Column
Friends of Israel fear the impact of a sale of American F-35s to the UAE. But Begin’s lost AWACS fight with Reagan teaches a lesson about seeing potential friends as enemies.
Over the past decade-and-a-half, he has taken some positions that have surprised and alarmed many friends of the Jewish state.
With fear of the virus at an all-time low, Israelis have been acting as though the only thing they have to worry about is coming up with convincing lies about why they’re not at home.
The former U.S. secretary of state said things about peace-making in the Middle East that he probably now wishes he could take back.
The friendship between the late justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Antonin Scalia provides a model for how all Americans should interact with political foes.
There’s already enough real Jew-hatred to condemn. Both parties need to stop trying to weaponize charges about alleged dog whistles that don’t amount to much.
A debut studio album in France by rapper Freeze Corleone is steeped in anti-Semitism, hatred of Israel, Holocaust denial, QAnon-style accusations of pedophilia against French politicians and constant references to the Rothschilds.
Hitherto suppressed truths are now being told in the Arab world in a way that was previously unthinkable.
Members of the Islamist bloc finance and direct the terror forces in Judea and Samaria, and in the Gaza Strip, and work in cooperation with their front groups in the West.
Only an administration staffed by amateurs who didn’t play by the rules could have orchestrated the Abraham Accords. Don’t expect the Democrats to build on this success.
The Abraham Accords underscore the failure at the core of the Oslo Accords: You cannot make peace with people who seek your destruction. You can only make peace with those who accept you.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s strategic adviser Aaron Klein tells JNS: “It’s clear the Mideast peace train has left the station, and we are ushering in a new era of peace between Israel and the other children of Abraham.”