Saturday, March 08, 2025

From Ian:

Andrew Fox: Lessons from the IDF for the British Army
Urban warfare presents the most difficult ethical and strategic dilemmas. The IDF employed extensive measure to minimise civilian casualties: evacuation warnings by text; small warning strikes on buildings known as ‘roof knocks’; and canceling airstrikes when civilians were detected. Still Hamas’s cynical use of human shields has made civilian casualties unavoidable.

Planning for civilian protection is essential, both as a moral imperative and as a strategic necessity. The enemy will take advantage of any missteps by Nato operations in Eastern European cities. British forces must incorporate civilian risk mitigation into operational planning, use precision munitions with discipline, and coordinate with humanitarian agencies whenever possible.

Britain must acknowledge that civilian harm in urban warfare is unavoidable, even with precautions. Train troops in ethical decision-making; deploy frontline legal advisors: these will be key to maintaining legitimacy in the information war.

In Gaza, IDF special forces and regular units collaborated closely. Elite commandos cleared Hamas’s tunnel networks, while conventional troops secured the surface above. British forces must similarly remove barriers between special forces and the broader military. The IDF experience also reveals the value of real-time intelligence sharing to enhance joint operations.

Finally, the Gaza war was fought both on the battlefield and in the media. Hamas effectively exploited images of destruction to shape global opinion, often exaggerating or distorting events. The IDF struggled to counter this narrative in real time, facing international criticism despite implementing more civilian protection measures than most modern militaries.

Britain should take note: information warfare is as vital as military operations. The UK must proactively manage the narrative by rapidly releasing factual updates, providing evidence for military actions, and deploying dedicated information warfare teams to counter disinformation. When every smartphone is a battlefield, controlling the story is as crucial as controlling the ground.
The Quite Unnecessary Peter Beinart
Tolstoy described such a book as “nikomu ne nuzhnaya kniga” (not-needed-by-anyone book).
Its most obvious pointlessness is that it is simply boring, a predictable regurgitation of every slander against Israel. We get ethnic cleansing, apartheid, massacres and all the usual stuff. Why bother with Beinart when this is the everyday diet of the media? Beinart jazzes it up with a rant against anyone even vaguely associated with speaking up for Israel in the wake of the October 7 massacre. If that sounds repulsive, it is because it is. Beinart goes through the motions of condemning what happened on October 7 but spends far longer attacking those who have stood up for Israel since then. As he writes at the start, in his “note to my former friend”: “I consider your single-minded focus on Israeli security to be immoral and self-defeating.” Think about that for a second (because that is all it is worth). For Beinart, focusing on the right of Jews to be secure from terrorists is “immoral”.

If you’re worried about the impact on Jews of having to live alongside Palestinians in a single state – if you’re worried, that is, that they would be slaughtered – then don’t be, because Beinart says it worked in South Africa so it will work in the new not-Israel state. And that’s it. That is the entire basis on which he thinks the world should take the leap into deciding that the Jews no longer need a state.


In fact, South Africa is hardly a model to be emulated. Whites in South Africa have increasingly been leaving the country out of concern for their safety. White farmers are being murdered. The black South African leader and millionaire Julius Malema sings in public “Kill the farmer, kill the Boer,” and his other favorite lyrics include “Kill the white man. Kill the white woman. Kill the white children.” And it has been happening. Is that the South Africa that Beinart thinks should serve as a model for that Jewish-Arab state he favors?

Beinart “no longer” believes in Zionism. He has no sympathy for the continued existence of a Jewish state. He believes instead that Israelis should give up the idea of a Jewish state, and live in a single state with people who have just demonstrated in a most convincing way their pleasure in raping, torturing, mutilating, and murdering Jews, who just the other day screamed with delight, while martial music played, at the spectacle of Israeli corpses in coffins that had been placed in front of the crowd. Inside two of those four coffins, as the delirious crowd knew, were the bodies of the Bibas brothers — four-year old Ariel and nine-month-old Kfir — who had been killed, according to Israeli forensic experts, by the bare hands of Hamas killers. In other words, they had been strangled or suffocated, like the princes in the Tower.
Why do citizens of Palestine still have refugee status?
None of the three resolutions provides any legal authority for UNRWA to operate inside Palestinian territory today.

First, the texts of the resolutions make clear that they apply only to “the” refugees. The use of the definite article “the” before the word “refugees” means the drafters limited the coverage of the resolutions to those who were alive in 1948 and who actually left their homes in that year. Thus, the term “the refugees” does not cover descendants of the original refugees. Once the original refugees pass away, there will be no further legal basis for UNRWA to operate anywhere.

