'Pahlavi power' is the future of post-Islamic Republic Iran - editorial
The people of Iran are no longer whispering the name Pahlavi. They are shouting it.
The people of Iran are no longer whispering the name Pahlavi. They are shouting it.
Israel cannot afford to remain indifferent to the change emerging in Riyadh. Jerusalem must tighten coordination with Egypt and Jordan, and even more so with the United Arab Emirates.
The figures show that the number of Israelis who left Israel for in excess of nine months in the years 2023-2025 is around 211,000.
With the state comptroller blocked, citizens must focus on the questions a future inquiry into the failures leading up to the October 7 massacre.
Iran’s regime has lost its ideological anchor, its popular base, and possibly its military, this time, the collapse could well be real.
Only a society that enables people to live and develop together, and that cultivates difference, reciprocity, and equal rights will raise people that do not need to learn to "behave correctly."
We can let trauma define those spaces forever. Or we can redefine them with blessing, with building, with defiant acts of goodness. This is the Jewish way.
As the US strategy shifts to Asia-Pacific, Israel’s future depends on proving how it can serve America's interests.
Iran’s protests have spread nationwide, uniting workers, merchants, and students in a direct challenge to clerical rule.
A war-safety score for Israel was dressed up as a women’s-rights verdict to launder authoritarian influence.
The world clings to the idea of a Palestinian state, but Jordan is already the Palestinian state in every sense except its name.