Friday, March 06, 2026

  • Friday, March 06, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon
If you followed Megyn Kelly's career a decade ago, you might have described her as a tough, fair-minded interviewer — someone willing to challenge guests on both sides, including Donald Trump, in ways that earned grudging respect even from people who disagreed with her politics.

But over the past year or two, she has increasingly given platforms to, amplified, and aligned herself with voices that traffic in antisemitism - conspiracy thinking about Jewish power and hostility to Israel that shades into something uglier. And a recent exchange on X illustrates exactly how far the drift has gone. 

When Bill Ackman criticized Tucker Carlson for content about Chabad that Ackman said could get someone killed, Kelly fired back on Carlson's side. But she did not engage the substance of the Tucker Carlson question, and instead pointed out that Ackman had recently retweeted someone who had called her many profane names. The retweeted post, it should be noted, also contained a detailed substantive critique of Kelly's positions on Iran and American military strategy -  but Kelly responded only to the insults, treating being called names as a moral equivalent to content that could plausibly incite violence against Jews. 

Her response, implying that Ackman was a hypocrite for caring about the lives of Jews when he approved a message that insulted her, is not a small thing. It reveals the precise failure that the Torah's ethics of judgment is designed to prevent. Kelly had criticism in front of her. She chose not to engage it. She used the profanity as cover to protect her position rather than examine it - and then inflated the personal affront into something it wasn't, to gain moral high ground she hadn't earned, and effectively defended Carlson's antisemitic incitement at the same time. 

How does a journalist get to that place? The Torah has a precise answer. And it has nothing to do with secret payments or deliberate malice.

"You shall not take a bribe, for the bribe blinds the eyes of the wise and distorts the words of the righteous." — Deuteronomy 16:19

The most remarkable part of the verse is what it doesn't say. It doesn't say bribery corrupts the wicked. It says it corrupts the wise and the righteous.

The Torah is being psychologically precise: the danger isn't the villain who knowingly takes a payoff. The danger is the good person whose perception is quietly reshaped by incentive. even the most righteous, self aware person's opinions are shaped by the act of being indebted to someone.

The rabbis found something revealing in the Hebrew word shochad (bribe). It can be read as she-hu chad — "because he becomes one with him." Once someone receives a benefit from a party, their mind subtly begins to identify with that party's interests. This is why Jewish law prohibits judges from accepting even trivial favors from litigants.

How trivial? The Talmud in Ketubot (105b) is specific.

Ameimar was sitting and judging a case when a feather floated and landed on his head. A certain man came by and removed it from his head. Ameimar said to him: What are you doing here? He said to him: I have a case to present before you. Ameimar said to him: I am disqualified from presiding over your case, due to the favor you performed for me.

This trivial act that took two seconds, cost nothing, and was probably done reflexively,  and yet Ameimar considered himself compromised. He had received a minute benefit from this person. That was enough.

But the Talmud goes even further with the story of Rabbi Yishmael, son of Rabbi Yosei.

His sharecropper customarily brought him a basket of fruit every Friday. One week the sharecropper arrived on Thursday instead. Rabbi Yishmael asked why, and the sharecropper explained that he had a legal case before the court, and since he was coming to town anyway, he brought the fruit along the way.

Rabbi Yishmael refused the gift and immediately recused himself. He seated two other scholars to hear the case. But as he walked nearby, he noticed something disturbing in his own mind: he kept unconsciously constructing arguments for the sharecropper: "If he wants, he could claim this, and if he wants, he could claim that."

His conclusion: "Blast the souls of those who accept bribes. If I, who did not accept anything — and if I had accepted, I would have accepted my own property, since the fruits legally belong to me — am nevertheless in this state of mind due to the proposed gift, all the more so those who actually accept bribes."

He refused the gift. The fruits were arguably already his. And his cognition was still distorted — simply because a benefit had been proposed.

Behavioral science has spent decades documenting some, but nnot the full extent, of what the Talmud described. Psychologist Ziva Kunda established in 1990 that people don't reason toward truth alone but  toward desired conclusions. When people have a personal incentive, they search memory selectively, scrutinize opposing evidence more harshly, and lower the bar for evidence supporting their preferred conclusion. And they experience the result as objective.

Dan Kahan's 2013 study found something even more unsettling: when data on a politically charged topic was presented, people with higher analytical skills became more biased, not less. They used their intelligence to build better defenses for the conclusion their incentives required.

But modern psychology has not yet formally studied what Rabbi Yishmael documented: that a rejected benefit — one involving property arguably already yours — still contaminates reasoning. The contamination, the Talmud suggests, happens at the moment the proposed benefit is perceived, not at acceptance. The bribe doesn't need to land to blind.

The science has confirmed the Torah's insight. It hasn't yet caught up to Rabbi Yishmael's.

This is not only about judges in court. The sages made clear that we are all judges, all the time. The obligation to judge fairly - dan l'chaf zechut -  applies to all of us. We are all constantly rendering judgments: about people, events, claims, news stories.

And on social media are all Ameimars, with people removing feathers from our heads all day long.

When someone likes your post, they are doing you a small favor. When they retweet you, share you, comment "finally someone says it, " each one is a tiny benefit flowing from a specific audience, with specific views, that expects specific things from you. And the Talmud would tell you that each one subtly nudges your reasoning toward becoming one with the people rewarding you: toward their worldview, their grievances, their preferred villains.

Most of us experience this as validation, not corruption. People are responding because I'm right. That is precisely what Rabbi Yishmael feared. But we are all affected, and it in turn affects our own behavior.

If it affects occasional social media posters, all the more so it affects online influencers whose very income stream depends on those clicks and "Likes" and feedback. Their audience, like all audiences, rewards content that confirms what it already believes, triggers outrage, and provides satisfying villains.

The mechanism doesn't require a phone call from a donor or a wire transfer from a foreign government. It is built into the economics of attention. Feed the audience what it rewards, receive income. Do it long enough, and you don't experience yourself as compromised: you experience yourself as someone who finally sees things clearly.

And when someone criticizes you, substantively, the ego that has been shaped by years of audience reward will find a way not to hear it. Kelly dismissed a detailed critique of her Iran positions because it came wrapped in profanity. She treated being called a name as morally equivalent to Tucker Carlson's content about Chabad — content that Ackman argued could get someone killed. The insult became a permission slip to avoid the harder question: what if they have a point? 

That is not only a failure of shochad,  of incentive corrupting judgment over time. It is a failure of anavah, humility: the capacity to receive an uncomfortable truth and evaluate it on its merits rather than its packaging. Rabbi Yishmael noticed what was happening in his own mind and named it honestly, even though he had refused the gift and even though the fruits were arguably his. That kind of self-scrutiny is precisely what the attention economy trains people out of.

