Missing at Davos: World Economic Forum agenda should have covered antisemitism - opinion
To ignore the spread of antisemitism at a gathering that claims to champion global cooperation would be a moral and strategic failure.
To ignore the spread of antisemitism at a gathering that claims to champion global cooperation would be a moral and strategic failure.
The invitation is about structure, power, and a deliberate attempt to reshape the global order.
To fixate on flawed accusations against Israel while ignoring genuine, massive atrocities elsewhere is to repeat ominous historical precedents.
Trump now has the opportunity to set a different precedent – one that distinguishes accommodation from endorsement, and allies who constrain instability from strongmen who monetize it.
The key to victory is through Jewish-Arab political cooperation.
UNRWA’s defenders abroad often describe it as a humanitarian body caught in a political storm. Israel’s view is sharper: the agency became part of the problem.
Without context, the move to demolish UNRWA’s east Jerusalem headquarters looks like just another incident of Israeli hard-heartedness - an attack on a UN body that wants only to help.
This support is embedded in a broader context of severe and long-term loss of legitimacy facing Iran’s incumbent theocratic regime.
Leadership begins with accountability. When leaders refuse to acknowledge responsibility, they abandon the very people they claim to represent.
Americans and Israelis shouldn’t need haters to remind us how closely our two countries are interconnected – with aligned values, overlapping liberal-democratic ideologies, and intertwined fates.
Israel can and should move forward on its own – still a close friend of the United States, but an independent friend, not a friend in need.