Second, none of the resolutions define the term “refugees.” The term is more logically read to cover those who left Palestine in 1948 for third countries such as Jordan or Lebanon rather than those who simply relocated from one part of Palestine to another.

Third, the wording clearly states that only those wishing to live in peace with their Israeli neighbors would be permitted to return. That formulation places the burden on those wishing to return to prove their intent to live peacefully within Israel. There is, unfortunately, little evidence that any of the so-called refugees could satisfy that burden, given how UNRWA propaganda has promoted hatred of Zionism and Israelis for the past 75 years, and especially since UNRWA recognized the PLO in 1975. Further evidence can be gleaned from a quick stroll through the Al Amari “refugee camp” in Ramallah (which is actually a neighborhood, not a “camp”), where the walls are splattered with posters paying homage to suicide bombers and other terrorists.

Therefore, because Palestinians living in Palestine are not truly “refugees,” UNRWA has no legal authority to operate inside Palestine. This is not simply a technical anomaly. It is a huge waste of US and European taxpayer money, which has funded the lion’s share of the billions of dollars spent on UNRWA’s operations in Palestine for the past nearly eight decades.

Finally, we now know that several Gaza-based UNRWA employees were Hamas members and participated in the October 7, 2023, massacres and hostage-takings. At least one UNRWA employee held one or more hostages as prisoners in his apartment in Gaza. The British-Israeli former hostage Emily Damari was held in an UNRWA facility during her time in captivity.

Moreover, Hamas has used UNRWA schools in Gaza for the past 18 years as bases for launching rockets against Israel and using children as human shields. Hamas even concealed a command-and-control center in a tunnel directly underneath an UNRWA location.

The bottom line is that UNRWA has no lawful basis to operate inside Palestine, serving Palestinians who are not true refugees and providing both implicit and explicit support to Hamas. The time has come to terminate UNRWA’s operations inside Palestine once and for all.

Friday, March 07, 2025

From Ian:

How the Trump Administration Is Making Progress in the Fight against Anti-Semitism
On Wednesday, mobs of anti-Israel demonstrators took over two buildings at Barnard (the all-female college at Columbia University), called in a bomb threat, and engaged in other disruptive activities—and were met with a typically feeble response from administrators. But there is hope that things may soon start to change. Nathan Diament takes stock of what the Trump administration has done thus far to restore Jews’ civil rights—beginning with federal investigations into five universities and four medical schools—and of what remains to be done:

It is striking that the new university investigations were not opened in response to students filing complaints—[unlike those begun by] the Biden team—but were launched proactively by the new administration. That alone sends a strong message to university leaders that there’s a new sheriff in town and a new era of enforcement in the White House.

Universities seem to be getting the message. Anti-Israel extremists on campus are now facing disciplinary action from schools. Six months ago, these same universities responded to anti-Semitic vandalism and intimidation with cowardly statements or a free pass.

[But] the fight against anti-Semitism must extend beyond the campuses. The Justice Department should use the full force of the law to prosecute raucous “protesters” in residential Jewish neighborhoods. These protests are designed to intimidate Jews as they attend synagogue and interfere with citizens’ right to enjoy basic constitutional rights. They are criminal and should be treated as much.
Legal assault threatens NY nonprofit that has handled funding for anti-Israel groups
On a sunny April morning in Chicago, a group of anti-Israel activists rushed onto an interstate highway leading to O’Hare International Airport. Irate drivers were stuck in traffic for more than an hour, their anxiety mounting as their flight departures approached.

One of the drivers who missed his flight filed a class action lawsuit against the activist groups that organized the protest — National Students for Justice in Palestine, American Muslims in Palestine, the US Campaign for Palestinian Rights, and a low-profile nonprofit in New York called Wespac.

The advocacy group, based in Westchester County, north of New York City, has handled funding for a range of leading anti-Israel activist groups around the US. Its status as a financial lynchpin for the protest movement has drawn a barrage of lawsuits that is threatening its existence, in a crisis for the group that deepened last month when it was sued by its own insurance company.

“This is not normal. I haven’t ever seen anything like this, but I haven’t ever seen anything quite as politically charged as this. This is huge,” Doug White, a longtime adviser for US philanthropies, said in an interview.

Wespac, a progressive nonprofit founded in 1974, has served as a fiscal sponsor for the protest groups, in a financial arrangement in which a nonprofit collects donations on behalf of other groups that do not have nonprofit status themselves.

