"I wanted to be with you today, but I heard that you have 18,000 participants and I began to worry that the registration line waiting would be too long, so I’m happy to be with you from Jerusalem. Thank you, AIPAC. Thank you Howard Kohr and Lillian Pincus for your leadership. Thank you to the 4,000 students, the leaders of tomorrow, who have come to the conference today. Thank you to the bipartisan leadership of Congress and to the many members of the House and Senate who have come to show...
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, this morning (20 March 2017, China Standard Time), met with the heads of China's largest corporations, each of which has a turnover of tens of billions of dollars. Among those present were the chairpersons of Wanda, Alibaba, Wahaha, Lenovo and Baidu.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will, on Sunday (19 March 2017), leave on an official visit to China. The visit follows an invitation by Chinese President Xi Jinping and will mark 25 years since the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries. The Chinese President will meet with Prime Minister Netanyahu and host him for an official dinner. The Prime Minister will also meet with his Chinese counterpart, Li Keqiang.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met tonight in Jerusalem for over five hours with Jason Greenblatt, US President Donald Trump's Special Representative for International Negotiations.
Jerusalem, Thursday, November 24th, 2016 - Hundreds of United Hatzalah volunteer EMS personnel assisted firefighters in evacuating residents in the Romema and Sapir neighborhoods of Haifa during a series of fires that blazed in those areas on Thursday morning. Residents who were still in their neighborhoods were evacuated by the firefighters, police and United Hatzalah volunteers.
Over 75,000 evacuated from Haifa; fires rage in Galilee, Jerusalem foothills; Druze villagers open homes to evacuees as Palestinian firefighters pitch in
Targeting Orthodox voters in battleground states, 16-point manifesto pledges unprecedented assistance to Jerusalem, stops short of promise to kill Iran nuclear deal
Michael Lynk says Israel’s threatening response to criticism by B’Tselem is unacceptable; Israeli envoy says he represents a biased, discredited organization