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Jerusalem said it had not supplied the mobile surface-to-air missile battery to Kyiv but rather had returned it to the U.S. for refurbishing.
David Lappartient said that “peace does not come through exclusion,” a day before the Israeli cycling team was banned from an Italian competition.
The foreign ministers of France, Britain and Germany met with their Iranian counterpart on the sidelines of the General Assembly.
“It could have happened to anyone,” Jonathan Harounoff, whose book is slated to publish this week, told JNS of the killing of Mahsa Amini, which sparked the Woman, Life, Freedom movement.
The House House Foreign Affairs Committee chair said that it is “empty virtue signaling” that rewards “Hamas butchers and rapists.”
Tel Aviv University ranked seventh worldwide, Technion breaks into global top 10 in PitchBook’s 2025 ranking for leading universities around the world.
“The challenges faced by the Jewish community are increasingly global in nature, and our response must be global as well,” the U.S.-based National Jewish Advocacy Center stated.
In an interview with JNS, Israeli historian Yisrael Ne’eman sounds the alarm over what he calls the “Red-Green Axis.”
If Qatar supplies the messaging, China provides the machinery in what is now called “cognitive warfare.”
Washington correspondent Élisa P. Serret claimed on air that Jews finance U.S. politics, control a “big machine” and run big cities and Hollywood.
A coalition, including CodePink and the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, is pressuring FIFA, UEFA and national federations to ban the Jewish state from play.
The legislation will allow families of fallen Jewish American servicemembers “to know that their loved one’s military service, life and religious heritage are properly honored,” said Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz.