Israel should not force Gulf’s hand on Iran - editorial
When and if the moment comes that Jerusalem’s Gulf partners officially join the fighting against Iran, Israel should welcome that cooperation, but do so quietly.
When and if the moment comes that Jerusalem’s Gulf partners officially join the fighting against Iran, Israel should welcome that cooperation, but do so quietly.
Kurdish forces may attack Iran, but only if the US and Israel guarantee political and military backing for their people.
Iran’s leaders chant “Death to America” while pursuing nuclear power. This is not Israel’s problem alone; it is a threat to the West.
Historic battles and religious memory echo across generations, from the Battle of Khaybar to the death of Khamenei.
A special forces mission in Lebanon shows the ancient promise still guiding Israel: no Jew is ever left behind.
A military gamble without a day-after plan risks regional war, nuclear chaos, and shocks to the global economy.
Iran’s missile and drone strikes hit Gulf states, testing trust, unity, and reliance on the US.
One of the dangers of having a strong-willed and unpredictable senior partner is that you never know if they’re going to turn against you.
This is a historic moment that carries dual potential: one misstep by any player could reshape the region, but it also showcases Israel’s capacity, resources, resolve, and spirit.
Dismantling the Iranian state without a plan for the “day after” is not a strategic victory: it is the deliberate detonation of a geopolitical abyss at the nerve center of the global economy.
After the war, a "mega deal" would produce the quintessential victory against not only the perpetrators of the October 7 massacre but against all those who wish for Israel's demise.