Tools
Change country:

The longshot plan to end the war in Gaza and bring peace to the Middle East

Biden walking behind Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman as the two enter a room.
President Joe Biden and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman arrive for a photo during a summit in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, on July 16, 2022. | Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

The US and Saudi Arabia say they’re close to a historic mega-deal. There’s just one problem.

As an old saying, often attributed to President Dwight Eisenhower, goes, “If a problem cannot be solved, enlarge it.”

Given how torturously difficult it has been to reach a ceasefire deal to halt the fighting in Gaza, it might seem like the height of hubris that even as the Biden administration is trying to curtail the war, it is simultaneously hoping to reach an agreement between Israel and Saudi Arabia that would fundamentally reshape the politics of the Middle East. But advocates say such a deal may be the only way to convince Israel to step back from the war and recommit to a wider peace process with the Palestinians.

Under the potential deal, the basic details of which have been reported, Saudi Arabia would agree to formally recognize and establish diplomatic relations with Israel, Israel would take meaningful steps toward a Palestinian state, and the US would grant security guarantees to Saudi Arabia.

Negotiators have suggested a deal may be imminent. One anonymous diplomat told Haaretz that the government of Saudi Arabia “has decided to go for an agreement with Israel … as part of the rapprochement with the US.” According to the New York Times, the Saudis made clear they were “eager” to conclude the deal during Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s recent visit to the kingdom. Bloomberg has reported that “officials are optimistic that they could reach a deal within weeks.” CNN reports that Saudi and US diplomats are “finalizing the details” of the accord.

This may feel a bit like deja vu. Just last September, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced in a speech at the United Nations that his country was “at the cusp” of a “historic peace” with Saudi Arabia and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman told Fox News that “every day we get closer” to normalization.

The stumbling block that prevented it from happening back then was the Palestinian issue: While Netanyahu badly wanted the deal, it wasn’t clear he was willing or politically able, given his hard-right coalition, to give enough ground on the issue of a two-state solution to satisfy either the Saudis or the Americans.

Everything that’s happened since then — the trauma of the October 7 attacks; more than six months of carnage in Gaza — hasn’t made the politics any easier. So why is so much diplomatic time and energy still being devoted to it?

A slow thaw

Saudi Arabia has refused to recognize Israel since the Jewish state’s founding in 1948. The Sunni kingdom backed other Arab countries in their early wars with Israel and was long a strong supporter of the Palestinian cause.

In recent years, however, as the Israeli-Palestinian stalemate has dragged on and Iran’s regional influence has grown, Saudi priorities have shifted. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, now Saudi Arabia’s de facto leader, is also reportedly less attached to the Palestinian cause than his father, King Salman. Riyadh has also cut its financial aid to the Palestinian Authority.

It’s an open secret in the region that there is already extensive security and intelligence cooperation between Israel and Saudi Arabia with the aim of containing their mutual adversary, the Shiite government of Iran. This cooperation paid dividends for Israel during the Iranian missile attack last month, when Israel’s overwhelmingly successful air defense was reportedly aided by intelligence cooperation from Saudi Arabia and other Arab countries.

It’s not just the Saudis who’ve been shifting. Under the Trump administration, the United States helped broker a series of deals, known as the Abraham Accords, in which several Arab countries — the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco, and Sudan — agreed to normalize relations with Israel.

This was a landmark diplomatic development for the region, a significant win for Israel — and a major setback for the Palestinians. It showed that after decades of conflict and isolation, Arab governments were willing to make peace with Israel even without the establishment of a Palestinian state.

But not all Arab governments. The Trump team pushed hard to extend the accords to Saudi Arabia. Israel and its supporters in the US badly want normalization with the kingdom, both because of its own military and economic clout and its leadership role in the wider Muslim world, but the kingdom’s rulers held out. The other Abraham Accords countries could be enticed with what, from the US perspective, were relatively painless concessions: The Trump administration recognized Moroccan sovereignty over the disputed territory of Western Sahara, while it took Sudan off a State Department sponsors of terrorism list.

The Saudis will require more.

“The Saudis have a global and regional leadership role in the Islamic world that the others don’t have,” said Hussein Ibish, senior resident scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington. “They have [more than] 30 million people and a lot of regional factions and divisions, so they have to worry about their internal political stability as well as their Arab leadership role.”