This is how Megyn Kellys get created. It isn't corruption in the ordinary sense, but the slow, incentive-driven drift that the Torah warned about, plus the ego investment that, over time, makes honest self-examination feel like surrender.

Jewish law's answer to judicial bias was structural: remove the incentive, require recusal, build in transparency. Good intentions were explicitly considered insufficient. Ameimar didn't trust himself to remain objective after someone removed a feather from his head. Rabbi Yishmael didn't trust himself after refusing a gift that was arguably already his.

The modern equivalent is transparency about incentives.

Journalists should disclose who funds them and who their audience is. Academics who write about political topics while being political activists should disclose that, and not hide behind "I have no competing interests" while omitting their own advocacy work. Universities that accept hundreds of millions of dollars from Qatar and then find themselves hosting antisemitic speakers and publishing anti-Israel research should be required to acknowledge the connection explicitly.

The relationship between benefit and bias isn't always provable. Rabbi Yishmael couldn't prove causation either; he just noticed what was happening in his own mind and was honest enough to name it.

That honesty is enormously difficult. And when it comes to one's livelihood being dependent on such incentives, it is literally impossible to remain objective.

The click economy doesn't just make objectivity impossible, but actively rewards extreme positions - and this includes antisemitism. It is not only a moral problem, but a structural problem.

The rabbis knew this 2,000 years ago. 




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 


Parts 1 and 2 diagnosed the problem. Revolutionary movements treat war as permanent. The West treats it as episodic. The international framework built on that episodic assumption has been systematically weaponized by the very movements it was supposed to constrain. The historical record is unambiguous.

But diagnosis without prescription is just despair. If the existing framework fails, what replaces it?

To answer that we need to start with the most fundamental reframe in this entire series — one that is obvious once stated but has enormous consequences for everything that follows.

War is not an event. It is a relationship.

The Western tradition treats war as something that happens — a discrete episode with a beginning, a legal trigger, a period of hostilities, and an end. Before the war there is peace. After the war there is peace again. The war itself is the exception, bounded and temporary, something that interrupts the normal state of affairs and then stops.

But that description doesn't fit what actually happens between Israel and Iran, between the West and revolutionary Islam, between liberal democracy and continuous-war movements. What exists there isn't a series of wars interrupted by peace. It is a relationship — continuous, evolving, with a history and a trajectory and declared intentions that persist regardless of whether guns are currently firing.

This is not a new idea. John Locke, one of the foundational thinkers of liberal democratic theory, defined the state of war in his Second Treatise of Government not as active hostilities but as declared hostile intent combined with the power to act on it. For Locke, you did not need to wait for the blow to land. The state of war existed when one party had made clear its intention to destroy another and was building the capacity to pursue that intention. That is precisely the relational understanding this framework is recovering.

The irony is pointed. Modern international law, built in the liberal democratic tradition that traces directly to Locke, quietly abandoned his insight in favor of a simpler imminence doctrine. The post-WWII legal framework didn't represent progress beyond Locke. In the most important respect, it represented a step backward — trading a sophisticated relational understanding of threat for a binary that revolutionary movements have spent decades learning to exploit.

Consider how this relational framework applies to cases the reader already knows.

The United States and Mexico have genuine conflicts — immigration, drug trafficking, trade disputes, border tensions. These are real and sometimes serious. But neither party questions the other's right to exist. Neither seeks to replace the other's system. Neither defines its national identity through opposition to the other. The relationship is adversarial on specific issues and cooperative on others. That is normal international relations — disagreement within a relationship both parties want to preserve. No state of war in Locke's sense exists, whatever the current temperature.

China is different. The relationship looks superficially similar — trade disputes, competing interests, diplomatic friction. But the underlying doctrine is not similar at all. China's stated strategic goal is to replace the US-led international order with a Sino-centric one. Its economic warfare, technology theft, political interference in democratic institutions, and military buildup are not discrete policy disagreements. They are instruments in a continuous strategic competition aimed at the fundamental transformation of the global order. The hostility is not episodic; it is structural and declared. That is a state of war in Locke's sense: not because shots have been fired, but because one party has declared through consistent doctrine and behavior its intention to displace the other's position and replace it with something fundamentally incompatible.

Iran is clearer still. Iran has not merely competed with Israel and the West. It has defined itself through that opposition. "Death to America" and "Death to Israel" are not diplomatic positions or negotiating tactics. They are constitutional to the regime's identity — institutionalized in its schools, its Friday prayers, its Revolutionary Guard doctrine, its proxy network across four continents. Khomeini said explicitly: "We do not worship Iran. We worship Allah. Let this land burn, let it go up in smoke as long as Islam wins in the end." That is not a state expressing a foreign policy preference. That is a state defining itself as being in a permanent state of war — in Locke's precise sense — with the existing order.

The diagnostic question this framework provides is simple but clarifying: look past the current incident and ask what the relationship is actually aimed at. Disagreement, or destruction? Competing interests that both parties want to resolve, or a declared intention to replace the other entirely? That question — asked honestly and answered with reference to doctrine, behavior, and declared intent rather than the current temperature of relations — is the first step of any honest war ethics. And it is the step that existing international law almost never takes.

Relationships have completely different logic than events.

You don't evaluate a relationship by any single incident. You evaluate it by the pattern, the trajectory, the structural incentives that shape behavior over time. A ceasefire doesn't end the relationship — it's a moment within it. A peace agreement between parties who define themselves by the struggle isn't peace — it's a chapter. 

This is why the entire apparatus of international law keeps producing the wrong answers. It was designed to evaluate events but it has no tools for evaluating relationships. It looks at a specific strike and asks: was this proportionate to the triggering attack? But the right question is: what does this action mean within a relationship in which one party has declared permanent hostile intent and is building the capability to act on it?

This is also why the West's false binary — war or not-war — fails so completely. A binary works for events. Events either happen or they don't. But relationships don't switch off. They evolve, intensify, recede, and evolve again. The space between war and not-war isn't empty — it's where most of the relationship actually lives.

The episodic model codified in international law is not merely incomplete. It is a category error — applying event logic to something that is fundamentally relational. And category errors don't produce wrong answers. They produce answers to the wrong questions, like whether a specific act is legal or illegal, proportionate or disproportionate, done with intent to hurt civilians or not.

But there is another tradition. And it has been grappling honestly with this problem for considerably longer than international law has existed.

Jewish political thought approaches the ethics of war from a fundamentally different starting point. Where international law begins with restraint — force is the exception, requiring justification against a presumption of prohibition — Jewish thought begins with responsibility. Pikuach nefesh, the obligation to preserve life, overrides virtually everything else. It is not a permission, it is a mandate. Inaction that leads to preventable death is itself a violation.

Milchemet mitzvah — obligatory war — states that the nation has not merely the right but the duty to defend itself and its citizens.

International law asks: can you justify your use of force? Jewish political thought asks: can you justify your failure to protect your people? One system places the burden of proof on action. The other places it on inaction.

