Tuesday, March 24, 2026

  • Tuesday, March 24, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon
A columnist at Al Ahram discusses the conundrum of whether Arab Muslim states should support Iran for attacking Israel, or whether it should oppose Iran for attacking other Arab Muslim states.

His solution is to quote David Ben Gurion.


Some have fallen prey to the dilemma of either defending or condemning Iran. This stems from a flawed oversimplification and a superficial approach to a complex situation...

Defending Iran against Israel does not justify failing to condemn its aggression against the Gulf states. In fact, its aggression against these states renders defending it futile and illogical. Defending the Gulf states and condemning attacks against them, regardless of the justification, undoubtedly takes precedence over all else. Iran's aggression against the Gulf states is a clear continuation of its hostile approach and its aggression against Arab states for years prior to the war. Supporting the Gulf against Iran or any other entity is an obligation that cannot be absolved by any other consideration.

Israel's first Prime Minister, David Ben-Gurion, offers a way out. The Jews found themselves in a predicament before World War II because Britain, the country that had taken the most significant step in the creation of Israel (the Balfour Declaration), issued what became known as the White Paper. This document restricted Jewish land purchases and immigration to Palestine, in a British attempt to secure the support of Arab states, which they considered more important than supporting the Jews in the war. This created a rift between the Jews and Britain. With the outbreak of war, the Jews had no choice but to stand with Britain against Nazi Germany. Ben-Gurion declared, ""We must assist the British in the war as if there were no White Paper and we must resist the White Paper as if there were no war." Hitler was the primary enemy of the Jews, and their disagreement with Britain did not lead them to side with him, nor could they forget their conflict with Britain.

Therefore, the minimum position on Iran is to defend it against Israel as if it had not done what it did to the Arab states, and to condemn Iran’s policy and aggression against the Gulf as if there had been no war.
So should Gulf states support Israel helping destroy the drones and missiles aimed at them, or not because they are also aimed at Israel? Should Arabs join the war against Iran to protect their own people? Should the Saudis protect their own oil exports? 

And of course, Iran attacking Israeli civilians is assumed to be perfectly moral in this supposedly sophisticated approach. 

Hate for Israel is so ingrained in Arab thinking that the idea that Israel and the Gulf Arab states might be on the same side is utterly unintelligible to them. 



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Tuesday, March 24, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon
New York City’s new mayor, Zohran Mamdani, has aligned himself with a 74-page report from Jews for Racial and Economic Justice proposing to combat antisemitic violence in New York — without policing, without armed guards, and without the law enforcement coordination that security professionals say is essential. Instead, JFREJ proposes community building: intergroup collaborative projects, playground renovations, soup kitchens, street fairs. Bonds of connection. Root causes.

The plan claims to be evidence-based. It is not. Examined carefully, it is a political document masquerading as social science, built on three fundamental analytical errors, contradicted by the actual history of antisemitic violence in New York and America, and — most damning of all — produced by an organization whose political framework actively excludes the majority of Jews from its definition of community. This plan does not protect Jews from antisemitic violence. At its logical conclusion, it increases the risk.

The Plan and Its Claims
JFREJ’s report, titled “NYC Against Hate Violence: Evidence-Based Prevention & Infrastructure for Intergroup Community Building,” was unveiled on the steps of City Hall in March 2026 alongside Mamdani’s announcement of a new Office of Community Safety. The report calls for $26 to $30 million annually in hate violence prevention spending, an 800% increase over current levels — the exact figure Mamdani had pledged during his campaign.

JFREJ executive director Audrey Sasson told assembled reporters that “our traditional responses — policing, and prosecution and arrest — have not reversed the trend of rising hate violence, because they can’t.” She and the report argue that the Jewish community “has never been offered real prevention options at scale” and that what’s needed is to “bring communities together around shared goals” so that “bonds of connection” are already in place when crises arise.

The Secure Community Network, which actually advises Jewish institutions on security, lists coordination with law enforcement first among its eight security recommendations. In the wake of the March 2026 attack on Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, Michigan — where a Lebanese-born American drove his vehicle into a synagogue containing a preschool, drove inside the building, and opened fire — SCN specifically credited the institution’s prior investments in security and law enforcement coordination with limiting casualties. JFREJ’s report calls this approach “security theater.”

We are going to take JFREJ’s evidence seriously — more seriously, it turns out, than JFREJ itself did.

The “Evidence-Based” Claim

The report’s introduction contains a remarkable sentence that should have disqualified its central claim before the document got off the ground:

“There is almost no research into what actually works to prevent violence, leaving practitioners with little guidance on how to design programs that stand to make an impact.”

They wrote this themselves. Several paragraphs later, the same document declares: “We now have the research — we know what actually works.”

An honest reading of the report’s own citations will show that it has assembled evidence about the causes and demographics of hate violence — useful descriptive work — and then asserted, without demonstrating, that its proposed interventions address those causes. The leap from description to prescription is never justified. It is simply assumed.

The report’s primary descriptive framework for hate crime perpetrators comes from a 2002 paper by criminologists Jack McDevitt, Jack Levin, and Susan Bennett, using Boston police data. They categorized hate crime offenders into four types: thrill-seekers (the majority), defensive offenders, retaliatory offenders, and mission-driven offenders. The report leans heavily on the finding that thrill-seekers dominate — young men committing impulsive, low-planning bias violence for the excitement of peer dynamics. Community-based social norm interventions are plausibly relevant to this population.

But there is a devastating problem with how JFREJ applies this data, and it runs in three dimensions.

Error One: Conflating All Hate Incidents With Violent Ones

The ADL recorded 8,873 antisemitic incidents in 2023 and 9,354 in 2024. The overwhelming majority of these were vandalism and harassment — swastikas spray-painted on synagogue walls, threatening letters, slurs shouted on the street, social media harassment. Physical assaults were a fraction of that total, and mass-casualty attacks were a fraction of that fraction.

The McDevitt typology’s finding that thrill-seekers dominate the hate crime offender population is a finding about all hate incidents across all target groups — including, critically, the large base of graffiti, chalking, and low-level harassment that makes up most of the aggregate count. Thrill-seeking is exactly what drives a teenager to spray-paint a swastika on a wall at 2 a.m. It is social, situational, impulsive, and plausibly amenable to community norm intervention.

JFREJ then uses this population-level finding to discredit security measures designed for the attacker-with-a-gun population. Armed guards at synagogues are “security theater,” the report argues. Hate crime sentencing has no deterrent effect, it notes correctly. But sentencing deterrence and physical protection are different mechanisms — and the report conflates them without acknowledgment. The teenager with a spray can and the man who drives a vehicle into a building containing a preschool are not the same phenomenon requiring the same response.

If JFREJ’s community programs were maximally effective and reduced thrill-seeking incidents by half, that would produce exactly zero effect on the threat facing Jewish institutions from mission-driven actors. The two populations do not overlap.

