New statistics from the European Union's law enforcement agency give a sense of the scale of the threat to UK citizens
By Jason Burke
Professor Gilles Kepel talks to John Lichfield about the “jihad fatigue” that is affecting the recruitment of a new generation of terrorists
By John Lichfield
“My children think I am too busy and would like me to calm down. I love the idea but I find it hard putting it into practice.”
By Rosa Doherty
After the Six Day War Pan-Arabism’s decline created a vacuum that was filled by Islamists — Muslims who advocate an Islamic state governed by Islamic law.
By Michael Sharnoff
Norman Lebrecht gives a personal account of life during the Six Day War
By Norman Lebrecht
The war broke a fragile, though imposed, partition as the way to solve the ongoing conflict between Israeli Jews and Palestinian Arabs
By Daoud Kuttab
Anshel Pfeffer speaks to the former head of Mossad about the tumultuous events of 1967
By Anshel Pfeffer
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Wolf Mankowitz,called the approach of the Czechoslovak Communists towards Israel “a curious and repulsive psychopathology”.
By Colin Shindler
Moscow’s role in 1967 demonstrates there is nothing new in manipulating events by relaying false information.
By Lawrence Freedman
After the Six day War the threat has changed shape. It has not gone away.
Israelis’ euphoria at victory reflected the fear that defeat might have meant annihilation
By Toby Greene
'I fear for the survival of Jewish, democratic Israel'
By David Landau
A small, outnumbered, country waved its fist at a belligerent enemy and demonstrated that the present would not imitate the past.
The origins of the Six-Day War lay in part in the outcome of the previous Arab-Israeli war.
By Neill Lochery
Naomi Nevies, chair of One Family UK, outlines the way this Israeli charity supports victims of terror
By Naomi Nevies
In an exclusive interview, the Prime Minister talks to JC political editor Marcus Dysch
By Marcus Dysch