Tuesday, May 12, 2026

  • Tuesday, May 12, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon
It is refreshing to see someone with principles.

From WESA (Pittsburgh):

Pennsylvania state Supreme Court Justice David Wecht, who was reelected to a second 10-year term as a Democrat last fall, says he has left the party, in which he says “hateful anti-Jewish invective and actions are minimized, ignored, and even coddled.”

“Acquiescence to Jew-hatred is now disturbingly common among activists, leaders and even many elected officials in the Democratic Party,” said Wecht in a statement distributed from a state court system email account Monday afternoon.

“I can no longer abide” the tide of rising antisemitism, he said. “So, I won’t. I am no longer registered within any political party.”
America's political system needs a third party that condemns the extremes of both major parties and makes its stand on issues based on morality rather than partisanship. and power.

What would such a party's platform look like? Glad you asked! This is the kind of thing I've been thinking about. 

The Covenantal Party: A Platform

A society survives not through laws and incentives alone, but through morally trustworthy relationships between citizens, institutions, and truth itself. That is the center of gravity of this platform.

Rights protect individuals. Obligations sustain civilization.

Citizens owe duties — to family, to community, to truth, to future generations, to institutions, and to the nation itself. A political movement that speaks only of rights while ignoring obligations has already conceded the ground on which free societies stand. The deepest unit of civilization is the relationship, not the individual and not the state — and a platform that ignores that has misread what it is trying to protect.

Human dignity is non-negotiable.

Anti-dehumanization norms, criminal justice reform oriented toward rehabilitation where possible, strong disability protections, anti-corruption laws, and ethical AI governance all follow from the same root: people are not reducible to demographics or economic units. The party rejects cruelty as entertainment, ideological purges, mob humiliation culture, and any system that strips individuals of their irreducible worth. Dignity is not a progressive talking point or a conservative tradition — it is the precondition for everything else.

Truth and moral transparency are civilizational commitments.

Institutions collapse when they lose moral credibility, and the process of losing it is usually invisible until it isn't. The platform makes transparency a defining issue: radical government transparency, independent institutional audits, anti-propaganda standards, strong whistleblower protections, mandatory disclosure of political funding sources, and public reasoning requirements for major administrative decisions.

That transparency mandate extends fully into the technology sector. Social media platforms, search engines, and content recommendation systems exercise extraordinary influence over what citizens see, believe, and feel — and they exercise it invisibly. Algorithm disclosure requirements, public audits of content amplification systems, and anti-manipulation regulations apply across all major platforms, not just AI systems. Users have a right to know how their information environment is being shaped, and platforms that profit from manipulating attention bear a corresponding obligation to account for how they do it. Institutional opacity is a civilization-level threat whether the institution is a government agency or a technology company.

Fair elections require fair maps.

Gerrymandering is legalized political corruption — the manipulation of district boundaries to predetermine election outcomes regardless of voter preference. The platform supports algorithm-defined redistricting, drawing district lines through transparent, auditable computational processes optimized for compactness, contiguity, and equal population — with no partisan data as input. Independent oversight commissions verify the output. The legitimacy of representative democracy depends on voters choosing their representatives, not representatives choosing their voters.

Family stability is infrastructure.

The party treats family stability as seriously as highway maintenance or grid reliability — because it is. Policies include pro-family tax reform, meaningful child tax credits, parental leave, housing affordability initiatives, marriage counseling incentives, and community-based childcare. Unlike some traditionalist movements, the framework avoids punitive moralism; it orients toward repair, aspiration, and reintegration rather than permanent exile. Strong families are not a culture-war decoration — they are the load-bearing structure of social cohesion.

Relationships are the foundation of the civic order.

Responsibility for other citizens begins at home and radiates outward — to neighbors, to community institutions, to the nation, to future generations. This platform centers relationships rather than transactions. The neighbor you check on during a storm, the community organization you give three hours a week to, the civic association that maintains the park, the volunteer fire department — these are not quaint remnants of an earlier era. They are the connective tissue without which no law, no policy, and no government program can substitute. Volunteerism and civic participation are not lifestyle choices; they are the active expression of what citizenship means. A platform serious about civilization will treat the cultivation of civic participation as a policy goal in its own right — supporting volunteer infrastructure, incentivizing community service, and measuring social capital alongside economic indicators.

Pluralism with principles.

A covenantal society is not a monoculture. It holds together diverse communities — religious and secular, traditional and progressive, urban and rural — under a shared framework of basic obligations rather than a shared set of cultural preferences. Any community that adheres to those basic principles — human dignity, rule of law, non-coercion of members, civic participation — has wide latitude to organize its own internal life according to its own values. Orthodox communities, secular humanist communities, religious minorities, immigrant communities maintaining distinct cultural identities: all of them belong within the covenant as long as they honor the floor that makes coexistence possible. The framework does not demand uniformity; it demands accountability to shared minimum standards. Pluralism without that floor is not tolerance — it is the gradual dissolution of the common ground on which all communities stand.

Markets are tools, not moral authorities.

The economic framework is market-friendly, anti-oligarchic, anti-extractive, and committed to the dignity of labor. Policies include regulated capitalism, vigorous anti-monopoly enforcement, worker ownership incentives, vocational education, industrial policy for strategic resilience, discouragement of predatory finance, and strong social safety nets tied to reintegration and contribution. The party rejects both libertarian hyper-individualism and centralized technocratic socialism — the economy should serve human dignity, and when it stops doing that, the framework for correcting it must already exist.

National cohesion without ethnonationalism.

The platform strongly emphasizes national preservation, sovereignty, and cultural continuity while rejecting racial nationalism, supremacism, and xenophobic politics. Policies include strong border enforcement, civic integration into constitutional and covenantal norms, controlled immigration, national service programs, and the construction of a shared civic identity. Obligations to citizens come first; strangers are still treated ethically. A nation is a covenant with its own people — that priority is not a moral failure, it is a moral structure.

Peace through strength.

Foreign policy is restrained realism: seek peace first, maintain overwhelming defensive capability, avoid humiliation politics in diplomacy, reject utopian interventionism, and refuse to appease violent actors. The platform is skeptical of ideological empire-building in both its neoconservative and progressive humanitarian forms. Deterrence works; naïveté kills.

Ethical technology and AI governance.

The same values driving the transparency agenda — dignity, accountability, corrigibility — apply directly to AI governance. The party advocates AI transparency standards, explainability requirements, human accountability for automated decisions, protections against algorithmic social fragmentation, digital privacy rights, and limits on surveillance capitalism. The technology sector does not get a separate moral framework just because its tools are new.

Education for moral formation and civic responsibility.

The platform rejects value-neutrality in education as the illusion it is. A democracy that produces technically skilled but morally unformed citizens has not educated its people — it has processed them. Policies include robust civics as a core graduation requirement at every level, ethical reasoning, media literacy, dialogue skills, history taught with genuine complexity, anti-fragility education, and vocational dignity.