While Jewish ethics recognizes the sacredness of the lives of the enemy, it prioritizes the lives of one's own people being defended.

That difference is not merely philosophical. It produces entirely different frameworks for evaluating when force is warranted, and it turns out that the framework built around responsibility handles adversarial reality considerably better than the one built around restraint.

With that foundation, here is what an honest theory of war actually looks like.

The Diagnostic Layer — ask these questions first

Before applying any ethical or legal framework, establish what kind of conflict you are in.

Is this conflict episodic or continuous in nature? Does the adversary have a defined political objective that, if achieved or abandoned, ends the conflict — or is the conflict itself a defining part of the adversary's self-view? Iran has been calling America "the Great Satan" and chanted "Death to Israel" and "Death to America" since the revolution. The messaging that America and Israel are universal enemies has been consistent in their leaders' speeches and media. Dismissing all of these as rhetoric is not sophisticated analysis but wishful thinking.

Is the adversary's victory condition survival rather than achievement? If the regime or movement wins simply by continuing to exist, then any outcome that preserves it is not resolution but deferral, at least in their minds.

The most important question in the entire diagnostic layer — and the one Western war theory almost never asks — is this: If this episodic war is won, does that actually neutralize the threat?

Asking this question before a single shot is fired changes everything. If the honest answer is "no, winning this round leaves the system that generates the conflict fully intact,"  then every objective short of dismantling that system is not victory. It is intermission management. Knowing that at the outset changes what you fight for, what costs you accept, and what you are willing to call success. Achieving five years of calm may be the right decision — but if the enemy then returns with twice the force, it could easily be the worst decision.

Vietnam illustrates what happens when these questions are never honestly asked. The United States fought a limited episodic war against an adversary operating under explicit continuous-war doctrine. The North Vietnamese had stated their position clearly — they would absorb casualties indefinitely because the struggle continued until total victory. That meant only two honest options existed: full commitment to destroying the North's capacity to continue, or not fighting at all. The middle path — limited war, graduated escalation, negotiated settlement — was guaranteed to fail against a continuous-war adversary. It produced 58,000 American dead, millions of Vietnamese casualties, and the outcome the other side wanted all along.

The quagmire wasn't a failure of execution. It was the inevitable result of applying episodic war logic to a continuous-war conflict without ever asking the foundational question: if we win this episodic war, does that actually neutralize the threat?

The diagnostic questions don't only determine whether to fight. They determine what fighting must look like if you do. Half-measures against a continuous-war adversary don't just fail strategically. They cost more lives than either full commitment or non-intervention would have. Knowing what kind of conflict you are in before committing is not merely a strategic obligation. It is a moral one.

These questions must come before proportionality calculations, before legal analysis, before strategic planning. Getting the diagnosis wrong makes everything that follows a category error.

The Threshold Layer — replaces imminence

Before going further it is worth clarifying what kind of legal problem this framework is actually addressing, because international law recognizes three distinct concepts that are frequently conflated.

Casus belli — the triggering cause of war — is the oldest concept. It asks whether a specific act justifies hostilities. Israel's 1967 argument that Egypt's closure of the Straits of Tiran constituted an act of war was a casus belli argument. The claim was that the war had effectively already begun.

Anticipatory self-defense — derived from the Caroline doctrine — asks whether a state may strike before an attack occurs when the threat is imminent, necessary, and overwhelming. This is the imminence doctrine at the heart of most modern debate.

Preventive war asks something more uncomfortable: may a state act against a threat that is not yet imminent but whose trajectory makes future catastrophe nearly inevitable? This is the category that international law has failed to address.

The imminence doctrine asks: is the attack about to happen? The right question for modern continuous-war conflicts is different: is the trajectory locked in?

Four conditions define the threshold:

Declared intent — explicit, sustained, and unbounded. Not a single statement but a consistent, documented pattern of expressed purpose.

Capability trajectory — is the adversary building toward a threshold that will make future defense untenable? The question is not current capability but direction and rate of change.

Time asymmetry — does delay materially increase future harm? If waiting converts a manageable threat into an unmanageable one, delay is not neutrality. It is a decision with consequences.

Absence of reliable constraint — is there any enforcement mechanism that can actually stop the trajectory? This is where sanctions and international pressure may help forestall combat. If the answer is no, the burden of action falls on the threatened party.

When all four conditions are met, the moral question is not whether an attack is imminent. It is whether the trajectory toward mass harm is so sufficiently clear and irreversible that intervention is obligatory.

The Victory Layer — replaces stability

The existing framework defines success as restoration of quiet. That definition, as the historical record shows, consistently produces the next war.

Victory, against a continuous-war adversary, means one of two things: termination of the system that generates the conflict, or fundamental transformation of that system such that it no longer has the capability or ideological commitment to continue.

This does not automatically mean occupation or conquest. It can mean destruction of key military infrastructure, elimination of leadership that makes the system function, loss of the regime's coercive capacity, or internal transformation that abandons the revolutionary project. But it must mean that the engine stops. An outcome that leaves the engine running is not peace. It is a strategic pause.

The Constraint Layer — survives everything above

None of the above eliminates moral constraints on how war is fought. The constraints change in how they are measured, not whether they apply.

Discrimination between civilian and military objectives still applies. Civilian and combatant must be distinguished to the greatest extent possible.

Proportionality still applies — but measured against the objective of threat termination, not against exchange symmetry in the current engagement. The question is not whether your response matches the triggering attack. It is whether your response is proportionate to the goal of ending the system that will otherwise produce indefinite future attacks.

Civilian harm must be minimized by every available means. This is not negotiable.

But — and this is the point that international law consistently obscures — moral responsibility for civilian harm flows to the party that deliberately generates it. A force that embeds itself in hospitals, fires from schools, uses its civilian population as strategic cover, and deliberately denies civilians an exit has made a choice. The deaths that result from that choice are primarily that force's moral responsibility, not the responsibility of the army responding to it. Acknowledging this is not callousness, it is the only honest accounting of where the culpability actually lies.

Accountability still applies. Actions must be documented, investigated, and answered for.

The burden of honest diagnosis falls entirely on the party claiming these exemptions. This framework cannot become a blank check. The evidentiary standard is high precisely because the stakes are high.

The Foundational Layer

Morality precedes law. Law is a necessary but imperfect approximation of moral reality, always lagging, always simplifying, always vulnerable to the gap between its categories and the world they attempt to describe. When the approximation systematically produces immoral outcomes, when legal compliance means abandoning your citizens to a threat the legal system cannot see, the approximation has failed its own justification.

Conflating law and morality is another category error we see constantly. Strip away context and treat international law as the only metric for whether something is right, and you have handed revolutionary movements their most powerful weapon. Building a weapon of mass destruction — or stopping one screw-turn short of the final product — is not an act of aggression that international law recognizes as something that can be answered with force. International law has no answer for it. Morality does.