Error Two: Conflating Antisemitic Violence With Other Hate Crimes

The McDevitt data was collected across all hate crime categories in Boston. Anti-Black hate crimes are by far the most numerous nationally, followed by anti-gay, anti-Hispanic, and others. These categories have very different perpetrator profiles. Anti-Black hate crimes, particularly in the “defensive” category — white residents of changing neighborhoods trying to intimidate new arrivals — are responsive to the contact hypothesis and intergroup relationship-building in ways that antisemitic violence is not.

The contact hypothesis, the backbone of JFREJ’s intergroup projects recommendation, predicts that sustained positive contact between groups reduces prejudice. This has been validated for attitude change in contexts of situational bias — the discomfort of unfamiliarity, the generalized stereotyping born of social distance. It performs poorly against ideological bias, and it fails almost entirely against conspiracy-theory-based belief systems.

Contemporary antisemitic violence — from white supremacists to Islamist extremists to Black Hebrew Israelite theology — is not born of unfamiliarity with Jews. It is driven by positive, elaborated belief systems that assign Jews a specific role in a cosmic or political narrative: Jews as civilization-destroyers, Jews as agents of white genocide, Jews as fraudulent impostors of the true Israelites. These frameworks do not waver when confronted with pleasant Jewish neighbors. They accommodate the pleasant neighbor as the exception — the “good Jew” — while maintaining the categorical threat. Centuries of European Jews having cordial individual relationships with Christian neighbors did not prevent pogroms. The pogromists had Jewish acquaintances. This did not matter when the ideology reached a boiling point.

JFREJ applies research about attitude change in situational bias to the population driving antisemitic violence, where the bias is structural and ideological. This is a category error that invalidates the core recommendation.

Error Three: The Geography of the Threat

The thrill-seeking and defensive typologies, and the community-building interventions designed for them, are implicitly local. The theory assumes that hostile neighbors who don’t know each other develop prejudice that community contact can reduce.

But examine where the perpetrators of major antisemitic attacks actually came from. Robert Bowers was radicalized in online white supremacist ecosystems — the global fever swamp of Gab and 8chan. John Earnest was a California college student who wrote a manifesto consciously imitating a New Zealand mass murderer who attacked mosques. Malik Faisal Akram flew from Manchester, England, to take hostages at a Texas synagogue. Ayman Ghazali drove to West Bloomfield. Naveed Haq typed “something Jewish” into a search engine and drove to wherever the results pointed.

The radicalization is online and transnational. The targeting is of Jews as a category, not of specific individuals known from a shared neighborhood. Building intergroup relationships in Crown Heights does not reach the man in a Kansas City suburb being radicalized on Telegram, or the man in Lebanon who is already planning his trip. JFREJ proposes hyper-local solutions to an extra-local threat. Even if every program worked perfectly for the population it could theoretically reach, it would not touch the class of perpetrators responsible for the worst attacks.


The Actual Record: Who Attacks Jews, and What Stops Them

Let’s test the JFREJ framework against the actual perpetrators of violent antisemitic attacks in America since 2001.





Of eleven major violent incidents since 2001, every single one was mission-driven. Zero were thrill-seeking. The mechanism that stopped or limited each attack — in every case — was armed intervention, law enforcement response, or both.

Nowhere in this table is there a slot for “intergroup soup kitchen.” Nowhere does “bonds of connection” appear. These attacks were not the product of social distance between communities that could be bridged by collaborative projects. They were carried out by people whose ideological commitments were, by design, impervious to personal experience of Jewish individuals.

New York’s own record of foiled plots confirms the picture with even greater clarity.

The 2009 Bronx plot to bomb two synagogues in Riverdale — stopped by an FBI informant operation.

The 2011 Manhattan plot to bomb a synagogue, with one suspect planning to disguise himself as a Jewish worshipper to gain entry — stopped by months of NYPD intelligence surveillance.

The 1993 World Trade Center network, which also plotted to attack New York’s diamond district because, as one co-conspirator said, it would be like “hitting Israel itself” — stopped by FBI penetration.

The 2004 Herald Square subway plotters, whose recordings revealed deep antisemitic conspiracy beliefs about Jewish world domination — stopped by an NYPD undercover officer.

The record is unambiguous: the lack of successful Islamist terror attacks against Jewish targets in New York is not the product of good community relations. It is the product of effective, aggressive law enforcement. The perpetrators were not dissuaded. They were caught. JFREJ’s proposal, at its logical conclusion, dismantles the apparatus that has produced that record.

The “Good Jew” Problem

JFREJ’s community-building framework rests on an assumption: that personal positive contact with Jews erodes antisemitic hostility. The evidence suggests this assumption is wrong for the perpetrator population that matters most.

The phenomenon has a name in research and history: the “exceptional Jew” effect. It has been documented across centuries. The mechanism is straightforward: a person holds a conspiratorial or theological belief that Jews as a category are threatening, malevolent, or illegitimate. They then encounter a Jewish individual who is warm, honest, and admirable. Rather than falsifying the categorical belief, the positive experience gets accommodated into it. The individual becomes the exception that proves the rule — “my Jew,” the one who isn’t like the others.

Heinrich Himmler complained about this explicitly in his 1943 Posen speech, expressing frustration that every German seemed to have “his decent Jew” whom he wanted to exempt from persecution while supporting the destruction of Jews as a class.

Conspiracy theory beliefs are, by structure, self-sealing. They are not held tentatively, waiting for disconfirming evidence. They contain, built into the framework, an explanation for why the evidence looks the way it does. If Jews are conspiring to control the media, and a Jewish person tells you that’s false, the conspiracy framework already predicts that response. If a Jewish person seems trustworthy and kind, the framework accommodates this: Jews are especially skilled at deception. Personal contact cannot provide falsifying evidence because the framework doesn’t treat personal experience as relevant evidence about the category.

For the attacker who drove into Temple Israel, or the men who plotted to bomb synagogues in Riverdale, or the man who flew from Manchester to take hostages in Colleyville, intergroup collaborative projects are not just insufficient. They are addressed to a different human being entirely.


The Zionist Question JFREJ Cannot Answer

There is a foundational question that the JFREJ report evades entirely, and which exposes the deepest flaw in the plan: would Zionist Jews be welcome in the communities it proposes to build?

The answer is plainly no — and this is not a hypothetical. It is the lived reality of the progressive coalitions in which JFREJ operates.

JFREJ is explicitly anti-Zionist. Its 2017 publication “Understanding Antisemitism,” co-authored by the lead author of this report, drew a sharp distinction between antisemitism and anti-Zionism and argued forcefully that they should not be conflated. The organization has consistently allied itself with political movements that treat Zionist identity as disqualifying for progressive coalition membership.

The organizations that consulted on and co-launched this report — the Arab American Association of NY, Muslim Community Network, Emgage, MPower Change — are organizations that, in the post-October 7 environment, have been participants in and organizers of protests whose explicit demands include the elimination of Israel as a Jewish state. Several operate in spaces where Zionist Jews are not simply unwelcome but are treated as adversaries.

The pattern is well-documented. Women’s March leadership was fractured and eventually collapsed partly over the refusal to distance from explicitly antisemitic figures and frameworks. The 2017 Chicago Dyke March expelled Jewish participants for carrying a Star of David flag deemed “too closely associated with Zionism.” Black Lives Matter chapters published statements in 2020 expressing solidarity with Palestinian “resistance,” framing Israel’s existence in conspiratorial terms. These are the coalitions JFREJ inhabits and, in some cases, helped to construct.

