In recent years, it has become increasingly clear that the global Jewish Diaspora is facing an unsettling squeeze, one that is closing in from both ideological extremes.

On the left, an unlikely alliance between progressive activists and Islamist movements has generated a wave of hostility toward Israel and, by extension, Jews worldwide. On the extreme right, a rising tide of isolationist and populist voices—from figures like former Fox News host Tucker Carlson to the openly antisemitic fringes around Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes—have found new ways to target Jews and the Jewish state.

It feels, at times, like a buzz saw inching closer—a convergence of two very different forms of resentment toward the same small people.

At this crossroads, Israel itself faces a historic choice—what m

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