Column
It made sense at the time. And while the situation is very complicated right now, it still does.
Robert Kraft’s Foundation to Combat Antisemitism wasted $8 million on something that never mentioned Jews or antisemitism, while also failing to explain the real reason for its rapid spread.
By stoking public outrage, particularly among those protesting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the terrorists seek to turn internal divisions into political leverage.
It is hard to fathom why France should display such ire at the Trump proposal to procure Greenland since the idea is hardly new, having been raised several times in the past without setting off any outrage.
The display of these survivors is a stark reminder that Hamas continues its brutality despite its military defeats.
Hamas has managed to plunge Israel into the kind of moral dilemma depicted by Hannah Arendt in “The Origins of Totalitarianism.”
Three men released by Hamas looked like Nazi death-camp survivors. Israel and the United States must not allow the terrorists to survive and thrive.
Alice Nderitu sought to make forgotten conflicts in the world a topic of discussion and action, but everyone wanted her to focus on what she wouldn’t call a genocide in Gaza.
Moving Palestinians out of the Gaza Strip may not happen, but at least, there will be a four-year respite from pressure to achieve the unachievable.
His administration’s stance is clear: Israel’s defensive war is justified, its soldiers are courageous, and the hostages must be returned.
Introducing hundreds of thousands of Palestinian refugees to Egypt or Jordan would rock the peace these neighbor states have with Israel, as well as bolster Arabs in an increasingly restless Judea and Samaria.