Civics education in particular is treated as nation-building infrastructure. Students learn how government works, how to evaluate evidence and argument, how civic institutions depend on citizen participation, and what obligations come with the rights they inherit. The goal is not the production of any particular political viewpoint — it is the production of citizens capable of self-governance, which is something distinct from, and more demanding than, the ability to cast a ballot.

Environmental stewardship without apocalypticism.

Conservation, sustainable energy, long-term stewardship, anti-waste culture, and genuine ecological responsibility — all grounded in the obligation to future generations rather than in anti-human ideology. The platform rejects degrowth ideology and civilizational self-hatred alongside environmental recklessness. Stewardship means caring for something you intend to pass on — that is a conservative impulse, a progressive commitment, and a human obligation simultaneously.

What makes this different.

Unlike progressivism, this platform is less utopian, more obligation-centered, more institutionally skeptical, more committed to family and national cohesion, and less identity-essentialist. Unlike conservatism, it is less market-fundamentalist, more communitarian, more committed to robust social safety nets, and more explicitly moral-structural in its reasoning. Unlike libertarianism, it rejects radical atomized individualism as a social philosophy. Unlike populism, it is suspicious of demagoguery and moral simplification — which means it will never be the easiest platform to sell, but it may be the most honest one.

The platform in three words: Rights require responsibility. 

And civilization requires the willingness to say so.





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

From Ian:

John Podhoretz: Abe Foxman, 1940-2026
The “Jews who care” were the ones Abe Foxman, the most important and probably the most beloved American Jewish communal leader of his day, spoke for. He knew the difference between the Jews who care and others in his kishkes, based on his own extraordinary life story of the century. Born to Polish Jews in Belarus, his parents left him as a baby in the care of his nanny while they were sent to a ghetto.

He was given a false name and baptized as a Catholic. Miraculously, his mother escaped, returned to Vilnius, and herself posed as a local Catholic so she could provide money for Abe’s care. Then his father was liberated and came back after the war—at which point the nanny would not give him up, believing that she had saved his soul through his baptism and that he should remain in her care as a Catholic. Custody battles ensued, which the Foxmans finally won before making it to America in 1950. Abe was 10. He went to City College and then got a law degree before beginning to work as a Jewish activist. Abe made reference in many speeches to “the day I took off the cross.” And yet he and his parents remained grateful to the nanny and helped her until her passing. As they remained grateful to be Jews, in spite of having been targeted for death for being so. They raised Abe Orthodox, sent him to yeshiva, and while he attained a law degree and could have assimilated into the larger American melting pot to put the trauma of his first 10 years behind him, an Orthodox Jew he remained until his passing on Sunday at the age of 86.

The point here is that he saw his mission and obligation in the defense of Jews against the scourge of anti-Semitism. If that anti-Semitism came from the right, he attacked it. If it came from the left, he attacked it. If it came from white people, he attacked it. If it came from black people, he attacked it. If it was hidden inside anti-Zionism, he attacked it. If it was hidden in conversations about rapacious capitalists, he attacked it. He was utterly consistent. His mission was his mission and he pursued it unfailingly.

Which is why, in one of the more shameful moments in communal Jewish organizational history, he was coup’ed out of the ADL—simply because he wasn’t helpful enough to the cause of Jewish liberalism. His replacement, Jonathan Greenblatt, spent years muddying the institution’s mission and letting leftists off the hook by prioritizing liberal apologia until October 7 woke even Greenblatt up to the undeniable fact that the predominant threat is from the left. Had Abe been there, the clarity would not have been that hard to achieve.
I’m a Democrat. My Party Has a Double Standard on Antisemitism.
In 2017, Democratic leaders denounced the white supremacists who marched in Charlottesville chanting “Jews will not replace us.” In 2022, Democrats took Donald Trump to task for having dinner with Nick Fuentes, an antisemite and a white supremacist. Across the Democratic Party’s ideological spectrum, right-wing hate is consistently condemned.

But today, too many Democrats are noticeably and shamefully silent when antisemitism comes from the far left — at a moment when the Anti-Defamation League is reporting a surge of antisemitic incidents in the past three years.

It’s a glaring double standard.

Consider the response to — really, the embrace of — Hasan Piker, a prominent left-wing commentator with millions of online followers. He referred to Orthodox Jews as “inbred” and said “America deserved 9/11,” both statements he halfheartedly walked back. He said that Hamas — a designated terrorist organization that has killed Americans and taken Americans hostage — is “a thousand times better” than Israel, America’s ally, which he called a “fascist settler colonial apartheid state” — a statement he stands by. None of this should be waved away as mere edgy commentary. Mr. Piker traffics in antisemitic and anti-American extremism that has been met by silence from many on the Democratic left.

Sadly, we’ve seen several prominent Democrats appear on his show and even campaign with him, granting his views legitimacy.

I’ve spoken to congressional colleagues who have privately told me that many things Mr. Piker has said are disgusting. Yet they’ll say nothing about it in public, even as they rightly rush to condemn President Trump for his unending barrage of offensive comments and social media posts. I understand that speaking up isn’t easy — if you do, there are many on the left who will heckle you in public and troll you online. But whether we’re elected officials, candidates, organizers or activists, we should remember that our constituents don’t expect us to take the easy path. It takes far more courage to stand up to those who have long claimed to be in your corner than to oppose your political opponents. That’s what principled leadership is all about. But we’re not always seeing it.

At their recent party convention, Michigan Democrats nominated a candidate to run for a seat on the University of Michigan’s Board of Regents who had shared a social media post praising the former leader of Hezbollah as a martyr and another post that invoked age-old antisemitic tropes by referring to Israelis as “demons” who “lie, steal, cheat, murder and blackmail.”

Last month, most Senate Democrats voted for two measures that would have blocked sales of military equipment to Israel, with some arguing that among the reasons for their votes was their assessment of Israel’s human rights record. Is this turnabout a legitimate departure from decades of American foreign policy? Or — more likely — is it a politically convenient stance that coincides with a small but vocal and growing segment of the political left making opposition to support for Israel a new litmus test?
Seth Mandel: Journalism Succumbs To Its Wounds
The famous saying attributed to Jean-Paul Sartre holds that “the anti-Semite doesn’t accuse the Jew of stealing because he actually believes he stole. He accuses the Jew of stealing because he enjoys watching the Jew empty his pockets to prove his innocence.”

That is no doubt as true today as ever, regardless of the quote’s origins. And it immediately comes to mind when watching, in real time, the evolution in the latest in a long line of accusations about the nefarious trained militarism of Zionist animals. Whereas many of these rumors—my favorite being the griffin vulture that Arab governments claimed had been trained as a Mossad spy—had an air of levity about them, the new one most certainly does not. And that is the idea that Zionist dogs are trained to rape Arabs.

The anti-Zionist activists who started or popularized the rumors have made clear that there is no evidence in their favor. That didn’t stop the sick-minded anti-Israel protesters from adopting the talking point, as demonstrators did in London. From there, however, it has moved to the pages of the New York Times, where Nicholas Kristof repeats it.

