Column
Where there’s a will for a schism between Trump and Netanyahu, the latter’s detractors will find a way to fabricate one.
Shared democratic values bind Israel and the U.S., even as war, Hamas and Iran complicate Trump’s vision of peace in the Middle East.
With antisemitism surging on both the left and the right, the future remains uncertain. But the Trump-Netanyahu meeting is a reminder that the Jewish state is winning—and not alone.
In bolstering ourselves and our learning, we enhance each other.
History shows how quickly allies can turn into adversaries.
As I walk through the terminal, carrying the weight of the shiva along with my luggage, I suddenly understand the traditional Jewish condolence phrase: “May you be comforted among the mourners of Zion and Jerusalem.”
Following the arrest of nine members of a Hamas cell, Rome confronts the cost of tolerating their ideological warfare and antisemitic falsehoods.
The U.S. strikes on Islamists in Africa ordered by President Trump put into perspective the hypocrisy and double standards of Israel’s critics on the left and the right.
The silence of mainstream conservatives over the antisemitism in their midst is lethal for the Republicans and America.
Why be surprised when this particular candidate, whose political career has been based on an obsession with destroying Israel, hires scores of antisemites to staff his administration?
Over the years, the elite school in the northern Chicago suburbs has become a litmus test for the authoritarian state’s propaganda machine.
Vice President JD Vance had an opportunity to establish some boundaries at the Turning Point USA AmericaFest. He specifically chose not to.