Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

World News

The latest international news, videos, analysis and opinions on politics, business, government, society, culture and more. JNS.org covers everything from breaking stories to in-depth reports on cities, countries and Jewish communities worldwide.

A spokesperson for Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei issued a veiled threat in Hebrew as rallies were held over record inflation in the Islamic Republic.
The program provides students with tools needed to confront antisemitism and misinformation when they return to their colleges.
In Israel, it is believed that as long as the Syrian leader attempts to wage a dual struggle against both ISIS and external actors such as Iran, his ability to achieve a decisive victory will remain limited.
“There were few individuals anywhere in the world who possessed the depth of knowledge and understanding of the Soviet Jewish community that Jerry did,” stated Mark Levin, of the National Coalition Supporting Eurasian Jewry.
“The big test for the U.S. now is to go to the Turks into the Qataris and say, ‘You’ve been blowing smoke at us, and Hamas is not cooperating,’” Edmund Fitton-Brown, a former U.K. envoy to Yemen, told JNS.
Some of the countries in question have “very polemicized attitudes to Jewish history and what’s going on at the moment,” a study researcher told JNS.
Blue and White Party head Gantz called for sanctions, diplomatic isolation, intelligence activity, sustained pressure and, if necessary, military action.
“We need to know why clear warning signs were ignored, how antisemitic hatred and Islamic extremism were allowed to grow,” families wrote the PM.
Senior officials in Washington believe there is a once-in-a-generation opportunity for moves that could pull the region in a better direction.
Naim Qassem said in a televised address that removing the Iranian terror proxy’s weapons is “not in Lebanon’s interests.”
The warning from the Iranian-backed Yemeni terrorist group came after Jerusalem recognized the self-declared Horn of Africa nation.
A drop in arrivals from Russia drove a 34% decline in total aliyah in 2025, while immigration from Western countries—led by France—more than doubled.