Monday, July 29, 2024

Guest post by Andrew Pessin

Anti-Israelism and the Ph.D.

1.

One doesn’t often get such delightful emails as this:

Do not contact me again you deranged, perverted, genocidal freak. Please save your poorly composed genocide denialism delusional fascist essay for your substack audience of 5 like-minded brain rotted sociopaths. Please know this pathetic email does not intimidate me, you and your creepy zionist alumni friends do not intimidate me, all of Israel, and all of their weapons, and their international impunity, and their corrupt imperial power do not intimidate me. I pity you. Your life must truly be so miserable and meaningless for you, at your big retired age, to be wasting your final days harassing young women you do not know and who do not wish to know or engage with you. How embarrassing!

Though it wasn’t actually me who received this, it might as well have been. I wrote an article refuting the current libel that Israel is perpetrating a “genocide” in Gaza, and a reader of that article forwarded it to the author of that email and was treated to this response. Not wanting to hog it to himself, he kindly shared it with me.

One might be tempted to chuckle were it not all so tragic and, ultimately, perhaps even deadly.

The author of this email is a graduate student at an elite university. I shall call her “H” (for Hamas and Hezbollah, whose side she takes in the current conflict) and call the university “Ivy.” In H’s response we see everything wrong not only with the general anti-Israel hatred present on so many campuses, including (or especially) elite campuses, but everything wrong with the academy in general over the past number of years.

2.

Of all the many lies regularly told about Israel, the “genocide” allegation is currently the most important. If Israel is committing “genocide” in Gaza then (a) Israel is evil and (b) all measures must be taken to stop it. Never mind its justification for being at war with Hamas, or the fact that Hamas is actually fighting back, or the prospects for some form of long-term peace: if it’s not just a bilateral war (with the tragic, if inevitable, civilian casualties) but a unilateral “genocide,” then Israel must unilaterally stop its military activity.

Nor should one imagine that labeling this activity as “genocide” is a measure of perfectly admirable concern for Gaza’s suffering civilian population. That suffering would, after all, be more quickly and permanently alleviated by the surrender of Hamas and return of hostages, which would end the war instantly and allow Gaza to be rebuilt for actual peace and prosperity. The “genocide” label in fact aims to delegitimize Israel’s war effort, to stop Israel with Hamas still in power and still holding the hostages, and thus to advance Hamas’s actually genocidal agenda toward the Jews. The allegation of “genocide” is in fact a weapon in the longstanding war against Israel.

Assuming, that is, that it is false.

Of course it is false. In fact it is demonstrably false. It is not even remotely true. Gaza may be experiencing significant destruction and Gazan civilians great suffering, but, regrettably but true, that is an ordinary (if tragic) consequence of war. Though you might not know it from the hyper-focus on Israel, there are well over 100 military conflicts occurring in the world right now, and there isn’t one of them that doesn’t involve significant destruction and civilian suffering and casualties. Many involve destruction and civilian casualties far exceeding those in the current Israel-Hamas war and even in the wider Israeli-Palestinian-Jewish-Arab-Muslim conflict. Unless all wars are “genocides,” Israel’s war on Hamas is not remotely a “genocide,” even if it’s nearly the only one on that long list of conflicts that ever gets libeled by that label. My lengthy and detailed article defending this conclusion examines the reported casualty numbers and offers extensive evidence and many arguments to demonstrate that, to the contrary, Israel in its war against Hamas is taking literally unprecedented measures to target only militants and to spare civilian lives, and largely succeeding in doing so. To the contrary, too, the side actually seeking, and partially perpetrating, genocide is Hamas: the evidence for that is incontrovertible, starting with its never renounced foundational charter, including its four decades of terrorist activity and open declarations of genocidal intent, and of course its October 7 massacre and subsequent declarations. In light of all this evidence and these arguments, the “genocide” allegation can be seen for what it is: a weaponized blood libel that aims to delegitimize Israel and thus support Hamas’s genocidal war effort.

