Monday, November 17, 2025

  • Monday, November 17, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon

Globes reports:
Elbit Systems (TASE:ELST; Nasdaq: ELST) announced a huge strategic deal this morning, amounting to $2.3 billion, with an international customer. Elbit Systems did not disclose the identity of the customer, or even on which continent it is located. The company says that the deal will be spread over eight years, but has not specified what it will be supplying.
It sounds like we have gone back to the days of the Arab boycott of Israel, where nations would secretly make deals with Israel (often through intermediaries) to avoid the wrath of the Arab League. 

Now it is the wrath of protesters. 

Plus ça change...



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

In his new book, Failure to Adapt: How Strategic Blindness Undermines Intelligence, Warfare, and Perception, former U.S. Army Intelligence Analyst Dr. David Firester—Founder and CEO of TRAC Intelligence, LLC—dissects the recurring patterns that left America vulnerable on 9/11, Israel stunned on Yom Kippur in 1973, and—more recently—allowed Hamas to breach the Gaza border on October 7, 2023. In this written exchange, Firester warns that democracies, especially Israel, cannot survive if moral reflexes eclipse strategic judgment, and he offers a blueprint for the intellectual humility and moral adaptation required to confront enemies who weaponize empathy itself. Please note, in his responses, Dr. Firester uses quotation marks around the word Palestinian to highlight how politics and history have shaped that label.

What first led you to see intelligence and military failures as symptoms of a deeper strategic blindness and not just isolated mistakes?

The idea first began to take shape after 9/11. I was in New York that day, and the experience left a lasting imprint. It wasn’t only the shock of the attack—it was the realization that so many signals had been visible beforehand, yet went unheeded. It made me question how intelligent, capable institutions could possess so much information and still fail to adapt in time. Later, during my deployment to Iraq, those questions only deepened.

Whether the setting was Pearl Harbor, the Yom Kippur War, or the intelligence breakdowns before 9/11, the fingerprints were strikingly similar. Failure to Adapt is an attempt to explain why even societies that are technically advanced and morally motivated can misread the world so consistently and how those same habits can be unlearned.

You argue that intelligence failures rarely result from a lack of information. If the problem is not the data or analysis, what drives these breakdowns in judgment?

That became clear to me during my graduate research, when I examined how organizations fail less from ignorance than from misperception. Because bureaucracies suppress dissent, intelligence officers are under pressure to produce quick, certain answers that resolve ambiguity and reinforce pre-existing beliefs. Intelligence systems reward consensus and predictability, becoming resistant to change and failing to adapt to newer threats.

The challenge, then, is not just to collect data more efficiently but to build institutions that can question themselves as effectively as they analyze others.


What changes—structural or cultural—could make the intelligence community more adaptive? And does the military’s command hierarchy help or hinder that process?

True adaptation begins with intellectual humility. Intelligence organizations need to reward dissent rather than making analysts afraid to challenge assumptions.

The military’s hierarchy, while vital for discipline, can both enable and inhibit that independence. Hierarchies excel at execution but often struggle with reflection. In Iraq, I saw leaders empower local commanders to interpret intelligence in real time and act on their interpretations. However, when information had to travel upward for approval, this agility disappeared—sometimes for the pettiest of reasons, such as restrictions on the language that analysts could use to describe the enemy.

Adaptation depends on questioning our own assumptions, even as technology accelerates the speed of information.

In the age of cyberwarfare and artificial intelligence, is the U.S. finally learning to adapt faster—or are we still repeating old strategic patterns?

Technology has certainly accelerated our ability to gather and process information, but speed is not the same as understanding. The deeper challenge remains human and organizational: how do we interpret the processed information once produced? Algorithms can expose patterns, but they can’t tell us which ones matter—or what they mean in human terms.

Artificial intelligence learns from historical data, but that means it inherits the same biases and blind spots that shaped those histories. If our institutions don’t evolve conceptually, AI simply becomes a faster mirror of our own assumptions.

That said, there are encouraging signs. Combining cyber capabilities within traditional military commands, testing plans from the adversary's perspective, and sharing data across agencies all reflect an awareness that adaptability must be built in, not added on.

However, true adaptation will come from leaders and analysts willing to challenge the machine’s conclusions and ask why an algorithm sees what it does. Technology may expand perception, but only critical thought can turn perception into strategy.

You write that non-state actors have a natural edge in adaptability. Is that due in part because they create the threat and force others to react—or is something else at work?

That’s certainly part of it—initiative is power. I saw this dynamic firsthand in Iraq, where insurgent networks could alter tactics overnight. When non-state actors create the threat, they control the tempo of events and dictate how others respond. But their advantage runs deeper. They operate outside the legal and institutional constraints that bind states. They are not signatories to the conventions that gave rise to the laws of war, and jihadist movements in particular violate those laws regularly.

What further complicates matters is that deception itself functions as a strategy. Concepts such as taqiyya (religious concealment) and hudna (temporary truce) are used not as theological footnotes but as operational tools—enabling non-state actors to deceive, delay, and regroup. These actors exploit the openness and moral restraint of democracies precisely because they know that restraint limits how we can respond.

That moral self-restraint is what separates civilization from barbarism—but it also exposes a new vulnerability: the tendency to let moral judgment override strategic judgment. That dilemma led me to explore what I call moral adaptation—the theme at the heart of my book.

You introduce the concept of moral adaptation and also warn of a moral reflex that distorts analysis. How do morality and moral judgment shape intelligence and policy—for better or worse?

Morality is indispensable in democratic strategy—but only when it is self-aware. Moral adaptation means aligning ethical principles with the realities of conflict without abandoning either. It recognizes that moral clarity and strategic clarity are not opposites.

On the other hand, there is the moral reflex: the impulse to interpret events through narratives about innocence and guilt rather than cause and consequence. Democracies, especially those founded on humanitarian ideals, are prone to this because they seek moral reassurance as much as strategic success.

In intelligence, that reflex can produce selective empathy—seeing some actors only as victims and others only as villains—blinding analysts to motives, intentions, and opportunities for deterrence. In policy, it manifests as performative morality: decisions made to appear just, rather than to achieve just outcomes.

Moral adaptation, however, is different. It demands the discipline to see adversaries as they are, not as we wish them to be, while preserving moral integrity without surrendering realism. The task of democratic intelligence is to remain humane without becoming naïve—a balance as difficult as it is essential.

Moral adaptation demands the discipline to see adversaries as they are, not as we wish them to be, and to preserve moral integrity without surrendering realism.

In your book, you note that democracies often crave moral narratives—the innocent underdog, the oppressive hegemon. This is evident not only among leaders and analysts, but in society itself. How can this be addressed?

