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- To stay in office, Benjamin Netanyahu must continue the war until some sort of ‘victory,' so he cannot possibly compromise with Hamas’ demands. That’s why he is now determined to attack Rafah, Gaza's last relatively intact city. It’s no Stalingrad, but symbolically it serves his purposes well enough.
- To stay in office, Benjamin Netanyahu must continue the war until some sort of ‘victory,' so he cannot possibly compromise with Hamas’ demands. That’s why he is now determined to attack Rafah, Gaza's last relatively intact city. It’s no Stalingrad, but symbolically it serves his purposes well enough.
- The obvious way for Israel’s prime minister to escape from the dilemma in the Gaza Strip was to make the war bigger by dragging in Iran.
- The obvious way for Israel’s prime minister to escape from the dilemma in the Gaza Strip was to make the war bigger by dragging in Iran.
- If the U.S. cut off military aid to Israel or applied serious economic sanctions, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government would collapse almost instantly.
- If the U.S. cut off military aid to Israel or applied serious economic sanctions, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government would collapse almost instantly.
- The U.S. is no longer the sole superpower, but it is still the flywheel that keeps the whole system ticking over smoothly. Most people prefer predictability even when they long for change, so a presidential election in which both leading candidates are dark horses from a younger generation would qualify as a major ‘event.'
- The U.S. is no longer the sole superpower, but it is still the flywheel that keeps the whole system ticking over smoothly. Most people prefer predictability even when they long for change, so a presidential election in which both leading candidates are dark horses from a younger generation would qualify as a major ‘event.'
- In the 1970s, Egypt was the only Arab country strong enough to pose a real threat to Israel, but now tens of thousands of Israelis visit Egypt as tourists, and the Arab world has basically abandoned the Palestinians to their fate.
- In the 1970s, Egypt was the only Arab country strong enough to pose a real threat to Israel, but now tens of thousands of Israelis visit Egypt as tourists, and the Arab world has basically abandoned the Palestinians to their fate.
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