I watched other sensational “reports” of Israeli perfidy circulate among people who treated them as fact recently and thought about how the question of whether Western journalism will ever recover from its alliance with the machinery of Hamas propaganda appears to have been answered. No.

I saw a video of a woman wearing a “PRESS” vest in Southern Lebanon, (though her bio lists no affiliation) and proceed to read a list of talking points off of a card and then say “I just received a heartbreaking report”—please note the wording—of an Israeli drone following a girl riding a scooter and shooting at her until she was mortally wounded.

Usually the reporter reports. But when it comes to Israel, activists costumed as journalists “receive” reports and then continue the game of telephone. “Somebody told me” is not reporting, but you can report out what somebody told you. Reporters know the difference, or should.

Monday, May 11, 2026

From Ian:

David Collier: Dear BBC News – Just When Will You Stop Shilling For Terrorists?
The journalist behind this particular mess is Nawal Al-Maghafi. Her timeline is full of clear anti-Israel bias, non-factual commentary, Hamas propaganda presented as news, and retweets of Gaza-based activists whom no respectable journalist should be seen amplifying.

In this latest case, either she did not bother to dig for the truth of the Hezbollah affiliation at all, or chose to turn a blind eye to it.

Why is it that these Arabic journalists are given carte blanche to piggyback on the BBC’s name and spend money from the British licence fee promoting such a blatant anti-Israel agenda?

The truth is this: Hezbollah is a proscribed jihadist terror group that seeks to wipe Israel off the map. Funded, armed, and often directed by the Iranian regime, it has exported its violence to arenas such as the Syrian civil war. Hezbollah chose to attack Israel on 8 October 2023, and again at the start of the latest round of violence. Israel has no territorial dispute with Lebanon – and without Hezbollah’s religious fundamentalism in the south, there would be no conflict. All of Lebanon’s woes stem from the refusal of the Shia in the south to abandon their jihadist aims.

So why is there not a single BBC article that lays out this context clearly for its audience? Those who support Hezbollah – including this man’s own community – have brought devastation to both Lebanon and Israel.

Isn’t it about time that the BBC took away the pen from those journalists who clearly hate Israel and defunded its anti-Israel agenda? More importantly, when will the BBC stop shilling for terrorists?
Khaled Abu Toameh: Erdogan's Turkey: The NATO Member That Sponsors Terrorism
New revelations emerging from Israeli security investigations have shattered any illusion that Turkey's relationship with Hamas is limited to "political support" or "diplomatic engagement." The evidence increasingly points to a situation far more alarming: Turkey has become a primary operational, logistical, and financial hub for Hamas's global terror infrastructure.

Countries that enable terrorism cannot at the same time be treated as indispensable partners in the fight against terrorism.

By allowing Hamas members to develop drone capabilities on Turkish soil, Ankara is deliberately grooming terrorists for future wars against Israel.

Turkey, rather than simply hosting Hamas officials, is willfully cultivating the next generation of Hamas terrorists and making sure that the geographical reach of Iran's jihadist axis continues to expand.

Turkey's pivotal financial role is especially significant because it provides Hamas with access to the international financial system through the territory of a NATO member state. That reality should deeply alarm both Washington and European capitals.

Ideologically -- as well as militarily and financially -- Erdogan has openly embraced Hamas leaders. He has repeatedly refused to designate the group as a terrorist organization... and characterized its members as "resistance fighters" and "liberation group" warriors fighting to protect Palestinian lands.

Erdogan's alignment with Hamas seems rooted in his broader ideological affinity with the Muslim Brotherhood movement and other Islamist groups. His government has consistently supported radical Islamist groups in Egypt, Libya, Syria, and other countries.

For years, Western governments have clung to the fiction that countries such as Turkey and Qatar can serve as neutral mediators between Hamas and Israel. That assumption has always been deeply flawed.

Qatar, meanwhile, continues to try to undermine the United States by donating, over decades, many billions of dollars to influence education from K-12 through graduate schools throughout America. Cornell University has received $10 billion over the years; Carnegie Mellon "just under $2 billion"; Texas A&M University "over $1 billion" (which gave Qatar full ownership of more than 500 research projects in fields such as nuclear science, artificial intelligence, biotech, robotics and weapons development); and Georgetown University $971 million. Why do Qatar and Turkey continue embracing Hamas while demanding the trust of the US and the West? Why does the West keep accepting this duplicity?

The Trump administration faces a crucial test. If Washington is genuinely serious about dismantling the infrastructure of Hamas and confronting the Iranian regime, it cannot continue overlooking Turkey's commitment to doing the exact opposite: safeguarding and supporting Hamas.

A NATO member state, Turkey, is facilitating the activities of an Iranian-backed terrorist group responsible for the mass murder of civilians, including many Americans.
European sanctions on Israelis won’t succeed in pressuring Jewish state, Sa’ar says
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar said on Monday that the European Union’s attempt to impose political views on Jerusalem through sanctions on Jews living in Judea and Samaria “is unacceptable and will not succeed.”

Israel “firmly rejects” the E.U. decision, describing it as “arbitrary” and “political,” Sa’ar said.

The Israeli official decried the “outrageous” comparison between Israeli citizens and Hamas terrorists. “This is a completely distorted moral equivalence,” he stated.

The E.U. foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas stated earlier that her organization “just gave the go-ahead to sanction Israeli settlers over violence against Palestinians.” She added that it had “also agreed new sanctions on leading Hamas figures.”

“It was high time we move from deadlock to delivery,” Kallas said. “Extremisms and violence carry consequences.”

“Israel has stood, stands and will continue to stand for the right of Jews to settle in the heart of our homeland,” Sa’ar responded. “No other people in the world has such a documented and longstanding right to its land as the Jewish people have to the Land of Israel.”

“This is a moral and historical right that has also been recognized by the law of nations, and no actor can take it away from the Jewish people,” he stated.

Earlier on Monday, Ireland’s national public service broadcaster reported that according to E.U. officials, “seven settlers or settler organizations” were set to be blacklisted, and that the bloc was also preparing sanctions against representatives of the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas.

Israel Gantz, head of the Binyamin Regional Council and chairman of the Yesha Council, also strongly condemned the E.U.’s decision to impose sanctions on organizations and residents in Judea and Samaria, calling it a “shameful decision” and “the height of hypocrisy and double standards.”

Placing sanctions on Israeli citizens in the same framework as measures against Hamas terrorists represents “an unprecedented moral low,” he said.

The E.U. is unfairly targeting Israelis who are “on the frontlines of the struggle against Palestinian Authority terrorism,” while ignoring the P.A.’s role in rewarding violence, Gantz said.

The Psyops of Palestine

The war to erase the Jews did not end — and your mind is being used as a weapon of war

By Forest Rain

What do you do if your enemy cannot be vanquished through direct conflict? You change the framework of the battle, moving it from the battlefield to the mind.

Psychological warfare targets the mind, attempting to weaken the enemy from within. Shatter the spirit, and victory can be achieved with minimal waste of lives and ammunition.

This form of warfare is subtle, cumulative, and highly effective precisely because people prefer to believe their ideas are their own, rather than seeds carefully planted by external forces.

