The coup systemically caused Egypt's crisis
Yes, the coup d'état on June 30 systemically caused Egypt's crisis. Let's say it out loud, it was causation, systemic causation
Yes, the coup d'état on June 30 systemically caused Egypt's crisis. Let's say it out loud, it was causation, systemic causation
Replacing Benjamin Netanyahu as prime minister is an existential Israeli imperative.
Putin’s support of Assad’s Syria has inevitably drawn him closer to Iran, its devoted ally.
That was Netanyahu’s goal in addressing Congress. And so far, he’s been surprisingly successful.
It is extremely concerning that the idea of supporting Assad, however peripherally, seems to be infiltrating mainstream political thinking in parts of Europe.
That, it turns out, is exactly what the new, higher electoral threshold has done.
Whether Iranian national decision makers will turn out to be rational, irrational, or mad is clearly beyond any imaginable powers of selection or creation in Jerusalem.
There is an elephant in the room, which Blair pointedly ignores.
Why do people still back Netanyahu? Because in statecraft, as in medicine, the first rule is ‘do no harm.’
The major lesson to be learned from the history of the 1930s is that there is no satiating the appetites of dictators and autocrats.
The lead up to Netanyahu's address to Congress on March 3 resembles the plot of The Karate Kid.