Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs
How can the Iranian people of today create the free and democratic Iran of tomorrow? “Our Middle East: An Insider’s View” with host Dan Diker and guest Mohsen Sazegara, Ep. 23
“When Khameni dies, there’s no fixed structure for what the succession is,”John Bolton, the former U.S. national security adviser, said at the conference.
The former Trump-administration Middle East envoy helped broker the Abraham Accords.
The Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs and Ethiopian government think tank signed a Memorandum of Understanding at Jerusalem summit.
Supporters want to build a neighborhood for 3,412 families between Jerusalem and Ma’ale Adumim.
“The summit is particularly important when Iran and its Hezbollah terror proxy are subverting states across the region,” said Dan Diker, president of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs.
“The vast majority of black Americans are not anti-Semitic, not anti-Israel. But this doesn’t get talked about. The louder mouthpieces often are like Louis Farrakhan, who is talking about white people, Jews and Israel, and somehow, they are portrayed as the mouthpiece for the entire black community,” explains Pastor Dumisani Washington.
Lt. Col. (ret.) Michael Segall, a senior analyst at the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, tells JNS about Iranian intelligence-gathering and attack vessels active in the region.
Yossi Kuperwasser, director of the Project on Regional Middle East Developments at the JCPA, said the May 2021 riots “exposed the intensity of the hostility of some of the Arab population in Israel towards the prevailing order in the state and, in practice, showed their animosity towards Israel’s very existence as a Jewish and democratic state.”
Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs President Dore Gold says that besides the Iranian nuclear threat, the more probable danger comes from its proxies in the region.
What is becoming clear in a number of surveys, analyses and discussions is that the utility of the term “pro-Israel” U.S. Jews may be fading, replaced by a more issue-specific attitude.
New research highlights links between the “human rights groups” pushing for investigations against Israel and the U.S., and their links to the PFLP terrorist group.