Psyops function as a feedback loop: plant an idea, normalize it through repetition, reinforce it through trusted institutions, and eventually the target internalizes the manufactured perception as reality itself. Repeated often enough, circulated through authoritative channels, and fused with fragments of truth, the constructed narrative begins to feel self-evident, becoming socially and psychologically embedded.

That methodology is now being used to replace Israel with “Palestine.”

The children’s story The Emperor’s New Clothes revolves around an emperor who is persuaded that he is wearing magnificent garments when, in reality, he is wearing nothing at all. The deception succeeds because everyone around him participates in maintaining the illusion. The tailor, his assistants, the court, and the crowd all reinforce the same falsehood until the emperor subjugates his own perception of reality to the authority of the masses and changes his behavior accordingly.

We are conditioned to conform to the consensus around us. When enough external signals suggest that reality differs from what we understand it to be, many people will abandon their own logic, memory, and direct observation in order to align with the crowd — especially when those signals come from sources perceived as authoritative, authentic, and unbiased.

This principle lies at the heart of the psyops of Palestine: an attempt to alter reality itself because direct conflict could not achieve the objective of “wiping Israel off the map.”

The first challenge is teaching the public that a country that never existed is real.

Historically, there never was an Arab country called Palestine. The term itself was part of a Roman attempt to sever the connection between the Nation of Israel and the Land of Israel by renaming the country and, in doing so, symbolically wiping Israel off the map. This occurred in the second century CE after the Romans crushed the revolt of Shimon Bar Kokhba in 132 CE, when the Jews attempted to free their ancestral homeland from foreign occupation.

“Palestine” was a name invented and imposed by the Romans to punish the Jews.

It didn’t work.

Changing the name could not change the psychology of a nation whose identity is inseparable from its land. Nor did it erase the understanding of the Western world, whose religion, culture, and morality stand on the foundations of Jewish civilization. For centuries, “Palestine” remained widely understood as a geographic reference to Zion — the Jewish homeland. Even under the British Empire, the official designation reflected this reality: British Mandate Palestine – Eretz Yisrael — the Land of Israel.

The modern era has brought us the psyops of Palestine – the revival of the Roman technique, designed to erase the Jews, applied in a new way.

The idea is clever. As it is nearly impossible to erase something the world knows has existed for thousands of years, do not deny the reality of its ancient existence. Instead, deny ownership, replacing the framework we know as Israel — the Jewish homeland — with a new framework: an Arab state called Palestine.

Hamas, the Palestinian Authority, and other terrorist organizations routinely depict maps in which all of Israel is labelled as Palestine, signalling that the entirety of the Jewish state is Arab — or should become so.

Maps are powerful symbols. So are flags. National colors and emblems create the impression of an established people rooted in a sovereign homeland.

Facts become secondary when symbols evoke emotions strong enough to make something feel unquestionably true.

There is no historic sovereign Arab nation called Palestine. What does exist, however, is a vast network of symbols, institutions, labels, and international recognition mechanisms designed to create the impression that such a nation has always existed.

The psyops of Palestine: building blocks in a war of erasure, designed to eliminate Jewish history in order to destroy the Jewish future.

Conquering the mind, moving it to the new framework, is done by a cumulative effect: participation in the Olympics under the Palestinian flag, representation in international pageants, observer status at the United Nations, international media terminology, and “Made in Palestine” labels on products. Each example may appear insignificant in isolation, but together they form a psychological architecture designed to establish legitimacy through repetition and familiarity.

The strategy is effective precisely because it relies on tangible markers people instinctively associate with nationhood: flags, maps, diplomatic institutions, sporting delegations, even merchandise and packaging.

Each one reinforces the illusion.

I recently found a discarded bottle on a street in Haifa. I have found others like it before — products not officially sold in Israel but bearing the same label: “Made in Palestine.”

This particular bottle originated from a company in Hebron.

Hebron is not a mythical or disputed abstraction. It is a real and ancient city with a documented history stretching back thousands of years. It is the burial place of the Patriarchs and Matriarchs of the Jewish people and is considered second in holiness only to Jerusalem in Jewish tradition. Today, Hebron is divided into sections: approximately 80 percent falls under Palestinian Authority control, while the remainder is under Israeli security control and includes both Jewish and Arab residents.

These are verifiable realities supported by history, archaeology, biblical record, and modern political agreements.

“Palestine,” however, is different. There is no historical or modern sovereign state corresponding to that label.

That is why bottles like this matter.

The label itself functions as a political instrument — a small but deliberate building block in a campaign of psychological warfare. It does not reflect historical truth or political reality, but within effective propaganda, truth is often secondary to repetition.

Repeated exposure conditions people to accept the implication embedded within the label. Familiarity becomes assumption, and assumption gradually hardens into legitimacy.

The true power of propaganda is not that people consciously choose to believe a lie. It is that constant repetition, reinforced by institutions and everyday symbols, slowly teaches them to stop questioning it altogether.

Have you ever thought about how your mind is being used in this war?

The psyops of Palestine are a potent tool in the war against the Jews, and yet, when you learn to recognize the building blocks in this weapon of war, the psyops crumble. 

The psyops of Palestine are effective only so long as the illusion goes unchallenged. Once you recognize the mechanism — the repetition, the symbols, the manufactured familiarity — the illusion bursts.

The emperor has no clothes. We are Zion, home to stay. 

 

 




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Monday, May 11, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon


For over twenty years I've been writing about Israel, Judaism, and antisemitism. But I just released a book about America ahead of its 250th birthday.

The topics are not as different as they might appear.

Reclaiming the Covenant: America's Remarkable 250 Years and Assuring it Continues is both a love letter to America and a warning. 

The Jewish experience — three thousand years of covenantal thinking, of building communities defined by shared obligation rather than shared ancestry — turns out to be the most precise lens available for understanding both what is so exceptional about America and what threatens it today.

Most nations throughout history have defined membership by what you are — your blood, your soil, your tribe, your religion. America's founders defined it differently: by what you accept. Membership in the American republic has always been open to anyone willing to take on the obligations of self-government, regardless of ancestry or origin. That is the covenant — and it traces directly to the Hebraic tradition the founders themselves drew on.

They were not subtle about it. The founders quoted the Hebrew Bible in their pamphlets and sermons more than any other source. When Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson were asked to design the Great Seal of the new nation, both independently proposed similar Biblical images of the Israelites crossing the sea and traveling toward a promised land governed by law. When George Washington wrote to the Hebrew Congregation of Newport in 1790, he told them that "it is now no more that toleration is spoken of, as if it was by the indulgence of one class of people, that another enjoyed the exercise of their inherent natural rights." He was not extending a courtesy. He was describing the structural logic of the republic itself: in a covenantal nation, Jewish belonging requires no majority's permission.

This is why Jewish history illuminates American history so precisely. Both traditions define membership through covenant — through acceptance of shared obligations — rather than through ethnicity or origin. America's genius was to apply that ancient Hebraic model to a modern republic, creating something the world had not seen before: a nation where you could be fully yourself and fully American at the same time. European states were turning liberal, but America is both liberal and pluralistic - and that is a difference that is not commonly noticed.

