Column
In adopting it, the world body became the main vehicle for the promotion of Jew-hatred, creating a bureaucratic apparatus designed to amplify the Arab and Palestinian campaign to eliminate Israel as a sovereign state.
The terrorists’ brazen post-ceasefire crackdown on rivals and dissidents mocks Trump’s promise to disarm them and shows they believe that they’re not going anywhere.
The Oct. 7 attack fired a starting gun for what the Islamists believed was the final push to destroy not only Israel but the West itself.
Their captivity corroded Israelis’ faith in their leaders and fractured the social contract between citizen and state. Even now, a lingering sense of abandonment persists.
The failure to decapitate the leadership of Hamas when the opportunity presented itself is one of modern Israel’s most devastating missed chances.
The “Bring Them Home, Now!” campaign was never really about the hostages. It was about ousting the prime minister.
Even as the terror group violates agreements and sows chaos, Israel remains focused on recovering its fallen and advancing the disarmament of Gaza.
Trump acknowledged Netanyahu’s courage, patriotism and greatness.
Reconciling religion and science; there really is no contradiction.
If Hamas won’t disarm or give up power in Gaza, will a president who is basking in the title of “peacemaker” or an exhausted Israeli public let the terrorists get away with it?
While the U.S. president deserves all the praise he gets, Israel’s prime minister deserves just as much, if not more.
A poll shows that liberals and those who think being Jewish is unimportant are more likely to believe Hamas propaganda that the mainstream press reports as facts.