Shimon Peres

Middle Israel: How Benjamin Netanyahu transformed Israeli politics in 30 years - opinion

Netanyahu’s rise marked the beginning of a new political age in Israel, one defined by sound bites, self-promotion, and lasting consequences.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends a Christian Conference in Jerusalem, on April 27, 2025
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sits with his arm around his wife Sara as she accompanies her husband on the podium during Netanyahu's election victory ceremony, on June 2, 1996.

30 years after Netanyahu’s victory in 1996: How the comeback marvel changed Israel - opinion

PRESIDENT HERZOG presents the Jerusalem Unity Prize 2026 at the President’s Residence.

Significant award inspired by tragedy: Herzog presents Jerusalem Unity Prize 2026

A LIKUD supporter waves the party’s flag at a gathering, a show of grassroots loyalty which has long defined the movement, even as critics say its primaries have reshaped, and at times distorted, who rises within its ranks.

Middle Israel: How Likud’s primaries poisoned Israeli politics - opinion


Grapevine, July 30 2023: Rivlin roars

Movers and shakers in Israeli society.

 FORMER PRESIDENT Reuven Rivlin with President Isaac Herzog at the annual memorial ceremony for Chaim Herzog in 2022.

Israeli-American relations over time, from President to President - opinion

Successive presidents have tried to duplicate Carter’s achievement, but only a few have come close to matching the scope of his breakthrough.

 THEN-PRESIDENT Shimon Peres meets with former US president Jimmy Carter, in Jerusalem, in 2009. Successive president have tried to duplicate Carter's achievement, but only a few come close to matching the scope of his breakthrough, says the writer.

Grapevine June 2, 2023: All that jazz

Movers and shakers in Israeli society.

 FROM RIGHT: Prof. Uriel Reichman, Prof. Yifat Bitton, Prof. Ami Moyal, Nina Avidar Weiner and Prof. Nir Kedar

UN commemorates Shimon Peres with new releases of former Israeli PM's speeches

14 of the former-Presidents speeches were published and a fellowship has been launched in his name.

 THEN-FOREIGN MINISTER Shimon Peres signs the Oslo Accords, witnessed by (from R) PLO chairman Yasser Arafat, prime minister Yitzhak Rabin and US president Bill Clinton, at the White House, Sept. 13, 1993.

Killing jihad commanders amplifies an illusion - opinion

The killing of the jihad commanders is justified, but it does not eradicate these roots, it nurtures them.

 A FUNERAL procession takes place for Islamic Jihad commander Ali Ghali and his brother, Mahmoud, who were killed in an Israeli strike in Khan Yunis, Gaza Strip, on Thursday.

How can we reach beyond borders to bridge Israel's divide? - opinion

Besides the challenges we face with the situation around us, between us and within the country, we seem to be getting further and further apart from each other.

 PEOPLE STAND at attention on Remembrance Day for fallen soldiers and terror victims during the two-minute siren, last week. ‘I burst into tears. I felt helpless, angry and confused,’ the writer recalls.

Two full Right/religious governments - opinion

The difference between the full right-wing/religious government of 1990-1992 and the current such government is that the latter appears to have full command of the 64 votes.

 OUTGOING PRIME minister Yitzhak Shamir raises a glass with Yitzhak Rabin, on the day of the Rabin government’s inauguration on July 13, 1992. Attention was diverted from the constitutional revolution to the Oslo Accords, says the writer.

Letters to the Editor, December 05, 2022: Witness to the atrocities

Readers of The Jerusalem Post have their say.

 Letters

Shimon Peres: Dreams of peace became Israel's nightmare - opinion

Shimon Peres’s dreams of peace and his support for Palestinianism and “the two-state-solution” became a nightmare which haunts us until today. This is his true legacy.

 THEN-PRIME minister Yitzhak Rabin and his foreign minister Shimon Peres confer at a Labor Party meeting in 1993.

Grapevine October 26, 2022: With a little help from his friends

Movers and shakers in Israeli society.

 GRAYEVSKY TOOK one of the last photographs of late president Shimon Peres.