From Shushan to Tehran: Purim’s story repeats itself - opinion
Again and again, the pattern returns: a decree of destruction, a sudden fall, a people still standing.
Again and again, the pattern returns: a decree of destruction, a sudden fall, a people still standing.
Operation Roaring Lion is not another military strike or another round in an endless cycle: It is a moment of strategic recalibration.
The Iranian regime, since Khomeini’s revolutionary takeover in 1979, has been portrayed as a global threat with profound dimensions for five decades.
Despite its existential stake, Israel has no coherent political strategy for increasing the likelihood of regime change.
The entry of Indian blue-collar labor into the construction segment marks a structural shift in how Israel sources labor, manages risk, and builds resilience in an era of chronic insecurity.
Damascus’s plan for Sweida could reshape Israel’s northern frontier.
In response to Alex Sternberg: The heart of Israel’s death penalty bill.
Donald Trump’s Iran war, Operation Epic Fury, is absolutely and fantastically righteous, as is Israel’s Operation Roaring Lion. Today, both the Persian and Jewish people celebrate a Purim miracle.
With lessons learned from past conflicts, Israel’s preparedness is put to the ultimate test as Iran’s missile barrages push the country’s defense systems.
To grasp the magnitude of this moment, one must see it not as an isolated shock but as the culmination of a decades-long political experiment.
When the regime is struck, Iranian identity is not being struck.