Seth Mandel: Israelis and Palestinians Chose Their Own Paths
The phrase “live your values” is a bit of a cliché, but the Jewish DPs did so—and how they did so is one of the lesser-appreciated stories of the struggle for statehood.Azerbaijan’s top adviser meets Netanyahu, sparking Abraham Accords talk
“The displaced Jews have an almost obsessive will to live normally again, to reclaim their full rights as free men,” wrote Leo Srole in COMMENTARY in 1947, after spending time at the Landsberg camp. “Their energies and talents have been dramatically exhibited in the vigorous communities they have created in the camps, despite scant material resources and highly abnormal environmental conditions. This achievement in reconstruction reduces to absurdity the efforts made to stigmatize the Jewish survivors. It deserves the world’s admiration. More important, it calls for the determination that such character and courage shall no longer be denied fulfillment.”
Srole takes pains to point out that, at least in Landsberg in the American zone, the camp is not a prison. There isn’t enough space or food, but the Jews are making the best of it rather than wallowing in their misfortune. At the entrance to the camp there are “statues of the Jew of the exile, bent by the Torah scrolls on his back, and of the halutz (pioneer), ramrod-straight, with a shovel at his shoulder.”
The streets are clean, the men and women stay busy and productive, the children are educated in makeshift schools. There were newspapers, theaters, religious institutions, sports clubs, boy scouts. “Even for a population predominantly young adult, the birth rate is extraordinarily high,” Srole writes. Life began anew.
But often overlooked among these makeshift institutions was the fact that the Jewish DPs governed themselves, complete with political parties and various administrative agencies. This was done with the approval, of course, of the Americans. President Eisenhower encouraged it and his military governors recognized it.
As historian Abram Sachar wrote in The Redemption of the Unwanted, when one general attended a camp Hanukkah party as if he were a visiting dignitary, the Armed Forces Network cheered that it “writes a new page in our history.” The general “has recognized the existence of a little democracy of 160,000 people liberated in the heart of Germany. The Central Committee of Liberated Jews is now a government without a flag.”
In 1945, David Ben-Gurion visited the camp and told cheering crowds that statehood in Palestine was not just inevitable but near. “If England attempts to keep the doors of Palestine shut, our youth will open them; and even if our hopes are stifled, we will meet the situation like a nation confident in its cause and in its strength.”
Self-determination was the natural state of the Jews; they built polities wherever they stood. They refused to see themselves as beaten-down victims even after the Holocaust. They built a democracy in postwar Germany before Germany did.
There is another, Sliding Doors-like timeline in which the Jews waited for others to determine their fate. If nothing else, the current conflict is a reminder of that.
In a significant diplomatic development, Hikmet Hajiyev, Assistant to the President of Azerbaijan, held extensive talks with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem on Tuesday, marking what officials describe as a potential "game-changing moment" in regional politics.Daniel Greenfield: How USAID Shipped Bags of Hundred Dollar Bills to the Taliban
"Mr. Hajiyev conveyed the greetings of President Ilham Aliyev to Prime Minister Netanyahu," the Azerbaijani Embassy in Israel stated, adding that both sides discussed expanding bilateral cooperation and regional developments.
The high-level meeting, which comes just 48 hours after Netanyahu's strategic dialogue with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, signals growing momentum for Azerbaijan's potential inclusion in the Abraham Accords framework, according to diplomatic sources familiar with the discussions.
"Azerbaijan has been one of Israel's most reliable partners in the Muslim world for three decades," a senior Israeli official told The Jerusalem Post. "Their strategic importance to regional security architecture cannot be overstated."
Close relations with Azerbaijan positive development
The Atlantic Council, a prominent US think tank, recently emphasized that "Washington should learn from Israel’s diplomatic and security collaboration with Azerbaijan to bolster its own ties with Baku. Besides being a bulwark against Iran, close relations with Azerbaijan could help the United States gain a stronger foothold among Central Asian countries, with whom Azerbaijan has been developing stronger relations. This would be especially important for the United States, as Central Asia is rich in minerals and energy and is home to the Middle Corridor, a trade route from Asia to Europe that bypasses both Russia and Iran".
The same day, the Assistant to the Azerbaijani President arrived in Jerusalem, Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies published a special Prospective Paper called ”How to Effectively Engage Azerbaijan in Trump’s Regional Plans and in Israel’s Interests: Practical Recommendations”.
It points out that Israel and pro-Israel forces in the US should actively advocate for Azerbaijan’s inclusion in American-Israeli regional development, investment, and technology partnerships. Israel is already advancing a trilateral partnership model for Morocco, involving American companies, and plans to extend this approach to Sunni Gulf monarchies and the US in defense, AI, and cybersecurity as part of the Abraham Accords expansion. Azerbaijan’s participation in such initiatives would strengthen the Muslim component of Israel’s regional partnerships. Moreover, this fully aligns with the Trump administration’s strategy of expanding multilateral cooperation among US allies to reduce Washington’s financial burden on regional development and defense projects.
The paper highlights a significant obstacle: Section 907, a legislative amendment that has restricted U.S. assistance to Azerbaijan since 1992. "For the U.S. and Israel to fully leverage Azerbaijan's advantages within the new 'Greater Middle East' architecture, these formal obstacles must be eliminated," the report states.
[T]he ultimate responsibility lay with USAID. The $40 million on the tarmac was part of a much larger scheme under which USAID and the State Department provided over $1.7 billion in funding to the UN, which then shipped $2.9 billion in cash to Afghanistan.
Under the guise of humanitarian needs, $1.7 billion was provided to the UN, which used some of the money to buy dollars to fly into Afghanistan, to trade for Afghan currency, which the U.S. had also arranged to have printed on behalf of the Taliban.
The cash is not provided to the Taliban or DAB by the UN, but by the groups funded by the UN.
During the intermediate step, DAB held "auctions" of the dollars which elements linked to the Taliban, including the Haqqani network allied with Al Qaeda, reportedly "win." The auctions prop up the Afghan currency and keep the Taliban in power.
Putting the money into UN pooled accounts allowed USAID to claim that they "do not provide assistance to or through the Taliban", they just put money into "pooled UN accounts..."
The State Department responded to these revelations by falsely claiming that there are no sanctions on Afghanistan, that banks refuse to carry out wire transfers because of "the lack of profitability" and that "to the best of our knowledge, no electronic financial delivery systems are currently scalable to meet the liquidity needs of the UN" requiring it to instead convert billions of dollars into paper notes and ship them by plane. None of this is true or even a plausible lie.
The Taliban money laundering scheme was not an exception. It was how USAID, the State Department and the UN have operated for too long, not only in Afghanistan, but in Syria, Yemen, Gaza and many other terrorist areas around the world, using plausible deniability and chains of organizations to avoid accountability and direct responsibility for aiding terrorists.
Americans have become the financiers of their worst enemies. It's time for that to stop.
