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Please note that IPF's phone number has changed. We can now be reached at 212-354-1812. 

We will not stand for this

Israel Policy Forum is shocked and appalled by the column published in the Atlanta Jewish Times by its owner and publisher Andrew Adler calling for Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “to give the go-ahead for U.S.-based Mossad agents to take out a president deemed unfriendly to Israel in order for the current vice president to take his place, and forcefully dictate that the United States policy includes its helping the Jewish state obl

Amb. Daniel C. Kurtzer on 'Reviving the Peace Process' (TRANSCRIPT)

In an ideal world, if we were writing this up as a scenario we would say let’s put this all on hold, and everyone stays away happily and nothing changes for the worse, and we pick it up perhaps when everyone is stronger. But status quos are not status quos and people know that. They either get better – or more commonly – they actually get worse because they are left neglected. I fear that this status quo, over the next 10 or 11 months if there isn’t some very significant policy activity, will deteriorate into violence.

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A Hezbollah and Hamas Meeting

Earlier today, Hezbollah head Hassan Nasrallah met with a Hamas delegation led by political bureau member Mohammad Naser. According to Roee Nahmias of Yediot Ahronoth:

The parties are believed to have discussed, among other things, the prisoner exchange deal which will lead to Gilad Shalit's release. A statement released by Hezbollah following the meeting said it focused on "international and regional affairs, in light of our frustration with the American administration and its aggressive policies in Arab and Islamic matters, and especially given its outrageous inclination to support Israel's policies against the Palestinian people and their rights."

Additionally, Hamas dived into Lebanese internal politics and expressed its support for a parliamentary bill officially allowing Hezbollah to maintain its cache of arms. So too did the Lebanese cabinet. 

While Hezbollah and Hamas have different motivations and constituencies, they also share a similar support network primarily involving Syria and Iran. In a multitude of ways, coordination and cooperation between Hezbollah and Hamas is an ongoing concern for both the US and Israel. The potential for synchronized violence on the northern and southern fronts of Israel, not too mention Hezbollah’s international reach, are front and center in this regard. 

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