The Obama administration may exert pressure on French diplomats to rescind their objections to a nuclear accord with Iran; Congress must stand firm.
Washington is in a position to demand the most stringent of nuclear accords and should pay scant attention to Iran’s oft-proclaimed red lines.
For as long as the Middle East both controls global oil supplies and incubates international terrorism, the United States cannot wholly leave—no matter how hard it tries.
In its pursuit of nuclear weapons, Iran poses a threat of paramount urgency to global trade, security, and stability; negotiations are doing nothing to. . .
The U.S. must intensify sanctions, initiate new military deployments, and make clear its support for Israeli military action if conducted—because a bad deal is worse. . .
The demographic crisis that threatens the future of American Jewry has been facilitated by the country’s unprecedented embrace of the Jewish people.
As outlined by Susan Rice, the National Security Advisor, Washington’s new Middle East policy is bound to hearten America’s enemies and confirm to its. . .
“If we have to choose between the ‘bomb’ or the ‘bombing,’ I’m for the ‘bombing.’” And Israel doesn’t need America. “It can do it alone.”. . .
The Obama administration saw its first-term Middle East policy go awry when it mishandled America’s relationship with Israel. Is it about to do the same. . .
In complaining about Americans’ legalistic approach to governance, the Economist exposes its own failure to grasp the canonical status of the country’s founding charters.
Israel may not be able to rely on the Obama administration to force Iran to make genuine concessions on its nuclear program. But can it depend on Congress?
Iran looks set to promise the West that it won’t produce nuclear weapons, but no outsider will be able to know whether it actually. . .
America can be wrong about Hassan Rouhani without lethal consequences. Israel has no such margin of error.
The award of Nobel prizes to two Israeli scientists living in the U.S. has ignited talk of a brain drain from Israel. There is a. . .