Meanwhile, surveys consistently find that 80 to 90 percent of American Jews consider themselves Zionist in some meaningful sense — that they support the existence of Israel as a Jewish state. The American Jewish Committee, the Jewish Electoral Institute, and multiple academic surveys confirm this year after year.

JFREJ’s proposed “community” is therefore not the Jewish community. It is a self-selected fragment of Jewish life — secular, progressive, politically aligned with anti-Zionist frameworks — that has already agreed, as a condition of coalition membership, to subordinate or suppress its Zionist identity. The 80-plus percent of Jews who hold mainstream attachment to Israel are, by the logic of JFREJ’s political world, not full members of the community being built.

The implications for antisemitism are serious. The fastest-growing and most dangerous form of antisemitism in America today is the anti-Zionist variety — the framework that treats Jewish nationalism as uniquely illegitimate, Israel’s existence as a moral crime, and Zionist Jews as appropriate targets of hostility. This is the antisemitism that drove the man who attacked Temple Israel. It is the antisemitism that motivated the Colleyville hostage-taker, who flew from Britain to demand the release of a Pakistani terrorist while holding American Jews responsible for Israeli policy. It is the antisemitism expressed in the “from the river to the sea” chant that has become standard at protests where JFREJ’s coalition partners are present.

JFREJ’s community-building plan does not address anti-Zionist antisemitism. Its political commitments make it structurally incapable of addressing it. By excluding Zionist Jews from meaningful participation in its community framework, and by treating the organizations that propagate anti-Zionist antisemitism as coalition partners rather than as part of the problem, JFREJ’s plan does not reduce the most prevalent form of violent antisemitism Jews face. It legitimizes it.

Worse: by supplanting the law enforcement apparatus that has actually kept New York’s Jews safe — the FBI informants, the NYPD intelligence units, the armed guards — with programming that cannot reach, let alone deter, mission-driven ideological actors, this plan leaves the majority of New York’s Jews more exposed than they were before.

What Actually Saves Lives

On March 12, 2026, Ayman Ghazali drove his vehicle into Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, Michigan. The synagogue has a preschool. He drove into the building, opened fire, and was killed by security personnel on the scene. The Secure Community Network later cited the institution’s prior investment in security and law enforcement coordination as the reason the casualties were not worse.

Imagine Temple Israel had instead invested in intergroup collaborative projects. Imagine its leadership had attended soup kitchens and street fairs with Muslim community organizations in the Detroit suburbs. Would Ayman Ghazali, a Lebanese-born man whose worldview treated Jewish institutions as legitimate military targets, have been reached by those soup kitchens? Would the bonds of connection have given him pause at the moment he turned his steering wheel toward a building full of children?

The question answers itself.

The armed security guard at the door did not prevent the ramming — the vehicle moved too fast. But the security presence, the trained response, the prior coordination with law enforcement, limited what could have been a massacre of children to one injured security guard and a dead attacker. This is what saved those children.

JFREJ’s report calls this approach unsustainable and counterproductive. Audrey Sasson told reporters this represents “security theater.” The children who went home from that preschool on March 12th may disagree.

Conclusion: A Plan That Serves Its Authors, Not Its Supposed Beneficiaries

JFREJ is an anti-Zionist organization proposing to protect a Jewish community of which it represents a small, ideologically self-selected fraction. Its evidence base, examined carefully, does not support its primary recommendations. Its framework systematically excludes the forms of antisemitism most dangerous to New York’s Jews. Its coalition partners include organizations that propagate the anti-Zionist antisemitism that motivates many of the most serious attacks. And its prescriptions — if implemented — would defund and delegitimize the law enforcement infrastructure that has, demonstrably, prevented multiple mass casualty attacks on New York’s Jewish institutions.

Mayor Mamdani has signaled alignment with this framework and budgeted $260 million for a community safety office partly inspired by it. New York City’s Jewish institutions are operating in what the Secure Community Network calls “the most elevated and complex threat environment in recent history.” In this environment, the city’s mayor is moving toward a model that experienced security professionals consider dangerously inadequate, under the intellectual sponsorship of an organization that considers Zionism immoral and counts anti-Zionist organizations among its trusted partners.

The historical record of foiled plots in New York is a record of law enforcement working. FBI informants, NYPD intelligence surveillance, undercover officers, armed security — this apparatus has kept the Riverdale Temple standing and the Bronx synagogues intact. Its opposite is not playgrounds and soup kitchens. Its opposite is an unguarded building and an unlocked door.

Rabbi Charlie Cytron-Walker of Colleyville, Texas, opened that door in January 2022 because a man said he was cold and homeless and wanted shelter. The rabbi made him a cup of tea. This is the instinct toward community openness and human connection that JFREJ celebrates. It resulted in eleven hours of hostage crisis that ended with an FBI tactical team killing Malik Faisal Akram.

The rabbi survived because of law enforcement. He nearly didn’t because of hospitality.

JFREJ wants to fund the hospitality and defund the FBI team. New York’s Jews deserve better than that.



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Monday, March 23, 2026

From Ian:

The Golders Green ambulance attack reveals the depths of the new Jew hatred
We’ve been told since Brexit that a new 1930s is upon us. Apparently, British voters politely asking for more democratic clout and better border control constituted a terrifying descent into Nazism. All the while, those menacing Britain’s tiny Jewish community – smaller in number than British Sikhs – were rendered invisible.

Smashed shops, firebombings, murder – purely because they are Jews. I don’t know how many echoes of history need to ring out, how much broken glass needs to rattle on the ground, before the anti-fascists rouse from their slumber. Or realise they’ve slipped on to the other side.

Muslim anti-Semitism, in particular, has been lent cover by all the usual idiots and cowards. Despite anti-Semitic attitudes being stubbornly higher among British Muslims, despite Islamic extremism being the biggest terror threat we face by a country mile, every political discussion must at some point pivot to the spectre of the ‘far right’.

Given you could now fit the actual far right in the back of an Uber XL, this requires smear tactics and spectacular mental gymnastics – like when Gary Neville responded to the Heaton Park killings by bemoaning the blokes putting Union flags on lampposts, or when Green MP Hannah Spencer blamed the 2017 Manchester Arena bombing on the ‘division’ generated by Reform UK.

The arguments are almost too stupid to rebut. Apparently, Jihad al-Shamie only decided to lunge at Jews with a knife because he was made to feel ‘unwelcome’ by the sight of our national flag, and Salman Abedi only blew up girls at a pop concert because he stumbled across one of Nigel Farage’s old speeches to the European Parliament.

