Joe Biden
The Israeli prime minister’s remarks come amid reports that the Biden administration is spearheading a new diplomatic effort to end the fighting.
The president “is beginning to acknowledge” that the chances of a Gaza ceasefire deal are fading, his aides say.
In his final address to the U.N. General Assembly, the U.S. president called on world leaders not to “flinch from the horrors of Oct. 7.”
An initial IDF probe found that 26-year-old Aysenur Eygi was “with high probability” struck by troops’ “indirect and unintended” gunfire.
Both candidates should say during Tuesday’s debate what they’d do to combat Jew-hatred, Nathan Diament, of the Orthodox Union, told JNS.
Sen. Chuck Grassley’s office released the whistleblower document, which no longer appears to be accessible on the Iowa Republican’s site.
“It’s clear they don’t want Hamas to win, but it’s also clear they don’t want it to lose,” the legal scholar told JNS.
Earlier on Monday, the Israeli prime minister said that he didn’t believe that Biden would seriously say that Israel must make new concessions in a deal with Hamas.
The U.S. president, vice president and key advisers met about “the Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal” in the Situation Room on Labor Day.
“I am devastated and outraged,” stated the U.S. president, who then called for a deal between Israel and Hamas.
“Biden’s rabbi” spoke to JNS in Chicago after he delivered the benediction at the Democratic National Convention.
“Evil only respects one thing: unyielding strength,” the former president says.