Column
The time has come to penalize the Palestinian Authority for its rewarding and incentivizing of terrorism.
It is not possible to separate Abbas’s grotesque views about supposed Jewish culpability for the Holocaust from his equally grotesque views about the origins of the State of Israel.
Israeli left-wingers want U.S. Jews to rebuff Netanyahu. But what they need to do is to win an election, not depend on Americans to fight their battles for them.
Just like when Arafat died, finding a new Palestinian Authority leader isn’t the issue. It’s a sea change in their political culture that’s needed for peace to become possible.
The Iranians now know that, in obtaining this most closely guarded information, the Mossad penetrated the innermost sanctums of the Iranian security apparatus.
While Israel’s critics think that the Gaza situation will prove to be Israel’s undoing, it’s much more likely that Gaza will lead to yet another stinging defeat for the J Street crowd.
Abbas spews anti-Semitism, while Hamas seeks a violent “return.” So why do so many American Jews still blame the lack of peace on Israel?
Netanyahu’s presentation isn’t old news. Tehran’s con job on Obama explains why the Iran deal’s sunset clauses are an invitation to disaster.
A partisan tilt doesn’t grant the group a pass from left-wingers—and their corporate stooges—out to marginalize mainstream Jews.
Maybe the Europeans just didn’t understand it. But they, too, will be victims because anti-Semitism is the engine behind history’s greatest tragedies.
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan’s comparison of a hypothetical travel ban on Israel to one on real terrorist hotbeds explains what’s wrong with the critique of Trump.
For all the apparent differences between anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism, we spend an enormous amount of time thinking and speaking negatively about Jews as a group.