Why is the U.S. Helping to Send Arms to Hizballah?
Something doesn’t add up.
August 11, 2016
The Sharett plan.
In 1950 and 1951, some 100,000 Iraqi Jews—most of whose assets had been frozen by the Iraqi government—immigrated to the Jewish state. In response, Israeli leaders began to investigate the possibility of an agreement with the Arab countries whereby any property abandoned by Palestinian refugees would be exchanged for property lost by Jewish refugees from Arab countries. Eylon Aslan-Levy writes:
Something doesn’t add up.
The Way to the Spring.
To forget one’s past is to remain forever a child.
Adrift on a flood of speculation.
The Sharett plan.
In 1950 and 1951, some 100,000 Iraqi Jews—most of whose assets had been frozen by the Iraqi government—immigrated to the Jewish state. In response, Israeli leaders began to investigate the possibility of an agreement with the Arab countries whereby any property abandoned by Palestinian refugees would be exchanged for property lost by Jewish refugees from Arab countries. Eylon Aslan-Levy writes:
Unlock the most serious Jewish, Zionist, and American thinking.
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