Enter Biden

The Abraham Accords was one of the few Trump initiatives that the Biden administration was happy to pick up and build on. And though Biden had vowed on the campaign trail to make the crown prince a global “pariah” over the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi — the prince has denied involvement in the Washington Post columnist’s death, but US intelligence agencies have concluded that he ordered it — concerns over energy prices in the wake of the war in Ukraine, regional security fears, and a desire to counter China’s growing influence in the Middle East eventually took precedence over human rights.

Biden, who was deeply involved in Middle East politics for decades even before becoming president, has worked to reset ties with the kingdom, culminating in the infamous “fist bump” during the president’s trip to Riyadh in 2022.

The sought-after prize for the administration’s Mideast diplomacy has been, as it was for Trump’s, an ambitious three-way normalization deal. As part of the agreement, the US would give Saudi Arabia security guarantees modeled on the defense pacts it has with non-NATO countries like Japan and South Korea. According to a column this week from the New York Times’ Tom Friedman, the US and Saudi sides are “90 percent done with the mutual defense treaty.”

The deal also reportedly includes US assistance to help Saudi Arabia build a civilian nuclear program, something that the country has long sought for its own economy, but which critics fear could be converted quickly into a weapons program. The deal may also include US investments in Saudi Arabia’s technology sector and a pledge by the Saudis to continue pricing their oil in US dollars rather than Chinese currency.

As a formal treaty, the security guarantee would also require ratification by two-thirds of the Senate. That would be a tough lift, but from the Saudis’ point of view, that’s exactly the point. They want a defense commitment that will not be subject to the vagaries of US politics or which president is in the White House. “The Saudis want to know when the United States will act and when it won’t, they want it in writing,” said Ibish. “They want it ratified by the Senate, so they don’t have to worry about the JCPOA scenario” — the Iran nuclear deal which was agreed to without a formal, congressionally ratified treaty by the Obama administration, then reversed by Trump.

A deal like this with the United States would be a big ask for any country; the US hasn’t agreed to a pact like this with any country since Japan in 1960, and much less one as controversial as Saudi Arabia, which only recently extricated itself from a long and brutal war in neighboring Yemen and has had diplomatic crises with several other countries in recent years. The Biden administration may believe the deal is worthwhile on purely realist national security grounds, but likely the only way it could be sold in Congress — particularly among members of Biden’s own party, who have generally been more critical of the Saudis — is if it’s tied to meaningful progress toward Israeli-Palestinian peace.

“I think it will be hard to get a US-Saudi security agreement ratified by the Senate,” Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT) told Vox. “There’s not a lot of enthusiasm right now for getting pulled even deeper into Middle East security dynamics, and any agreement would have to have a clear, actionable pathway to a Palestinian state, which feels unlikely in the short term. But no one is going to judge a deal that doesn’t exist, so let’s keep an open mind.”

That “clear, actionable pathway” is going to be tough to chart.

The official Saudi position, dating back to a 2002 agreement known as the Arab Peace Initiative, is that it will establish relations with Israel only after the “establishment of a sovereign independent Palestinian state.”

Israel wouldn’t have to go quite that far in the deal under discussion — nor is there any chance it would — but it would have to commit to what Blinken has called a “practical pathway” toward a Palestinian state.

It’s not clear exactly what this pathway would look like in practice, but to satisfy the Saudis, the Israeli commitment toward restarting two-state talks would have to be “very serious,” Ali Shihabi, a Saudi commentator and analyst close to the royal court, told Vox.

This was the main stumbling block when the three parties appeared close to an agreement last fall. Netanyahu has boasted of preventing the establishment of a Palestinian state and at times has supported fully annexing the West Bank. Still, as strident as he can sound, Netanyahu’s firmly held positions should be taken with a grain of salt: He also briefly accepted the idea of Palestinian statehood, in principle, with significant conditions and limitations, back in 2009.

But the same cannot be said of his right-wing coalition partners. In particular, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, himself a West Bank settler, “would rather jump off the Azrieli Tower than agree to land transfers,” David Makovsky, an expert on Arab-Israeli relations at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, told me last September, referring to a well-known Tel Aviv skyscraper. Accepting this deal could mean Netanyahu losing his coalition and then his job, which, given his current legal troubles, could land him back in court or even jail.

The new landscape

Tricky as the politics were last fall, they didn’t get any easier after the October 7 attacks, which were at least partly motivated by Hamas’s sense that the Palestinian cause was being abandoned by other Arab states. Smotrich has said that recognizing a Palestinian state now would be a “prize” for the attackers. Netanyahu has made similar comments.