That architecture is now under serious pressure. The left has been claiming that groups who are considered oppressed have a superior claim on rights than other citizens, a politics of identity. From the right, a politics of exclusion has been defining the nation by ancestry and culture rather than by shared obligation. Both abandon the founding logic, and both make Jewish life in America more precarious — because Jewish safety has always depended on the health of the covenant, on a republic that protects minorities through principle rather than through the majority's goodwill. And history shows that where Jews aren't safe, neither are anyone else. 

The Founding Fathers could not have anticipated the technological and social changes of the 21st century. But the genius behind the American experiment applies to us as well. We just need to recover what America really means and adapt it to today.

Reclaiming the Covenant is available now in print and ebook on Amazon, and wherever books can be ordered. I have been serializing it on my America at 250 Substack, where non-paying subscribers can read roughly half of each chapter.

Daniel Pipes writes: "The pseudonymous author of this remarkable book pays tribute to the United States’ semiquincentennial by undertaking three tasks: identifying the country’s successful ‘founding design,’ locating current threats to that design, and recommending methods to sustain it. Focused on what he calls the American covenant, Eldad Tzioni argues that, based on a Hebrew antecedent, this defined membership in an unprecedented and inspired way: not via a person’s identity but via full acceptance of a citizen’s shared obligation."

Andrew Pessin, Professor of Philosophy at Connecticut College and Founding Director of the Institute for the Critical Study of Antizionism, calls it "a penetrating account of America as a covenantal nation — one grounded not in identity, but in shared commitment. Provocative, erudite, and timely."

Reclaiming the Covenant  is available on Amazon as a paperback and an ebook,  You can order it from your favorite bookstore, ISBN 979-8-985708-48-6 . 



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Monday, May 11, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

Atef Sayyed el-Ahl served as Egypt's ambassador to Israel. This is one of the most sensitive diplomatic postings in the Arab world, representing a country that signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1979 at considerable political cost, and which has maintained that peace across decades of regional turbulence. The job requires, at minimum, a capacity to engage with Israel and Israelis as they actually are.

El-Ahl has recently been publishing and appearing on television to explain what Israel actually is. The picture he paints is not that of a diplomat who spent years developing an honest understanding of a difficult neighbor. It is rantings of an antisemite.

He fully subscribes to the discredited Khazar theory, claiming that He argues that Jews in Israel have no real ancestral connection to the Land of Israel. He is not even careful to distinguish Ashkenazi Jews from Mizrahi Jews - to him, all Jews in Israel are not really Jewish. This hypothesis has been demolished by modern population genetics — study after study finds that Jewish populations share a common Near Eastern ancestral cluster, with Ashkenazi Jews genetically proximate to other Middle Eastern populations including Palestinians. The Khazar theory survives today almost exclusively in antisemitic literature, where its political utility outlasted its credibility by decades. Denying that Jews are Jews — that the Jewish people have any genuine connection to their own history, ancestry, and land — is antisemitism, regardless of how many footnotes accompany the denial.

El Ahl also argues that the Jewish Temple may never have existed, citing the absence of definitive archaeological proof of its precise location, claiming that the Samaritan Temple on Mount Gerizim might have been the real one. We see this accusation in Arab media all the time, that there  is not one scrap of archaeological evidence of the Jewish Temples. 

Yet the Temple left its walls behind — and not just Herod's walls. The Eastern Wall of the Temple Mount, still standing today, preserves three distinct building phases readable in the stonework itself: the Iron Age section dating to King Hezekiah in the 8th century BCE, visible on either side of the Golden Gate and near the southeast corner known as the Bend; the Hasmonean extension southward; and Herod's later expansions to the north and south. Leen Ritmeyer, the archaeologist who has personally measured and documented more of the Temple Mount than any living scholar — Christian, Muslim, or Jewish — has spent decades mapping exactly these phases in the physical fabric of the walls. The Temple Mount is not an assertion. It is a structure, and its pre-Herodian stonework is visible to anyone standing in front of it.  Temple denial is not a scholarly position. It is antisemitism with a footnote.

In his television interview, el-Ahl went further still. He claimed that Israel has dug nine tunnels beneath Jerusalem, three of them running under Al-Aqsa itself, "in an attempt to find any means to make it collapse," and concluded: "I believe the takeover of Al-Aqsa is now very close." This is not geopolitical analysis from a former diplomat. It is a classical antisemitic conspiracy theory — Jews secretly scheming to destroy the holy site above them — dressed in the borrowed authority of ambassadorial experience.

Taken together, these are not peripheral or incidental views. They form a coherent worldview: today's Jews are not really Jews, their Temple never existed, and they are now tunneling to collapse the mosque built over the Temple Mount they have no right to. Every element strips Jews of historical legitimacy. Every element portrays Jewish claims as fabrication in service of dispossession. That is the architecture of antisemitism, and el-Ahl has built his analysis on every beam of it.

The question worth asking is not whether el-Ahl holds antisemitic views — he clearly does. The question is what it means that Egypt sent this man to Israel as its representative. He arrived, apparently, having already concluded that his hosts were historical frauds. An antisemite not qualified to be an ambassador to any country, let alone Israel. That he was Egypt's ambassador to the Jewish state should be a scandal.

But the world expects Arab nations to be antisemitic at their core. So no one thinks twice about a person who denies Jewish existence and history being a respected diplomat who is interviewed very often on Egyptian TV, today. 





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From Ian:

Where are the voices defending Europe’s Jews?
There would have been no Europe had it not been built upon the need to turn the page after the Shoah. Europe claimed to be “new,” as Konrad Adenauer declared. It swore to become “different,” as Simone Veil assured us, in the name of overcoming the antisemitism that murdered 6 million Jews.

And so the celebration of Europe Day on Saturday was deeply paradoxical.

Antisemitism has once again become omnipresent—a stain spreading across the continent just as it did in the Europe of the 1930s, a Europe dazzling in beauty, culture and tradition before the plague of Nazism and fascism consumed it.

Today’s Europe, confused by a mixture of distorted human-rights ideology and Third Worldist progressivism, applies an obvious double standard. It condemns Donald Trump while treating Iran gently. It attacks Israel while forgetting Hamas and Hezbollah.

All this while Europe claims to be forging a stronger identity, capable of competing strategically and politically with the United States.

But antisemitism remains the structural weakness of European thought—its recurring condemnation.

Walter Hallstein, one of the first presidents of the European Commission, once said: “Anyone who lived through National Socialism knows that Europe was born so that such persecution could never happen again.”

Yet when European Parliament President Roberta Metsola spoke this week of the “many challenges” facing Europe, she did not mention antisemitism.

French President Emmanuel Macron spoke of a “treasure forged by courage.” Yet why is that courage not used to pressure Lebanon to stop Hezbollah and pursue genuine peace, instead of endlessly blaming Jerusalem?