3.

But I’m fallible. The evidence I invoke could be problematic. (The problem of obtaining accurate information in this war is particularly acute.) My reasoning could be fallacious. I admit that I could be mistaken in sundry ways. God knows I’ve been mistaken often enough, as everyone from my Ph.D. advisor to my wife seems to enjoy pointing out. But I’m an academic. So critique me. Challenge my evidence. Offer alternative sources of evidence. Show me where my reasoning goes wrong. That is how an academic—or anyone committed to the pursuit of truth—behaves. Do not read the extensive evidence and argument on offer and merely shout in response, “But, genocide!” Worse, do not not read the extensive evidence and argument and just shout, “But, genocide!” That is not how an academic behaves.

Especially not an academic affiliated with an elite institution—among the most elite academic institutions in the world, in fact, dedicated, as every elite institution mentions in their mission statements and public declarations, to the acquisition and dissemination of knowledge (and therefore truth). For one is surely not pursuing knowledge or truth if one refuses to read, or simply dismisses, views different from one’s own that are accompanied by evidence and argument. To behave that way is to decide in advance what is true independently of the evidence and arguments that are supposed to lead one to truth. To behave that way is essentially to make things up, presumably to further one’s political agenda. And that is just not how an academic supposedly in the business of truth should behave.  

In more detail now: I shared my long article against the “genocide” allegation on my substack. A reader shared it on his own substack, noting (he emailed me) that “I typically forward my posts to, among others, those at [Ivy] I think might be, or should be, interested in hearing something other than the standard Hamas/Palestinian talking points.” And so he did, sending it to, among some seven dozen others, H. He sent it to H because he thought she was the president of a significant graduate student group at Ivy that is actively, and publicly, involved in anti-Israel activity there. He thought she was still president because several recent student newspaper articles identified her as such, and at least until this past week she lists herself as “president” on her LinkedIn page. (It turns out that, as of recently, she is no longer president, which my reader subsequently acknowledged. No matter.) To get a sense of her public platform, a search of her name on the Ivy student newspaper site returns 31 hits, many concerning her work with the group she until recently led. Many of these articles publicly provide her email address, perhaps as a contact for the public group she led. As for the group itself, it publicly declares that its members include “researchers,” “teachers,” and “mentors” at [Ivy] (i.e. academics), that it rejects all forms of discrimination, and that it nurtures both the personal and the professional lives of its members. Whether the group fulfills these virtuous claims toward many of its Jewish members is not clear, given that it has consistently been outspoken against Israel, dating back some years but especially so in supporting “resistance” (i.e. terror) since October 7, including through its prominent “Palestinian Solidarity Caucus.” So this is why H was included on the list of some seven dozen to receive my reader’s email: she was (until recently) the oft-publicly-quoted president of this very public anti-Israel group, somehow finding copious time for her anti-Israel advocacy while pursuing her PhD at Ivy in the humanities.

My reader was, arguably, doing the thing academics should do. This graduate student group publicly advocates for Hamas’s victory, in libeling Israel as perpetrating “genocide.” Since H is an Ivy academic, working toward a PhD, shouldn’t she at least grapple with an academic article contesting one of the fundamental claims repeatedly made by the group she so publicly represents?

One thing we can perhaps all agree on, given her response above, is that she didn’t like the article.

As to how or why her response is so objectionable, let us count the ways.

4.

Do not contact me again you deranged, perverted, genocidal freak. Please save your poorly composed genocide denialism delusional fascist essay for your substack audience of 5 like-minded brain rotted sociopaths.