On the other side, the fury provoked in the Arab world by the war means it’s likely that “the price has gone up” in terms of what concessions will be required from the Israelis, said Ibish. In addition to a pathway toward statehood, Israel would likely also have to withdraw its troops from Gaza.

Still, while talks on normalization were paused for a time after the attacks, all three sides have indicated that they’re still interested in a deal. The past few days have consistently brought new comments from diplomats saying an agreement may be imminent. In what may be a sign of its seriousness, Saudi Arabia has even stepped up its arrests of citizens who’ve criticized Israel and the United States online. Shihabi predicts that any public backlash to normalization would be manageable since “people understand that the Saudi normalization is the only card of leverage the Palestinians have with the Israelis.”

The talks have only taken on a greater urgency as US and regional diplomats have been pushing Hamas and Israel to reach a ceasefire and avert a potentially catastrophic Israeli assault of the southern Gaza city of Rafah, where roughly half of Gaza’s population has taken refuge.

As much as or even more than before October 7, it’s impossible to imagine the current Israeli government agreeing to a deal. But for supporters of normalization, that’s a feature, not a bug.

“I would not be surprised if [Netanyahu has] reached the conclusion that this coalition has outlived its usefulness,” said Nimrod Novik, a former foreign policy adviser to Prime Minister Shimon Peres now with the Israel Policy Forum. Novik laid out a scenario in which Netanyahu could form a new coalition government with more mainstream partners “to replace the lunatics in return for going for the Saudi regional package, including a serious change in policy vis-a-vis the Palestinian Authority.” Still, he noted that there was no evidence such a plan was actually in the works.

The Israeli public, who polls show have grown more skeptical of the two-state solution, would still have to be sold, but Novik, who served in a Labor Party government and is a longtime critic of the prime minister, conceded, “I believe the government can market it, and to my great regret, no one could market it better than Netanyahu.”

The long shot

It all sounds very neat: the war ends, the two-state solution gets back on track, two key US allies end 75 years of bitter rivalry. But making it happen requires quite a few things to go right, and without a lot of time to spare. A ceasefire would have to be reached in Gaza, the issue of Hamas’s Israeli hostages would have to be resolved, and an agreement on Palestinian statehood would have to be found that would satisfy both the Saudis and their critics in the Democratic Party. Making that happen might very well require Israel to form a new government.

In the meantime, the US presidential election is rapidly approaching, which could upend all of this. For one thing, it’s hard to imagine Democrats in Congress agreeing to a deal with Trump in the White House.

“The sun, the moon, and the stars have to align pretty close together in record time, in order to make this happen,” Aaron David Miller, a veteran Mideast peace negotiator now with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, told Vox. Unfortunately, said Miller, “in my experience, Arab-Israeli negotiations work at two speeds: slow and slower.”

In a possible sign of frustration, the Guardian reported this week that the Saudis are also proposing a “plan B” agreement under which the US-Saudi components of the deal would be completed even without any Israeli involvement. That would seem to be a nonstarter for Congress. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), generally a strong supporter of US-Saudi ties, tweeted, “Without normalizing the Israeli-Saudi relationship and ensuring the security needs of Israel regarding the Palestinian file, there would be very few votes for a mutual defense agreement between the U.S. and Saudi Arabia.” Another possible plan, according to Friedman’s column, is that the deal could be presented to Congress “with the stated proviso that Saudi Arabia will normalize relations with Israel the minute Israel has a government ready to meet the Saudi-U.S. terms.”

On a call with reporters on Thursday, National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby wouldn’t comment on the recent press reports, saying only that negotiations were ongoing and that “We still want to see normalization between Israel and Saudi Arabia and we believe that that could have a significant impact on our ability to get closer to a two-state solution.”

Israeli-Saudi normalization is a dream that has now captivated two different US administrations who otherwise agree on little else, and even the seismic break of October 7 wasn’t enough to kill it off.

It may very well be the best offer on the table to induce Israel to step back from the war. At the moment, however, it’s far from clear that Israel is actually interested in stepping back.