Former Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi dedicated a “White Rose,” the symbol of his political movement, to Sophie Scholl, the young German student executed for resisting Nazism. Rightly so. That is the Europe we should honor.

But in the hands of a political camp that, in the name of peace, condemns only Israel, that rose appears withered.

Where are the voices defending Europe’s Jews?
Why Is It Only in Ireland that I Worry about Being Jewish?
As one of the 2,000 Jews in Ireland, I worry every time I attend a Jewish community event that this will be the time someone gets through the many layers of security to attack us. I worry that my partner, who is publicly visible as a Holocaust education activist and a Jewish business owner, will be targeted. I worry that when I bring my six-year-old son to places where other Jews are present, I'm putting him in danger.

Attacks against diaspora Jews are happening within a context of relentless protest against Israel and a boycott movement that is trying to isolate the country from the community of nations. The attackers seem to believe that hurting Jews in Sydney, London or Manchester is striking a blow against Israel. The implication is that Jews everywhere share responsibility for the conduct of Jews anywhere. It reduces all Jews to avatars of Israeli policy, creating a permission structure for violence against Jews in general.

Sometimes Irish Jews end up as collateral damage, as happened with the Sinn Fein party's appalling campaign on the Dublin city council to rename Herzog Park in Rathgar, one the city's most Jewish areas, on the pretext that it honored a Zionist. Before he was president of Israel, Chaim Herzog was an Irish Jew, the son of Isaac Herzog, who was Ireland's first chief rabbi and later chief rabbi of Mandatory Palestine and the State of Israel. The Herzogs are essentially the Kennedys of Israel; Isaac's grandson and namesake is president of Israel today.

The overall message is that the recognition of Jewish humanity is somehow conditional, qualified, contingent on what the Israeli government does or doesn't do. In my experience, this logic is very common in Ireland. I've encountered it personally. It's all over social media. It pops up in mainstream media too. It's even promoted by several political parties.
Pierre Rehov: The Saudi 'No'
The Abraham Accords, once touted as a breakthrough, have quietly moved, in Saudi political conversation, into the deep freeze.

In September 1967, the Arab League, at its summit in Khartoum, delivered the famous three "no's": no peace with Israel, no recognition of Israel, no negotiations with Israel. Notably, the declaration made no mention of a Palestinian state, which the late senior PLO official Zuheir Mohsen significantly pointed out in 1977, had not yet been invented:

"The Palestinian people does not exist. The creation of a Palestinian state is only a means for continuing our struggle against the state of Israel for our Arab unity. In reality, today there is no difference between Jordanians, Palestinians, Syrians and Lebanese. Only for political and tactical reasons do we speak today about the existence of a Palestinian people, since Arab national interests demand that we posit the existence of a distinct Palestinian people to oppose Zionism." — Zuheir Mohsen, Trouw, March 31, 1977.

Once US President Donald J. Trump, without Saudi Arabia lifting a finger, relieved the kingdom of its foremost adversary, Iran, and removed the major threat to the kingdom, what would Saudi Arabia need Israel for anyway? To the Saudis, the Abraham Accords doubtless look like an agreement signed by others, but never embraced by the one Arab power that truly mattered.

The Arab League's Khartoum resolution was never truly about borders. It expressed a fundamental rejection of Jewish sovereignty on land the Arab world, guided by religious doctrine, considered permanently to be held in trust (waqf, endowment) for Allah.

The late Abba Eban, serving as Israel's foreign minister, had called the pre-1967 "border" -- merely an armistice line where the fighting had stopped in 1949 -- "the Auschwitz lines." Riyadh appears to understand this perfectly, which is precisely why its condition was framed as it was.

The Arab League's response to the 1948 UN partition plan was a genocidal invasion of the newly born Jewish state by the armies of five Arab states. Khartoum repeated this rejection in 1967. Saudi Arabia continues the same refusal today in language carefully tailored for Western chancelleries.

Qatar, meanwhile, plays an even more institutionalized double game: hosting America's largest regional military base while protecting Hamas commanders, financing Muslim Brotherhood networks, and deploying Al Jazeera TV network as the ideological megaphone for the entire project.

Israeli security cannot rest any hope on a recognition that will not come. It will depend instead on the determined elimination of the Iranian regime and its terrorist proxies when the opportunity arises, and the fight for power that might well define the Sunni world once the Shia threat no longer binds it together.

Sunday, May 10, 2026

International recognition of Israel in 1948 is often presented in retrospect as the world's moral response to the Holocaust. The reality was more complex. The Western European democracies that had produced the Jewish Question over the nineteenth century supported Israel's creation partly because the alternative was absorbing the Jewish survivors into their own societies, partly because the recent catastrophe demanded some form of moral recognition, and partly because the geopolitics of the moment made support advantageous. None of these motives constituted a revision of the framework that had generated the Question. The framework had been suspended by moral overhang and parked by operational expediency. It had not been dissolved.

The honeymoon was real

For roughly two decades after 1948, Western Europe and North America treated Israel as a state that had earned its place. The recognition was rapid. Diplomatic relations were established. Israel joined international bodies — the UN in 1949, UNESCO in 1949, the IMF and World Bank, the international sporting federations. Trade and cultural exchange developed. The Suez crisis of 1956 saw Britain and France in active military cooperation with Israel against Egypt. West Germany's reparations agreement of 1952 was negotiated and signed despite significant Israeli domestic opposition, because Konrad Adenauer's government understood reparations as a structural obligation that postwar Germany owed. French military cooperation with Israel through the late 1950s and early 1960s was substantial; France was Israel's primary arms supplier and contributed to the development of Israel's nuclear program.

The Eichmann trial of 1961 is a useful exhibit. Israel had captured Adolf Eichmann in Argentina, transported him to Israel, and tried him in a Jerusalem courtroom for crimes against the Jewish people. Eichmann was the Nazi bureaucrat who had organized the logistics of the Holocaust. His trial in Israel raised legal and political questions: Was Israel the appropriate venue? Did Israel have jurisdiction over crimes committed before the state existed? Should the trial have been held under international rather than Israeli auspices?

The Western reception of the trial was, on the whole, accepting.  European and American newspapers treated Israel as the appropriate venue precisely because the equation Israel-equals-the-Jews was operating in its positive register. The Jewish state was the proper place to try the Nazi who had organized the murder of the Jews. The reasoning was emotional more than legal, but it was the reasoning that the Western press accepted, and it was the reasoning that confirmed the underlying equation. Supporting Israel was supporting the Jews. The trial was the world's reckoning, conducted in the venue the world had created for the survivors of what was being reckoned with.

This was the honeymoon at its clearest. The Israel-equals-the-Jews equation was operating openly, in positive register, in the most prestigious Western institutions. 

What Europe was actually doing

Even during the honeymoon, the framework’s assumption that Jews must be managed was operative beneath the surface. Two patterns ran continuously across the post-1948 period — in diplomatic recognition and in commercial accommodation of Arab demands. Each pattern was visible to anyone choosing to look. None of them was characterized by Western governments as anomalous.

