Chessmasters: Israel and the Iran deal
Critics of the Iran deal unfailingly say that the American negotiators, including President Barack Obama, were no match for their wily Iranian counterparts.
Critics of the Iran deal unfailingly say that the American negotiators, including President Barack Obama, were no match for their wily Iranian counterparts.
Here’s what you need to know in order to make up your mind about the Iranian nuclear deal: No one knows.
You want to understand the Iran nuclear negotiations? You should read the analyses in Foreign Policy and the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
Former Israeli ambassador Michael Oren is coming to Los Angeles this week to speak about his new book, “Ally: My Journey Across the American-Israeli Divide,” and I’m going to miss him.
When I was in Berlin last year, I decided to go to a spa.
I didn’t attend the Sheldon Adelson anti-BDS conclave in Las Vegas last weekend for one good reason: I wasn’t invited.
I’ve held off writing about President Barack Obama’s speech at Adas Israel Congregation late last month, but I’ve certainly read everything we Jews have written about it.
Just because he looks like Larry David’s angry uncle, and just because he is the only Democratic socialist in the United States Senate, and just because he represents a heavily forested state best known for a breakfast condiment, doesn’t mean you should dismiss Bernie Sanders.
The first question I asked Amos Oz is whether it bothers him to be called a traitor.