Halevi and Beinart converged on something this week.
They converged from opposite ends of the political map — and that's only one of three turns this week's article takes. Halevi from inside the Israeli centre-left, Beinart from inside the American Jewish left, both engaging a framing Coleman Hughes put forward three weeks ago. Mearsheimer enters the same week with a long-form conversation that quietly grants more ground than he usually does. Here are the three turns worth pausing on.
Mearsheimer extends the structural read to a place he usually doesn't
The new long-form conversation quietly grants more diagnostic ground to the cable framework than Mearsheimer usually does. §1 puts the move under pressure: where it holds, where it doesn't, and what it implies for everything else in this week's reading.
Read §1 in the articleThe asymmetry of the ask
Hughes's piece argued that the question both sides keep refusing to answer cleanly is not what do you want but what are you asking the other to give up. Three weeks later, Halevi and Beinart engage it independently. §3 traces how the convergence happened — and why it matters that it came from voices that don't usually share a sentence.
Read §3 in the articleHalevi and Beinart, meeting from opposite directions
Halevi's Hartman essay and Beinart's Notebook newsletter converged on a single point about the asymmetric ask — from inside the centre-left Israeli position and from inside the American Jewish-left position respectively. §4 is built around the convergence. Almost entirely missed by mainstream coverage.
Read §4 in the article