Sponsored content
sponsored content
Get The Foreign Policy Newsletter
The key issues and people influencing Canadian foreign policy and diplomacy. Thursday.
By entering your email address you consent to receive email from The Hill Times containing news, analysis, updates and offers. You may unsubscribe at any time. See our privacy policy
FOLLOW THE HILL TIMES:
Want to make sure your whole office has the full Hill Times experience?
We have team plans available for companies, organizations, classes, Parliament Hill offices and more. Fill out this form and find out if your team is eligible for a discount.
More Opinion
Related Stories
- Israel's prime minister is playing for time with the war, using it to avoid his criminal corruption trials, and an inquiry into whether he could have prevented Hamas’ brutal attack. The longer that’s put off, the better for him.
- Israel's prime minister is playing for time with the war, using it to avoid his criminal corruption trials, and an inquiry into whether he could have prevented Hamas’ brutal attack. The longer that’s put off, the better for him.
- What Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is doing at the moment is systematically crossing the ‘red line’ laid down by Israel’s most dangerous enemies: Iran, and its proxy in Lebanon, Hezbollah.
- What Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is doing at the moment is systematically crossing the ‘red line’ laid down by Israel’s most dangerous enemies: Iran, and its proxy in Lebanon, Hezbollah.
- None of the local players cares a fig about dead Palestinians. Indeed, in the case of Hamas, the more dead Palestinian civilians the better.
- None of the local players cares a fig about dead Palestinians. Indeed, in the case of Hamas, the more dead Palestinian civilians the better.
- Hamas attacked Israel in order to kill off the Abrahamic project—effectively tying Israel, Saudi Arabia, and the United States together—and to put the Palestinians back on the Arab agenda.
- Hamas attacked Israel in order to kill off the Abrahamic project—effectively tying Israel, Saudi Arabia, and the United States together—and to put the Palestinians back on the Arab agenda.
- Gwynne Dyer responds to a reader asking whether the easiest way out of ‘the Middle East problem’ would be paying everybody to leave. It’s not completely unthinkable.
- Gwynne Dyer responds to a reader asking whether the easiest way out of ‘the Middle East problem’ would be paying everybody to leave. It’s not completely unthinkable.
- Politics
- Foreign Policy
- Lobbying
- Legislation
- Policy Briefings
- Politics This Morning
- Hill Climbers
- Civil Circles
- Heard On The Hill
- Election
- Finance and Budget
- Public Service
- Exclusive Lists
- Parliamentary Calendar
- Top 100 Lists and Exclusive Features
- Podcasts
- This Week's Paper
- Search
- Archives
- Digital Newspaper Archives
- Politics
- Foreign Policy
- Lobbying
- Legislation
- Policy Briefings
- Politics This Morning
- Hill Climbers
- Civil Circles
- Heard On The Hill
- Election
- Finance and Budget
- Public Service
- Exclusive Lists
- Parliamentary Calendar
- Top 100 Lists and Exclusive Features
- Podcasts
- This Week's Paper
- Search
- Archives
- Digital Newspaper Archives
-
Get free news updates