These are just the more low-wattage attempts to defend the indefensible. Jew hatred is back. But our rulers cannot compute it, let alone fight it. For that would require ditching their comforting ideologies, their identitarian blinkers, their deranged Israelophobia. It would mean accepting that they are part of the problem.
Jake Wallis Simons: We love life, they love death and Britain still can't pick a side
The firebombing of the ambulances is a case in point. We saw it in the Manchester synagogue stabbings and in all likelihood, we have seen it again: unbridled antisemitic incitement has consequences. Ever since October 7, our country has been debased by weekly carnivals of Jew-hatred on our streets, powered in large part by the Muslim Brotherhood and its allies. Yet when Suella Braverman labelled them “hate marches”, it was she who was silenced rather than the racist agitators.

Once again, even as the ambulances smoulder, the same propaganda is all over social media. If the Jews hadn’t tried to defend themselves against the jihadi hordes of Hamas and the Islamic regime in Tehran, if they had simply rolled over and joined Kier Starmer in bleating that vanquishing your enemy is “against international law”, they claim, then ambulances would not be firebombed in London.

Such are the foul consequences of lies. Such is their weaponisation. Such are the results of fanning the flames of hatred for years, or taking no action when it happens under our noses.

There was no “genocide” in Gaza – which genocide features evacuation warnings and humanitarian aid? Which genocide involves soldiers fighting hand-to-hand in tunnels to avoid harming civilians when the Strip could easily have been levelled from the air? – just as there are no “war crimes” in Iran.

Saturate people’s brains with footage of the appalling sufferings of war, however, and deceitfully frame it as evidence of atrocities, and lies have borne the fruit of hatred. Even our political leaders are not immune. With one eye on the Muslim vote, which is increasingly functioning as an anti-democratic sectarian bloc in a contribution to our social decline, the Prime Minister recognised a state of Palestine with the Israeli hostages still in the catacombs, earning the open congratulations of Hamas.

About ten days later, two Jews were killed in Manchester, again to the great satisfaction of the jihadis in Gaza. When David Lammy turned up to offer his condolences, he was heckled by the grieving Jews of Manchester, and with good reason.

What does all of this amount to? Simple: Britain faces a choice. Either we find the courage to look the Islamists in the eye and tell them that enough is enough, or we see the disappearance of our Jewish community and the gradual fall of our democracy. If that sounds alarmist, look back at history. Read the 2015 government report on the Muslim Brotherhood, which labelled the group a national security threat and yet resulted in no action.

As Israeli prime minister Golda Meir famously said, “they say we must be dead. And we say we want to be alive. Between life and death, I don’t know of a compromise.” Does Britain wish to stand on the side of the ambulances that seek to save us, or the arsonists who fetishise blood? Disturbingly, the country is finding it hard to make up its mind.
Daniel Sugarman: Golders Green, antisemitism and Passover
In a little more than a week, we will sit at the Passover table to conduct the seder. We will tell our children the story of the Exodus from Egypt. The people of Israel were honoured in Egypt – Joseph served as the Imperial viceroy – until it all came crashing down. What happened? The book of Exodus, quoted in the Haggadah, the telling over of the Passover story, tells us. “A new king arose, who did not know Joseph”. Did he literally not know who Joseph was? Unlikely. But Joseph – and his service to Egypt, helping protect the populace from the ravages of famine – meant nothing to him. The Bible goes into detail about what was the first instance of antisemitism in history – the charge, repeated so many times down the millennia, of dual loyalty.

“Let us deal wisely with them”, says Pharaoh to his people. “In case they increase in number and a war befall us and they join our enemies and wage war against us.”

A little later on in the Haggadah, we will read the paragraph of Vehi Sheamdah, which says “in every generation, our enemies rise up to destroy us”. It would be taken as paranoia were it not demonstrably true. The last few years have seen a sickening sanitisation of Jew hate in public life. In an era where every antisemitic attack is followed by a tidal wave of accusations of false flags and dual loyalty, where Jews are blamed for the very attacks they are targeted by, this takes on a new meaning.

That paragraph of the Haggadah ends by saying “and the Holy One, blessed be he, rescues us from their hands.” Returning momentarily to my charedi upbringing, the word for “rescues us” – matzilenu – has the same Hebrew root as the name of the organisation whose ambulances were firebombed – hatzola – literally, “rescue”. At the time I write this, more than £1 million has been been raised for Hatzola NW, raised by thousands of people, Jewish and non-Jewish alike – and the government has pledged to replace all the ambulances that were destroyed.

Those who seek to intimidate us and bring us down will find it far harder to do so than they think.
From Ian:

Suicide by Timidity
There is a particular kind of comfort in the phrase no imminent threat, a talking point that has gained prominence with the joint U.S.-Israeli military operation against Iran. For opponents of the operation, on the left and the right, the phrase serves as evidence that the rationale for attacking Iran is fraudulent. It functions both as a linguistic sedative—whispered by bureaucrats and pundits to assure a nervous public that the wolf is not yet at the door—and as an assertion that any military action at this time constitutes reckless and unnecessary warmongering. It is the language of “principled restraint,” a rhetorical shield used across the ideological spectrum, from the skepticism of Sens. Mark Warner and Elizabeth Warren to the isolationist critiques of Tucker Carlson and Rand Paul. But beneath the surface of this bipartisan consensus lies a profound psychological pathology.

By reducing the complexity of strategic judgment to a single, binary metric—Is an attack occurring right this second?—we have traded genuine security for a dangerous, and ultimately temporary, emotional relief.

In the realm of behavioral economics, this tendency is known as “present bias” or “hyperbolic discounting.” Humans are hardwired to undervalue future risks in favor of present comforts. For a modern populace, the “immediate reward” of social stability today—no sirens, no mobilization, no disruption of the daily routine—is so intoxicating that we are willing to accept the “delayed punishment” of an adversary completing a nuclear facility that renders future defense impossible. Avoiding military action delivers an instant hit of political relief, while the catastrophic risks of inaction remain deferred and abstract. We are, in effect, choosing a quiet today at the cost of a radioactive tomorrow.

This cognitive trap is reinforced by a legal doctrine that has failed to keep pace with the physics of modern slaughter. The traditional formulation for anticipatory self-defense emerged from the Caroline incident of 1837, when Canadian militia, under British authority, crossed into the United States and destroyed the Caroline, an American steamer that had been used by sympathetic Americans to supply Canadian rebels, nearly setting off a crisis between the United States and Great Britain. The legal theory, articulated in the diplomatic correspondence between U.S. Secretary of State Daniel Webster and British envoy to the U.S. Lord Ashburton, required a threat to be “instant, overwhelming, leaving no choice of means, and no moment for deliberation.” In the mid-19th century, when armies moved at the speed of a horse, and mobilization was a visible, weeks-long process involving steamships and infantry, this standard was a workable safeguard against adventurism.

But we no longer live in the world of the Caroline. Modern warfare has compressed the timeline of destruction into a digital pulse. Ballistic missiles, cyberwarfare, and nuclear enrichment programs have eliminated the visible “mobilization phase” of old. Today, an adversary can achieve a “breakthrough” that permanently alters the strategic balance before a single soldier crosses a border.

