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U.S.-Israel Relations

News about governmental relations between Israel and the United States

The White House pursues Muslim votes, David Friedman said.
The path to reducing Israel’s reliance on the U.S. for munitions isn’t necessarily limited to ramping up domestic production, expert tells JNS.
Qatar agreed to take charge of the port on condition that the construction work go to the Al-Hisi firm, “a company controlled and sponsored by Hamas,” according to Israeli journalist Baruch Yedid.
The presumptive Republican presidential nominee also claimed that “any Jewish person that votes for Democrats hates their religion.”
The White House national security advisor said that Israel agreed on Monday to send a “senior interagency team” to Washington to review a potential operation in Rafah.
Contrary to the picture being presented in America, the vast majority of the Israeli public is behind the government’s war goals, said the prime minister.
“If he [Biden] were supportive of Israel, the Iran nuclear deal would have never been signed and Israel would have never been attacked,” Trump said.
U.S. officials claimed there is no change in policy or any deliberate slowdown in delivering promised military aid.
The position had remained vacant since Asaf Zamir resigned, ostensibly over Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s now-shelved judicial reform agenda.
Gush Etzion Regional Council mayor calls the sanctions “another scandalous decision from the chairman of Joe Biden’s election campaign.”
Netanyahu’s Likud Party charged that “Israel is not a banana republic, but an independent and proud democracy.”
Schumer drew sharp criticism from Republicans and from Jewish organizations for saying that Netanyahu should be voted out of office.