On the plus side, that H calls it “poorly composed” suggests she may have read it, or some, though one suspects, given the content, that she hasn’t, and, given the tone, that she’s just flinging insults. But all considered this message comes across as being from a person who has decided that the current war is a “genocide” and isn’t interested in actually examining or engaging with the evidence and arguments. Instead she offers some childish textbook ad hominem fallacy, calling the competing point of view, and the person endorsing it, “deranged,” “perverted,” “delusional,” and “fascist.” These are also the first clues that she is not in fact operating with the same English language that I am, at least. There is literally nothing in my anti-“genocide” article that conceivably has anything to do with fascism, for example, so she seems to be simply slapping that word on any point of view she doesn’t like. Ditto for “delusional,” which is an odd response to a 4000-word, detailed, heavily documented, and quite sober engagement with facts and evidence, all of which, though fallible, is about as far from “delusional” as one could be. If my theory doesn’t fit the facts, as they say, so much the worse for the facts: dismiss them as “delusional” and you don’t have to deal with them. Orwell would be proud here: the view that doesn’t engage with the facts is the truth, in her mind, while the actual facts are discredited as delusions.

Given this abuse of language, her use of “genocide” becomes equally suspect.

Indeed, notice how she tosses in, quite strategically, that word “genocidal” and the phrase “genocide denialism.” Apparently someone who denies that a “genocide” is occurring in some particular instance is ipso facto in favor of, or complicit in, that (non-existing) genocide. That leap of logic is hard to bridge: denying something is an instance of genocide literally has nothing to do with whether one is in favor of or in any way complicit in anything. I am myself quite opposed to all forms of genocide and my writing that article literally perpetrated nothing, except an article. It’s even quite logically possible to deny a “genocide” is occurring and still be quite opposed to the way the Israeli military is conducting its Gaza campaign, as a more honest anti-Israelist might hold. Her move only makes sense when we realize she isn’t using “genocide” to mean genocide here. It may just mean, in her mind, any military activity she doesn’t like, or specifically any Israeli military activity, period, regardless of whether that activity is, well, actually “genocidal.” She quite obviously doesn’t like any Israeli military activity, including, given her public history, even that in the form of self-defense or that which clearly targets militants while attempting to minimize civilian casualties. So she calls all Israeli military activity “genocide” no matter how it is exercised, and any article that seemingly defends any Israeli military activity—including by denying the genocide libel levied against it—is therefore in support of “genocide.” Now that makes sense, apart from the fact that she’s making up her own meaning for the word “genocide.” As with her use of “fascist” and “delusional,” “genocide” becomes a label she slaps on everything Israel she doesn’t like. Orwell would again be proud, though perhaps her elementary school English teachers, and the Webster dictionary, might be a little disappointed.

Beyond the childish insults and the flagrant abuse of language, also note the neat rhetorical trick here. She libels Israel with “genocide,” then labels anyone who questions her libel as a “genocidal genocide denialist.” This move supplements her textbook ad hominem fallacy with some textbook “poisoning the well” fallacy (with perhaps some textbook “begging the question” fallacy and simple gaslighting thrown in for good measure). To see the problem, imagine I falsely alleged that your friend was a pedophile, and the moment you began to refute the allegation I responded by calling you a “pedophilic pedophile-denier.” That would be an obvious attempt to discredit you in advance, before you can even offer the evidence or arguments to refute the libel, thus making the libel impossible to challenge. Your demonstrating that the allegation is false is transformed into actively supporting the evil activity falsely being alleged! It’s like falsely charging someone with a crime then charging anyone who offers evidence to refute the charge with the same crime. It’s called a fallacy because that strategy obviously doesn’t mean the original allegation is true; it amounts to refusing even to consider the relevant evidence to determine whether the allegation is true, thus shows a profound disinterest in truth. But “fallacy” is too technical, and polite, a term: it’s deeply dishonest and, frankly, sleazy. It’s political advocacy, bullying, dressed up as rational discourse. It’s Soviet-style totalitarian propaganda and manipulation, worthy of a Stalinesque show trial.

It’s not what someone who cares about truth would do. Yet the person doing this is en route to a PhD at an elite institution. One would be tempted to share this behavior with her PhD committee, as evidence of her unsuitedness to the degree, did one not suspect or fear that many on her committee would behave the same way as she.