Legal scholars like Daniel Bethlehem have proposed a necessary evolution: Imminence must be assessed contextually. It must weigh the probability of an attack, the pattern of hostile conduct and, most critically, the “last window of opportunity” to act. As Mark L. Rockefeller has argued, equating imminent with immediate risks transforms the sacred right of self-defense into a “strategic suicide pact.” If we wait until the missile is airborne to satisfy a 19th-century definition of timing, we have already lost.
Israel Is America's Best Ally - We Must Reject the Evil of Antisemitism
The stunning and ominous rise in antisemitism in the U.S. cannot be disputed, but can be resisted. It is particularly the obligation of genuine Christians to participate in the repression through education of the ancient evil. It is the particular obligation of Christian institutions to do their part in making this sin once again an obvious source of shame and to help cure those who suffer from it and, where it cannot be cured, to force it back by shaming and shunning into the deepest shadows where it belongs.

In a dangerous world, even the dominant superpower - the U.S. - needs allies. Israel is, objectively, the most important ally of the U.S. It is the equal of any military on the globe in its ability to strike far and hard and to dominate its region. It's an intelligence superpower and an engine of technological excellence and ever-increasing breakthroughs. If any country had to pick one strong ally not named the U.S., it would pick Israel.

Israel is also a reliable and fully-integrated-into-our-military ally. Israel takes what the U.S. makes and improves on it, as had been the case with the F-35 fighter. It sometimes takes the rudiments of a technology and develops them to scale and deploys them, as with Iron Dome and soon Iron Beam. Those advancements will return to America as the Golden Dome and the Golden Beam.

Finally, and perhaps most importantly, Israel shares America's founding values of individual liberty and democratic governance. Freedom of speech is as robust there as it is here. Human rights are respected there as they are here. It is a "Western nation" in every respect.
Criticizing Israel in Wartime
According to a survey by the Institute for National Security Studies, 91% of Israeli Jews support the war against Iran, which most view as a battle for Israel's very right to exist. Israel's American critics say Iran does not present an imminent threat.

In practice, Iran's ballistic missile program was growing at a rapid rate and becoming an extreme threat to Israel, of which we are now getting an initial "taste." Iran was also building new nuclear facilities at Natanz and Isfahan and would eventually have unearthed the 400 kg. of highly enriched uranium, sufficient for the first 10 bombs.

Part of adulthood is the ability to put one's overall political preferences aside and assess specific issues on their merits. Trump and Netanyahu are doing an effective job of severely degrading a major threat to American security and an existential one to Israel's. On this they deserve our support and appreciation.

The critics have never had to cower in their shelters and safe rooms, grab their kids off the swings in a playground during an alert, or jump into a ditch on the highway. They rarely served in the IDF or sent their children to serve. They have never spent three or more years of sleepless nights, worrying whether their sons - and increasingly daughters - who serve in combat units are all right. Most American Jews have never lived in a country in which one is rarely out of sight of the nearest hostile border.

They have never had to live for decades in the face of existential threats and the knowledge that Israel's enemies would annihilate its civilian population if ever given the opportunity, as proven so tragically on Oct. 7. They have never had to live with continuous terrorism and repeatedly had to call the cell phones of loved ones to make sure they were okay after another barbarous attack.

If you care deeply about Israel and want to have a positive impact, support AIPAC. It may not be perfect, but it is the only pro-Israel lobby.
  • Monday, March 23, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon


On February 24, 2022 — the first day of Russia's invasion of Ukraine — a Russian Tochka ballistic missile with a cluster munition warhead struck outside a hospital in Vuhledar, killing four civilians and wounding ten, six of them healthcare workers. HRW published a full report the very next day. It named the victims, interviewed the hospital's chief doctor, identified the weapon from remnants, and laid out the legal case under customary international humanitarian law — noting that Russia's non-signatory status to the 2008 Convention on Cluster Munitions was no excuse, since the prohibition on indiscriminate attacks applies to all parties regardless of treaty status. HRW's arms director Steve Goose called it "unlawful" and demanded Russia stop immediately. 

It has now been three weeks since Iran shot its first cluster bomb missile at Israeli civilians, and HRW has not written a word.

Since February 28, 2026, Iran has fired approximately 850 ballistic missiles at Israel. According to the IDF Home Front Command, roughly 50 percent of those missiles — approximately 425 — have been armed with cluster munition warheads, releasing between 24 and 80 submunitions each across areas of up to 10 square kilometers. CNN's analysis of two separate Iranian cluster munition attacks confirmed impacts spread across areas of seven and eight miles respectively, falling at random on homes, businesses, roads and parks. The IDF has had to instruct Israeli citizens not to approach unexploded ordnance after attacks, because the duds function as landmines. Arms expert N.R. Jenzen-Jones of Armament Research Services reviewed the pattern of strikes and concluded that these warheads have no "clear military purpose" and are being used "primarily to sow terror amongst a civilian population."

Israelis have been killed by these bombs. Yaron and Ilana Moshe, a couple in their seventies in Ramat Gan, were killed after a cluster warhead struck their building. Two construction workers were struck by submunitions at a work site in Yehud. Nine civilians were killed in a single strike on a residential neighborhood in Beit Shemesh. Three women were killed in a beauty salon in Beit Awwa. A Thai agricultural worker was killed by submunition shrapnel at Moshav Adanim. In total, at least 18 Israelis have been killed and over 3,700 wounded by Iranian attacks — the vast majority involving cluster munitions.

HRW has not found the time to write a single word about these.

The weapons Iran is using against Israel fall squarely within the definition of cluster munitions under the Convention on Cluster Munitions: conventional munitions designed to disperse explosive submunitions each weighing less than 20 kilograms. Iranian warheads carry submunitions of approximately 8 kilograms each. Iranian warheads carry between 24 and 80 submunitions with no self-destruct capability. Iran, like Russia, has not signed the convention. As with Russia, that is legally beside the point: the customary IHL prohibition on indiscriminate attacks applies regardless.

HRW wrote about and condemned a single cluster bomb missile in Ukraine within one day. They have not written about Iran's hundreds of similar missiles targeting Israeli civilians in three weeks.

What it has published on Israeli conduct in this war includes a report calling Israeli white phosphorus use in an evacuated Lebanese town "unlawful" — despite HRW's own admission that it could not verify a single civilian was present. It includes a report on the Minab school strike that keeps Israel in the headline despite Israel's denial and overwhelming evidence of American responsibility. And it includes a general statement from February 28 noting that HRW was "currently investigating" all parties — an investigation that, three weeks later, has produced reports exclusively targeting Israeli and American conduct.

HRW did publish one report on Iranian attacks on civilians in this war: a March 17 investigation documenting Iranian drone and missile attacks on Gulf states — Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, the UAE, Saudi Arabia. Those attacks killed approximately 21 civilians across all those countries combined. 

As far as I can tell, none of the missiles exploded in the Gulf states included cluster munitions. 

Human Rights Watch co-founded and chairs the Cluster Munition Coalition. It has spent decades building the legal and advocacy architecture that makes cluster munition use a recognized war crime. It applied that architecture to Russia within 24 hours of a single strike killing four people. It has declined to apply it to Iran after 425 strikes over three weeks killing and wounding thousands.

That is not an oversight. An organization with HRW's expertise and institutional focus on cluster munitions does not accidentally fail to notice 425 ballistic missile cluster strikes on a civilian population. It notices. It chooses not to report.

