Caroline B. Glick (Hebrew: קרולין גליק; born 1969) is an Israeli-American conservative journalist and author who lives in Efrat, in Gush Etzion.
After her demobilisation, Glick worked for about a year as the assistant to the director general of the Israel Antiquities Authority.
[8] [9] Following her return to Israel, she became the chief diplomatic correspondent for the Makor Rishon newspaper, for which she wrote a weekly column in Hebrew.
In the summer of 2019, Glick joined Israeli newspaper Israel Hayom, where she works as a senior columnist for its Hebrew and English editions.
In 2003, during Operation Iraqi Freedom, Glick was embedded with the US Army's 3rd Infantry Division, and filed front-line reports for The Jerusalem Post and the Chicago Sun-Times.
[11] Glick is the author of The Israeli Solution: A One State Plan for Peace in the Middle East, and Shackled Warrior: Israel and the Global Jihad.
[10][16] On May 31, 2009, she received the Guardian of Zion Award from the Ingeborg Rennert Center for Jerusalem Studies at Bar-Ilan University.
[17] In July 2012, the David Horowitz Freedom Center announced the hiring of Glick as the Director of its Israel Security Project.
[citation needed] In a Jerusalem Post opinion piece on the subject of the Iran nuclear agreement published on August 13, 2015, Glick characterized Jewish Americans as being at a crossroads, being threatened by President Barack Obama to risk both alienation from the Democratic Party and a weakening of the traditional Israeli-USA relationship if influential American Jewish leaders fail to support the nuclear deal.
[21] In Glick's 2014 book The Israeli Solution: A One-State Plan for Peace in the Middle East, she advocates for the annexation of the West Bank into a Jewish state.
[24] David P. Goldman's review at the Asia Times was more favorable of Glick's one-state plan, but questioned whether it could be executed considering the demographic disaster predicted by Sergio Della Pergola.