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Boaz Bismuth

Boaz Bismuth is editor in chief of Israel Hayom.

The most important thing to take from U.S. President Donald Trump’s peace plan is its spirit, which allows Israel to cement a new reality on the ground and reshape its border.
I have come to the realization that Trump is one of the most important presidents in U.S. history because he dares to defy political correctness.
It is a pity that, with such a sympathetic U.S. administration to work with, Israel can’t seem to muster up a stable government—and, it can be said, a stable nationalist government.
In an event that occurs perhaps once or twice a century, Emperor Naruhito of Japan formally declared his ascension to the Chrysanthemum Throne as the nation’s 126th emperor.
Jacques Chirac was loved by his supporters and hated by his opponents; an important world figure has left us.
The anti-Israeli voices on the fringes of U.S. politics are nothing more than a flash in the pan. Israel has always enjoyed bipartisan support.
Israeli elites on the left find it hard, even in 2019, to accept the fact that they have lost power; they cling to investigations and Israel’s imaginary racism to excuse their entrenched opposition to Benjamin Netanyahu. And how their hypocrisy has grown since the last election—all of a sudden, they miss Menachem Begin.
The people of Chad are proud that the prime minister of Israel visited their country and eager to see cooperation in the fields of agriculture and water technology. Because who knows better than Israel how to make a hostile desert environment bloom?
We have a very heated and unclear election campaign ahead of us. (Almost) nothing should surprise us. Let’s hope for a pleasant surprise, such as a merger between the old right and the New Right.
U.S. President Donald Trump proved that resolute ‎foreign policy pays off, and that when one has no ‎choice, one must exercise force because that is the ‎way of the world, and at times, the only way to earn ‎an adversary’s respect. ‎
On the eve of Passover, Lt. Gen. Gadi Eizenkot answers questions about Gaza, the Palestinians, security, regional stability, peace partners and the future of Israel.
Trump is the best thing to happen to Israel in recent years, after predictions that we had “lost America.” Between us, history will decide – not the studio pundits who miss the loud voice of former U.S. President Barack Obama. These are also the same analysts who explained that Trump wouldn’t win the 2016 election, and afterward explained with the utmost gravity that he would never recognize Jerusalem, and therefore never move the embassy.