U.S.-Israel Relations
News about governmental relations between Israel and the United States
“Friendships are forever in this region,” an Israeli source who dealt with the first Trump administration said.
A nuclear-armed ayatollah is an “nightmare for the world,” the U.S. senator said.
There is “no such thing” as the West Bank and “there is no ‘occupation,’” said the former Arkansas governor.
“While President Trump said he will be a president who will end wars, and despite talk of ‘America First’ isolationism, his nominations have created a team of like-minded national security personnel who are well aligned with Israel on the Iran threat.”
The independent federal U.S. agency said that its funding would, in part, “reduce the influence of Hamas.”
“Trump won because of us, and we’re not happy,” co-founder of Muslims for Trump and a Philadelphia investor said.
“The administration has worked tirelessly to get a deal done as soon as possible to bring the hostages home,” a statement by the White House said.
Sunday’s discussions at Mar-a-Lago reportedly centered on an Israeli ceasefire in Lebanon that involves Western and Russian cooperation.
The president-elect’s picks suggest that his administration will “take the region, the Middle East, the threats confronting Israel seriously,” Blaise Misztal, of JINSA, told JNS.
“We’re prepared to work with the incoming team, in common cause, on a bipartisan basis, to do everything in our collective American power to secure the release of the hostages,” the U.S. national security advisor said.
“Why are we allowing the humanitarian crisis to worsen with U.S. taxpayer dollars?” asked Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vt.).
Asif William Rahman was indicted on two counts of willful retention and transmission of national defense information.