U.S.-Israel Relations
News about governmental relations between Israel and the United States
“Your lack of transparency ... has our Jewish communities and Americans wondering which side you are on,” Sen. Roger Marshall (R-Kan.) said.
Jerusalem was surprised to hear of the terror group’s acceptance of a proposal that was different from the latest one on the table.
The Biden administration is effectively delaying the delivery of up to 6,500 Joint Direct Attack Munitions, according to The Wall Street Journal.
“There is a different reality on the ground and we cannot run away from it if we want to win,” Israel’s consul general to the Pacific Southwest tells JNS.
Demands for a hostage deal, a Rafah battle, governmental stability and U.S. pressure all pushing the premier in different directions.
An Israeli official downplayed the report, saying that “the flow continues” and Jerusalem was “not aware of a policy decision to stop it.”
“It is insane that America is dictating terms for the national security of Israel,” Bryan Leib tells JNS.
Asked by Time magazine whether he believes Netanyahu should resign from office, Trump noted he “had a bad experience with Bibi” in 2020.
Riyadh hopes to generate bipartisan support in the U.S. Senate before a possible Trump re-election.
At the Conservative Political Action Conference in Budapest, Hungary, former U.S. presidential candidate Rick Santorum says the administration “has been anything but supportive of Israel.”
“This will have no impact on our support for Israel’s ability to defend itself against Hamas, Iran, Hezbollah or other threats,” the U.S. secretary of state wrote to House Speaker Mike Johnson.
The Florida senator declared his strong support for Israel and noted the threat from radical groups in the United States.