More resolutions
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Prospects for change with the demise of Netanyahu and criticism of Abu Mazen
09 June 2021 10:14 AM אין תגובות -
Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital has buried the two-state solution
30 January 2018 11:21 AM אין תגובות -
Der Krieg gegen Gaza und das Scheitern der arabischen Regime (German)
12 October 2014 9:21 AM אין תגובות -
The war on Gaza and the collapse of the Arab regimes
27 September 2014 8:01 PM אין תגובות -
Tension between approaches and the failure of Israeli-Palestinian talks
14 April 2014 2:07 PM אין תגובות -
The Israeli attacks on Syria serve Assad’s criminal regime
06 May 2013 7:44 AM אין תגובות -
Public statement by the Da’am Workers Party following the 21 November Tel Aviv bombing
22 November 2012 10:36 AM אין תגובות -
Daam Workers Party – Statement on Gaza: Those who refused peace are now waging war
15 November 2012 3:35 PM אין תגובות
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Meta
Israel Archive
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The boycott: To what end?
Posted on 09/02/2014Until 2008 the boycott against Israel, known also as the BDS movement (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions), was a marginal phenomenon. It began on July 9, 2005 when 171 Palestinian NGOs called for a boycott at an economic and cultural level. Over time, the initiative spread beyond the Occupied Territories to the wider world. But the Palestinian Authority (PA), which maintains diplomatic, security and economic ties with Israel, refused to express support (and refuses until now). The world’s governments likewise withheld support. Here and there, a famous singer or actor cancelled a gig in Israel, and demonstrations were held abroad when Israelis performed there, but these did not have an impact on public opinion in Israel, or on its government, which regularly accused the boycotters of anti-Semitism. -
The settlements: shrapnel in Israel’s backside
Posted on 23/06/2013When Naftali Bennett compared the Palestinians to shrapnel in the backside of an IDF soldier, undoubtedly many public figures in Israel identifies with his allegory. -
Israel, Assad, and the world
Posted on 14/05/2013At the outbreak of the revolution in Syria two years ago, the Israeli government announced that events there were none of its business and it would not interfere. Forty years of quiet on the Golan Heights had led Israel to prefer Assad over any conceivable replacement. Now, however, when the rebels rule wide areas, when the Syrian army is falling apart, and when the regime's survival is in the balance, Israeli policy appears to have shifted from passivity to active intervention.