The question that follows — why — is one HRW should be asked to answer publicly. But the pattern itself, across this conflict and others, already contains the answer.




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  • Monday, March 23, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

Human Rights Watch published a report on March 9 accusing Israel of unlawfully using white phosphorus munitions over the southern Lebanese town of Yohmor on March 3. The headline is unequivocal: "Lebanon: Israel Unlawfully Using White Phosphorus."

The body of the report quietly dismantles HRW's own conclusion. 

The prohibition HRW invokes is specific: white phosphorus used as an incendiary weapon is unlawful when deployed in or near concentrations of civilians. That's the operative requirement under Protocol III of the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons, and under the customary IHL principles HRW cites for states like Israel that haven't ratified the protocol.

If there are no civilians, it is not unlawful. 

Here is what HRW's own report says about civilian presence in Yohmor on March 3:

"Human Rights Watch has not verified whether people were in the area or injured as a result of white phosphorus use."

That single sentence, buried in the body of the report, should have ended the legal analysis. HRW cannot establish that the munitions were used "over concentrations of civilians" — their exact words in the conclusion — while simultaneously admitting they don't know if anyone was there.

HRW acknowledges that Israel's Arabic-language military spokesperson Avichay Adraee issued an evacuation order for Yohmor and 50 surrounding villages at 5:27 a.m. on March 3, ordering residents to move at least 1,000 meters outside village boundaries. He repeated the warning at 12:12 p.m.

Two things follow from this. First, Israel had clear awareness that Yohmor was a populated area — this wasn't an oversight. Second, the repetition of the warning before any strike indicates Israel was actively waiting for the town to clear. A military operating with indifference to civilian life doesn't issue the same evacuation order twice.

HRW tries to reframe the warnings as themselves potentially unlawful, arguing elsewhere that Israel's evacuation orders across southern Lebanon may constitute forced displacement. That's a separate legal argument about displacement policy (and a contested one) but it cannot substitute for the absent evidence of civilian presence required to sustain the white phosphorus charge. You can't simultaneously argue that Israel's evacuation orders were so effective they caused mass displacement of 300,000 people, and also that civilians were concentrated in Yohmor when Israel fired. 

Even more telling was HRW's update to the report. It carries an editor's note: "March 9, 2026: This version of the news release was updated to accurately reflect the number of images verified and geolocated by Human Rights Watch." In other words, HRW found it important to correct a peripheral detail about its image count.

What the update does not include is the Israeli military's response, reported by the Associated Press: that Israel is "currently unaware and cannot confirm use of shells that contain white phosphorous in Lebanon as claimed," and that "any weapons that contain white phosphorus are used in line with international law." That denial is directly responsive to the report's central legal claim. Updating the number of images examined that appear nowhere in the core argument while omitting the Israeli military's on-record denial of the report's headline conclusion shows that HRW has the ability to update reports with new information - and chose not to include Israel's denial.

Also omitted from HRW's report is the fact that Hezbollah is known to operate from Yohmor - and that it uses civilian infrastructure. Somehow HRW is not concerned with that violation of the laws of war.

The structure here follows a pattern that we've documented from NGOs across multiple conflicts: the legal conclusion is written first, and the factual record is assembled around it. When the facts don't cooperate — as they don't here — the gap is bridged with hedged language that the headline doesn't reflect.

"Unlawfully" is a serious word. It implies a finding that specific legal standards were violated by specific acts. HRW's own reporting establishes that Israel warned the civilian population twice, that no civilians have been confirmed present, and that no injuries have been confirmed. Under the law HRW itself cites, that is not an unlawful attack on civilians. There is no evidence it was an attack on civilians at all.

A human rights organization that reaches legal conclusions its own evidence doesn't support isn't doing human rights work. In this case, it is anti-Israel propaganda that it disguises as a human rights report.




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From Ian:

John Spencer: The rise of the ‘leadership first’ strike — and why it’s so important in warfare
The Prussian military theorist Carl von Clausewitz described war as a contest of wills between political communities. His framework assumed friction, uncertainty, and resilient command structures under pressure.

What he did not imagine was a world in which the senior political and military leadership directing a war might be physically targeted in the opening minutes of conflict through integrated intelligence and precision strike.

The objective of these strikes is not simply destruction. It is a disruption.

For decades, opening strikes focused on suppressing air defenses, destroying aircraft on the ground, and degrading infrastructure. The goal was to weaken an enemy’s military capacity.

Today, some states are experimenting with something different: targeting the leadership directing the war itself.

That possibility introduces a new dimension to deterrence.

If adversaries believe their political and military leadership could be struck in the opening phase of a conflict, the personal risks of initiating war change. Deterrence has traditionally relied on threatening damage to territory, forces, or infrastructure. Leadership vulnerability adds another layer to that calculation.

This capability is not omnipotent. Intelligence can fail. Targets can escape. Succession structures can absorb the loss of leaders.

But the increasing ability to locate and strike senior leadership rapidly at the outset of conflict represents an important shift in how wars may begin.

For centuries, eliminating a supreme leader was usually the end of a war.

In the emerging character of modern conflict, it may sometimes become the opening move.
To Fulfill Iran War's Objectives, More Time Is Required
The regime in Iran continues to function and fight, largely because the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has effectively taken control of the state and is directing the war effort.

Both Israel and the U.S. seek to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, ideally permanently, and to deny it the ability to develop and produce ballistic missiles and drones in quantities and sophistication that no defense system could counter. These are the two existential threats the war is meant to eliminate, at least for years, even if the current regime survives.

Israel is acting across multiple channels to create conditions in which the Iranian people will want and be able to take control of their fate. Efforts to weaken the regime include targeted strikes against security officials and political leaders, and attacks on Basij and Revolutionary Guard facilities.

Israeli officials report results including defections, particularly among Basij members. At the same time, efforts are underway to organize opposition groups and encourage public protests. According to informed sources, these efforts are beginning to bear fruit.

Iran has learned lessons from previous confrontations and prepared well for the current war. It dispersed its military assets geographically and granted local commanders authority to act based on pre-set directives. It moved critical assets underground, including nuclear laboratories, ballistic missiles and launchers, drones, and even fast attack boats. Iran also divided the country into 31 ballistic missile commands, each with independent launch authority. Iran has also moved much of its nuclear weapons program infrastructure underground.

Israel is targeting Iran's missile, launcher, and drone production infrastructure spread across the country. The air force will likely need at least two more weeks to achieve a satisfactory level of damage. Meanwhile, interception rates by Israel's air defense systems have risen from over 85% to more than 90%.

In both Iran and Lebanon, significant achievements have already been made. But for the war's objectives to be largely fulfilled and for those gains to endure for years, more time is required.
Iran Believes It's Winning and Wants a Steep Price to End the War
Three weeks into the war, the Iranian regime is signaling that it believes it is winning and has the power to impose a settlement on Washington that entrenches Tehran's dominance of Middle East energy resources for decades to come.