Moral narratives are comforting because they simplify complexity. They turn geopolitics into morality plays, giving people the illusion of certainty in an uncertain world. Democracies are especially prone to this because their citizens participate emotionally as well as politically. The desire to see one side as purely righteous and the other as inherently guilty satisfies a deep human need for moral coherence—but when applied to strategy, it distorts perception.

Correcting this requires education that prizes evidence over emotion, media literacy that resists emotional framing, and what I call epistemic humility—the courage to question one’s own moral instincts. Democracies don’t need less morality; they need morality informed by truth rather than narrative convenience.

After World War II, the Allies succeeded in de-radicalizing Germany and Japan. What made that transformation possible—and could a similar process ever take hold in Palestinian Arab society?

The moral reconstruction of Germany and Japan after 1945 succeeded because defeat was total, leadership was delegitimized, and ideology was discredited from within. The Allies didn’t simply impose new institutions; they reshaped the moral vocabulary through which those societies understood themselves. Education was rebuilt around accountability, civic responsibility, and empirical truth. Reconstruction was both economic and psychological/ethical.

Democracies don’t need less morality; they need morality informed by truth rather than narrative convenience.

The Middle East, by contrast, has rarely experienced either in unison. Many "Palestinian" institutions still derive their legitimacy from resistance rather than governance; the political culture rewards grievance as part of "Palestinian" identity. Where post-war Germans said “never again” and meant it, much of the region still says “not yet.”

De-radicalization begins when a society confronts the moral bankruptcy of its ideology. In Germany and Japan, that reckoning was undeniable because the devastation was existential and the evidence overwhelming. In "Palestinian" society, no comparable moral reckoning has yet occurred. Instead, anti-Jewish and anti-Western narratives remain woven into educational curricula, political rhetoric, and even religious discourse.

Transformation isn’t impossible, but it would require leaders and educators willing to replace myth with memory, victimhood with responsibility, and resentment with moral agency. External actors can help create the conditions, but only internal reform can make them endure.

The lesson of 1945 is that reconstruction is not merely about rebuilding cities—it’s about rebuilding conscience.

You write that “democracies cannot afford even the perception of moral erosion.” Does this describe Israel’s current dilemma, where civilian casualties are seen as proof of wrongdoing regardless of intent? How can a democracy preserve moral clarity when its enemies exploit that perception?

It does describe Israel’s dilemma—and more broadly, the dilemma of all democracies confronting adversaries unbound by moral restraint. The tragedy of modern asymmetric warfare is that the more a democracy adheres to the laws of war, the more it risks being condemned for them. Adversaries who embed themselves among civilians exploit that very morality as a tactical weapon. The result is an inversion of ethics: restraint becomes weakness, and self-defense is recast as aggression.

Adversaries who embed themselves among civilians exploit that very morality as a tactical weapon. The result is an inversion of ethics: restraint becomes weakness, and self-defense is recast as aggression.

Israel faces this more acutely than any other state because its enemies understand that Western perception can achieve what battlefield force cannot. Hamas and similar movements deliberately manufacture civilian suffering, knowing that global media will conflate consequence with intent. This is the weaponization of empathy. It exploits precisely the moral reflex I warned about—the tendency to judge outcomes emotionally rather than analytically.

Yet Israel’s moral challenge is also its moral strength. Democracies cannot abandon their ethical standards without forfeiting the very legitimacy that distinguishes them from their enemies. The task, then, is not to mute moral concern but to anchor it in context—to explain, relentlessly, the nature of the enemy’s strategy and the moral calculus it imposes. The harder challenge is teaching the world to see that moral clarity is not measured by emotion, but by integrity under fire.

You note that “doctrine shifts only after humiliation.” Did Israel fail to recall the lessons of 1973—or was October 7 a fundamentally different kind of shock?

October 7 bore eerie echoes of 1973, not only in the surprise itself but in the psychology surrounding it. In both cases, early warning signs were present yet filtered through assumptions about enemy capability and intent. Hamas’s preparations may have been noticed, but their potential effect was probably judged as limited—an operation expected to produce shock, not systemic trauma.

But there is another, subtler similarity: the constraint of perceived legitimacy. Before the Yom Kippur War, Israel was influenced by a sense of what the international community—especially Washington—would tolerate in terms of preemptive or decisive action. The same dynamic almost certainly shaped Israeli assumptions before October 7. In an era of instant moral judgment and politicized media, Israel must constantly calculate not only military risk but reputational cost. Under the Biden Administration, Jerusalem likely assumed there were narrow limits to how forcefully it could act without jeopardizing diplomatic support. The forms of surprise evolved, but the assumptions that enabled it did not.

The lesson is not simply to anticipate the next attack, but to reclaim confidence in the legitimacy of decisive self-defense, even when the world hesitates to grant it. A sovereign nation should never require anyone’s permission to protect its citizens, least of all when confronting a genocidal enemy sworn to its destruction.

You first developed your argument 14 years ago. Looking at today’s strategic environment, has anything changed for the better? Do you see any reason for optimism?

Some things have changed for the better, though often in painful ways. Fourteen years ago, I was focused primarily on how institutions fail to learn. Today, I see more signs that they at least recognize the cost of that failure. Both Israel and the United States have been forced to confront the limits of technological deterrence—the realization that no amount of precision or surveillance can replace adaptability, judgment, or moral clarity.

So yes, there is room for optimism—not because the world has grown safer, but because the cost of blindness has become impossible to ignore. Adaptation is slow, but it’s happening.

Any final thoughts?

If there’s one point I would add, it’s that the greatest threat to democracies is not external—it’s the erosion of strategic and moral confidence from within. Adversaries can attack our systems, but only we can dismantle our own conviction. The challenge of the twenty-first century is not just military or technological; it’s cognitive. We are drowning in information but starving for understanding, and that imbalance makes us vulnerable to every actor who manipulates perception faster than we can correct it.

Where post-war Germans said “never again” and meant it, much of the region still says “not yet.”

Israel’s story captures this tension perfectly. Its extraordinary innovation has stemmed largely from necessity—an extremely small country in a very bad neighborhood, surrounded at times by genocidal enemies. Nothing sharpens ingenuity like survival. Yet even nations defined by creativity can misjudge their adversaries.





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Monday, November 17, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon


Sometimes the random forces of Internet searches combine in unusual ways.

As I browsed through recent Arabic articles with the keyword "Jews", I saw an article in the Palestinian Al Ray site from November 2009 pop up - I'm not quite sure why - describing how then-Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh insists that Arabs and Muslims are not antisemitic as he met with Neturei Karta "rabbis."
Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh said: "Arabs and Muslims do not hate Jews, and their problem is with the occupation stemming from the Zionist vision and the displacement of all Palestinians."

