Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Latest News

Nine countries have participated: The UAE, Jordan, Egypt, Spain, France, Germany, Belgium, Canada and the Netherlands.
The elite Lebanese terror force for years trained to invade northern Israel and seize communities under a plan known as “Conquer the Galilee.”
“We have a crisis right now, and we need to pull every lever on the state level and the federal level,” Shira Goodman, vice president of advocacy for the ADL, told JNS.
“Germany is rewarding Hamas terrorism,” the Israeli premier’s office stated.
Rep. Brad Schneider called the decision “tactically questionable and strategically self-defeating.”
The “unique” plan is “a confident first step towards addressing what is a reemerging and longstanding prejudice,” Jason Miyares’s office told JNS.
A spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security told JNS that the suit is “baseless” and “political.”
“The credibility of Lebanon’s government rests on its ability to match a principle with practice,” the U.S. State Department said.
The family’s escape was a “true miracle,” the Chabad stated. “But they lost everything: their home, their belongings and the heart of their community.”
Daniel Mariaschin, CEO of B’nai B’rith International, told JNS that the university system president’s “bureaucratic statement is insufficient.”
“If we are asked to support, we of course stand ready at the president’s direction,” the U.S. Defense Department press secretary said.
The U.S. embassy and consulate in the United Arab Emirates stated that the warning also extends to “places of worship.”
Rory Lancman, of the Brandeis Center, told JNS that the decision is “significant” since it draws “some clear lines in the sand.”
“Axios” reported that “the only decision in the meeting was for both sides to de-escalate public attacks in the media against each other.”
Stephen Miran’s “expertise in the world of economics is unparalleled,” the U.S. president stated.
“The United States will not stay silent while our allies are targeted by hostile political agendas,” stated Rep. Claudia Tenney, who led the letter.
The two leaders also discussed efforts to deepen defense cooperation between the countries and other regional security issues.
Jerusalem’s decision to step up military operations makes it difficult for Germany to pursue its foreign policy priorities, Chancellor Merz said.
“I saw in his eyes that he was talking to us,” Itzik’s brother said.
“It stood for generations as a house of prayer, memory and sanctity, housing ancient scrolls and holy books,” said Chief Rabbi of Odessa Shlomo Bakst.