What has happened to the West’s will to win?
The West has forgotten that the aim of war is victory. And if victory is to be achieved, in Gaza or anywhere else, the enemy cannot be allowed to shelter, regroup and strike again.
The West has forgotten that the aim of war is victory. And if victory is to be achieved, in Gaza or anywhere else, the enemy cannot be allowed to shelter, regroup and strike again.
With UNRWA’s mandate expiring in 2026, the current crisis is a chance to remove an agency which has made it harder not easier to solve the Middle East conflict.
The UN court’s call for Hamas to release Israeli hostages is commendable, but its decision is troubling.
As we count the nation’s blessings, an easygoing tolerance will no longer be among them.
The proceedings in The Hague risk merely confirming everything that is wrong with the convention.
Islam’s problem is not only its extremes it’s the extremism of its mainstream.
Five decades after the Gulag Archipelago’s publication, Solzhenitsyn’s analysis of the process of moral decay retains all of its validity.
From George Pell to #MeToo, the seeds were sown of a harvest of activist outrage that swept through 2023.
Western governments are placing mounting pressure on Israel to commit to a pause which would allow Hamas to regroup. They have, it seems, forgotten absolutely everything and learned absolutely nothing.
After a year of tumult, the joy of Christmas should not obscure the hope of new life and new light.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/henry-ergas/page/9