Read full article on: vox.com
  1. Severna Park boys are a win away from an eighth straight lacrosse title The Falcons will face Towson on Tuesday for the Maryland Class 3A championship. Broadneck and Glenelg also reached state title games.
    washingtonpost.com
  2. NYC Council’s bid to block budget cuts boosted by report showing city actually has $2B surplus over Adams’ projection The Big Apple is sitting on an extra $2.2 billion in available funds than what Mayor Eric Adams projects through next fiscal year, a new study says.
    nypost.com
  3. Sex Offender Arrested After Faking His Death to Avoid Registering, Sheriff Says Pinal County Sheriff's OfficeA convicted sex offender was arrested on Tuesday in Arizona, seven months after he allegedly faked his own death to avoid having to register.In October, 50-year-old Benjamin Hollins allegedly had a woman file a false police report claiming that he’d killed himself jumping off the Theodore Roosevelt Lake Bridge in Roosevelt, Arizona.In a video statement posted to Facebook, Pinal County Sheriff Mark Lamb said his department had wasted “a lot of resources” searching for Hollins’ body, “which was clearly not found, because he wasn’t dead.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
    thedailybeast.com
  4. ‘Gold Bar’ Sen. Bob Menendez snarls at Post in defense of wife Nadine — days after blaming ailing spouse for legal woes  The embattled senator rushed to the defense of his wife — days after blaming her for his legal woes in a high-stakes bribery trial.
    nypost.com
  5. Knife-wielding maniac who allegedly smashed windshield of NYPD patrol car with cops inside before attacking them released by judge A knife-wielding maniac who smashed a NYPD cruiser’s windshield as a pair of cops sat inside and then punched them as they tried to arrest him in the Bronx last month has been sprung from jail.
    nypost.com
  6. El expresidente de El Salvador Mauricio Funes enfrenta juicio por lavado desde asilo en Nicaragua Un tribunal salvadoreño instaló el martes un nuevo juicio penal contra el expresidente Mauricio Funes por lavado de activos, por presuntamente licitar un puente a favor de una empresa guatemalteca a cambio de recibir un avión.
    latimes.com
  7. Mets make major lineup tweak in hopes of sparking woeful bats In search of a cure to the Mets’ disappointing offensive output, manager Carlos Mendoza presented two of his highest-profile players an idea after Friday’s loss.
    nypost.com
  8. Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley defends 'friend' Harrison Butker after 'out of touch' left's 'absurd meltdown' Senator Josh Hawley defended his "friend" Harrison Butker this week on social media after both media and the NFL condemned the kicker's commencement address.
    foxnews.com
  9. Luis Fonsi nos lleva a recorrer el mundo en su nuevo álbum 'El viaje', la nueva producción de Luis Fonsi, cuenta con varios invitados de lujo
    latimes.com
  10. Juan Soto accomplishes career-firsts after launching two long homers into Yankee Stadium bleachers Juan Soto is setting himself even more for quite the payday in free agency, but with all his talent, there were some things he hadn't accomplished until Saturday.
    foxnews.com
  11. Knicks vs. Pacers Game 7 prediction: NBA picks, player props, odds As injuries have piled up, Miles McBride has slid into the Knicks’ rotation, providing a jolt to coach Thibs’ depleted lineup.
    nypost.com
  12. WATCH: Zoo sets up new pulley system for giraffes A newly installed pulley system at the Oakland Zoo allows giraffes to eat at a more natural height.
    abcnews.go.com
  13. Leverkusen hace historia como el primer equipo en terminar invicto la temporada de la Bundesliga Bayern Munich nunca lo logró. Bayern Munich never managed it.
    latimes.com
  14. Caitlin Clark’s impressive game not enough as Liberty rip Fever in home opener It would’ve been nearly impossible for the Liberty to nearly eliminate Caitlin Clark’s impact two games in a row. This is Clark. This is what she does.
    nypost.com
  15. Tight-rope walker is latest problem for downtown L.A.'s graffiti towers A performance artist who goes by the name Reckless Ben filmed himself on a slackline between two downtown L.A. skyscrapers 40 stories above Figueroa Street.
    latimes.com
  16. Giuliani Is Served Arizona Indictment Notice After His 80th Birthday Party After trying to reach him for weeks, officials served him the notice as he left his 80th birthday party. He is expected to appear in court on Tuesday.
    nytimes.com
  17. Minnesota Republican Party issues surprising endorsement of BLM protest leader seeking to oust Dem senator The Minnesota GOP tossed its support behind Royce White, a former Black Lives Matter protest leader turned GOP Senate candidate, in the race to replace Sen. Amy Klobuchar.