Despite optimistic U.S. and Israeli pronouncements, Iran has retained the ability to fire dozens of ballistic missiles, and many more drones, every day across the Middle East. Shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, the Persian Gulf's chokepoint, remains only possible with Iranian permission. Surging oil and gas prices are exacting growing pain on economies worldwide.

Tehran has pledged that it will agree to a ceasefire only if Washington and the Gulf states pay a steep price. The spokesman of the Iranian Parliament's foreign affairs and defense committee, Ebrahim Rezaei, said any talks with the U.S. are off the agenda as Tehran "focuses on punishing the aggressors."

"This hubris is dangerous because they are not smart enough to understand that President Trump will never let them win. They don't understand how far he's willing to go," said Jason Greenblatt, who served as the White House special envoy for the Middle East. "The cost of not taking care of the problem will be many times more expensive over many, many years."

Demands voiced by Iranian leaders in recent days as conditions for ending the war include massive reparations from the U.S. and its allies and the expulsion of American military forces from the region. They have also called for transforming the Strait of Hormuz - an international waterway where free navigation is guaranteed under international law - into an Iranian toll booth controlling 1/3 of the world's shipborne crude oil. It is hard to imagine the U.S. - or the Gulf states - accepting such an arrangement.

Sunday, March 22, 2026

  • Sunday, March 22, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon


Three weeks in, the U.S. military has struck more than 8,000 targets. Iran's air defenses are almost completely destroyed, its command structure decimated, its proxy network in tatters. By any military measure, Iran is losing.

And yet you wouldn't know it from the coverage.

The New York Times tells us Iran has "shown no sign of backing down." The Wall Street Journal runs a sophisticated piece explaining why Tehran "believes it is winning." CNN elevates a disgraced former official's claim that Israel dragged America into war. The Associated Press makes that claim its headline.

This is Iran's cognitive war — and it is being fought largely with Western reporting, on Western platforms, by Western journalists.

The strategy is straightforward. Iran cannot defeat the U.S. military. It can, however, convince Western publics that the war is unwinnable, that the pain is unsustainable, and even that someone reasonable is waiting on the other side of a negotiating table. If that perception takes hold, political pressure does what Iranian missiles cannot.

What Iran needs to sustain this strategy is amplification it cannot provide itself. Iranian state media has no credibility with Western audiences. But the New York Times, CNN and AP do.

They are doing Iran's job for them.

The mechanism was caught in real time last week. When former counterterrorism official Joe Kent resigned and appeared on Tucker Carlson's show to claim that Israel had manipulated America into war, HonestReporting's AI Labs tracked what happened next. Within minutes, Russian state outlet RT was amplifying the specific claim. Pro-Iran networks followed, using language lifted directly from Iranian state framing. Pakistani, Kashmiri, and Latin American accounts joined the cascade. Identical phrasing appeared across multiple platforms simultaneously — a signature of coordinated inauthentic behavior, not organic virality.

And then CNN ran it as the central takeaway. AP made it a headline. ABC followed with nearly identical framing.

No Iranian handler called a CNN producer. They didn't have to. State-linked Iranian allies identify the useful narrative, amplify it to salience, and let Western news values — conflict, dissent, "both sides," and a natural aversion to anything Trump supports — do the rest. By the time it's a headline, the origin is invisible.

Iran's cognitive war rests on an implicit premise: that there is someone to negotiate with, some reasonable outcome available if only Washington would stop the bombs. This premise is false, and its falseness points to something the coverage almost entirely ignores.

Israel's decapitation campaign worked. The leaders who had the credibility, relationships, and political capital to engineer a compromise even if they wanted to are dead. 

What remains are survivors who don't have the clout, the charisma or the imagination to do anything but to continue with their predecessors' intransigence. There was and is no Iranian Gorbachev waiting in the wings, and such a figure is not possible, because the Islamic Republic's foundational ideology requires permanent hostility to Israel and America. 

This means Iran's triumphalist rhetoric — Foreign Minister Araghchi calling Iran "another Vietnam for the U.S." — isn't only foreign-facing propaganda. It's the only internal narrative available. No one left standing has the authority to propose otherwise.

The media reads this as Iran being unbowed. The more accurate read: Iran is trapped. It is burning through finite munitions to sustain an infinite-sounding narrative, with no one authorized to convert even a successful information campaign into an actual settlement.

There is also an argument so obvious it almost goes without saying — which is perhaps why it goes without saying. Iran is, at this moment, attacking civilian infrastructure across the Gulf and in Israel. It is bombing energy facilities in Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain and the UAE; shipping through the Strait of Hormuz moves only with Iranian permission. 

If the West stops this war before permanent results, this produces an Iran that has learned that attacking civilian targets works - and it will continue to do so. It is the clearest indication of how confusing the cognitive war for the kinetic war results in a worse kinetic war next time. 

Countering the cognitive war requires naming it. Not vaguely, but specifically. Here is the claim, here is where it originated, here is how fast it traveled, here is who amplified it, here is what the outlet did with it. The HonestReporting documentation of the Kent cascade is the model. 

It also requires insisting on the right metric. Iran has convinced much of the press to measure the war by duration and pain — by that measure, every day that passes is Iranian "resilience." The correct measure is irreversibility. Every destroyed launcher, every dead commander, every degraded node cannot be easily replaced. Iran's ability to do this again is the question. Whether they're still firing today is not.

The kinetic war and the cognitive war are not equivalent. One deals in permanent facts. The other deals in managed perceptions. But if Iran convinces the world that it can maintain its pressure forever and that is cannot be defeated, it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. Every Western outlet that buys into that narrative is prolonging the conflict, either this round or guaranteeing a next round. 

Iran is demonstrating its intentions in real time. The cognitive war asks you not to notice. 




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  • Sunday, March 22, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon
Egypt's influential Al Azhar University issued a statement condemning Iran's aggression against other Muslim states:

Al-Azhar al-Sharif strongly condemns the continued unjustified Iranian attacks on its Gulf neighbors—represented by the United Arab Emirates, the Kingdom of Bahrain, the State of Qatar, the State of Kuwait, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and the Sultanate of Oman—as well as a number of other Arab countries and neighboring states, represented by Jordan, Iraq, Türkiye, and Azerbaijan.

Al-Azhar calls upon the Islamic Republic of Iran—as a Muslim neighboring state—to take an immediate decision dictated by Islam and imposed by its Sharia: to cease the attacks on these brotherly Arab and Muslim countries unconditionally, to respect their sovereignty over their lands, and to refrain from infringing upon it in any way, near or far; in order to preserve the lives of the innocent who bear no guilt in these conflicts and have no stake in them whatsoever.

Al-Azhar affirms that targeting residential areas, airports, hospitals, and energy facilities in countries that were not party to any conflict constitutes a grave violation of international humanitarian law and a clear departure from what Islam mandates in protecting lives, property, and human dignity. It reminds of the words of Allah Almighty: "And do not kill the soul which Allah has forbidden, except by right" [Quran 17:33], and the cry of the Prophet (peace be upon him) to the Muslims: “All of the Muslim is forbidden to the Muslim: his blood, his wealth, and his honor.”
Notice that Al Azhar has no problem with Iran attacking Jewish civilians.

