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U.S.-Israel Relations

News about governmental relations between Israel and the United States

The office advised JNS to reach out to Ramallah.
“He knows well the ways of Washington and he knows Israel,” longtime D.C. media strategist Steve Rabinowitz told JNS.
“Another milestone in El Al’s continued growth in Florida,” a company executive stated.
The lack of an invitation to the Oval Office for the Israeli prime minister reflects the “bankruptcy” of the administration’s Israel policy, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., told JNS.
An observant Jew who served under presidents Clinton and Obama, he is the only candidate undergoing a background check.
Gil Bringer is the Israeli official who has been coordinating the delicate and complicated talks to have Israel admitted to the lucrative program. He now believes that it is within reach and will benefit both sides.
Rep. Shri Thanedar (D-Mich.) told JNS that he was excited to meet both the prime minister of Israel and the prime minister of “Palestine.”
Sylvia Santana’s recent trip stirred anger among her Arab Muslim constituents.
“I don’t think that the issue of judicial reform will undermine the relationship,” said Rep. Greg Landsman (D-Ohio).
Palestinian Arabs must be “thoroughly screened,” Morton Klein, national president of the Zionist Organization of America, told JNS.
House Democratic leader assures that his party will continue to stand with the Jewish state.
Asked why Foggy Bottom called an attack under investigation in Israel a terrorist incident, a spokesman said: “The thinking is that it was a terror attack, and we are concerned about it, and that’s why we called it that.”