This came during a meeting that brought together Haniyeh at the new Cabinet headquarters in Gaza with members of the Lifeline 2 convoy , which includes four Jewish rabbis.

Haniyeh continued, saying: "But with such honorable rabbis who have expressed their rejection of the siege, aggression, and crimes, we have no choice but to respect these trends and appreciate this culture."
Another article showed up in my search, an except from the memoirs of the also-late Muslim Brotherhood spiritual leader Yusuf Qaradawi, that was released yesterday on his website, describing Islamist hate for Jews since the 1940s:

Throughout my secondary school years, the Palestinian cause was a vital and pressing issue for us. The Islamists were more invested in it than the nationalists; many nationalists didn't fully grasp the danger the Zionist project posed to the region. ...

We organized demonstrations for it, chanted slogans, delivered fiery speeches, composed revolutionary poems, and stirred up students and the masses to chant for Palestine. We seized the opportunity of the anniversary of the Balfour Declaration and other occasions to revive the cause .

The Islamists were the ones who were fully aware of the Jewish danger, its ambitions and goals in the Arab and Islamic region. At the forefront of these Islamists who were aware of this danger and its dimensions was Sheikh Hassan al-Banna,...

The year 1948 came and the pot was boiling over, and the training camps were receiving young men for a few days. Many of us were eager to fight against the Jews, but the decision of the “Guidance Bureau” in Cairo was that high school students should not participate in the jihad, and that university students and other members of the public should be sufficient .
No distinction there between "Zionists" and "Jews." They were the same enemy.

It is interesting to note that Qaradawi himself described being indoctrinated in this antisemitism - it started when he was in school, it was strengthened by chants and slogans, and propaganda prevailed over facts (he claims that no Muslims sold land to Jews in Palestine.) But these methods were not originally Islamist - they came directly from Nazi Germany.

The Nazis planted agents in Egypt in the 1930s to oppose the British there and they funded and trained the nascent Muslim Brotherhood, which led to its explosive growth. And antisemitism was a key component of their indoctrination. An influential pamphlet, Islam and Jews, published in 1937, has been linked to the Nazi-collaborating Mufti of Jerusalem and was spread widely in the Islamic world. The Mufti was antisemitic before the Nazis, but he partnered with the Nazis in their shared goal of the eradication of Jews and he was instrumental in the links between the Nazis and the Muslim Brotherhood, which included Nazi propaganda methods. When Qaradawi describes organized demonstrations, slogans, fiery speeches and revolutionary poems this was largely a Nazi playbook to use Islam to counter the British - and to use antisemitism as the lever to promote Muslims as helpless victims of a worldwide Jewish conspiracy.

Islamist antisemitism is a fact and it has become an important part of Islamist theology. 






Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Monday, November 17, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
One of the most useful tools in the Derechology framework I am creating is the falsifiability test. 

In short, it asks a simple but powerful question: Are the load-bearing assumptions of your moral or political system provably false? If the system leans on an assumption that collapses under empirical reality, then the entire moral architecture built on top of it becomes unstable - no matter how noble the intent. 

Let’s apply this to the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA).

The DSA is essentially Marxist at its core, and it dresses it up to make it more palatable for voters. But it is not hard to  find that much of DSA’s rhetoric, inherited from Marxist frameworks, rests on a foundational binary as seen in a 2016 strategy document:
The fundamental social relationship in capitalism is between the worker and the capitalist (employee and employer), and the exploitation of workers by capitalists is the primary source of profitability within the capitalist system.

Similarly, in a 2024 statement: 

Elites—the capitalist class,... live through exploiting working-class labor and extracting rent from us... The solution is for working-class people to take political power for ourselves.
These statements as well as many others position the working class as virtuous victims and the capitalist class as exploitative oppressors. That’s not just a structural description. It’s a moral determinacy claim: the system treats structural position as the defining moral feature of a person or group.

But a little thought shows that the working world isn't binary. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics counts tens of millions of people who are managers - but not at the top tier of executives. Meaning that they are both managers and workers at the same time.

Socialists have come up with with bizarre and contradictory ways to deal with this reality. Sometimes they treat them as workers, sometimes as the capitalist elites, some create a new category called "professional management classes" and others claim that no such class exists. 

But they also ignore, or try to explain away, that there are plenty of companies where workers are treated fairly and are happy. There are managers who genuinely advocate for their teams. There are people who began their careers on the factory floor and ended up as C-suite executives  -  not because they betrayed their class, but because they grew, led, and adapted.

It’s not that there aren’t real structural barriers; of course there are. But refusing to acknowledge the permeability of class boundaries renders the binary assumption empirically false and morally dangerous. The attempts to patch the problem by coming up with new theories and sub-theories to account for reality - when in fact, it is reality that discredits the theories. 

A false assumption discredits a philosophy that depends on it.

But there is another implicit assumption that todays' socialists rely on - how they define the oppressed class. Perhaps this is because they realize that the current economy is not based on factory workers and the 19th century facts of worker oppression and horrible conditions simply does not translate to office workers or even Walmart warehouses. So now they try to include minorities or immigrants to shore up their support - along with a healthy dose of propaganda. 

But by doing this, the socialists are again ignoring reality. There are as many obstacles to success as there are people. Disability, geography, language ability, personality traits, and many others are all challenges people have. By choosing some people as the officially oppressed, they are marginalizing others, enforcing the very inequality that they claim to be against.

Socialism intends to replace political leaders with workers who presumably understand their struggles. Now, let's look at New York City mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani. His entire experience as a "worker" was a few years working as a foreclosure prevention and housing counselor in Queens, helping low-income homeowners. I don't know if he was working for a non-profit or a government agency, but either way, he does not have any experience at all working for an oppressive capitalist who exploits workers for profit. 

So what qualifications does he have, as a socialist, to lead a city when he knows nothing about the exploitation of workers? The entire point of socialism is to have workers become the leaders, not self-declared socialists. Electing non-workers as political leaders betrays the entire point of socialism.

Even worse, let's look at his campaign. He had hundreds of campaign workers under him being paid. Which means, by socialist definition, Mamdani was one of the capitalist elite exploiting his workers to gain his own selfish goals! Arguably, he has more experience as a leader of an organization than as a worker in any real sense.

Marxism demands revolution. The DSA has to publicly modify the philosophy to fit in a democracy. But it has not come up with a consistent alternative, so it is all about electing not workers, but socialists who are LARPing as oppressed workers. 

The result is an inconsistent, immoral mess that cannot articulate a real positive vision.

