Column
The world body’s routine hypocrisy and prejudice—this time about attacks from Gaza—normalizes hate.
In lockstep with a refusal to acknowledge that Islamic religious fanaticism is Islamic, anti-Semitism is once more openly stalking Britain and Europe.
The only argument worth having now is between Zionists of all stripes—liberals as well as conservatives—and those who oppose the Jewish state’s existence.
An anti-Zionist group’s effort to use Jewish camps to undermine support for Israel poses a difficult challenge for a key American Jewish institution.
How sad that a long-established and respected organization, the American Jewish Committee, is knowingly perpetuating the dangerous myth that a Palestinian state could be demilitarized.
If a growing number of American Jews don’t see Israelis as part of their family, don’t blame Trump or Netanyahu.
Under the 2018 budget, authorized by the government in Ramallah two months ago, 1.2 billion shekels ($340 million) will go to terrorists convicted by Israeli courts and their families.
The best-case scenario is that the demolitions in Netiv Ha’avot will have little to no effect on Israel moving forward. In the worst-case scenario, the evacuations will drive peace further away.
Presidential contender’s videos boost Hamas terror organization and the Palestinian “right of return.”
Yossi Klein Halevi’s “Letters to My Palestinian Neighbor” is more important reading for American Jews than its intended audience.
Despite soccer headlines, the Philadelphia Orchestra’s tour of Israel gave a textbook example of how to defeat those who seek to intimidate friends of the Jewish state.
Jewish tradition acknowledges “realpolitik” national concerns as morally valid even as it warns of the dangers of ignoring individual morality.