Time to Bar the Joint Arab List

Even a cursory perusal of the official platforms of the alliance reflects a stark rejection of Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people.
Israeli Sovereignty and the Future of Trump’s Peace Plan

If Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu fails to apply Israeli sovereignty to the Judea and Samaria communities before the election, not only will he almost certainly lose the elections, his defeat will bury Trump’s peace plan and harm Trump’s re-election chances.
If Not Now, When?

Today, there is a family or several families on every street in the Jewish communities of Judea and Samaria that have felt the horrific pain inflicted by an Arab terrorist.
Arabs are in an Uproar (Over the Prospect of Living in Palestine)

In no other conflict have aggressors been invited by their victims to remain citizens of the country they’ve been trying to wipe off the map.
From Rabin to Trump: A Price for Saying No?

For the very first time, someone has had the guts to tell the Palestinians there is a price to pay for saying no. That price is the Rabin peace plan.
Israeli Sovereignty and the Fate of the Trump Plan

And so we return to the issue of applying Israeli sovereignty in Judea and Samaria.
Amid a Spate of Palestinian Attacks, Israel’s Security Forces Seek to Prevent an Explosion of Violence

So far, the succession of incidents appears to be unorganized, with each terrorist incident prompting another in a chain reaction, even in areas like Jenin, which has been quiet for years.
For any Chance at Peace, the Palestinian Education System must be Overhauled

The U.S. peace plan calls for Palestinian education reform, and the context cannot be ignored; 20 years of research show that the PLO has transformed Palestinian schools into a tool of war against Israel.
Who Cares about Palestinian Rejectionism?

The Palestinians have spent decades overplaying their hand, but the world seems to be catching on to their lethal game.
Time for the Architects of Middle East Failures to be Quiet

Longtime State Department peace processors who helped wreck the region under Clinton or Obama, and are now the first to criticize the Trump plan, lack credibility.