Afghanistan belongs to the Taliban now, but the Washington elite still has Palestine as an object of its active fantasy life. Naftali Bennett would be wise to stick to the reality principle.
Do I support a Palestinian state run by a fundamentalist terror cult that targets civilians? No, I don’t.
New York Congressman Jamaal Bowman and others are grafting a domestic psychodrama onto a foreign region—and endangering American Jews in the process
The two-state solution has been dead for decades. A one-state solution frightens Israelis and Palestinians alike. Is three the magic number for peace?
Not to be confused with the Knights Templar of medieval fame, they settled in Palestine and invented the Jaffa orange brand, before becoming enthusiastic Nazis
Slow but ceaseless movement strategically transforms the human landscape
Esther Cailingold was disillusioned with the British Empire’s treatment of Jews after the Holocaust. So she joined the Jewish resistance in Palestine.
Don’t try to save the people on either side of the conflict. Just listen to them.
The very arguments advanced to support the embassy move today can easily be repurposed tomorrow
Abbas, whose doctorate denied the Holocaust and who accused rabbis of poisoning Palestinian water, is no stranger to anti-Semitic remarks
Don’t be that guy
American interests will be worse off without two states. But it’s time to consider how we might make the best of that bad situation.
From condominialism to a confederation, hybrid alternatives to the one-state and two-state paradigms have been picking up steam
The media reported that a Palestinian swimmer didn’t have access to an Olympic-size swimming pool because of Israel. Technically, this was true. She had access to several.
How my Judaism helps to identify the schools I want to attend
Eliaz Cohen believes one way to break the one-state/two-state dichotomy might be to combine them, in an attempt to avoid ‘righting a wrong’ by creating another wrong
A draft text of the Democratic party’s platform on Israel sets forth a ‘parallel acknowledgement of Israeli and Palestinian rights.’ But it doesn’t go as far as some would have liked.
A Knesset plenary got heated after Likud MK Anat Berko called pronunciation into a discussion about a two-state solution
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