States have concentric circles of responsibility. Survival and protecting the lives of its citizens is the first moral obligation of any state, not the last resort. This is not to say other lives matter less in the abstract, but because the entire moral and political legitimacy of a state derives from that foundational duty. No state can be asked to treat its enemies' civilians as a higher priority than its own.

The second circle is the enemy's civilians, who must be protected to the greatest extent possible, and whose deaths must be minimized even at cost. But minimized, not treated as an absolute veto on action. A framework that allows the enemy to use its own civilians as an absolute shield has not protected those civilians. It has made them into weapons.

The third circle is the international community, whose norms and guidelines carry real moral weight as accumulated wisdom about how wars should be fought, even when they lack enforcement mechanisms adequate to the situation. 

The order of those circles matters. International law, as currently constructed, frequently inverts them, treating international institutional approval as the first obligation and national survival as a distant consideration requiring elaborate justification.  It is a framework that systematically disadvantages states facing existential threats from adversaries who recognize no such framework at all.

Lesser evil reasoning is not moral weakness. It is moral seriousness. When all clean options are gone — and against a continuous-war adversary they usually are — the ethical question is not how to keep your hands clean. It is how to minimize total harm across time, including the harm of losing.

Losing has victims too.

The Nation That Has Been Living This

This framework is not purely theoretical. One nation has been forced to develop and apply it in practice, out of sheer necessity, for over forty years.

Israel could not afford to wait for international law to catch up. The consequences of being wrong were existential. So it developed, implicitly and by necessity, something very close to the framework described above.

The Begin Doctrine — never formally announced but clearly operative — holds that a regime that has declared intent to destroy Israel will not be permitted to acquire the means to do so, regardless of whether international law recognizes the threat as imminent. Capability plus declared intent plus trajectory equals justification for action.

Osirak, 1981. The world condemned it unanimously. History vindicated it quietly.

Deir ez-Zor, 2007. Israel destroyed Syria's nascent nuclear reactor without a word of public acknowledgment. No condemnation followed because no one wanted to admit what had been prevented.

Iran, 2026. The same doctrine, applied at larger scale, against a threat that had been "not ripe, not ripe, not ripe,"  until the calculation finally flipped.

Israel never fully articulated this as a theory — partly for diplomatic reasons, partly because naming it publicly would invite every bad actor to claim the same doctrine. But the doctrine exists. It has been applied consistently. And it has prevented conflicts that the international framework, left to operate alone, would have allowed to mature into catastrophes.

The West has watched Israel apply this framework for four decades, condemned it repeatedly, and learned nothing from it.

Because for the threats Israel faces, international law is inadequate — and too many people cannot tell the difference between the right thing to do and what the UN Charter says. The West kept evaluating each Israeli action as a discrete event requiring discrete justification, rather than as the application of a coherent strategic doctrine built for a continuous-war environment.

Why Existing Alternatives Fall Short

Interestingly, international law has adapted to asymmetric actors before. When piracy threatened international trade in the 16th and 17th centuries, Hugo Grotius developed the concept of hostis humani generis: the enemy of all mankind. Pirates had placed themselves outside the framework of civilization by rejecting its most basic norms. Therefore any state, anywhere, had both the right and obligation to act against them regardless of nationality or location. Universal jurisdiction was born from a categorical recognition that certain actors had forfeited the protections of the framework they were violating.

The parallel to modern revolutionary movements is obvious. And some have argued for applying something like hostis humani generis to terrorist organizations and rogue states that systematically violate the laws of war.

But the analogy breaks down at a critical point. Pirates were genuinely stateless. Modern revolutionary movements almost always have state sponsors — Iran funds Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Hezbollah, Qatar and Turkey host Hamas leadership, Pakistan sheltered the Taliban, the Houthis have seized most of Yemen.  That state sponsorship is deliberately maintained to provide legal cover, keeping the movement inside the framework of state relations precisely to avoid the categorical outlawry that hostis humani generis would imply. The sponsorship is itself a form of lawfare.

More fundamentally, hostis humani generis still requires international consensus to decide who is an enemy of mankind. This immediately recreates the same problem. You would need Russia and China to agree that Hamas qualifies. That is never happening. The UN couldn't even agree on a definition of terrorism because so many countries wanted their favored terror groups to be excluded. 

The framework itself needs to be rebuilt from different foundations entirely. In Part 4 we will ask what this means for international law as an institution — whether it can be reformed, whether it should be, and what an honest framework built around transparency and accountability rather than universal enforcement would actually look like.




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

From Ian:

Palestine’s draft constitution is a manifesto for permanent war
In a sane world, human-rights organisations would be incandescent. A constitution that makes Sharia a primary legislative source, sidelines women’s genuine equality, erases gay rights and rewards terrorism ought to trigger every alarm bell. But these NGOs have long ago abandoned moral principles in favour of a hierarchy of oppression. To them, Palestinians are sacred victims and Israel is the eternal villain. They are blind to the authoritarianism and festering anti-Semitism of Palestinian society, reserving their outrage instead for the Jewish State, which dares to defend itself against this. Peace and human dignity come secondary to the goal of seeing the Middle East’s only democracy dismantled.

Put simply, the PA’s constitution is a manifesto for permanent war. By codifying the total rejection of Israeli legitimacy, it has ensured that a peace deal based on mutual recognition is an impossibility. For any future Palestinian leader, recognising Israel would now be, quite literally, a violation of the state’s supreme law.

The silence from the British government following the release of this document is a tacit endorsement of its principles. If Starmer is so determined to recognise Palestine, he should at least have the courage to tell the public what kind of state he is backing. Why is he prepared to endorse a framework that prioritises Sharia over secular rights, canonises martyrdom, erases Jewish history and perpetuates the conflict by legal means? Is this really the ‘better future’ he was hoping for in the Middle East?

If Britain continues to recognise Palestinian statehood without demanding fundamental constitutional change, it can no longer do so under the pretence of advancing peace. The PA does not care about peace. For the UK to endorse it is not diplomacy, but a moral abdication.
Hamas's Oct. 7 Attack Launched a Historic Reordering in the Middle East
In 2023, from a tunnel beneath Gaza, Yahya Sinwar gave an order that sent thousands of Hamas fighters through the fence separating the territory from Israel. That green light has reordered the Middle East on a scale comparable to the Arab Spring or the carving up of the Ottoman Empire in the early 20th century - but not remotely in the ways Sinwar had in mind. 29 months later, the Middle East is almost unrecognizable. Israel stands indisputably as the military hegemon, its enemies demolished or decapitated. Sinwar is dead and the network he hoped would ride to his rescue is in ruins.

Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was blown up in a joint U.S.-Israeli airstrike on Saturday. The regime that bankrolled and armed the "axis of resistance" for four decades is on the edge of collapse - perhaps taking with it Hamas, Hizbullah and the Houthis. Tehran is making enemies of the entire region - firing drones and missiles haphazardly, and often including civilian targets.

On Oct. 6, 2023, it was all different. Iran's proxy network was at the peak of its power. Hamas governed Gaza. Hizbullah held Lebanon hostage with 100,000 rockets. Assad sat in Damascus, reintegrating into the Arab League after years of isolation. The Houthis controlled the Yemeni coast and menaced shipping lanes with near-impunity.

Behind them all stood Iran, with a nuclear program viewed as an imminent threat in Jerusalem and the West, backed by a missile arsenal regarded as a strong deterrent against direct Israeli or American attack. Gulf nations were quietly reestablishing ties with the Islamic republic. "Two years later, none of those pillars are standing, and the Islamic republic is never going to be the same," said Ali Vaez, director of the Iran Project at the International Crisis Group.

What Sinwar set off was an unraveling of everything he and his sponsors yearned for - a defeated Israel, Palestinian hopes for statehood, a Middle East rid of Western influence. "Talk about a colossal miscalculation leading to catastrophic consequences," said Bilal Saab, a Chatham House fellow and former Pentagon official. "That cataclysmic event single-handedly changed the face of the Middle East."

Since Oct. 7, 2023, Israel has neutralized every major threat on its borders. A former senior Israel Defense Forces official said, "There is still war, but I can tell you that no one but the biggest dreamers ever thought we would be in the position we are in now. Israel is not untouchable, but we have made it very expensive to touch us."
AIJAC welcomes decision to list Hizb ut-Tahrir as a prohibited hate group
The Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council (AIJAC) welcomes the decision to list Hizb ut-Tahrir as a prohibited hate group under the new legislation introduced following the Bondi terror attack. AIJAC has long called for Hizb ut-Tahrir to be formally proscribed, given its well-documented record of extreme Islamist ideology, antisemitic incitement and hostility to Australia’s democratic values.

This designation, the first of its kind under the new hate group legislation, is an important and necessary step in confronting the spread of extremist ideology that threatens social cohesion, public safety and the fundamental values of Australian society. Under the listing, individuals who are members of Hizb ut-Tahrir, recruit for it, or provide training, funding or material support to the organisation, will now be in breach of the law.

By formally designating Hizb ut-Tahrir as a prohibited hate group, authorities are sending a clear message that organisations which promote intolerance, division and extremism have no place in Australia.

AIJAC commends the Government and law-enforcement authorities for taking this important step and urges continued vigilance to ensure that extremist groups and those who support them are held fully accountable under the law.
Actress asks 'where are the college campuses' protesting Iranian regime
British Iranian actress Nazanin Boniadi called out progressive activists for their lack of outrage over the regime's human rights violations before President Donald Trump conducted military strikes against the nation.

The "Rings of Power" actress appeared on CNN's "The Lead with Jake Tapper" Wednesday to discuss the ongoing war against Iran and concerns over the vacuum of leadership in the nation after the U.S. eliminated its leaders.

She agreed with concerns that an ISIS-level threat could take over the country but noted that several human rights activists and organizations did not acknowledge civilian deaths until after the U.S. targeted Iran.

"For people who care about international law as I do, I'm getting plenty of messages from colleagues in entertainment and saying, ‘I’m so sorry in this moment, what's happening to your people.' Thank you, but where were you a few weeks ago, when tens of thousands of Iranians were being killed by their own regime?" Boniadi asked. "This is a regime that has been violating international law for decades."

Tapper remarked that he also hadn't "really heard a ton" from international progressive activists regarding Iran's human rights violations, even after the nation launched hundreds of missile and drone strikes against other Muslim-majority countries in retaliation.

"I mean, if any other country did that, I think there'd be a huge hue and cry and huge marches in the streets. Iran does it, and there really isn't that result in the progressive community. What do you make of that?" Tapper asked.

"Look, in 1979, progressives world over, including in Iran, were all too willing to sacrifice women‘s rights, LGBTQ+ rights and every other basic human rights at the altar of anti-imperialism. Are we going to do the same in this moment? Are we really caring more about whose hands are on the trigger, or are we going to care about human lives, civilian lives?" Boniadi answered.

"This is a regime that has violated human rights," she continued. "International law has wreaked havoc on the region, domestic oppression, transnational repression, hostage diplomacy, destabilizing the region. And now, it's killing fellow Muslims in neighboring countries. Where is your outrage? Where are the college campuses?"

Boniadi, whose family fled Tehran for England following the 1979 Islamic Revolution, has been a longtime supporter of Iranian protesters and has previously used her career to highlight atrocities conducted by the Iranian regime.

Thursday, March 05, 2026

From Ian:

Lee Smith: Who Wants This War?
The name given to the Iran campaign, Operation Epic Fury, suggests that Donald Trump’s political trajectory may have begun with the 1979 embassy takeover. It was plain proof that America was losing, and it inspired him to turn things around. America’s defeat in Vietnam, left-wing political violence, and rampant drug use left our country sucking wind during the ’70s. But the embassy siege was a public humiliation that lasted 444 days, during which the revolutionary cadres ground our faces in excrement: “The United States has made threats and raised a great deal of noise,” said Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. “America can’t do a damn thing.” And because America didn’t do a damn thing, it acclimated itself to losing to Iran and its regional allies.

President Reagan rolled back the Soviet empire but blinked after the Iranians directed Hezbollah to kill U.S. armed forces, spies, and diplomats in Beirut. Bill Clinton admitted he was a loser. After the U.S. president spent political capital and personal prestige to bully Israel into giving up land to create a state under the Iranian revolutionaries’ old friend Yasser Arafat, the Palestinian terror master told Clinton no. “I’m a colossal failure,” Clinton told Arafat. “And you made me one.”

George W. Bush’s global war on terror turned Iran into a regional hegemon, presiding over what was for a time known as the Shiite crescent, reaching from the Persian Gulf to the eastern Mediterranean. Democratizing Iraq meant ensuring power would rest with the country’s Shiite majority, whose political leaders, with few exceptions, were controlled by Tehran. Even though the administration had been warned that elections in the Palestinian territories would lead to a Hamas victory, Bush’s Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice pushed for elections, which the Iranian-backed terror group won, leading to Hamas’ eventual takeover of Gaza. As if the freedom agenda hadn’t done enough harm to American regional interests, Bush stopped Israel’s 2006 war against Hezbollah to protect a Lebanese government the administration saw as a beacon of democracy, even if it was controlled by Hezbollah.

By withdrawing from Obama’s nuclear deal and from guarantees to protect Iran’s bomb against Israeli attacks, Trump started to roll back the losing. In January 2020, he helped initiate the terror regime’s eventual death spiral by liquidating Qassem Soleimani, commander of the Quds Force, Iran’s expeditionary terror unit. “Soleimani has been perpetrating acts of terror to destabilize the Middle East for the last 20 years,” said Trump. And what the United States did “should have been done long ago,” Trump said. “A lot of lives would have been saved.”