The requirement for justice is real. But reducing moral agency to class cosplay collapses under reality. A system that refuses to see people as complex agents will always betray them - even those whom it claims to represent.





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Sunday, November 16, 2025

From Ian:

Hamas member's diary published, reveals exploitation of Gaza’s civilian infrastructure
IDF soldiers seized the personal journal of a Hamas commander from Beit Hanun in Gaza, N12 News reported on Sunday.

Terrorist Khaled Abu Akram’s diary entries prove how Hamas exploits civilian infrastructure in Gaza. For example, in one entry from May 2024, Akram writes about how he went to set up an ambush at a school after tunnels in the area were bombed.

"I went with Abu Saleh (a unit commander in a different company in the area) to set up a new ambush at the Al-Naim school after the tunnels in the area were bombed, and the previous ambush was destroyed,” he wrote.

Akram also described how Hamas used UN infrastructure in the Gaza Strip to its advantage.

"Additionally, we took the batteries from the UNRWA clinic, removed the solar panels, and prepared the water well," Abu Akram wrote in his diary.
The Continuing Threats to Israel from Syria
As part of my army reserve service, I belong to a unit that is holding a sector opposite Syria, defending Israel on the northern border.

Syria continues to host terrorist organizations hostile to Israel and intent on harming it.

The fall of Assad's regime did not bring peace. Instead, it created a strategic vacuum that was quickly filled by radical Sunni militias.

When Syrian opposition forces took control of Damascus on Dec. 8, 2024, in response, the IDF moved into the demilitarized zone between Israel and Syria established by the 1974 ceasefire agreement and set up several forward posts.

Today, the IDF holds these positions as strategic depth to defend the nearby towns and villages of the Golan Heights from various hostile actors.

Iranian-backed Shi'ite forces are still operating in southwest Syria and are trying to rebuild their capabilities.

An operational arm of Lebanese Hizbullah is attempting to rebuild its capabilities on the Syrian front, with funding from Iran.

ISIS is also facing us in southern Syria, in addition to many small terrorist groups seeking to harm Israel, including organizations affiliated with Hamas abroad.

The flat terrain in the center of the Golan Heights could allow vehicles from Syria quick access to Israeli civilian communities in a very short time.

In the southern Golan, a landscape of deep wadis can enable covert infiltration by terror cells.

The constant presence of the IDF in this challenging terrain allows it to preempt the build-up of hostile forces - a task that would have been impossible had the IDF remained behind the buffer zone fence.

The Israeli presence in the buffer zone is essential to prevent a repeat of an Oct. 7-type surprise attack in the Golan.
Israeli football fans banned over ‘entirely fictitious’ information
Israeli football fans were banned from Villa Park on the back of “entirely fictitious” information, a former attorney general has claimed.

A group of sitting and former parliamentarians including Sir Michael Ellis, a former attorney general, Lord Austin of Dudley, a former Labour MP, and Nick Timothy, a Tory MP, has written to the chief constable of West Midlands Police to express “deep concern about the propriety and processes surrounding the ban”.

Maccabi Tel Aviv fans were barred from attending the Europa League clash against Aston Villa on Nov 6 after the West Midlands force raised safety concerns about hooliganism with Birmingham city council.

The force’s stance provoked an outcry, with Sir Keir Starmer calling it “the wrong decision” and the Israeli government condemning it. Maccabi said they would turn down any ticket allocation even if the decision was reversed.

In the parliamentarians’ letter, seen by The Telegraph, the ban was criticised as “bizarre” and “draconian”.

The group warned that the force risked being accused of “two-tier policing” against Jewish people, and called on Craig Guildford, the chief constable, to explain how the decision was made.

The politicians also said they were “deeply concerned” about the force’s portrayal of violent disorder in Amsterdam in November last year, when Maccabi played Ajax in the Europa League.

Pointing to a police commander’s remarks that the violence in Amsterdam “wasn’t all one way”, the group wrote: “This gives rise to a concern about whether West Midlands Police was operating ‘two-tier policing’ when it comes to Israel, because your force has taken draconian steps against an entire Israeli fanbase for a limited number of reported infractions.

“Suggestions that Maccabi fans provoked the Amsterdam attacks have been previously dismissed as ‘entirely fictitious’ by the UK Government’s independent adviser on anti-Semitism after he met the chief of police in Amsterdam and was given access to their reports.

“West Midlands Police have seemingly discarded this overwhelming evidence. Could you please outline how West Midlands Police have reached such a starkly different conclusion about the roots of the disorder in Amsterdam to the Dutch authorities? In the absence of an explanation, there are many who may conclude that the actions of West Midlands Police are akin to victim-blaming.”
  • Sunday, November 16, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon

Israel's far-Right ministers are upset that the US has signaled that is is offering a conditional pathway to a potential Palestinian state. Yet there is nothing in the US position that contradicts what Netanyahu himself has said on more than one occasion. 

The US Mission to the UN issued a joint statement Friday together with several Muslim countries:
The United States, Qatar, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Pakistan, Jordan, and Türkiye express our joint support for the Security Council Resolution currently under consideration, drafted by the United States after consultation and in cooperation with Council members and partners in the region.

The historic Comprehensive Plan to End the Gaza Conflict announced on September 29 is endorsed by the resolution and was celebrated and endorsed in Sharm Al Sheikh.

We are issuing this statement as the Member States that gathered during High-Level Week to begin this process, which offers a pathway to Palestinian self-determination and statehood. We emphasize that this is a sincere effort, and the Plan provides a viable path towards peace and stability, not only between the Israelis and the Palestinians, but for the entire region.

We are looking forward to this resolution’s swift adoption.

The specific language in the leaked versions of the draft Security Council resolution is weaker. It says, "After the PA reform program is faithfully carried out and Gaza redevelopment has advanced, the conditions may finally be in place for a credible pathway to Palestinian self-determination and statehood."

This morning, Netanyahu responded to the backlash saying that he is against a Palestinian state, saying, "Our opposition to a Palestinian state in any territory has not changed. Gaza will be demobilized and Hamas will be disarmed, the easy way or the hard way. I don't need reinforcements and tweets and lectures from anyone." 

Yet in 2011, Netanyahu laid out his conditions for a Palestinian state to Congress, and he ended his speech by saying, "So I say to President Abbas: Tear up your pact with Hamas! Sit down and negotiate! Make peace with the Jewish state! And if you do, I promise you this. Israel will not be the last country to welcome a Palestinian state as a new member of the United Nations. It will be the first to do so."