The first pattern was the treatment of Jerusalem. The 1947 partition plan had designated Jerusalem and a surrounding area, including Bethlehem, as a corpus separatum under international administration. After the 1948 war, Israel controlled West Jerusalem and Jordan controlled East Jerusalem and the rest of the proposed international zone, including Bethlehem. Western countries refused to recognize West Jerusalem as Israel's capital. They kept their embassies in Tel Aviv. They invoked the corpus separatum framework as the reason: Jerusalem was supposed to be an international city, and Israeli sovereignty over West Jerusalem could not be acknowledged.

The same framework should have applied symmetrically to the Jordanian-held portion of the proposed "international city." But it didn't. 

Jordan formally annexed East Jerusalem and the West Bank in 1950. The annexation was recognized de jure by only a handful of states, but Western governments tacitly accepted Jordanian administration of East Jerusalem, Bethlehem, and the rest of the West Bank for ordinary diplomatic purposes. They did not insist that Bethlehem should be internationalized. They did not invoke the corpus separatum as a reason to withhold recognition of Jordanian sovereignty over the southern boundary of what the same framework had defined as international territory.

The corpus separatum was a framework the international community kept alive as a tool against Israeli sovereignty over West Jerusalem and allowed to die quietly everywhere else it would have applied. It was not really a position about Jerusalem's status. It was a position about Israel's claim to Jerusalem. The same logic that refused to acknowledge Israel's capital silently accepted Jordan's claim to the rest of the area the same logic had defined as international territory. By 1967, Western embassies were still in Tel Aviv on the principle that Jerusalem was an international city, while Jordanian rule over Bethlehem had been accepted in practice for nearly two decades.

Similarly, even though the armistice agreement between Israel and Jordan included full access to the holy places of each religion, Jordan did not allow Jews - from any nation - to the parts of Jerusalem under its control. In 1959, a Canadian parliamentary delegation visited east Jerusalem but Jordan banned their one Jewish member, Leon Crestohl, from entering. This blatant antisemitism was not protested by any European government - and not even Canada filed a complaint to protest its own lawmaker being banned for being Jewish. 

The second pattern was the treatment of the Arab boycott.  

The Arab boycott was not against Israel as a state. It was against Jews. By 1956, Saudi Arabia and other Arab League members were sending letters to firms in Western countries demanding to know whether the firm had Jewish employees, Jewish board members, Jewish managers, or Jewish workers anywhere in its operations. A November 1955 letter to a Dutch firm asked: "Do you have any Jewish employees in your company. if yes how many and what are the positions held by them. Are there any Jews in your Board of Directors as members? Is any of your managers or branch managers a Jew, if yes please give name of the department headed by such a man." A Saudi Arabian directive of January 1952 asked an American firm directly: "what faith your firm is belong, to Jewish or Christian?"

The boycott's anti-Jewish character continued operating openly through the 1970s. By 1975, Western banks including Morgan Guaranty Trust and Chase Manhattan were participating in Arab-state syndicated loans that excluded Jewish-owned investment houses on the explicit demand of Arab clients. Time magazine reported the practice as routine. The United States ultimately enacted anti-boycott legislation in 1977 — the Export Administration Amendments Act and the Tax Reform Act, but Western European countries did not follow suit. European firms continued complying with Arab anti-Jewish demands as a normal feature of doing business, and European governments treated this as a private commercial matter rather than as discrimination requiring legal remedy.

The third pattern emerged when Palestinian terrorism began affecting European soil. In September 1970, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine hijacked four airliners in coordinated attacks, eventually concentrating hostages at Dawson's Field in Jordan. The hijackers separated Jewish passengers from the rest, holding them longer and singling them out by passport markings. Germany, Switzerland, and Britain released Palestinian terrorists from their prisons in exchange for the hostages. The United States and Israel refused. The released terrorists, including the hijacker Leila Khaled, returned to PFLP operations.

The pattern that began with Dawson's Field continued. After the Munich Olympics massacre of 1972, in which Palestinian terrorists murdered eleven Israeli athletes on German soil, West Germany released the three surviving attackers within weeks. The release was secured through a Lufthansa hijacking that the families of the murdered athletes have argued for decades was staged with German government complicity to get the attackers off German territory without trial. The released attackers were welcomed as heroes in Libya. Switzerland made a secret bilateral agreement with the PLO in the early 1970s, in which the Swiss foreign minister contacted Yasser Arafat through a junior parliamentarian, agreed to support Palestinian statehood diplomatically, agreed to abandon the investigation into the 1970 Swissair bombing that had killed forty-seven people, and agreed to push for diplomatic recognition of the PLO — in return for which the PLO would stop attacking Swiss targets. The agreement was never publicly disclosed at the time. It came to light only in 2016 through a journalist's investigation of Swiss archives.

These were not isolated decisions. They were a sustained operational pattern. European governments accepted Arab anti-Jewish hostility as a structural feature of the regional and international environment that European policy had to accommodate. When the hostility was directed at Jews who were not in Europe — Israeli Jews, Jewish firms operating internationally, Jewish hostages on hijacked airliners — European governments treated the hostility as someone else's problem to manage. When the hostility produced operational consequences inside Europe — terrorism on European soil, hijacked European airliners, Arab oil pressure on European economies — European governments responded not by confronting the underlying anti-Jewish character of what they were facing but by accommodating the demands the hostility produced.

This is the key point. Europe did not stop operating the framework after 1948. Europe outsourced it. The Jews of Europe had been removed by the Holocaust and by emigration; the framework's load-bearing assumption — that something about Jewish presence requires management — could now be operated against Israeli Jews, against Jewish firms, against Jews on European airliners, without disrupting European domestic political life. As long as the framework's hostility was directed at Jews elsewhere, Europe could appear to have moved beyond the Question while continuing to operate it.

When the hostility began producing consequences inside Europe, the framework simply expanded its scope to absorb the new conditions. European banks complied with anti-Jewish boycott demands. European governments released Palestinian terrorists in exchange for European hostages. European intelligence services cooperated covertly with Israeli counter-terrorism through a secret network of eighteen countries codenamed Kilowatt — but the cooperation was kept secret precisely because it could not be reconciled with the public diplomatic positions European governments were taking. The covert cooperation acknowledged what the public position denied: that Palestinian terrorism was a serious threat that required coordinated response. The public position served the framework's other requirement: that Arab demands had to be accommodated and that the underlying anti-Jewish character of those demands could not be confronted.

This is how the Question survived 1948. Europe had not dissolved the framework. Europe had outsourced it. As long as the irritant was at a distance, the framework could be operated quietly. When the irritant returned to European soil, the framework expanded to accommodate it. The structural assumption — that there is something about Jewish presence in any form that requires management by surrounding societies — was operative throughout. The vocabulary changed across the post-1948 period. The structure did not.

Reactivation: the public face

The Six-Day War of June 1967 changed the operational situation. Israel won decisively against three Arab armies that had massed on its borders threatening its destruction. It captured the West Bank, Gaza, the Golan Heights, and the Sinai. The military situation was unambiguous. Israel had been attacked and had won.

