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia wished Sharon a quick recovery and expressed hope for new peace talks.

"We are looking for a new era in which we can negotiate and be partners in a real peace that serves both peoples," he told his Cabinet.

©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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