Trump cannot use the Abraham Accords to sell a bad Iran deal - opinion
Expanding the Abraham Accords won’t fix the consequences of a flawed Iran agreement
Expanding the Abraham Accords won’t fix the consequences of a flawed Iran agreement
The position of Israel's New York Consul General requires intellectual seriousness, moral clarity, and the courage to challenge failing assumptions. Caroline Glick can provide that.
That is the point. Israel didn’t try. It rarely does. And that, right now, is the story of Israeli public diplomacy in a single sentence: Israel is not even in the game. The question is why.
Netanyahu’s rise marked the beginning of a new political age in Israel, one defined by sound bites, self-promotion, and lasting consequences.
There was a certain irony to the violent response of the police in Bilbao to the pro-Palestinian provocateurs at the airport. After all, Spain was one of the countries that protested Ben-Gvir's video
“We do not have the privilege of refusing to work together, even when we disagree. If we learn how to do that, we will do good for all of Israeli society," a Kibbutz leader told me.
In placing Israeli institutions alongside Hamas, the UN has practically collapsed the distinction between isolated criminal allegations and systematic sexual violence deployed as a weapon of war.
A country that is inherently immoral because of the inequality of its citizens based on national-religious identity and rejects the aspiration of seeking maximal justice cannot survive forever.
Violence, extremism, and division are distorting Torah values in parts of Israeli society and religious life.
From Israel to South Asia, fears are growing that Iran’s ideological influence is fueling extremism and instability.
A deal that provides sanctions relief to Tehran ensures the regime will remain in power.