Opinion | We're Israelis who study fascism. This week, our country took a terrifying step toward the abyss. A bill put forward this week by the National Union of Israeli Students, which reportedly enjoys broad support among Knesset members, “would require universities to fire all academics who express dissent, including tenured professors.” For two scholars of fascism, the proposed law is one of the most startling items yet in a cascade of increasing illiberalism in Israel: Cracking down on political speech in academic environments is a move straight out of the authoritarian playbook. Read their essay ➤
Latest on the war… Only 19% of Israeli Jews believe an Israeli and a Palestinian state can peacefully coexist — one of several headline-making findings in a new Pew study released Thursday. Among the others: 77% of Israeli Arabs and 66% of Israeli Jews are worried about the war “lasting a long time.”
Only one hospital remains functional in Rafah after multiple humanitarian operations, including a field hospital, have been forced to shutter this week.
The Mossad said Thursday that criminal enterprises in Europe had worked as proxies for Iran to strike Israeli targets, including in the lobbing of two grenades at the Israeli Embassy in Belgium last weekend.
Israel’s national security adviser, Tzachi Hanegbi, reportedly told hostage families on Thursday that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government would not end the war in exchange for the release of all the hostages who remain in Gaza.
Slovenia became the latest European country to endorse a motion to recognize a Palestinian state. |