The Yom Kippur War shows Israel needs nuclear power, never Iran
Remembering the Yom Kippur War proves that what is needed is not a return to the 2015 agreement with Iran and its zero breakout time. Op-ed.
Remembering the Yom Kippur War proves that what is needed is not a return to the 2015 agreement with Iran and its zero breakout time. Op-ed.
Trump's long awaited plan for Middle East peace will be missing the essential ingredient that would allow the PA to accept it. Op-ed.
The rocket fire launched at Israel and the reescalation of riots along the Gaza border should serve as a wake-up call. Op-ed.
Obama's end of term frustration, especially now that Clinton is not his successor, bears careful watching. Op-ed.
If Carson gives Rubio his support, things could change for the Republicans.
Airing one's dirty laundry in public is not the way to cement the relationship between the US and Israel.
Is Bayit Yehudi going to take a stand on the ever deepening split in Religious Zionist ranks on religious matters?
Nuclear proliferation will be able to expand much faster than the procedure for sanctioning allows.
Sanctions may be the best and only weapon left to the West.
With no prior information on breakout times, the whole world will know what they are when the bomb goes off, so how’s that for transparency?
Imagine Iran being able to produce and launch a nuclear weapon in days, or even hours. It can happen.
If Herzog is accepted as pro-peace, who, then, by implication, are they trying to paint as pro-war?