Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Middle East

Jerusalem wants Amman to tone down its hostile rhetoric.
Peace with Riyadh? Definitely yes, but not at any price, and without creating false expectations like those kindled by the Abraham Accords.
Pro-Assad regime media reported that “three powerful explosions” rocked the Syrian city of Baniyas at dawn.
Tehran has reduced its stockpile of high-enriched uranium by 70 pounds in recent weeks, according to the IAEA • The Israeli Air Force has established a new department to focus on the Iranian threat.
The award was presented to the former president at Mar-a-Lago by Israel Heritage Foundation Executive Director Rabbi David Katz.
Nir Barkat told Majid bin Abdullah Al Qasabi that “Israel is interested in peace with countries that seek peace, and we can make history together.”
Citing “loose talk” about Iran possessing the components necessary for a nuclear weapon, the IAEA’s director-general called on Tehran to “please let me know what you have.”
Former U.S. Middle East envoy Jason Greenblatt speaks to JNS about the Biden administration’s approach to the Israel-Hamas war, Iran and the Abraham Accords.
Israel’s defense minister vows that every day the IDF continues to operate in Gaza brings the hostages closer to freedom.
“They felt that solving the Middle East’s water problem may lead to peace,” said Ellen Marcus of the infusion of money her parents gave to Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Beersheva.
The Arab foreign ministers are also slated to discuss rehabilitating the Strip after the war and further integrating Israel into the region.
Washington stated that the strike responds to Iran-backed militia attacks on U.S. forces in the region, including a drone strike that killed three soldiers in Jordan on Jan. 28.