His speech did include several important conditions that are not mentioned in the US draft resolution, top among them the demand for the Palestinians to recognize Israel as a Jewish state, but also that the Palestinian state is demilitarized, Israel maintains a long term security presence along the Jordan river, and Jerusalem remains the undivided capital of Israel. These are all non-starters for the Palestinians and they are all critical Israeli demands. 

But the new resolution language does not contradict Bibi's 2011 speech at all. His statement today opposing a Palestinian state "in any territory" is the only contradiction I see. And given that the Palestinians would never agree to his 2011 conditions, even that contradiction is practically meaningless. 

Which means everything happening is just political theater. The Saudis et. al. need the pretense of progress towards a Palestinian state, Israel needs to look flexible while holding fast to its conditions that are truly critical which the Palestinians would never agree to, Bibi needs to look tough to his coalition and flexible to the US, the US needs to show progress towards a comprehensive Middle East peace by expanding the Abraham Accords, the Palestinians need to insist on conditions that would ultimately lead to Israel's destruction, and the world will continue to blame Israel for everything anyway.

 




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Sunday, November 16, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
Last month, the Middle East Research and Information Project published a long research article on how dependent Jordan is on Israel for energy:

As Israeli fighter jets and Western air-defense systems used Jordanian airspace to intercept Iranian projectiles, Jordan’s military also played a decisive role in shielding Israeli cities—even as government officials warned that Jordan would not become a battleground for adversaries. Over the same tense hours, Israel abruptly curtailed natural gas supplies to Jordan and Egypt when it shut down two major offshore gas fields in the Mediterranean, the Leviathan and the Karish. The move was preemptive: Israel feared Iranian retaliation after it had targeted one of Iran’s largest gas fields in the Gulf.

...Israel’s weaponization of water and electricity in Gaza—as documented in South Africa’s genocide case at the International Court of Justice (ICJ)—has made Jordanians even more wary of their own reliance on Israel for utilities. These fears were born out during the summer’s escalation with Iran. When Israel cut gas supplies in June 2025, the kingdom had to turn to alternative sources for electricity generation at a cost of $1.4 million per day adding strain to NEPCO’s more than $8.74 billion deficit.
Let's do some math. Israel stopped gas extraction for 12 days, costing Jordan $17 million. This is a drop in the bucket compared to Jordan's energy company's $8.74 billion deficit.

In fact, even when Israeli gas is flowing, NEPCO loses some $2 million a day anyway.  So an additional $1.6 million a day for a couple of weeks would hurt for sure, but it is hardly where Jordan's problems lie.

In fact, the gas deal between Israel and Jordan saves Jordan some $500 million every year compared to what it would pay for energy from other sources.

The MERIP report doesn't mention that!

Jordanians routinely protest any deal with Israel. And they they protest shortages of electricity and water, which Israel also provides to Jordan. 

Why don't the rich Gulf countries give below-market price energy to their Arab brethren in Jordan? None of the protesters of Israeli gas seem to ask that. 

You don't see too many stories about how bad off Jordan would be without Israel. 



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Saturday, November 15, 2025

From Ian:

Michal Cotler-Wunsh: 50 years since UN resolution, the world proves anti-Zionism is actually racism
Anti-Zionism, as clearly articulated in the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s (IHRA) Working Definition of Antisemitism after a long democratic process, is denying Israel’s right to exist as a state and denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination. It is discriminating against Israelis and turning the Jew among nations into all that is evil, a pariah responsible for all that is bad in the world.

Fifty years later, and as the past two years since the October 7 Kristallnacht-moment of our times have made abundantly clear, it is anti-Zionism – denying Jewish identity, memory, heritage, peoplehood, and ancestry – that is racism.

It is racism that has again been normalized and legitimized in the name of “liberation,” “justice,” and “progress,” this time by hijacking, redefining, inverting, and weaponizing foundational principles upon which the UN was founded, betraying all it was entrusted to uphold, promote, and protect. It is racism that not only endangers Israel, but all who believe in its right to exist, and the rights of Jews around the world. To paraphrase the late Rabbi Sacks, what begins with the Jews never ends with us.

“There will be time enough to contemplate the harm this act will have done the United Nations.” Fifty years later, Moynihan’s words have become a devastating reality. The institution entrusted to ensure that “Never Again,” by anyone to anyone, seats the most egregious violators of human rights around the Human Rights Council table. It hosts tyrannical regime leaders who invoke the language of rights, even as they torture, execute, and trample the rights of their people. In what has become a modern-day Tower of Babel, it collapses every foundational principle upon which it was constructed.

In a social-media age guided by a polarizing, fragmentizing business model, in which history has little resonance, what happens at the UN and the human rights industry created to support it does not remain there. Academic institutions, no longer pursuing truth in what has been dubbed a post-truth era, have seemingly replaced the mission of teaching how to think with agendas that indoctrinate generations on what to think. Bot-generated hashtags and buzzwords make their way around the world in TikTok videos, in Instagram reels, and in X/Twitter posts, before the (post)truth “straps its boots on.” Fifty years after the UN declared that Zionism is racism, leaders across spaces and places openly declare that they are not antisemitic, only anti–Zionist, generating popular support and little challenge.

Fifty years later, if we are to learn anything from history that repeats in rhyme, it is not enough to teach what happened. It is vital to understand how it happened, and can happen again, with the same mechanism of demonization, delegitimization, and double standards. It is imperative to insist that the law be applied equally and consistently by the institutions mandated to protect foundational principles. For “Never Again” to mean anything, it is vital to not only remember the past but also recognize present iterations of evil to prevent future recurrence of atrocities.

We must remember, reclaim, and renew the Jewish story, universal principles of human rights, and the commitment to uphold and protect foundational principles. In a raging war of barbarism openly declaring the intent to destroy our shared civilization, it is also a vital step toward protecting humanity and freedom.


The Palestinian Fantasy State
The idea of a Palestinian state exists only in the European imagination; even the Arabs do not truly believe in it.

While Israel recognized the national identity of the Palestinians, they have never recognized the Jews as a people entitled to national self-determination.

Before Israel captured Judea, Samaria and eastern Jerusalem in 1967, those territories were controlled by Jordan and Egypt. Why, then, was no Palestinian state established at that time?

The answer is that the Palestinians never wanted a state of their own alongside Israel. They only wanted a state instead of Israel.

Had the Jews lost the 1948 War of Independence, the Arabs of the region would have slaughtered them as they did on Oct. 7, and then divided the land among themselves - southern Syria, northern Egypt and western Jordan.
Lyn Julius: The settler-colonial lie, debunked
In fact, Israel is the only decolonization project in the Middle East, an indigenous people that has managed to throw off the yoke of Arab and Ottoman dominance. And yet many people assume that political rights only belong to Arab Muslims.