For the pro-Palestinian groups, the fiscal sponsorship means they can receive tax-deductible donations and grants, without having to file the tax documents expected of nonprofits, such as laying out their operating budget, total assets and spending. The arrangement does not require the fiscal sponsor to detail the organizations it collects funding for, meaning the activist groups’ finances are murky, hard to track and closed to the public. Best practices recommend that nonprofits detail their fiscal sponsorships, but Wespac does not make its arrangements public.

Groups affiliated with Wespac have contributed to the harassment of Jews on college campuses, hosted events that supported terror groups, and targeted cancer patients, museums, memorials to the dead, transportation hubs and holiday events.

Following disruptive protests by its affiliates, Wespac was sued in at least five courts — in New York, California, Illinois, Virginia and Washington, DC.
The Airlines That Still Won't Fly to Israel
Roughly a year and a half after Hamas's Oct. 7 terror attack prompted major airlines across the globe to pause flights to Israel, many of them still haven't resumed service or said when they plan to do so—including in countries led by bitter opponents of the Jewish state.

Domestically, American Airlines and Delta continue to pause their flights into Israel, citing a tumultuous security situation. Delta intends to restore service from New York’s JFK Airport on April 1, offering 2,000 weekly seats to passengers, an airline spokesman told the Washington Free Beacon. American Airlines flights, meanwhile, remain in limbo. An airline spokesman said that service to Tel Aviv is not slated to resume at this point.

"American continuously evaluates its network and we have nothing new to share at this time regarding Tel Aviv service," the spokesman said, noting that the airline does offer service through its partners. "Customers who are planning travel to Israel can purchase tickets on aa.com on flights operated by our partner airlines that serve Tel Aviv."

Scores of international carriers have similarly declined to announce a date for their resumption of flights to Israel. Here is a collection:
From Ian:

Elliott Abrams: The Arab States Are Clueless about Fighting Palestinian Terror
On Tuesday evening, a National Security Council spokesman stated that the U.S. rejects the Arab nations’ plan for the reconstruction of Gaza. And rightly so, especially as the plan ignores Hamas, and offers no suggestions of how to remove it from power. Elliott Abrams notes some additional problems, including the question of providing security:

The Arab plan says Egypt and Jordan have started training Palestinian police, but no timing or numbers are offered. The plan acknowledges that more will be needed: “It is proposed that the UN Security Council commences a study concerning establishing international presence in Palestinian territories (West Bank and Gaza), including through the adoption of a resolution to deploy international protection/peacekeeping forces.”

Oh, boy. The famously divided Security Council will do a “study” whose goal is to send international forces—to Gaza and the West Bank. Why the reference to the West Bank here, when the subject is supposed to be Gaza? To prevent Israeli forces from fighting terrorism in the West Bank, just as UNIFIL got in the way of the Israelis in southern Lebanon without ever confronting Hizballah itself. It’s hard to think of anything less likely to help bring security to the West Bank than a UN force. . . .

In other words, the authors of the plan have no real idea how to deal with terrorist groups—except the ridiculous notion that if Israel only agreed to the “two-state solution” and “restoring the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people,” those “challenging” terrorist murderers would simply go home.
‘No Arab should remain in Gaza,’ Shani Louk’s father declares
Nissim Louk, whose daughter Shani was murdered by Hamas terrorists during the Oct. 7, 2023, Supernova music festival massacre, urged the Israeli army on Friday to make sure that “no Arab remains in Gaza.

“Since the war, Hamas has only become stronger, more powerful, and has become extremely wealthy,” the bereaved father said in an interview with Channel 14 News. “Hamas will never be ready to give up this rule—not just today, never,” he added.

Louk noted that this Saturday marks Shabbat Zachor, the “Sabbath of Remembering,” which precedes Purim. The traditional Torah reading includes Deuteronomy 25:17-19, while the traditional haftarah recalls God’s command to King Saul to finally annihilate Amalek (I Samuel 15).

“God said this twice: in the Book of Exodus, as well as in the Book of Deuteronomy. In the Book of Exodus, He said, ‘I will erase the memory of Amalek,’ and in the Book of Deuteronomy, He said, ‘You shall erase the memory of Amalek,'” said Louk.

According to Jewish tradition, the Amalekites attacked after the Exodus from Egypt. The comparison has been used throughout the ages for those who seek to eradicate the Jewish people, including the Nazis.

“Now it is our job to make sure that no Arab remains in Gaza,” Louk declared. “And blotting out the memory of Amalek is our job.

