The three gunshots that struck Yitzhak Rabin on Nov. 4, 30 years ago, not only killed the Israeli prime minister, but also fatally wounded the peace process that was then barely two years old. The tragic irony was that the assassin chose to target Rabin as he left the stage of a peace rally in Tel Aviv — the Israeli leader’s final act singing what has since become the anthem of the peace camp “Shir LaShalom” (A Song for Peace). Those who personally worked against Rabin knew that this statesman and former Israeli military chief was an irreplaceable figure in the cause of peace.

OP-ED. In this opinion piece for Le Monde, Ofer Bronchtein and Daniel Cohn-Bendit commemorate former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, who was assassinated on November 4,…

The three gunshots that struck Yitzhak Rabin on Nov. 4, 30 years ago, not only killed the Israeli prime minister, but also fatally wounded the peace process that was then barely…

COLUMN. Benjamin Netanyahu has methodically dismantled the policies of the Labor prime minister who was assassinated by a far-right activist on November 4, 1995, blaming him in…