Israeli Foreign Policy
52% of Israelis back military rule in Gaza, 64% oppose a Palestinian state, and most fear another Oct. 7 massacre, this time from Judea and Samaria.
“We will not allow military forces to move south of Damascus, and we will not allow harm to come to the Druze in Jabal al-Druze,” the prime minister said.
While the situation of Syria’s Druze community remains “dire,” the prime minister says civilian attempts to assist family over the border are dangerous and hamper the IDF’s efforts.
Protesters and port workers in Piraeus prevented a ship from unloading equipment allegedly bound for Israel, echoing similar protests last month and in October.
The Ethiopian community in Israel has 170,000-plus members, some of them at the forefront of Israeli society.
Large columns of Syrian regime forces rolled into Sweida amid violent clashes between Druze militias and forces loyal to the Sunni Islamist regime.
Ambassador Xiao Junzheng rejects claims that Iran is rearming with the help of Beijing.
“This is not a local conflict—it’s a global struggle between life and death, between light and darkness,” said Ambassador Axel Wahnish.
For the first time, a French tribunal awarded refugee status to a Gazan not recognized as one by the U.N. agency.
At least six people vandalized the newly opened eatery, leaving graffiti and a poster that read: “All IDF soldiers are war criminals.”
New Israeli military outposts on the Syrian border could help fend off attackers.
Antisemitic provocateur Grzegorz Braun also called the blood libel of “ritual murder” real.