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acting to have this decision changed.” The Biden administration


has stated repeatedly that its goal is to prevent Israel’s fight with Hamas from escalating into a wider war, especially as the U.S. approaches the No- vember elections. But that wider war has al-


ready begun. Since Oct. 7, Lebanon’s Hezbollah has launched 3,100 missiles on Israel and cross-border incur- sions by armed guerilla fight- ers, causing the evacuation of more than 96,000 Israelis from the northern part of the coun- try.


The Houthis in Yemen —


another Iranian regime proxy — have launched hundreds of missiles against Israel and in- ternational shipping in the Red Sea, declaring these actions


were part of an Iranian-backed “Axis of Resistance.” For the past two years, ac-


cording to the usually anti-Is- rael New York Times, Iran has flooded the West Bank with weapons smuggled in primar- ily from Jordan, in an effort to make it the next flashpoint in Tehran’s ongoing war with Is- rael.


And on April 14, Iran’s Is-


lamic regime itself launched 330 drones and missiles against Israel. Biden has repeatedly called


for an “immediate cease-fire” in the war and sent Secretary of State Antony Blinken on several swings through the re- gion, in an effort to pressure Israel into accepting an end to its war to halt the Hamas


Continued on page 66


On April 14, Iran’s Islamic regime itself launched 330 drones and missiles against Israel.


Two-State Solution Is Dead


I


n a surprising report published April 29, National Public Radio, which doesn’t attempt to hide its left- wing and pro-Palestinian agenda,


admitted that the Oct. 7 massacre has ended support among Israeli voters for a two-state solution. “They’re totally incredulous that the


rest of the world is talking about it, and they think it’s absolutely bizarre,” Israeli public opinion expert Dahlia Scheindlin told NPR’s Michele Kelemen. “[Israelis] think it’s completely, like, happening on another planet.” Scheindlin said fewer than 25% of


Jewish Israelis today support the idea of creating a Palestinian state, arguing that the Oct. 7 attack “was a sign of what a [Palestinian] state would look like.” Previous Israeli governments have of-


fered a Palestinian state to Arab negotia- tors and to the PLO on at least six occa- sions since the 1967 war. Each time, the Palestinians refused. In a 1970 interview, Prime Minister


Golda Meir scoffed when a British TV interviewer suggested the Arabs would make peace if Israel just went back to its pre-1967 borders. “We were in the borders in June of ’67 and in May of ’67. Why was there war?” What she said next was as true in 1970


as it is today. “Our quarrel with the Arabs is not for


a piece of land. It’s not for territory. It’s not for anything concrete. They just re- fuse to believe we have the right to exist at all.” — K.T.


JUNE 2024 | NEWSMAX 65


MISSILE DEBRIS/AMIR LEVY/GETTY IMAGES / GAZA/ALI JADALLAH/ANADOLU VIA GETTY IMAGES)


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