Column
A conference shines needed light on how a U.S. “ally” not only does far more harm than good, but also reveals it to be a dangerous threat to the West.
His strategy is to turn the weapon of isolating Israel on its head by forging alliances wherever he can.
There is a case to be made for the activism of Jewish student groups that appeal to progressives. But not when they make common cause with anti-Semites.
It is par for the course that candidates’ claws come out before an election.
When extremes dominate and both despise the center, preserving a bipartisan consensus on the Jewish state gets that much harder.
Tom Brokaw was pilloried for urging immigrants to do a better job of assimilating. But he was right, and the success of the Jewish community is proof of it.
The correct observation that the situation in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn, N.Y., is an exception, and not the rule, for most American Jews shouldn’t lead us to complacency.
Jewish groups should be wary of diving into a new fight about abortion driven by a denial of science and morality.
Hassan Nasrallah is trying to “construct” a new policy of deterrence to cover up Israel’s revelation of the organization’s invasion tunnels.
Former IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gantz is the focus of the anti-Netanyahu camp’s hopes. But if he succeeds, the difference will be more about personality than policy.
Horrible as Riyadh’s behavior is, the Houthis are worse. Thus by ending support for the Saudi coalition, American would empower an even greater evil.
The Democratic Majority for Israel seeks to counter a rising tide of leftist attacks on the Jewish state. But does it speak for most Democrats?