Did he really equate anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism?
It looked a lot like anti-Semitism.
Just after the Six-Day War, an Israeli professor met and took notes on his discussions with Palestinian intellectuals. They reveal as much about now as about then.
And the moral vanity of Israel’s Jewish critics.
An anniversary in more ways than one.
Jerusalem Day reflections.
A new documentary’s false promises.
As Censored Voices makes its American debut, my advice to American Jews is this: save your tears—the Six-Day War was decently waged and morally just.
Peddling vague stories of war crimes for political ends is obviously and utterly immoral.
Self-flagellation, if performed at the behest of someone else, with money from somewhere else, is no longer just self-flagellation. Israelis would do well to remember this.
How do charges of Israeli crimes in the Six-Day War match up with similar charges against American forces in other wars?
A splashy new documentary promises to expose the Israeli military’s censorship of atrocities committed in the 1967 war. What it exposes is its creators’ agenda.
In researching his recent book, Like Dreamers, which follows the lives of seven heroes and veterans of the 1967 Six-Day War, Yossi Klein Halevi “was. . .
Two acclaimed new books about Israel betray a disquieting lack of moral confidence in their subject and its story