The political situation was already shifting. The Arab world's response to the 1967 defeat was not acceptance of the new military reality. It was the famous "three nos" of the Khartoum Conference of August 1967: no peace with Israel, no recognition of Israel, no negotiations with Israel. The Arab states recommitted to the structural position that Israel should not exist, even after losing decisively the war they had begun.

What had changed was that Israel now controlled territory whose populations could be characterized as colonial subjects. The framework had access to a new respectable register: the language of decolonization, native to the post-1960 international system in which dozens of newly independent states formed an emerging majority. The conflict could be reframed as a stateless indigenous people resisting a settler-colonial state, articulated in the vocabulary of national liberation and self-determination.

The October 1973 war forced the framework's reactivation into public visibility. Egypt and Syria attacked Israel on Yom Kippur. Israel sustained heavy initial losses, recovered, and pushed both armies back to lines favorable to a negotiated settlement. The military outcome was, again, unambiguous in Israel's favor. But the political outcome was the opposite of what the military situation suggested. The Arab oil-producing states imposed an embargo on countries supporting Israel. The price of oil quadrupled within months. European economies faced immediate disruption.

European public positions on Israel transformed in months, not years. By 1974, the European Community countries had shifted to positions critical of Israel and supportive of the Arab cause. France led the way. West Germany followed. The smaller European states followed Germany. The change was not gradual recognition of new evidence about the Middle East. The European governments shifting their public positions on Israel were the same European governments whose intelligence services were quietly cooperating with Israeli counter-terrorism in the Kilowatt network. The Europeans who were now publicly critical of Israel were the Europeans whose banks had been complying with Arab anti-Jewish boycott demands for two decades. The shift in respectable European political discourse was happening simultaneously with explicit anti-Jewish discrimination in European finance and with covert cooperation in counter-terrorism that could not be publicly acknowledged.

The framework's load-bearing assumption was always available. Oil and terrorism made deploying it operationally necessary. The Europeans were not encountering new evidence about the conflict. They were responding to operational pressure from a coalition whose anti-Jewish character was visible in their own institutions' transactions and their own counter-terrorism dilemmas.

The elevation of Palestinian nationalism

The most visible institutional moment of the transition was the United Nations General Assembly's invitation to Yasser Arafat to address it in November 1974. Arafat was the chairman of the PLO. Two years before he addressed the General Assembly, his organization had been classified by Western governments as a terrorist organization. He addressed the General Assembly with a holster on his hip and was given a standing ovation.

What is worth noticing is what this elevation actually was. Palestinian nationalism, as a centrally important international cause, was not visible before 1967. The Palestinian Arabs of the British Mandate had rejected the 1947 partition that would have given them a state, fought for and lost the 1948 war, and watched their cause absorbed into pan-Arab nationalism for nearly two decades. Between 1948 and 1967, the West Bank was annexed by Jordan and Gaza was occupied by Egypt; neither country supported the formation of a Palestinian state on the territories under its control. Palestinian Arab national aspirations during those nineteen years were treated by Arab governments and the international system as a regional refugee issue, not as a discrete national cause comparable to the post-colonial independence movements then receiving international attention.

There are many stateless or partially stateless peoples whose national consciousness is older, whose population is larger, whose case for recognition is stronger by any neutral measure. The Kurds number roughly 30 to 40 million across four countries, have a longer continuous national identity, have suffered chemical weapons attacks and forced relocations, and have no permanent UN agenda item, no committee on inalienable rights, no dedicated UN refugee agency, no annual day of solidarity. The Tibetans, the Uyghurs, the Western Saharans, the Tamils, the Baluch, the Rohingya — none has anything resembling the institutional architecture that began consolidating around the Palestinian cause in the mid-1970s.

The elevation of Palestinian nationalism from regional question to international centerpiece happened in roughly seven years. There is no rational explanation for this on the merits of the Palestinian case relative to comparable cases. The actual mechanism was terrorism plus oil. Palestinian groups had been attacking civilian targets across Europe and at international events since 1968. The Arab oil-producing states had used the embargo to demonstrate that European economies could be disrupted at will. The international system produced the elevation that the operational pressure required. Arafat's transformation from terrorist to statesman was the visible mechanism. Within twenty-four months, the same person whose organization had murdered Israeli Olympic athletes was addressing the General Assembly to a standing ovation.

This is the failure-of-solutions pattern the first essay trained the reader to recognize, operating in compressed time. The previous respectable vocabulary — Israel as a normal state with diplomatic standing, Arab opposition as a regional matter requiring eventual settlement — became inconvenient when oil prices spiked and terrorism became unavoidable. A new respectable vocabulary was selected. Within that new vocabulary, the load-bearing conclusion shifted from "Israel is a normal state" to "Israel is a colonial implant whose presence is the obstacle to indigenous Palestinian self-determination." The Palestinian cause was elevated to the centrality the new vocabulary required, on a timescale that admits no other explanation than the operational mechanism that produced it.

What the international system now had

The 1975 General Assembly resolution declaring Zionism a form of racism was the institutional moment when the framework's reassertion became official. The resolution was passed by a coalition of Arab, Soviet-bloc, and non-aligned states. It was opposed by the United States, Israel, and most Western European democracies. It would be revoked sixteen years later, in 1991, when geopolitical conditions had again shifted. But the 1975 resolution marked the moment when the international institutional vocabulary had completed its transition. The framework had moved from procedural concern about Israeli policy to declarative judgment about Israeli legitimacy.

The Treitschke-style escalation that closed the first essay had its post-Holocaust analogue in compressed institutional form. In 1879, a respected German academic had moved from procedural inquiry about Jewish citizenship to declarative judgment that the Jews were Germany's misfortune. In 1975, the General Assembly moved from procedural concern about Israeli policy to declarative judgment that Zionism was a form of racism. The vocabulary differed. The structural escalation was identical.

By 1975, the framework had what it needed. A respectable contemporary vocabulary that the post-decolonization world found native. A non-state actor who could be elevated to international statesman regardless of his organization's methods. Operational pressure (oil) sufficient to make European cooperation reliable. Terrorism sufficient to keep that pressure constantly visible. An asymmetric framework of "solutions" that always required Israeli concessions and never required reciprocal concessions from those who refused to recognize Israel. And a base of explicit anti-Jewish hostility — the Arab boycott, openly targeting Jews wherever they worked or invested — that the Western world had been politely declining to look at for two decades.

What the international system would do with this architecture in the decades that followed — how it would consolidate the institutional infrastructure, how it would produce the contemporary "Question of Palestine" with its permanent agenda items and dedicated agencies and inalienable-rights committees, how the architecture would operate against the Jewish state down to the present moment, and how its operation today reveals the same structural pattern that produced the original Jewish Question — is the subject of the next essay in this series.

The honeymoon was over. The framework had returned to operation. It had simply found new vocabulary in which to articulate what it had been articulating, in successively respectable registers, since 1789.

And soon enough, the Question would take on a formal form that few have recognized as a direct line from the 19th century to the 21st. 





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

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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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