Indeed, there were high hopes at the end of World War I, with the dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire, that indigenous Christian and other minorities would be given enclaves affording them special protection. The Assyrians and Kurds both expected to have autonomy, if not a homeland of their own. But only the Balfour Declaration of 1917, with its commitment for a home for the Jews, was endorsed at the 1920 San Remo conference and written into the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne.

For Khalidi, the settler colonial lie is “not just hypocrisy; it’s historical amnesia. If we truly want justice, we have to stop gaslighting our neighbors and start acknowledging that their story is Middle Eastern, too. Our liberation won’t come from denying theirs.”

Why is it that so few Arab voices of moderation are out there, while Western far-leftists, in alliance with Islamists, almost all espouse extremist positions or traffic lies about Israel or Jews?

The smear that Israel is a white colonial-settler state relies on two false premises: It severs Jews from their Middle Eastern ethno-religious roots and denies that Jews are a people distinct from the Diaspora, in which they spent 2,000 years. Israelophobes brand Judaism a matter of faith, like Christianity or Islam. They refuse to believe that Jews are distinct genetically, culturally, linguistically and historically from the many populations they lived among.

In order to depict Zionism as a European imposter, the anti-Zionists date the rise of modern Zionism to 1882 and the arrival of the Russian Jews of the first aliyah. In truth, Jews never left. Through the centuries, they returned, albeit in small numbers, to Eretz Israel.

To keep the memory of the 850,000 Jews forced to leave Arab countries and Iran in the 20th century alive, organizations such as JIMENA (Jews Indigenous to the Middle East and North Africa) and HARIF (the Association of Jews from the MENA), along with synagogues and community groups around the world, will observe “Mizrachi Heritage Month” throughout November.

The Israeli Knesset designated an official “Mizrachi Heritage Day” in the calendar on Nov. 30, the day after the U.N. Partition Plan for Palestine was passed in 1947, which triggered riots across Arab countries.

History matters. We must not let the truth be drowned out by crude and dishonest sloganeering. We must keep repeating the facts. And any help from Arab members of society is welcome.

Friday, November 14, 2025

From Ian:

The year Jews stopped believing in a safe West
The risk is no longer theoretical: in late 2024, France’s domestic spy agency warned that Hamas and Hezbollah “sleeper” operatives might seek to strike Jews in Europe to send a message.

The safe West, it turns out, is seen by jihadists. This situation is viewed as just another front in their war, possibly an easier one, because Jews in Paris or Manchester are generally less guarded than those in Jerusalem or Sderot.

This reality has prompted a grim recalibration among Diaspora Jews. Synagogues across Western capitals are fortifying like embassies. Jewish schools conduct active-shooter drills and hire armed guards.

In places like Malmö, Sweden, or Toulouse, France, where Jewish populations have shrunk after repeated attacks, the few remaining families must decide if they, too, will leave.

As one Jewish security expert in London remarked, “We’ve had to accept that what happens in Israel doesn’t stay in Israel. If Hamas had the opportunity, they would carry out similar attacks here as they did on October 7 [in Israel].”

In 2025, Europe’s Jews know that no amount of Western liberal values or policing can entirely shield them from the reach of those who wish them harm.

There is no doubt that the mindset of the Diaspora is changing.

As one Israeli columnist wrote to anxious Jews abroad: “Our grandparents in Europe asked, ‘Will it really get worse?’ and lived to regret the answer. Today, we must ask, ‘What if it gets worse?’ and live accordingly.”

For a growing number of Jews in the West, 2025 was the year that the question could no longer be avoided.

The answers they arrive at will shape the future of Jewish life on both sides of the ocean. Once again, the packed suitcases, whether literal or metaphorical, play a part in shaping that future.
Baroness Ruth Deech: Universities must rein in scourge of hate they left unchecked for so long
The cloak of so-called ‘anti-Zionism’ has led them towards the oldest hatred. So blinded by their detestation of the State of Israel, it is now perfectly unremarkable for students to demand ‘resistance’ – naturally appearing alongside Hamas-associated imagery – as well as the genocidal call for the destruction of Israel. The Prime Minister was absolutely right to recently declare “From the River” as antisemitic but it has had zero impact on the actions of university leaders.

And so, left unchecked by British authorities (from the Government and police through to universities and wider society), the anti-Zionists have radicalised. The disgusting - and utterly unchallenged - utilisation of an ancient Jewish blood libel by Dr Maqusi at UCL this week shows that a new line has been crossed. The speaker's reported decision to matter-of-factly cite the 1840 Damascus Affair and the long-repudiated lie that Jews used the blood of non-Jews for religious rituals is grotesque.

Patently baseless centuries-old anti-Jewish hatred is now being revived and repurposed to brainwash the next generation of leaders. Anyone acquainted with Jewish history will know full well that blood libels such as this have been the source of hundreds of years of violence, persecution, and massacres against Jewish communities across the world. The university authorities are complicit in this terrible danger.

StandWithUs UK has documented dozens of harrowing testimonies from students at universities all around the country. They have empowered Jewish students to proactively stand up against this onslaught and they have movingly retold their stories to parliamentarians and the international media. These are the true anti-racist heroes who deserve our full admiration and support.

The problem is clear and many of the tools to tackle it already exist but much like the obstinate leaders at the BBC, it requires university officials to take note of what is being taught on their campuses, accept responsibility and their own failings, and root out this poisonous ideology.

UCL’s immediate and unequivocal response to this shocking incident is welcome and offers a blueprint which I hope other universities will follow. If they continue to fall short, however, the Office for Students must forcefully act, and university leaders should be summoned to Parliament to account for the shameful discriminatory and menacing environment for Jews that they have allowed to take root.
Soros Bankrolling Anti-Israel Drop Site News
The left-wing philanthropy funded by George Soros, Open Society Foundations, gave $250,000 to establish a Middle East desk at Drop Site News, an anti-Israel news startup that touts itself as a "reader-supported" purveyor of "completely independent" journalism.

Open Society Foundations said the grant, awarded last year, would help "bridge a crucial information gap in independent journalism" in the Middle East, according to its spending database.

Drop Site, founded by veteran left-wing journalists Ryan Grim and Jeremy Scahill in July 2024, has filled that purported gap with a steady stream of anti-Israel coverage of the Israel-Hamas war. Its first major story was a series of interviews that Scahill conducted with Hamas leaders aimed at providing the "public deeper insight into [Hamas's] decision to launch the October 7 attacks in Israel."

"The past nine months of Israel’s genocidal war in Gaza have spurred an unprecedented global awakening to the plight of the Palestinian people," reads the opening line of Scahill's story.

