Miriam Adelson’s “commitment to the security and unity of our people is more vital than ever during these challenging times,” said Elan Carr, CEO of the Israeli-American Council.
“We’re not seeing any indication that a large part of the Jewish community supports anti-Zionism,” Jonathan Schulman, of Jewish Majority, which conducted the survey, told JNS.
“I assume this is a different Zarah Sultana MP to the one who was recently filmed clapping along to loudspeaker chants for intifada, on a street in Surrey,” Rowling wrote.
“People shouldn’t think that, ‘Oh this is not going to happen to me,’” the 32-year-old Judaic studies teacher told JNS. “It can happen to anyone walking the streets, anyone with their groceries.”
Rare documents, letters and photos on display at the President’s Residence trace a century of engagement between the Chief Rabbinate and American presidents.
At the summit, Lt. Col. G., of the IDF’s Mountain Brigade, says: “Before Oct. 7, we didn’t operate here.” The next step, the Druze officer hopes, will be to annex his brethren across the Syrian border.
Professionals in tech, finance, real estate, law and beyond routinely navigate their careers without access to a network organized around shared identity or interest.
Miriam Adelson’s “commitment to the security and unity of our people is more vital than ever during these challenging times,” said Elan Carr, CEO of the Israeli-American Council.
“We’re not seeing any indication that a large part of the Jewish community supports anti-Zionism,” Jonathan Schulman, of Jewish Majority, which conducted the survey, told JNS.
“I assume this is a different Zarah Sultana MP to the one who was recently filmed clapping along to loudspeaker chants for intifada, on a street in Surrey,” Rowling wrote.
“People shouldn’t think that, ‘Oh this is not going to happen to me,’” the 32-year-old Judaic studies teacher told JNS. “It can happen to anyone walking the streets, anyone with their groceries.”
Rare documents, letters and photos on display at the President’s Residence trace a century of engagement between the Chief Rabbinate and American presidents.
At the summit, Lt. Col. G., of the IDF’s Mountain Brigade, says: “Before Oct. 7, we didn’t operate here.” The next step, the Druze officer hopes, will be to annex his brethren across the Syrian border.
Professionals in tech, finance, real estate, law and beyond routinely navigate their careers without access to a network organized around shared identity or interest.
The assassination of a senior IRGC officer in Damascus dealt a blow to Iran’s strategy of maintaining distance from the actions of its proxies in the region.
The answer is simple: The 2015 nuclear deal is good for Iran. But negotiations or no, Israel must prepare for the possibility it will have to defend itself.
The Middle East is doomed to remain brutal, repressive and culturally Islamist. Regional powers, including Israel, must come together to guarantee stability.
Israel-U.S. dialogue on Iran’s nuclear program is necessary, as a good agreement with Iran is a clear Israeli interest. But Israel must be prepared with a military option, as a last resort.
In the meantime, it doesn’t seem as though Iran—the driving force behind most of the friction in the Middle East—is changing its plans or abandoning its dreams, whether in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq or even Yemen.
Escalating tensions with Iran should be a warning that Tehran’s strategy of training and arming proxy terror groups throughout the Middle East is not being countered aggressively enough.
“Operation Northern Shield,” raises complicated questions about Israel’s initiative and willingness to enter a war to prevent the threat it sees growing.
The downing of a Russian plane by Syrian artillery after an Israeli airstrike proves how vital it is to maintain open lines of communications between Israel and Russia.