Volume 16, Issue 21


“After eight months, 125 hostages are still being held in Gaza, 8 of them are American. There shouldn’t be a day that goes by that we don’t talk about them. Hamas terrorists tortured and abducted hundreds of innocent people. Afterward, they imprisoned them in horrific conditions— babies without formula, the elderly without critical medication, bloodied and maimed Israelis without proper medical care. Humans in cramped, dark tunnels with limited air to breathe. Those who have returned face post traumatic stress and don’t feel safe in their homes. Others are still terrorized because their loved ones did not return with them. If the world wants this

war to end, Hamas must release the hostages.”


                                                                         -Ambassador Nikki Haley, May 31, 2024

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This Week's Featured Article

By Sarah Stern | June 3, 2024

Upcoming Webinar

Wednesday, June 5, 2024 at 12 PM ET


Throughout the ages, many people have laid claim to the holy city of Jerusalem. However, for the Jewish people Jerusalem has played the central role for thousands of years as it's sole spiritual home. Come learn why the reunification of Jerusalem during the Six Day War has a very special and regnant meaning for the Jewish people.


With the current international pressure for a Palestinian state, come hear why most Jews believe that once the city has been united, it can never again be divided.


About the Speaker: Efraim Inbar President and Founder of The Jerusalem Institute of Strategy and Security (JISS). Professor Inbar also serves as the Head of the program on Strategy, Diplomacy, and National Security at the Shalem College. Professor Inbar was the founding director of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies, a position he held for 23 years (1993-2016), and a professor of political studies at Bar-Ilan University. He has been a visiting professor at Georgetown, Johns Hopkins, and Boston universities; a visiting scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars; a Manfred Warner NATO Fellow; and a visiting fellow at the (London-based) International Institute for Strategic Studies. He was president of the Israel Association of International Studies; a member of the Political Strategic Committee of the National Planning Council; chairman of the National Security Curriculum Committee in the Ministry of Education; and a member of the Academic Committee of the IDF History Department. He has authored five books: Outcast Countries in the World Community (1985), and War and Peace in Israeli Politics. Labor Party Positions on National Security (1991), Rabin and Israel’s National Security (1999), The Israeli-Turkish Entente (2001), and Israel’s National Security: Issues and Challenges since the Yom Kippur War (2008), and edited fourteen collections of scholarly articles. He is an expert on Israeli strategic doctrine, public opinion on national security issues, US Middle East policy, Israeli-Palestinian diplomacy, and Israel-Turkey relations.


Inbar holds an M.A. and a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago, after finishing undergraduate studies in Political Science and English Literature at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.

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