That is, because America had gotten used to losing, because previous presidents had neglected the normal business of protecting U.S. citizens, Americans died. Trump promised victory. “I will not hesitate to deploy military force when there is no alternative. But if America fights, it must only fight to win,” Trump said in an April 2016 speech. “I will never send our finest into battle unless necessary, and I mean absolutely necessary, and will only do so if we have a plan for victory with a capital V.”

So why didn’t the influencers opposed to Trump’s Iran campaign hear that part, that what distinguished him from his predecessors wasn’t that he renounced violence against our enemies—far from it—but that he swore to win? Further, here’s a president who means not only to dismantle Iran’s threat to Americans but also to avenge the many thousands of Americans kidnapped, tortured, and killed by the Iranians in the past five decades. That’s epic fury revising in fire and steel 47 years of American defeat at the hands of an anti-American regime that no U.S. president dared to challenge until Trump.

For normal Americans, it’s inspiring to see a commander in chief picking up the gauntlet for the purpose of killing terrorists who target Americans. More than 80% of the president’s party thinks so. And thus there’s no question that the campaign run by Carlson, Kelly, Walsh, and the others is designed to demoralize Americans. The tell isn’t that they don’t know the history but that their accounts are congested with lies. Maybe they’re lying for clicks and views; maybe they’re being paid by foreign parties. In the end, the external drivers are irrelevant because the crucial factor is that the demoralizers are themselves demoralized.

Winning is hard and losing is easy. Now, after embracing the ethos of losing, and elevating it as a sign of personal virtue, the demoralizers find themselves very clearly on the losing end—on the side of the ayatollahs and at odds with the White House and the Pentagon’s display of military dominance in the skies over Iran. The lesson is that losers love company, even if that company wears clerical robes stained with the blood of thousands of Americans and many hundreds of thousands of innocent people throughout the Middle East. As the history of the American hard left shows, there is no way out of that kind of ugly bitterness, in part because that’s where history’s most determined losers feel most comfortable. For the rest of us, winning is preferable.
Amit Segal: The New Israeli Rules of Engagement
On Oct. 6, 2023, the Israeli defense establishment realized something was stirring in Gaza but failed to act. Officials were paralyzed by the fear of a miscalculation. Decades of containment, restraint and forbearance had made Israel slow to stir and vulnerable in appearance. Two and a half years later, Israel stands at the pinnacle of its power in the Middle East - a transformation that occurred only after it shed rules it had adopted in recent decades.

There are new rules of the game. For years, Israel shied away from targeted killings, granting terror leaders and Iranian officials the time and peace of mind to plot against the Jewish state. The IDF's new mindset is the exact opposite: If terrorists are running for their lives, they can't make plans to take ours.

Another rule is: when enemies announce their intention to destroy you, believe them. "Death to America" and "Death to Israel" aren't lip service or empty words. They are mission statements.

Ignoring small security problems invites larger ones. Israel fled Gaza to avoid improvised explosive devices and shooting attacks, only to be attacked by two commando divisions with the world's largest tunnel network at their disposal. It withdrew from Lebanon because it couldn't stomach 20 fallen soldiers a year; in exchange, Hizbullah entrenched itself on the border with a missile arsenal rivaled by few global powers.

For years, the enemy fired rockets and Israel replied with "proportional" force. This normalized the firing on civilians, kidnapping and invasion. But this changed after Oct. 7. Hizbullah leader Hassan Nasrallah thought he was still playing by the old rules, launching a few rockets daily. It ended with his elimination, the decapitation of his organization, and the destruction of 80% of their missile stockpile.

The new rules are in effect in the operation launched on Saturday. The Jewish state can't accept the existence in Iran of production facilities and thousands of ballistic missiles, with every launch sending half of Israel into shelters and threatening mass casualties. It can't tolerate a regime that continues to fund its greatest enemies with more than a billion dollars annually.

President Trump understood that Iran is a danger to regional and world peace. Iran's attacks on peaceful Gulf states and Cyprus show what they would have done had they been allowed to develop nuclear weapons. This war will save us from the necessity of many others.
A Weakened Iran Is Already a Victory
In the war against Iran, something major has already happened. An evil and powerful regime that has destabilized the world for nearly half a century has been significantly weakened.

Aware that its fearsome reputation has crumbled and it is now in survival mode, Iran is hoping that the hundreds of missiles and drones it is launching against Israel, American bases and Gulf countries will regain some of its honor and help it survive.

But no matter what happens, something earth-shattering has already happened in the Middle East. The world's biggest sponsor of terror has lost its power to terrorize the world.

A nation that for decades has proudly trumpeted "Death to America" and "Death to Israel" is now worried about its own death.

A nation that threatened to destroy Israel with nuclear weapons is now worried about its own destruction.

Since 1979, the arrogant mullahs of Iran have been spreading their toxic poison and getting away with it.

This week, as we commemorate the failure of another Persian named Haman to destroy the Jews 2,500 years ago, these arrogant mullahs are getting a taste of their own medicine.
 Our weekly column from the humor site PreOccupied Territory.

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Islamabad, March 5 - Defense officials and planners in the Islamic republic of Pakistan voiced increased anxiety this week amid reports that the country's chief regional rival has mastered and will soon make operational a system that Pakistan has long feared: plumbing and waster-disposal systems that run in closed conduits that do not pose health and safety hazards.

Sources within the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) described the development as a potential “game-changer in the subcontinental sanitation deterrence equation.” Speaking on condition of anonymity, a senior planner at General Headquarters in Rawalpindi noted that open-sewer networks have historically provided Pakistan with certain asymmetric advantages. “For generations,” the official explained, “our drainage infrastructure has maintained a level of strategic transparency. Effluent remains visible, accessible, and — crucially — public. This openness serves as both a deterrent and a confidence-building measure. Closed systems introduce unacceptable ambiguity.”

Intelligence assessments circulating in defense circles suggest India’s new closed-conduit technology, reportedly rolled out in phases across major urban centers under the Swachh Bharat Mission’s extended infrastructure phase, could render traditional fall-in incidents obsolete. Analysts warn that without exposed channels, the risk calculus shifts dramatically: pedestrians and livestock would no longer enjoy the same predictable interaction with municipal waste streams, potentially reducing accidental immersion rates by as much as 40–60 percent in border-adjacent districts.

The concern extends beyond tactical considerations. “If India achieves full sewer enclosure,” one retired brigadier remarked during a closed-door seminar in Islamabad, “it gains not only public-health superiority but also psychological dominance. Our citizens have grown accustomed to navigating open nullahs as part of daily life — a shared national experience. A rival that conceals its waste behind concrete and pipe is, frankly, playing hide-and-seek with destiny.”

