Herb Keinon
He has been at the paper for 35 years, 20 of those as its diplomatic correspondent, and during this time has covered up close the major stories that have shaped the nation for more than three decades: from the first intifada to the withdrawal from Gaza; the massive immigration of Soviet Jews to the Rabin assassination; the Ariel Sharon premiership to that of Benjamin Netanyahu.
Keinon also writes a popular monthly "light" column on daily life in Israel. A collection of these columns, French Fries in Pita, was published in 2014.
Keinon lectures widely in Israel and around the world on political and diplomatic developments in the country.
Originally from Denver, Keinon has a BA in political science from the University of Colorado, Boulder, and an MA in journalism from the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana.
Air conditioning: Controlling the weather living in a brutally hot country - comment
From penguins to pariahs: What will happen at Netanyahu's return to the UN?
Netanyahu’s Uman decision: A political misstep during Israel’s national crisis? - analysis
Charles Kushner is a refreshing ally for Israel in Paris - analysis
US Ambassador to France, Charles Kushner, criticized Macron's stance on Palestine, linking it to growing antisemitism in France. The French government swiftly protested his remarks.
From national savior to political casualty: The rise and fall of Benny Gantz - analysis
Gantz's steep decline can be traced to June 9, 2024, when he resigned from the government after issuing an ultimatum a month earlier demanding that Netanyahu present a post-war plan.
Between rallies and raids, Israel struggles to find formula to protect its people
NATIONAL AFFAIRS: Israelis rally because they cannot imagine abandoning their own. Hamas raids because it cannot imagine a better strategy.
As IDF calls up 60,000 reservists, Israel wrestles with motivation, service, sacrifice - analysis
Israel has always wrestled with questions of motivation, service, and sacrifice. Yet when tested, the country has rediscovered its resolve.
Any action to recognize Palestinian state will be met with opposing reaction from Israel - analysis
The idea of establishing a Palestinian state in Judea and Samaria is one that a majority of Israelis once entertained, but no longer.
Israel hostage protests: Should the pressure be on Hamas or the gov't? - analysis
Sunday’s strikes, roadblocks, and protests - though they disrupt life in Israel - are unlikely to move Hamas toward releasing anyone; if anything, they encourage Hamas to dig in further.
Netanyahu's biggest gamble: A final push into Gaza to repair Israel's broken image
NATIONAL AFFAIRS: For Netanyahu, the calculation is now straightforward: win the war quickly, and the rest will sort itself out.
‘What time is Shabbat over?’ - A new understanding - opinion
'The nerves of even the most adoring grandparents can get shot. I understand that now. I didn’t understand it then.'
Strategic mess or strategic mask? Israel's government, military at odds over occupying Gaza
NATIONAL AFFAIRS: Whether this is chaos by design or simply dysfunction on full display, talk over reoccupying Gaza have led to a critical inflection point.
Sa’ar at the UN: Clear, urgent, and barely heard - analysis
Sa’ar said the right things, but in a world where Hamas’s word is often trusted and Israel’s is doubted, there's no guarantee it will matter.