Drop Site has not disclosed funding from the Open Society Foundations, of which Soros’s son Alex took control in 2022. In its fundraising pitches, Drop Site requests donations through Social Security Works Education Fund, an obscure nonprofit that aims to "educate the general public, media, and policy-makers about the benefits of protecting social security benefits." The organization serves as the "fiscal sponsor" for Drop Site, allowing donors to make tax-deductible contributions to the outlet, which does not have tax-exempt status from the IRS.

The Open Society Foundations funneled its contribution to Drop Site through the Social Security Works Education Fund, earmarked "to support establishing a Drop Site News MENA desk to to [sic] bridge a critical information gap in independent journalism."

Drop Site has provided little coverage of Social Security, or any other domestic entitlement programs. Instead, its bread-and-butter has been coverage of the Israel-Hamas war, from a decidedly anti-Israel viewpoint.
From Ian:

Seth Mandel: The Future of the U.S.-Israel Defense Alliance
How soon? Well, Bibi said, he was scheduled to have a meeting that very day about planning for the next five years of Israel’s future and beyond.

Five is less than 10, which is less than 20. Again, Netanyahu is conscious of how all this talk might play with the pro-retrenchment crowd.

Where is all this going? As I wrote last year, the Biden presidency marked a turning point for Israel. Biden himself mostly held the line on military aid, but it was clear that he was the last Democratic president willing to take that level of heat from his own party for defending our alliance with Israel.

The real shock was that the more vulnerable Israel seemed to be, the more intense were the calls to cut off the Jewish state from anything it might need to defend itself now or in the future. In the past, U.S. presidents took the position that Israel cannot be allowed to be put in mortal danger by the two countries’ shared enemies. That would be morally repugnant but also strategically reckless. But now, a loud-enough progressive chorus—a minority in the Democratic Party, but an influential one and a growing one—comes right out and declares Israel’s destruction to be a worthy goal.

This changes the calculus. If, in the future, there is going to be an American administration that won’t let Israel break the glass even in case of emergency, then Israel must be prepared for such a moment well in advance. And a domestic weapons production line does not appear overnight. Israel’s survival has long been ensured by a defense establishment constantly peering over the next horizon, and this appears to be no exception.
Jonathan Tobin: Begin reducing US aid to Israel, not extending it
The ideal ‘America First’ ally
That ought to make it, as Vice President JD Vance pointed out in a 2024 speech, the ideal “America First” ally since it doesn’t want Americans to fight for them and also can contribute to U.S. security interests in a variety of ways. A strong Israel that isn’t so dependent on the United States could enable the Americans to pivot to using more of its resources to deal with the pre-eminent 21st-century threat to their security: China.

There is no scenario in which Israel could be completely cut off from the United States. It’s just too small a country, and for all of the benefits of its First World “Start-Up Nation” economy, it isn’t rich enough to be on its own.

Nor would it be in its interests to do so since having a superpower friend—and there is no possible desirable alternative to the U.S. alliance—is essential to maintaining its security in a world where so many nations and people want to kill Jews and destroy their state. Yet reducing that dependence to the extent that it is possible is vital for maintaining that alliance in the long run.

Netanyahu knows this as well as anyone.

In 1996, during his first term as prime minister, he told a joint session of the U.S. Congress that he wanted to reduce American aid and eliminate the economic element—as opposed to the military portion—of the assistance. To his credit, he was able to do just that.

His next challenge is to reduce the U.S. aid package, rather than to enlarge and extend it.

That goes against every instinct of the Israeli military establishment, which is dependent on all those American arms and ammunition. It’s equally true that the Americans, even the Obama staffers who negotiated the last long-term aid deal, like to keep the Israelis on a short leash. Going back to the first Bush administration in the 1980s, the Americans have been less than enthusiastic about the Israelis manufacturing arms that could also be made in the United States.

If Israel is to remain secure and maintain a healthy relationship with the United States, then this must change in the long term. The United States needs a partner in the Middle East, not a vassal or a protectorate. The more independent the Jewish state can be, the more solid its alliance with America will become.
Danny Danon: Israel's envoy to UN Danny Danon: Israel's alliance with US protects both nations
The US-Israel alliance delivers tangible, measurable benefits to American security. Israeli intelligence has repeatedly provided early warnings that have saved American lives.

One pertinent example was former Hezbollah commander Ibrahim Aqil. He had a $7 million bounty on his head by the US government for playing a key role in the bombings of the US embassy in Beirut in April 1983, which killed 63 people, as well as the attack on the US Marine barracks in October 1983, which killed 241 American personnel.

Last year, Israeli forces eliminated Aqil, who had American blood on his hands, because he was a threat not just to Israel and the United States but to Western civilization.

This is what partnership looks like: a democratic ally doing what must be done when others cannot or will not. It is in America’s direct interest that groups like Hezbollah, Hamas, and Islamic Jihad face the kind of consequences that only Israel has the resolve to deliver.

When fringe parts of the American political spectrum – left or right – begin to waver on that basic truth, adversaries notice. The Islamic Republic of Iran notices. Hezbollah notices. So do the forces of extremism and authoritarianism that watch for any sign of Western fragmentation.

When some conservatives dismiss Israel as a burden, or when some progressives tolerate antisemitic rhetoric in their ranks, they are not simply debating policy. They are weakening America’s deterrent posture and emboldening its enemies.

The problem is not just political but cultural. On the Right, some have confused moral clarity with moral indifference, treating alliances as outdated relics rather than as instruments of power. On the Left, outrage has replaced empathy, and solidarity has been warped into tribalism. In both cases, the result is the same: a retreat from responsibility. When America retreats, chaos fills the void.

If this downward spiral is to be reversed, leaders in both parties must act with moral courage and follow in the example of true friends like President Trump. We are eternally grateful for his strong leadership in recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, brokering the historic Abraham Accords, and pushing through a hostage release agreement that has seen all our surviving hostages return home.

Other Republicans should also make clear that antisemitism, whether dressed up as nationalism or nihilism, has no home in their movement. Democrats must confront the radicals in their midst who conflate criticism of Israeli policy with the delegitimization of Israel itself. Neither side can afford to repeat the other’s mistakes. Silence is complicity, and equivocation is surrender.

The United States and Israel share more than intelligence. They share values that are intrinsic to each society: democracy, resilience, and a belief that freedom is worth defending. These principles are under attack from forces that despise both nations equally. To abandon Israel now, or to allow antisemitism to metastasize in American politics, would be to forget the lessons of history at a perilous time.

