1 to 10 of about 14
Attempts to end the conflict can no longer ignore equal rights and instead must be the guiding light.
It must begin to bring its policy in line with its rhetoric on human rights and international law and prevent further escalation.
The former secretary of state was funny, irreverent, and determined to broker peace.
Naftali Bennett’s historic state visit was a sign of progress—with caveats.
U.S. President Joe Biden says he wants “equal measures of freedom, prosperity, and democracy” for Gaza. What steps can he take to achieve that in practice?
External pressure has never been effective in forcing the parties to abandon their core principles. Only a negotiated two-state solution has the potential to satisfy both sides.
The United States can play an important mediating role in conflicts, but it's only truly effective when the parties own their negotiations and engage with one another based on their own interests and motives.
A rights-based approach to Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking must be balanced with the national interests of the United States, as well as those of the parties themselves.
The much-vaunted announcement that Bahrain will normalize relations with Israel, hot on the heels of the United Arab Emirates, has been greeted with excitement in Western foreign policy circles. But true stability in the region is a long way off.
Twenty years after Camp David, a one-time negotiator reflects on what was achieved at the historic presidential summit.