
Micah Quinney Jones is an attorney, a US Army veteran, and a pro-Israel advocate. He is a recipient of the Bronze Star Medal for Meritorious Service.
Before attending law school, Micah served for over five years as a Military Intelligence branch detail Infantry officer in the United States Army. He was honorably discharged as a Captain in 2016. The majority of his military service was spent in the Army's 82nd Airborne Division.
During his 2014-2015 deployment to Kabul, Afghanistan, he served as the aide to the Brigadier General in charge of NATO's Rule of Law mission.
Micah was the Distinguished Leadership Graduate for his Officer Candidate School class. He is a graduate of the US Army Ranger School, US Army Airborne School, and US Army Survival, Evasion, Resistance , Escape School (Level C).
A graduate of University of California, San Diego and Northeastern University School of Law, Micah has been actively involved in pro-Israel activism for well-over a decade. While in law school, Micah served as the chair of the law school’s Alliance for Israel club where he hosted numerous speakers and provided the pro-Israel voice.
During his time in law school, Micah was also a 2017 Rappaport Fellow in Law and Public Policy, a judicial intern to a federal magistrate judge for the District of Massachusetts, and a civil rights legal intern at the Anti-Defamation League.
Micah is currently a litigation associate in the Boston Office of an international law firm.
Our Soldiers Speak had the privilege of hosting Micah in Israel during the 2019 Israel Law & Policy Tour (I-LAP).
latest publications
In reciting the four questions this Passover, it felt like we should have asked one more: Why is this Passover different…
As has been covered extensively by American and international news media, General Qasem Soleimani’s death on Friday, January 3, 2020, in Baghdad, Iraq, was a history-altering event. The legal and justifiable strike of an arch-terrorist leader in a United States military theater of operations was in response to the recent attacks on the United States Embassy in Iraq and Soleimani’s history of unprecedented influence and violence within Iraq and the greater Middle East. Jews, the question bears mentioning, should Jewish Americans be worried for our future in the United States?
This August, I traveled to Israel as one of 40 Israel Law and Policy (“I-LAP”) delegates. The I-LAP tour was hosted by Our Soldiers Speak (“OSS”)—a non-profit organization focused on elevating the discourse surrounding Israel.