MOUNTAIN VIEW, California (AP) â" Israeli  Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made a swing  through the Silicon Valley to meet with high-tech  leaders and sign a pro-business agreement with  Gov. Jerry Brown.
  
  During a meeting  at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View,  the two emphasized their joint interests in  cybersecurity, energy sources and water  conservation, and suggested Israel â" an arid  country with a growing population â" might be  able to help California cope with its ongoing  drought.
  
  "California doesnt need to  have a water problem," Netanyahu said. "Israel has  no water problems because we are the number one  recyclers of waste water, we stop water leaks, we  use drip irrigation and desalination."
  
  Brown said he would welcome their ideas.
   
  "Israel has demonstrated how efficient a  country can be, and there is a great opportunity  for collaboration," Brown said.
  
   Wednesdays visit follows Netanyahus meetings with  President Barack Obama in Washington, D.C., on  Monday and his appearance Tuesday at the Los  Angeles premiere of a television documentary that  features him.
  
  This is the first  California visit from an Israeli prime minister  since 2006, and Netanyahu planned stops at  Stanford University, Apple Inc. in Cupertino, as  well as a meeting with WhatsApp co-founder Jan  Koum, a Jewish Ukrainian immigrant who sold his  company to Facebook Inc. for $19 billion last  month.
  
  The agreement the leaders  signed follows on several decades of commitments  from California and Israel to promote trade,  research and economic development.
  
   "The best brains in the world are in Silicon  Valley and Silicon Wadi," said Netanyahu,  referring to Israels tech startup region. And he  asked Brown to help get direct flights between San  Francisco and Tel Aviv.
  
  Netanyahu  also took a moment to talk about the reports  Wednesday of an interception of an Iranian arms  shipment to the terrorists in Gaza.
  
   He said the shipment would "rain death and  destruction on Israeli civilians and our  cities."
  
  "What this reveals is the  true face of Iran," he said. "This regime must not  be allowed to have nuclear weapons capability."
  
  He thanked Brown for divesting  Californias pensions from Iran.
  
   There are hundreds of Israeli firms working in  partnership with California companies, and in  Silicon Valley ties are particularly tight, with  more than 150 Israeli startups based there,  according to the consulate general of Israel in  Los Angeles. In addition, the California Israel  Chamber of Commerce has partnered with Facebook,  Oracle Corp., Microsoft Corp., eBay Inc.s PayPal  and others.
  
  Joint Venture Silicon  Valley President Russell Hancock said Silicon  Valley has become a mandatory stop for state  visitors; this year both the French and Haitian  prime ministers have toured tech giants in the  region. And he said the region has many interests  in common with Israel.
  
  "Israel is  particularly strong in cyber-security, which makes  sense given their strong military orientation, use  of unmanned air vehicles, and their national  security vulnerabilities," he said. "Security is  also a valley strength, and destined to be a big  growth area for us, so its natural for there to be  some convergence between us."
  
  On  Tuesday night, Netanyahu attended the premiere in  Los Angeles of "Israel: Royal Tour," the latest  show in a series that will air on public  television stations in which heads of state give  tours of their nations.
  
  "Am I at  the Oscars?" Netanyahu joked, drawing a laugh as  he spoke at Paramount Pictures studio to a group  of several hundred local dignitaries and  philanthropists.
Saturday, May 16, 2015
Netanyahu and California gov sign business pact
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