Ministry of Defence spokespersons declined to confirm whether contingency planning now includes simulated “covered-drain wargames,” though unverified leaks indicate tabletop exercises have begun incorporating variables such as manhole-cover integrity and odor-containment efficacy. One simulation allegedly modeled a scenario in which Indian closed sewers enable faster troop movements during monsoon seasons by eliminating the need for frequent de-silting halts.

Critics within Pakistan’s strategic community argue the anxiety may be overstated. “Closed does not mean invincible,” countered a Lahore-based defense commentator. “Pipes can burst. Manholes can still be pried open. The spirit of open defiance endures.” Still, the prevailing mood in planning rooms remains one of guarded alarm. The competence and concern for citizenry smacks suspiciously of Zionism. As one anonymous colonel put it: “We have always believed in facing our problems head-on — literally. The prospect of an enemy that no longer requires its citizens to do the same is profoundly unsettling.”

Officials stressed that Pakistan remains committed to its time-tested model of visible, participatory sanitation. No immediate countermeasures, such as accelerated open-drain expansion, have been announced.



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  • Thursday, March 05, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon
The New York Times reports:
Top Trump administration officials said on Wednesday that they were still investigating whether it was a U.S. airstrike that hit a girls elementary school in Iran on the opening day of the war.

The strike was one of the deadliest attacks of the American-Israeli campaign against Iran so far, killing at least 175 people, most of whom were likely children, according to state media and health officials.

It is not clear why the school was hit, or which country’s forces fired at it.
This is an astounding story because it doesn't mention the proximity of the school to a major IRGC naval compound, which was also hit, multiple times, in the same raid.

The girls' school was originally within the IRGC compound; it was separated around 2016. Even today you can see the wall around the entire complex. The school is in the upper left of this image (my Google Earth screenshot.).



NPR and Planet Labs catalogued all the airstrikes - seven, by their count -  based on satellite image analysis:



Seven identified strikes. One hit the school. 

From everything we can tell, this was a mistake based on outdated intelligence thinking the school building was still part of the complex. In fact, the school was primarily built to provide education to children of IRGC members who work in the complex, according to Al Jazeera.

But Al Jazeera is not willing to give the Americans a pass. They say:
What had been a single unified military complex became three independent sectors, clearly distinguishable in satellite imagery: The Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school, separated since 2016 with its own walls and gates; the Martyr Absalan Specialised Clinic, separated since early 2025 with an independent civilian entrance; and the Sayyid al-Shuhada military complex, which remained a closed and active site.

When the US-Israeli attack began on the morning of February 28, 2026, analysis of the strike locations revealed an odd pattern: Missiles hit the military base and the school, but bypassed the specialised clinic complex located between the two without touching it.

This exclusion cannot be explained as a coincidence; it strongly indicates that the executing party was operating with coordinates and maps that distinguished between the complex’s different facilities.

Here lies the fundamental contradiction exposed by this investigation: If the intelligence was up to date enough to spare a clinic that had been open for only one year, how did it fail to identify an elementary school that had been separated from the military complex and had become a clearly defined civilian institution for more than 10 years?
There is only one problem with this analysis: the Planet Labs image clearly shows that the clinic suffered a direct hit as well (the lower yellow L-shaped polygon.) You can see the black hole in the Planet Labs image that was clearly not there in the Google Earth image above it. 

And this Planet Labs high resolution image makes it even clearer that the clinic suffered a direct hit.





If both the clinic and the school were hit, then that indicates that the attackers were tragically working with outdated intelligence. (My guess is that this was the US, since Israel's main focus on the first day was Iranian leaders, anti-aircraft defenses and ballistic missile launchers.) 

But publicizing the clinic would be problematic for Iran; photos would have almost certainly shown the damage to the other IRGC buildings surrounding it which would weaken the claim of an intentional attack on schoolchildren. 

This could be why Iran didn't trumpet a US hit on a medical clinic. In this case, it would hurt the propaganda effort, not help  it. 

This could also account for the high death toll that Iran attributes to the airstrike at the school. Chances seem high to me that Iran counted all the casualties - from the clinic, school and the military complex - and said they were all at the school. This way the hospitals and morgues really were filled up, but not with students, but with a mix of victims of seven airstrikes. A death toll of 175 people from a single airstrike is plausible but would be quite high (although satellite images show that more than half the school is rubble.) 

Iran was careful to show photos of the school and pretend that this was the only target, and the media filled in the rest with the presumption that all the deaths Iran blamed on the school strike really were from there. 

From all evidence, this was not a false flag Iranian operation. It was not a misfired Iranian rocket, as some claimed. And neither the school nor the clinic were hit by collateral damage from the IRGC building strikes. 

The entire compound remains primarily IRGC. The school and clinic, even though later separated, were built for IRGC personnel and their families. This does not make them legitimate targets, but when you look at the entire picture, it seems clear that this was an intelligence failure based on outdated information. 

Because 100% of the buildings hit were IRGC buildings in the not-too-distant past. 




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In Part 1 we identified the structural mismatch between how the Western world treats war and how revolutionary movements do.  

To the West, as codified in the UN Charter and elsewhere, war it treated as an episode with a beginning and an end. But revolutionary movements treat it as a permanent condition that merely changes form. 

If that analysis is correct, it should be visible in the historical record. And it It is,  with a consistency that is difficult to explain any other way. And understanding this makes us understand that the revolutionary mentality is a challenge not just to Western societies but to the entire rules based international order. 

Consider the conflicts that define the modern era of asymmetric warfare.

The Israeli-Arab conflict stated before Israel with the desire of Arab states to stop or destroy the Jewish state. On a national level, it was obviously a threat to Israel's existence, but the national character of Israel's enemies allowed them to have a measure of pragmatism, seen in the Israel-Egypt peace treaty, and more recently in the Abraham Accords. Before the Six Day War, however, the Palestinian leadership adopted a revolutionary model, where the war would continue until Israel is destroyed - whether by military, legal or demographic means. 

So Oslo was not a peace treaty in the way the Camp David accords were. It was a means towards the same goal that Yasir Arafat defines int he 1970s - destroying Israel in stages. This is why the Second Intifada followed Palestinian rejection of a state - it was a new tactic in the same war. The war - which is still called a revolution by the PLO and Fatah - never ended, and there is no prospect for it ever ending. Fatah and Hamas disagree on tactics but they agree on the goal. 

Afghanistan consumed a Soviet empire and then an American one. The Taliban were removed from power in 2001 with startling speed. They spent the next twenty years doing what Mao prescribed: organizing, propagandizing, and waiting. When the occupying force finally exhausted its patience and left, the Taliban returned within weeks. The episode ended; the movement hadn't.

