However unreasonable and unfathomable it might seem, by Western democratic standards, Hamas is the legitimate leader of the Palestinian Authority.
Middle East
Following the trilateral summit in Jerusalem, a government-aligned Turkish newspaper declares Israel its top enemy.
On the security alliance of Israel, Greece, and Cyprus, sharp messages to Washington, and the attempt to prevent Turkey from shifting from rival to enemy through deterrence and strategic cooperation.
The Virgin Mary depicted side-by-side with the arch-terrorists Qassem Soleimani and Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis. What strikes many eyes as a blasphemous contradiction follows the brutal logic of the Middle East.
Middle East expert and Israel Today correspondent Edy Cohen reports on a historic and highly sensitive event in France: the proclamation of the independent Republic of Kabylia—after decades of resistance against the Algerian state.
Its president wants in—with troops on the ground in Gaza, as part of the 20-point peace plan, with no good outcome for the Jewish state. If he doesn’t get in, he could be out.
At the ceremony awarding honors to outstanding Mossad employees, the intelligence chief emphasizes that Israel will not allow a bad nuclear deal.
“The possibility of Syria presenting a conventional threat to Israel in the next 10 or even 20 years is not high,” says researcher Assaf Orion.
And the media misreports it. Of course.