    foxnews.com
  18. John Wayne Bobbitt says women cut off their partners’ penises out of ‘jealousy,’ unfulfilled ‘childhood dreams’ in response to grisly Colorado murder John Wayne Bobbitt, the man who gained notoriety when his wife cut off his penis in 1993, said women cut off men's genitals because they are distraught.
    nypost.com
  19. Scottie Scheffler’s chaotic PGA Championship weekend takes another twist with front 9 disaster Scheffler, completely out of character, came undone on the front nine of his third round. 
    nypost.com
  20. Dean McDermott praises ‘loving’ and ‘compassionate’ Tori Spelling for her support of girlfriend Lily Calo McDermott defended his estranged wife after a fan criticized the "Beverly Hills, 90210" alum for "liking" a photo of her ex with his new girlfriend.
    nypost.com
  21. Fantasy baseball: Base-stealers worth targeting to boost your squad Don’t look now, but it seems Major League Baseball perfected the flux capacitor, got themselves a DeLorean and went back to the 1980s, when stolen bases were all the rage. 
    nypost.com
  22. White House officials hold indirect talks with Iran: report Two top White House officials held indirect discussions with Iranian officials in Oman this week in an effort to tamp down regional attacks, according to a report.
    nypost.com
  23. Former Angel David Fletcher bet with the bookie used by Shohei Ohtani's ex-interpreter, sources say Former Los Angeles Angels' infielder David Fletcher may have made bets with the same bookie used by baseball star Shohei Ohtani's ex-interpreter, ESPN has reported.
    latimes.com
  24. Rep. Jasmine Crockett launches ‘Clapback Collection’ off Marjorie Taylor Greene insults: ‘Bad-built butch body’ "The money will go to ensuring that we have a Democratic House!" Crockett said of her "Clapback Collection" of swag.
    nypost.com
  25. McDonald’s franchisee claims company is trying to boot him from his 37 locations: ‘Wrongfully scheming’ McDonald's "is wrongfully scheming" to oust George Michell, and "to steal the value of his businesses from him," he said in a lawsuit.
    nypost.com
  26. Xavi desmiente reportes de la prensa española sobre que el Barcelona se plantea despedirlo Xavi Hernández desmintió el sábado un montón de reportes de la prensa española sobre que la directiva del Barcelona se plantea despedir al director técnico por haber dicho que la mala situación económica del club le impide competir con el Real Madrid.
    latimes.com
  27. En su día, Ohtani conduce a Dodgers hacia victoria sobre Rojos Shohei Ohtani disparó un cuadrangular de dos vueltas y anotó la carrera de la ventaja en la séptima entrada, para que los Dodgers de Los Ángeles vencieran el viernes 7-3 a los Rojos de Cincinnati.
    latimes.com
  28. The Met’s ‘Orfeo ed Euridice’ makes for a very welcoming underworld At the Met, star countertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo and soprano Ling Fang star in an enchanting presentation of Gluck’s masterful setting of the Orpheus myth
    washingtonpost.com
  29. Estrada batea jonrón de 3 carreras y guía a Gigantes a victoria sobre Rockies Thairo Estrada conectó un jonrón de tres carreras que significó la ventaja en la quinta entrada y añadió un par de sencillos para que los Gigantes de San Francisco doblegaran el viernes 10-5 a los Rockies de Colorado.
    latimes.com
  30. Member of Israel's war Cabinet says he'll quit unless there's a new war plan for Gaza Benny Gantz, part of Israel’s war Cabinet, threatens to resign if the government doesn’t adopt a new plan for the war against Hamas in Gaza.
    latimes.com
  31. Lawyer preparation suggests Trump won’t testify in New York trial Discussions that the judge had with lawyers in recent days indicate that Trump is not likely to be one of the witnesses called by the defense team.
    washingtonpost.com
  32. I run a nude resort — this is the sick behavior that will get you kicked out Karie Jane, 57, says most clothing-averse vacationers are impeccably behaved at her BHH Naturist Resort, but any lewd conduct is not tolerated.
    nypost.com
  33. Philippine mayor accused of acting as Chinese asset amid investigation, tensions Alice Guo provided what Philippine senators called "opaque" answers to questions about her background, leading to serious allegations about her allegiances.
    foxnews.com
  34. Knicks’ Game 7 pressure even greater with no guarantee of return They call it the best two words in sports, but “Game 7” sometimes can be classified as “last best chance.” Just ask Tom Thibodeau. Thirteen years ago, he guided the Bulls to the conference finals with the youngest MVP in NBA history and a ceiling seemingly higher than the Sears Tower. They were destined for...
