Editor-in-Chief of The Jerusalem Report. Author of Parallel Lines, out now!! w/@brwpublisher. Formerly @AFP @WashingtonPost @FoxNews @J_Insider

Joined March 2009
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Honored to be featured in @Jerusalem_Post ‘Behind the Bylines’ column 💪❤️❤️
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Israelis already endured a month of war with Iran this past March. The question now: how much more can a country take?
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Iranian ballistic missiles hit Israel overnight for the first time since April. Is this violation of the ceasefire going to start a new chapter of the Iranian war? youtu.be/fEsFZfi0TLk
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Replying to @reglash
@reglash and @calevbd flag gaps in Iran deal, saying negotiations address Strait of Hormuz but not ballistic missiles or proxies, warning ceasefire extending to Israel-Hezbollah conflict "very problematic."
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Watch: @calevbd and I break down the latest developments in the Jerusalem Dispatch podcast…. For @Jerusalem_Post
Replying to @Jerusalem_Post
The leaked contours of the US-Iran deal echo the 2015 Obama JCPOA. @reglash @calevbd
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Thank you @Jerusalem_Post for publishing my article. "The Arab spring is dead" . 👇 @reglash
“The Arab Spring Is Dead & the Arab Street Wants Stability, Not Revolutions” @sagivsteinberg, CEO of the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs, argues in a new Jerusalem Post article that the Arab world of 2026 is fundamentally different from that of 2011: “Ideology is giving way to pragmatism.” According to Steinberg, Arab publics no longer judge governments by slogans about democracy and revolution, but by their ability to provide security, economic stability, and functioning services. “The Arab Spring did not disappear — it was replaced by a new social contract based on results,” he explains. Drawing on major regional opinion surveys, Steinberg argues that after years of chaos, civil wars, and state collapse, much of the Middle East now prioritizes stability over ideology. He says this shift is also creating new opportunities for regional alliances and normalization, as the region moves from a “politics of revolution” to a “politics of survival and growth.”
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I have rarely seen the Jewish world so united in revulsion than in its response to this shameful display. Such conduct is the very antithesis of our core Jewish values and an awful Chillul Hashem.
You knowingly caused harm to our State in this disgraceful display - and not for the first time. You have undone tremendous, professional, and successful efforts made by so many people - from IDF soldiers to Foreign Ministry staff and many others. No, you are not the face of Israel.
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Since Oct 7, 2023, Israel has been working to capture or kill everyone involved in the attacks from Gaza. In my latest feature for the WSJ, I take readers into the most extensive targeted killing campaign in Israel's history. wsj.com/world/middle-east/is…
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Important take 👇
National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir is a reputational arsonist. Yesterday’s fire involved the minister visiting a detention center holding the latest batch of Gaza flotilla activists. There, he paraded around the bound and bowed detainees, waving the Israeli flag and blasting the national anthem. Are the participants in this flotilla criminals and determined enemies of Israel? Yes. Were some of the activists associated with ISIS? According to my sources, yes. Should we shed a single tear for them? Absolutely not. And were the embassies that summoned Israel’s ambassadors to reprimand them for Ben-Gvir’s actions the truest friends to begin with? No. But despite all of that, what Itamar Ben-Gvir did is a complete scandal—for three reasons. First, it is a brazen subversion of established policy. The government had already decided to deport these participants. Like it or not, that was the directive. For a minister to go rogue and hijack the situation reeks of cheap political theater—a desperate grab for attention that directly sabotages the government’s agenda. Second, this stunt is the political equivalent of the Davidka, Israel’s notoriously loud but functionally useless mortar from the Independence War—all noise, zero payload. In practice, Ben-Gvir’s photo-op achieved absolutely nothing, yet the diplomatic bill is staggering. It runs on the exact same playbook as his poorly planned death penalty law for terrorists: it will likely never result in a single execution, but it guarantees that Israel suffers maximum international blowback and disastrous headlines. If the goal was deterrence, I’m highly skeptical of its effectiveness. I can think of few things more guaranteed to fuel an activist’s anti-Israel obsession and ensure their booking on the very next flotilla than a forced, front-row seat to Ben-Gvir’s cheap political theater. Third, it actively sabotages vital, ongoing diplomatic efforts. Israel has been staring down the barrel of severe EU sanctions after losing the protective veto of Hungary’s Viktor Orbán. As Ben-Gvir was busy planning his stunt, Israel secured a critical victory: the Czech Republic agreed to step in and veto the sanctions in Hungary’s place. The Czech commitment has not been withdrawn, but why would one possibly want to make the lives of our diplomats and allies that much harder? Just as the international pressure was naturally defusing, Ben-Gvir dragged the world’s hostile glare right back onto Israel. Yes, the detainees may be criminals. But to the rest of the world, they just see a vulgar politician—one already synonymous with everything critics hate about Israel, with a Hague arrest warrant hanging over his head—screaming at captives of unclear guilt. I wish I could say it was an unfortunate mistake. But it was entirely by design.
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British playwright Ryan Craig describes an encounter where acquaintance said ex-girlfriend and her mother "really, really didn't like" his play, with Craig asking, "Too Jewish?" jpost.com/jerusalem-report/a…
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Ruth Marks Eglash retweeted
Anti-Semitism commission hears Jewish people are considering moving to Israel after becoming targets ⤵️ telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2…
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Replying to @erikadreifus
@erikadreifus says literary antisemitism "since October 7 became more pervasive, visible, virulent" as the Jewish Book Council hotline received 400 reports of incidents. @Howard_Lovy @NaomiFirestone jpost.com/jerusalem-report/a…
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Ruth Marks Eglash retweeted
🗣️ 'The drivel about Israelis ‘training dogs to rape Palestinians’ is bad enough. But here’s a smear that’s even more absurd' Read @MichaelPDeacon's latest column ⤵️ telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/05…
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Ruth Marks Eglash retweeted
An important question was raised. Do British Jews face a double standard over Israel? @reglash
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From the editor: Best-selling author Freida McFadden revealed her real name is Sara Cohen. Her success shows the power of a pen name, but too many Jewish writers still face bias in publishing. ✍️ @reglash jpost.com/jerusalem-report/a…
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Jewish writers say identity now comes with publishing risks by @reglash jpost.com/jerusalem-report/a… "Jewish and Israeli writers are confronting growing exclusion in publishing, even as new voices continue to emerge and push forward"
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Ruth Marks Eglash retweeted
As Israel plans to take legal action against 'New York Times' over claims of 'dog rape' of Palestinians, this week's episode of The Deep Dive discusses how the claim's timing effects October 7 victims. youtube.com/watch?v=ONu1aRZr…
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