Column
Daniel Pipes argues that Israel should worry about a Trump peace plan. But the odds are against Abbas or his successor mimicking Arafat’s Oslo deception.
Acts of violence and intimidation against Jews rooted in hatred of Israel are not free speech.
A new survey of Israeli Jews shows strong feelings of solidarity with the Diaspora, but little interest in listening to the views of American Jews. It should cause soul-searching in both communities.
Were he to suspend trade with Israel by imposing politically motivated sanctions, the consequences of such a vendetta for Turkey—for its currency, for foreign investor confidence, for its already frayed relations with the United States and Europe, and for the domestic livelihoods that have become reliant on the Israeli market—would be disastrous.
Pompeo’s speech reminded us of the goals for U.S. foreign policy that Obama abandoned and why they are not impossible to achieve.
If your staff circulates a propaganda video, and you don’t specifically disown and condemn it, then that constitutes a de facto endorsement.
Reported Trump blueprint gives the Palestinians another chance at an independent state, but the Israeli prime minister knows their answer will still be “no.”
Like the Yezidi and Christian minorities elsewhere in the Middle East, followers of the Baha’i faith have experienced horrendous persecution at the hands of Islamists—in their specific case, the Shi’a disciples of Ayatollah Khomeini who have ruled Iran since 1979.
Democrats’ grandstanding about violence without condemning Hamas highlights a disturbing partisan debate.
Why the refusal to acknowledge that Israel is the victim of Arab and Muslim exterminatory violence?
As soon as the Israelis stopped shooting, the mobs rushed forward . . . tens of thousands of Gazans streaming towards the border fence. Then hundreds of thousands.
Despite growing anti-Semitism and BDS propaganda, those who want the world to think that Israel is a “disaster” seem to be losing.