Stephen Turner (b. 1951) writes about good bad theories: beliefs that work as coordination devices. They need not map the world well. They hold a group together, lower internal friction, keep a coalition intact, and license continued action without costly self-examination. I call these convenient beliefs. A convenient belief might be true. The frame brackets the question of truth and asks a different one. What work does the belief do, and would the man hold it even if it were false, because his position rewards holding it?
Haviv Rettig Gur (b. April 4, 1981) covers Israel for a living. He is senior analyst at The Times of Israel, Middle East analyst at The Free Press, and host of the Ask Haviv Anything podcast. He grew up between the United States and Israel, served as a combat medic in the Nahal Brigade, ran communications for the Jewish Agency, and teaches at pre-military academies. He explains Israel to the world in English, at length, with the history attached. The beliefs below hold that project together.
He reads the Israeli street, the security consensus and the rightward shift, better than foreign correspondents and most academics do. He becomes the necessary translator of Israel to outsiders.
Palestinian rejectionism and the commitment of Hamas to Israel’s destruction drive the conflict, more than the occupation or Israeli conduct. He reads the war without adopting the dominant Western frame.
Explaining Israel to skeptical foreign and diaspora audiences serves the country. The work becomes a duty rather than a career.
History and realism beat moral simplification from the left and the right. He faults Netanyahu, the left, and Palestinian leadership in the same breath and stands above all three.
The split between Israeli Jews and diaspora Jews comes from different lives and different ways of building a Jewish self. He sits at the seam and reads both sides, so a real tension becomes his specialty.
His Jerusalem birth, twenty years on the beat, the teaching at the academies, and the Jewish Agency years give him standing across Israeli society. The credentials answer challenges before they land.
Charges that he leans too far toward the Israeli right, or goes soft on the occupation, show that outsiders miss Israeli reality. The attack confirms the brand.
Long-form analysis and patient explanation move understanding further than activism or polemic. The format follows from the belief.
Clear realism improves decisions and heads off dangerous illusions on every side, even when no solution sits within reach. The work keeps its purpose without a peace to point to.
Later readers will rank him among the accurate chroniclers of this era in Israel and the region. The long verdict outweighs the day’s controversy.
These beliefs feed one another. Together they order his output, justify the focus on security and rejectionism, hold his credit with the Israeli mainstream and with readers abroad, and turn the strain of his position, the charge of hasbara from one side and the charge of softness from the other, into a sense of duty. Turner’s point holds. The value of the cluster lies in how well it lets a man and his coalition keep working. It need not track Palestinian politics, the splits inside Israel, or the record of past peace efforts. He shifts the weight across pieces, history in one, the urgency of October 7 in another. The cluster carries the project either way.