But Iran was not happy. It published a response by Ayatollah Mohammad Javad Fazel Lankarani that explicitly referred to "Jews" as the targets:
Doesn't Al-Azhar ask itself why the countries of the region have given their lands and airspace to the infidels and Jews?
Don't you ask yourselves: What do they aim for with their presence and control over this region?

Don't you realize that they seek to plunder the wealth of Muslims and destroy their people and their property?

Has Al-Azhar forgotten the various verses that forbid accepting the hegemony of the disbelievers and the Jews?
If there is one thing the Iranians and Al Azhar can agree on, it is that attacking Jews is perfectly fine. 





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Saturday, March 21, 2026

From Ian:

Allies in name only: Israel left alone against Iranian aggression
Essentially, they say: Iran is not such a threat to global peace and security. Israel and the US may be the greater shared threat. Therefore, this is not our war. We will only defend our narrowest of interests a bare bit.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has sought to wrap repudiation of the US and Israel in highfalutin diplomatic terms. “We lack a mandate from the United Nations, the European Union, or NATO for the war,” he said. “Diplomacy and de-escalation” are the preferred route for handling Iran, he predictably added.

Yeah, sure. As if “mandates” from impotent international edifices are more important than winning the war that has been engaged. As if European-led diplomacy has ever effectively defanged or dissuaded Iran from pursuing its path of genocidal aggression.

I say that such studied neutrality in the great struggle against Iran is collusion with the enemy. All the “calm and level-headed” excuses for sitting out this war (of course, excepting “defensive assistance” to several oil-rich Gulf countries) is a grand collapse of Western spine and principle.

I also cast off anodyne sentiments about “heartfelt feelings for all victims of conflict in the region” and other such throwaway international statements. Without determination to quell Iran – and again, without specific expressed concern for Israel and Israelis too – these mushy musings equal profound moral failure.

Indeed, the frostiness exhibited by the “leaders” described above recalls the adage that you rudely discover who your true friends are (and are not) when the chips are down.

Alas, the ethical limpness and political animosity described here regarding the struggle against Iran is of a piece with the rotten global standard in relation to the Arab-Israeli conflict, going back decades.

The response of UN and EU leaders to every Palestinian-Israeli conflagration long has been to condemn the “continuing cycle of violence” (and then press for endless negotiations while boosting Hamas blood libels about Israeli war crimes). As if Israel and the Palestinians each were cavalierly engaging in murder just for fun or out of comparable burning hatred. As if “both sides” were “suffering casualties” and equally responsible for the “cycle” of warfare.

What is missing from the above comments in relation to both the Iranian and Palestinian fronts is a no-nonsense diagnosis of enemy aggression. Few are willing to reference Tehran’s almost five-decade-long record of assault against non-Shi’ite Arab, Western, and Israeli interests. Nobody has the guts to remark upon the death-glorifying political culture of Palestinians that repeatedly chooses war and terrorism over peace negotiations.

This nonalignment keeps the storyline in a neat, supposedly non-judgmental, and purportedly “level-headed” comfort zone – bereft of any right-minded backbone, free from any commitment to explicitly recognize and concretely fight evil. Alas, such detachment is tantamount to betrayal of Israel and the US, and is perfidy against the future of Western civilization.
The Buenos Aires Bombings
The decades of institutional failure that defined Argentina’s response to the AMIA bombing reached an inflection point with the 2023 inauguration of President Javier Milei. Whereas Kirchner was willing to accommodate Tehran, Milei has anchored Argentina firmly within a Western–Israeli security axis, designating Hamas, Hezbollah, and the IRGC’s Quds Force as terrorist organisations and joining the Combined Maritime Forces to combat Iranian-backed threats in international waters. In April 2024, Argentina’s Federal Court of Criminal Cassation, the country’s highest criminal court, formally declared the AMIA attack a crime against humanity and attributed responsibility to senior Iranian officials and to Hezbollah, thus lending the weight of the country’s highest criminal tribunal to what investigators had argued for thirty years. In 2025, Milei’s government used newly passed legislation to authorise the trial in absentia of ten Iranian and Lebanese suspects—among them former intelligence minister Ali Fallahian and Ahmad Vahidi, the former Quds Force commander who directed the unit responsible for planning the AMIA operation and who has been subject to an Interpol red notice since 2007. On 28 February 2026, US and Israeli strikes killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and decapitated much of Iran’s senior military leadership, including IRGC commander Mohammad Pakpour. Vahidi, who is wanted for the murders of 85 people in Buenos Aires, now commands the IRGC.

What Argentina’s experience reveals is not simply that Iran projects violence across continents, though it does. It also shows that such projections are more likely to succeed when a target’s state institutions are vulnerable. The lawlessness of the Tri-Border Area enabled the logistics. The corruption of Judge Galeano provided impunity. The political calculations of successive governments delayed justice. Each failure compounded the last, and for thirty years the gap between what is known and what has been adjudicated has remained almost unchanged. The names of the planners are on file at Interpol. The mechanics of the attack are documented in thousands of pages of investigative records. The dead have been counted, mourned, and memorialised. But justice has never been served.

Recent US–Israeli strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities have triggered fresh security alerts across Argentina at Jewish institutions, airports, and border crossings. The Buenos Aires bombings serve as a reminder that Iran’s willingness to strike at Israeli and Jewish targets outside the Middle East is not merely hypothetical. Argentina has already been a front in this war, and the traces of that history remain visible on its streets today. Concrete barriers line the entrances of Jewish community centres across the city, standing as a permanent physical acknowledgment that the threat that destroyed the AMIA building has never fully receded. Thirty years on, the most important question is whether the lessons of that experience have been learned by those who failed to deliver justice—and by those who may yet need it.
A Historic Moment: The Case for Ending Both the Iranian Regime and Hamas Once and for All
The critical question is whether we will stop at weakening the Iranian regime or Hamas or move toward ensuring that they can never again recover as long-term threats to their neighbors or global security. At this moment, leaving those regimes in place – the ruling mullahs in Iran or Hamas in Gaza — is probably the most dangerous option.

Authoritarian regimes such as Iran's, and terrorist groups such as Hamas, Hezbollah, Islamic State and the Taliban, rarely respond to setbacks by abandoning their ambitions. Instead, they pause, regroup, and rebuild.

Russia and China, each with its own anti-American calculations, could provide political cover, technological assistance, and indirect support that would allow Iran to resume its nuclear program. China has already been supplying Iran with "almost everything but troops" during this war, and supplying Russia with military materiel for its war against Ukraine.

If Iran's regime and Hamas are allowed to recover, their primary strategic objective will likely become to rearm as quickly as possible, and we will be right back at war again.

Stopping halfway through such efforts only allows threats to reemerge dangerously in the future. History will judge whether these two opportunities presented today were seized — or allowed to slip away.

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This blog may be a labor of love for me, but it takes a lot of effort, time and money. For 20 years and 40,000 articles I have been providing accurate, original news that would have remained unnoticed. I've written hundreds of scoops and sometimes my reporting ends up making a real difference. I appreciate any donations you can give to keep this blog going.

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