    nypost.com
  35. Rangers cherishing chance to create their own 1994-like legacy There is hockey and there are the Rangers. They are preceded around these parts by only the Yankees and Giants. In two years it will be a century. They are a legacy team. But that’s part of the issue, isn’t it? 
    nypost.com
  36. NYC shooter who killed 16-year-old ‘peacemaker’ rode to killing in Citi Bike basket, ID’d by his Air Jordans: court docs The teen shooter who fatally gunned down a 16-year-old in Soho earlier this month rode to the killing in a CitiBike basket and was identified in part by his distinctive Air Jordans.
    nypost.com
  37. D.C. police officer wounds man in West End A man who was shot Saturday afternoon by a D.C. police officer was reported conscious and breathing.
    washingtonpost.com
  38. Diana Taurasi changes course on Caitlin Clark warning: ‘Taken out of context’ Diana Taurasi wants to clarify her Caitlin Clark remarks.
    nypost.com
  39. Juan Soto’s breakout supports Luis Gil’s gem as Yankees beat White Sox for sixth straight win Soto crushed a pair of home runs in a four-hit game and Luis Gil struck out a career-high 14 in a dazzling performance as the Yankees cruised to their sixth straight win with a 6-1 drubbing of the White Sox in The Bronx.
    nypost.com
  40. Fight against antisemitism may have deep-pocketed ally as Israel-Hamas war fuels hate on campuses The fight against antisemitism may soon get a powerful and deep-pocketed ally: Blackstone chief and Yale graduate Steve Schwarzman.
    nypost.com
  41. Georgia’s President Vetoes Foreign Influence Law The law has triggered protests and threatens to derail the nation’s pro-European aspirations in favor of closer ties with Russia.
    nytimes.com
  42. ‘Emilia Perez’: Selena Gomez’s Trans Cartel Musical Is the Buzz of Cannes Shanna BessonNothing about Selena Gomez’s new movie that premiered at Cannes should work.Let's just review the plot. Stay with me here.Emilia Perez is the mostly Spanish-language story of a lawyer, Rita (Zoe Saldaña), who is hired by a notorious cartel leader, Manitas, who has been on hormones for two years, to make secret arrangements for a gender confirmation surgery. Rita makes millions in the process. Cut to four years later: Manitas is now Emilia Perez. She is impossibly glamorous and has another task for Rita. Emilia (Karla Sofía Gascón) wants the lawyer, now a success in London, to retrieve her wife, Jessi (Gomez), and children from their hideaway in Switzerland and install them in a house in Mexico City, where Emilia will pose as her own kids’ aunt. Jessi assumes that Manitas is dead and has no idea who Emilia really is, but she wants to return to get back together with the sexy Gustavo (Édgar Ramírez), with whom she had an affair. Later, Emilia, atoning for her crimes as the ruthless Manitas, opens a foundation to locate the bodies of disappeared people.Read more at The Daily Beast.
    thedailybeast.com
  43. Hear what ret. US general thinks about Gantz's ultimatum to Netanyahu about Gaza war Former Israeli defense minister and war cabinet member Benny Gantz is demanding that the cabinet lays out a plan for the war against Hamas by June 8, threatening to withdraw from the government if his demands are not met. Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling (Ret.) weighs in on the ultimatum and what he thinks Netanyahu should do.
    edition.cnn.com
  44. 6 Penn Students Among Pro-Palestinian Protesters Arrested During Attempt to Occupy Building The University of Pennsylvania students were among 19 pro-Palestinian protesters arrested during an attempt to occupy a school building.
    time.com
  45. Ben Affleck seen for first time without wedding ring amid Jennifer Lopez divorce rumors The ringless sighting further fuels the speculation that the movie star and his wife of nearly two years are headed for Splitsville.
    nypost.com
  46. Rangers’ struggles making their playoff success even sweeter It’s been a while for a lot of us, so we can be forgiven around these parts if we’d forgotten how excruciating serious postseasons runs can be. And how essential that anguish is to enjoying the ride in full.
    nypost.com
  47. No ands or buts about it — ‘If’ lands top box office spot opening day "If" was No. 1 this Friday, its first day in theaters, raking in $10.3 million.
    nypost.com
  48. LeBron James' son, Bronny, not getting love from scouts: 'He is not an NBA prospect' Bronny James is not getting much love from NBA scouts after he appeared at the NBA Scouting Combine earlier this week in Chicago.
    foxnews.com