“We can’t live with neighbors like these. You need to understand, would you want a neighbor who is a rapist, a necrophile, a murderer, and he’s right next to us, just a few hundred meters away? They want to repeat what happened on Oct. 7 over and over again,” explained Louk.
The murder of the Bibas brothers is not mentioned in UN report on children in conflict zones, but a 'kidnapped Palestinian girl' is
The draft of the UN's annual report on children in conflict zones, expected to be published in June 2025, continues to demonstrate imbalance and an anti-Israel tone. The report, for example, ignores the youngest Israeli victims of the war — failing to mention the names of Kfir and Ariel Bibas, who were murdered in captivity in Gaza and whose bodies were returned in the last hostage deal. Additionally, the 12 children killed by a Hezbollah rocket in Majdal Shams are not mentioned at all.

The report inflates figures, includes unverified information, and blurs the responsibility of terror organizations for causing harm to children. The draft was shared with Israel for its comments, but Jerusalem was shocked by the UN's insensitivity and hypocrisy and decided not to cooperate with the report. Among other accusations, the report blames the IDF for using exactly 27 Palestinian children as "human shields," yet it only vaguely mentions Hamas' systematic use of civilians as human shields, without verifying specific cases.

The report claims Israeli security forces "kidnapped a Palestinian girl," while simultaneously omitting the names of Kfir and Ariel Bibas. If that were not enough, the report does not state that the young siblings were murdered by their captors, instead merely saying they "died in captivity." Furthermore, the report blames Israel for harming children due to the impact of rocket interception fragments during Iranian missile launches toward Israel — without acknowledging the original source of the attack.

On the topic of humanitarian aid, the UN places almost all responsibility on Israel while almost entirely ignoring the fact that Hamas itself damaged the crossings designated for aid transfers and, according to countless testimonies and evidence, also stole aid intended for Palestinians in the Gaza Strip for its own purposes. The report claims that 2,723 requests for aid were denied but downplays the fact that 5,327 requests - nearly twice as many - were approved.

Regarding the number of Palestinian casualties, the report presents thousands of deaths and injuries, many of which are unverified, creating a misleading impression of the scale of events. Responsibility for violations is placed almost entirely on Israel, while Hamas is not held accountable at all, and Hezbollah and Iran are given only marginal mentions in the biased report. The report also claims the IDF used schools and hospitals for military purposes in 10 different cases, but it mentions only one instance in which Hamas used civilian structures for military purposes — despite the well-documented fact that many "innocent" buildings in Gaza were revealed to be bases for launching terror operations.
  • Friday, March 07, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon



I sometimes wonder how influential the Elder of Ziyon blog is.

While my 116,000 X followers clearly puts me in "influencer" territory, that doesn't necessarily mean I'm influential. I usually don't make the lists of "Top Influencers on Social Media."

For example, I found a list made last year by Masa of the top 21 influential pro-Israel and Jewish people on X. I'm not there. 

Out of 19 of them currently on X, 12 of them (63%) follow me:

  • @rudy_israel
    - Follows
    @elderofziyon
  • @Shaidavidai
    - Follows
    @elderofziyon
  • @adelacojab
    - Does not follow
    @elderofziyon
  • @noybeyleyb
    - Follows
    @elderofziyon
  • @EylonALevy
    - Follows
    @elderofziyon
  • @Kami
    .Soprano
    - Does not follow
    @elderofziyon
  • @yoavdavis
    - Follows
    @elderofziyon
  • @millennialmoor
    - Does not follow
    @elderofziyon
  • @Jews_of_Ny
    - Follows
    @elderofziyon
  • @tlvinstitute
    - Follows
    @elderofziyon
  • @noatishby
    - Follows
    @elderofziyon
  • @jewishhistory
    - Does not follow
    @elderofziyon
  • @houseoflev
    - Follows
    @elderofziyon
  • @melissaschapman
    - Does not follow
    @elderofziyon
  • @jordyntilchen
    - Does not follow
    @elderofziyon
  • @Jewishvibes
    - Follows
    @elderofziyon
  • @EndJewHatred
    - Follows
    @elderofziyon
  • @alizalicht
    - Does not follow
    @elderofziyon
  • @wearetov
    - Follows
    @elderofziyon


  • Looking at the top 50 pro-Israel influencers listed in 2021, out of 41 with X handles today, 22 of them - 54% - follow me. And that includes more than just activists but also celebrities that are really not my usual audience. 

    If I am reaching over half of the people recognized as influencers, I'm pretty happy with that!






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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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