The stakes are clear. If America truly intends to put itself first, it must remember that strength begins with solidarity. Standing with Israel is not selfless charity. It is strategy. It is the recognition that the enemies of the Jewish state are also enemies of the United States. And it is a reminder that sustained peace is built not on retreat but on the shared strength and resolve of allies who stand together.
  • Friday, November 14, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon

Something deeply unnerving is happening beneath the surface of recent antisemitic incidents. 

It is not merely the rise in raw expressions of Jew-hatred, nor the shamelessness with which people now voice medieval libels and slurs. What is emerging is a new mechanism of backlash that turns the exposure of antisemitism itself into an accelerant of antisemitism. It is a kind of psychological judo: an ugly act is caught on camera, public anger erupts, and the perpetrator is recast as the supposed victim of Jewish overreaction. The more blatant the antisemitism, the easier it becomes to claim persecution, and the faster the narrative turns on its head.

The model case arrived this week in Mississippi. A former university student, Patrick McClintock, approached Dave Portnoy during a pizza review and hurled antisemitic slurs while tossing coins at him, playing off the "cheap Jew" trope.  It was not borderline hate nor was it a coded message.  It was classic, unmistakable Jew-hatred.

Yet within twenty-four hours, McClintock had become a minor folk hero in certain corners of the Internet. A crowdfunding campaign quickly raised tens of thousands of dollars in his name, promoted through a narrative so inverted that it reads like satire: Jews, we are told, had “overreacted,” had “summoned the authorities,” had tried to “destroy his life for free speech.” None of this was true. Portnoy explicitly declined to press charges and publicly said he did not want the student punished. But the truth was irrelevant once a story could be built around Jewish oversensitivity and supposed “tyranny.” 

The lie served a psychological purpose. It recast the aggressor as a victim and the victim as an oppressor. It provided donors with a cause – not the defense of free speech, but the pleasure of striking back at Jews who were depicted as policing public life. 

This pattern is not accidental. Over the past few years, research on media and prejudice has shown that neutral or lightly framed news coverage of antisemitic incidents often has a counter-intuitive effect. Instead of generating sympathy for Jews or revulsion toward bigotry, it can produce a backlash among readers who perceive the outrage as excessive. When a story includes the incident and then notes “angry reactions,” or hints at controversy, people inclined to view Jews as powerful or hypersensitive interpret the anger as proof of the stereotype. Their defensiveness sharpens, not softens. Their prejudices deepen, not weaken. The original act matters less than the narrative that forms around the reaction.

In this case, the police reacted quickly and arrested McClintock for disturbing the peace. The fundraisers claim that he was being persecuted for freedom of speech by the entitled, rich Jews. 

What the Portnoy–McClintock affair demonstrates is that bad actors no longer have to wait for journalists to provide that framing. They can create it themselves. A viral clip, a fabricated claim that Jews demanded punishment, a call for donations framed as a stand against censorship, and within hours the incident has been rewritten. The backlash becomes more potent than the original hatred, because it is wrapped in a story about principle and resistance rather than open bigotry.

This is not limited to one side of the political spectrum. On the progressive Left, blatant antisemitism like an open blood libel is still difficult to defend in public. When a guest lecturer at University College London, Dr. Samar Maqusi, revived the nineteenth century Damascus blood libel and presented it to students as plausible history, the response from the institution was swift. UCL ended her affiliation and referred the case to the authorities. Most progressives are not prepared to go on record defending medieval fantasies about Jews murdering Christians for ritual purposes.

But if we look back to October 7, 2023 and its aftermath, we can see that the underlying playbook on parts of the Left is remarkably similar to what we are now watching around McClintock. After the Hamas massacres, a significant segment of progressive activists and commentators insisted that the most documented atrocities did not really happen. They claimed there were no rapes, no deliberate murders of civilians, that the attack was a legitimate act of “resistance,” and that Israel’s subsequent response was an outrageous overreaction. When Jews described this as antisemitic – not because criticism of Israel is forbidden, but because denying or justifying the murder and abuse of Jews has a very old pedigree – many of the same voices responded by saying that antisemitism was being “weaponized” to silence debate.

The argument around the IHRA working definition of antisemitism is another version of this dynamic. The text explicitly states that it is a non-legally binding educational tool, not a law and not intended to criminalize or shut down legitimate political speech. Yet for years, critics have claimed that IHRA is designed to outlaw all criticism of Israel and to censor pro-Palestinian activism. The actual words of the definition, which draw a clear line between normal criticism and antisemitic double standards, are quietly pushed aside. What matters is the narrative that Jews are redefining antisemitism in order to avoid scrutiny and to suppress dissenting views.

Once that frame is in place, the structure is identical for both the Left and the Right. First, minimize or relativize the underlying act: insist that the crime was exaggerated, that the facts are unclear, that what happened on October 7 was just another episode in an ongoing conflict, that a blood libel is just a “controversial interpretation of history,” that shouting slurs at a Jew in public is “one dumb mistake” unworthy of consequences. Second, accuse Jews of overreacting and of trying to relabel a political dispute as bigotry. Third, describe institutional or social pushback as censorship and persecution. At that point, the target audience is no longer thinking about what was done to Jews; they are thinking about what Jews supposedly do to others.

The result is a backlash that is especially powerful for a certain minority of people. These are not the committed neo-Nazis or the most extreme ideologues. They are the ones who already half-believe that Jews are influential and oversensitive, but who also think of themselves as fair-minded. When they are bombarded with stories that combine an antisemitic incident, visible Jewish anger, and a narrative of “weaponized antisemitism,” it confirms their suspicions. They come away less inclined to take future antisemitism seriously, more likely to resent Jews for “crying wolf,” and more open to the very stereotypes that these stories were supposedly exposing.

This is a vector for antisemitism that our society has no real defense against. Traditional methods – public shaming, strong institutional statements, educational campaigns – all feed the mechanism rather than weaken it. Silence is harmful; speaking out is twisted into evidence of Jewish overreach. Institutions that respond appropriately are accused of capitulating to “Jewish pressure.” The more antisemitism rises, the stronger the backlash narrative becomes, because every genuine case becomes raw material for the story that Jews are exaggerating.

That's why we see October 7 denial, why people claim Israeli prisoners of Hamas were treated well and even thanked them, why shouting out in public "Fuck the Jews!" is recategorized as a freedom of speech issue. When the crime is minimized, the reactions can be spun as excessive. 

If this logic continues to spread, it will become one of the most effective amplifiers of antisemitism in the digital age: a system in which every act of hatred carries within it the blueprint for its own justification, and in which condemnation becomes the gasoline rather than the extinguisher.

Unless we acknowledge this mechanism and find ways to disrupt it, we will continue to lose ground not because antisemitism is growing more sophisticated, but because it is learning to use our own moral intuitions against us.





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

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

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