It wasn’t October 7. It’s the continuing avoidance of military action against Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Israel’s northern border has been quiet, but the upheaval in Syria may spiral into another show-down with Hezbollah
A deeply personal account of the Pennsylvania native after whom Israel’s Lone Soldier Center is named
Amir Peretz, Tzipi Livni, and Danny Halutz—active members of the Israeli government during the 2006 Lebanon War—spoke at a conference in Tel Aviv marking 10 years since the conflict
First fatal Hezbollah attack in Israel’s north since 2006 raises questions about deterrence
Last week’s rocket attack and the weekend’s car bombing in Tripoli add urgency to Israeli counterinsurgency drills
A dispatch from the war’s end
The Hezbollah leader affirms his support for Assad
This Week in Israel: Civil Defense simulates a two-front war, the Netanya gas explosion goes under review, cost-of-living concerns reach the Knesset, a former army bodyguard pleads his case, Labor adds to its ranks, and more
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s recent visit to Hezbollah reveals the deepening isolation of the Shia in Lebanon
David Grossman, Amos Oz, and A.B. Yehoshua have won international acclaim for being the intellectual leaders of Israel’s peace camp. It’s undeserved.
Iran maintains an information-warfare front—it’s called Hezbollah
The key to a lasting peace, argues Israeli Nobel Prize winner Robert Aumann, is not to insist on ‘peace now’
Is U.S. military aid to Lebanon being used against Israel?
A Lebanon-Israel conflict is a matter of when, not if, and the United States has an interest in the outcome
Hezbollah’s Hassan Nasrallah wants war. His public wants war. But to get the war that he wants, he has to wait.