With the recent passing of former president Jimmy Carter, the time has come to consider the mixed legacy he has left behind. Although remembered for pursuing and signing the Camp David Accords, which facilitated the first peace treaty between Israel and an Arab state,
Jimmy Carter spent four years as president of the United States and 44 years as ex-president. It’s his extraordinary career as our former president that we are most likely to
America has always used a blend of hard power and soft power. We both flex and listen. With the stakes this high, we will need to do both in the coming years.
In 1977, before the Camp David talks, Begin and Sadat had a preliminary meeting at Jerusalem’s King David Hotel. On July 22, 1946, Begin, leading the Jewish Irgun militia, led a terrorist attack on this hotel and 91 were killed and 47 were injured.
A prerequisite for being a president of the United States should be having a carpentry background. Consider all of the knowledge you have to have in building a house.
Last week many Americans witnessed the funeral for former President Jimmy Carter at the National Cathedral in the nation’s capital. President Carter died in December while in hospice care in Georgia.
President Carter practiced his faith clearly and openly — he even taught adult Sunday School while in office! Yet he fully honored the separation of church and state.
Although the ceasefire agreement is a much-needed lifeline for Gaza, there is a lot of skepticism regarding it. Past agreements like the Camp David and Oslo accords demonstrate that achieving peace requires bold leadership,
This cease-fire is still fragile, and working toward a Palestinian solution and a wider Mideast accord will require intense work by the Trump administration.
16—Jimmy Carter spent four years as president of the United ... he worked with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin to hammer out an agreement. His attitude was, you're going to sit there until you get something ...
Joe Biden entered the Oval Office in January 2021 with more experience in foreign policy than any president in 30 years—more than all but one or two of his predecessors in the past half-century. Yet he leaves this week with a mixed record,
The debate in the Zionist camp over Carter’s legacy as it relates to his relationship with Israel teaches a lesson that extends far past president Carter and the US-Israel relationship.