Putin’s predecessor floated the idea but retracted it after Trump called him on it. Some analysts believe the threat bears the Kremlin’s signature.
Author - Canaan Lidor
More articles from Canaan Lidor
As missile sirens blared, protesters accused Israel’s judiciary of blocking democratic rule and vowed to push forward judicial reform.
At a special Cabinet session, the prime minister described the city as the raison d’être of Zionism and the Jewish state.
A top official had falsely claimed that 14,000 infants faced death within 48 hours.
The visitors, non-Jews who follow the seven laws of Noah, required special insurance arrangements to be able to safely tour the Golan and the border.
“Islamism isn’t only an enemy of Israel but of the whole Muslim world and the West.”
Dozens of Muslims came to the Christians for Israel’s Independence party in Katwijkand had to “run for their lives,” an observer said.
“The Jews say, ‘This is ours, that was ours….’ No. That’s not what the Koran says,” said the Palestinian leader, echoing a claim made by his predecessor, Yasser Arafat.
More than 500 residents of Syria were allowed by their country’s new rulers and Jerusalem to join a pilgrimage in the Galilee.
For Trump’s previous ambassador to Israel, the lack of diplomatic pushback is the change itself—a sign of enduring, bipartisan recognition.