Hezbollah has been at war with Israel since 1982. Even after Israel withdrew from Southern Lebanon behind UN-certified borders, Hezbollah did not disband - it continued to use Lebanon as a military launching pad against Israel, it continued to build a massive military, it continued to threaten war and terror. After the 2006 war, including UN resolutions on how to maintain peace and with a UN force overseeing it, Hezbollah patiently rebuilt its arsenal from tens of thousands of rockets to hundreds of thousands, embedding them in civilian infrastructure across southern Lebanon. The international framework produced exactly one outcome: time for Hezbollah to prepare the next round. Which is what revolutionary theory demands. 

Iran has been at war with the West since 1979 — through hostage crises, through proxy networks spanning four continents, through nuclear negotiations, through the JCPOA and its collapse, through missile strikes on American bases, through the funding and arming of every significant anti-Western terror organization in the Middle East. Each confrontation was treated by the West as a discrete incident to be managed. Iran treated each one as a phase in a continuous revolutionary struggle to build a Shiite Crescent - an "axis of resistance" - way beyond its borders. 

This is how revolutionary continuous-war conflicts work. Which makes defeating them extraordinarily difficult. And one example from recent history shows this starkly. 

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam - the Tamil Tigers - had waged one of the most sophisticated and brutal insurgencies in modern history for over twenty-six years. They invented the suicide belt. They operated a navy and an air force. They controlled significant territory. They were, by any measure, a formidable revolutionary movement with deep ideological roots and genuine popular support among Tamil civilians. 

In May 2009, the Sri Lankan military cornered the last remnants of the LTTE in a tiny coastal strip in the north of the country. And then it destroyed them in a matter of weeks. 

It did so by ignoring virtually everything the international community demanded. They were ruthless, they did not care about civilian casualties, they didn't care about humanitarian corridors or feeding the enemy. The military advanced regardless of  UN condemnation and international pressure. It killed or captured the entire LTTE leadership. It destroyed the movement's military capacity completely.

The civilian death toll in those final months was catastrophic. Estimates range from ten thousand to forty thousand. The Sri Lankan government has never been fully held accountable. International human rights organizations documented what they described as war crimes. 

And the war ended. Permanently. There was no pause, no ceasefire, no temporary de-escalation to allow hostage swaps. The LTTE has not reconstituted. The revolutionary engine was destroyed completely and it has not restarted.

The lesson is brutal and unavoidable: the only successful termination of a genuine revolutionary continuous-war conflict in recent history required doing exactly what the international framework prohibits - pursuing total destruction of the movement without pause, without negotiation, without regard for international legal norms, until the engine that generated the conflict could no longer function.

I'm not condoning the atrocities that Sri Lanka are said to have done. But the West has not considered the downside of the alternative - allowing a terror group to continuously regroup and keep murdering until it reaches its goal. International law means to protect the innocent but it also protects the non-state actors who attack the innocent and plan to keep doing so. It is a broken mechanism - because it still thinks of wars as episodic and not continuous. 

As we have mentioned, international law requires an imminent threat before starting a war. But modern revolutionary wars do not start neatly and they weaponize the episodic war assumptions of international law. This can be seen in a brilliant analogy given Israeli analyst Shany Mor:

Israel is supposed to accept the presence of armed militias dedicated to its destruction either because Israel is so strong that it could meet any threat or because meeting the threat now would be too costly. It means that the deterrence Israel is supposed to exercise over its enemies is purely theoretical. I call this the avocado model of deterrence. The conditions for Israeli military action are always not ripe, not ripe, not ripe, and then way too late.

Avocado deterrence was the rule with Hizballah in Lebanon after 2006 just as it was the rule with Arafat and Hamas in the West Bank in the 1990s and 2000s. And nowhere was the avocado principle more dearly held to than in Gaza. Hamas rockets were something Israel needed to learn to tolerate or even accept that it deserved. ...Any Israeli preventive action against the growing arsenal of rockets and tunnels was, as it was always asserted, an overreaction to an exaggerated threat.

Until the threat is too big and a response would incur unacceptable costs. Which is what happened with Hamas and Hezbollah and Iran. 

The imminence doctrine doesn't just fail against this strategy. It actively serves it. By requiring a moment of clear and present danger before action is legally justified, it hands the adversary a precise target to stay below. The legal framework becomes a roadmap for how to build threat without triggering response.

But earlier response to possible enemies brings its own set of problems, Any loosening of moral standards can be used by malign states to suppress legitimate dissent. These problems are genuinely hard, but we need to be clear-eyed about what morality demands and the tradeoffs involved — because refusing to grapple with them honestly hands a decisive advantage to those who would destroy the liberal democratic model entirely.

The historical record is grim - except for one model that seemingly violates international law, yet avoided the horrors of Sri Lanka.

In June 1981, Israeli jets destroyed the Osirak nuclear reactor outside Baghdad. The entire world condemned it. The UN Security Council passed a unanimous resolution censuring Israel. Legal scholars called it a flagrant violation of international law. Iraq was years away from a nuclear weapon. The threat was not ripe.

Thirty years later, after the Gulf War revealed what Saddam Hussein had actually intended, Dick Cheney sent Israeli General David Ivri ,who planned the Osirak raid, a note thanking him for preventing the US from facing a nuclear armed Iraq.

Osirak didn't end a forever war. It prevented one. And the price Israel paid for that prevention was universal condemnation for acting before the threat was - in the view of international law - ripe.

Every mechanism the West designed to end wars - ceasefires, negotiations, international pressure, legal constraints - has been used by revolutionary movements as a tool for continuing them. They were designed for adversaries who share the goal of ending conflicts, not to continue them forever. 

The mismatch between episodic and continuous war theory isn't an accident of history or a failure of imagination by well-meaning institution builders. Revolutionary doctrine, from Mao through Gramsci through its Islamist inheritors,  explicitly studied Western liberal democracy's moral commitments and built a strategy around exploiting them.

Liberal democracies cannot easily strike first without overwhelming evidence of a direct and imminent threat. They cannot sustain long wars because their electoral cycles demand results. They cannot ignore civilian casualties because  their values demand restraint. They cannot dismiss legal criticism because their legitimacy depends partly on institutional standing. Every one of these constraints, genuine and honorable in origin, becomes a weapon in the hands of an adversary who shares none of them and has no intention of being bound by them.

This is why every exit from these conflicts accepted in the West degrades the liberal democratic side somehow. Strike early and you're the aggressor. Strike late and you've absorbed catastrophic damage. Negotiate and you've handed them time and legitimacy. Accept deterrence and you've accepted permanent attrition. 

The revolutionary side doesn't need to win today. It needs you to have no good options. And it has spent decades making sure you don't.

We need to rethink the entire theory of war and then build a framework that can prioritize protecting one's own people over those of the enemy. Because that is what real morality demands. And Osirak gives a hint of how such a theory should be built.

That is what we will attempt to tackle next.





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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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