Note next the nice little dig at her antagonist’s allegedly small following, of “5 like-minded brain rotted sociopaths.” Points for the amusing insults, though once again one suspects that “sociopath,” like “fascist” etc., is simply a slur here that she flings against any position or person she does not like. My guess is that she believes all Zionists are ipso facto sociopaths, which means that for her, those who believe that Jews have basic human rights, including the right to live in security in their ancestral homeland, are evil mentally defectives. I believe, to the contrary, that this reveals far more about her deep-rooted bigotry against Jews than it does anything about Zionists or Jews.

But I digress. The main point about this dig is that it is fallacious as well. Since when, in the pursuit of truth, does the number of followers matter? Truth isn’t a democracy. Sometimes the minority, sometimes even the single brave individual standing against the mob, has the truth on their side. The Nazis had massive popular support in Germany of their time; does that mean they were right in their worldview? In academia, in fact, one is often encouraged to find one’s own point of view, one’s own original angle or theory, that differs from others’. What have you contributed, what use are you as an academic, after all, if you are merely going to parrot whatever the majority already thinks? On this perspective it may well be a plus that you have few followers, or even better that you stand alone, particularly in the humanities. Or perhaps not—because the only thing that matters, when it comes to determining the truth, is what the evidence and arguments have to say, not the numbers of people who agree.

All she is really doing here, with her juvenile insults, is trying to bully my reader into silence by somehow embarrassing or shaming him. As a PhD in progress her preference for fallacies, disinterest in evidence and arguments, and now bullying behavior, are all truly quite alarming.

5.

Please know this pathetic email does not intimidate me, you and your creepy zionist alumni friends do not intimidate me, all of Israel, and all of their weapons, and their international impunity, and their corrupt imperial power do not intimidate me.

So, then, to present this person with evidence and arguments that challenge her preconceived opinion is apparently perceived by her as an attempt to “intimidate” her. People sometimes complain about the current generation of “snowflake” students; one wonders if this is what they mean. Indeed, the truth can be intimidating: it doesn’t care what you think or feel about it, and you ignore it or deny it at your peril. Eventually, we have to hope, it will get you to comply. But at minimum an academic who is interested in truth would want to comply. And a truth-seeker would want to hear alternative points of view and opposing arguments. On what grounds do you believe whatever you believe to be true, after all, if not evidence and arguments? And if you want the truth, to avoid being mistaken, don’t you want to hear all the evidence and arguments? How would you ever determine that you are wrong about something unless you seriously consider the evidence and arguments that support the other side?

H’s reply reveals that she is playing a very different game here. To bring evidence and arguments is, for her, not a commendable attempt to persuade by rational truth-seeking means but a condemnable attempt to “intimidate.” See, too, the immediate link she makes between the emailed attempt to persuade her and “all of Israel, and all of their weapons”: the attempt to persuade is equated with the force of a military and its weapons. This person apparently sees no difference between offering evidence and arguments for a position and coming in with guns blazing. There are indeed academic theories, fairly popular across various disciplines, that hold more or less that view, that persuasion should be construed as a form of intimidation. But now where persuasion is discredited as “intimidation” one’s opinion becomes divorced from truth. Opinion is no longer based on evidence and arguments, whose whole point is to “persuade.” Opinion becomes untouchable, insensitive to evidence and arguments, to be preserved no matter what the evidence and arguments, the truth, might be. Someone who holds this is simply not concerned with the truth, since the truth, to the degree that we can determine it, is closely connected to evidence and arguments.

The opinion matters—having the right opinion as determined by some scale or persons or political agenda having nothing to do with the truth—but not the truth.

This is apparently what they are teaching in this PhD program at Ivy.

This person will soon be a professor in a classroom near you.

6.

I pity you. Your life must truly be so miserable and meaningless for you, at your big retired age, to be wasting your final days harassing young women you do not know and who do not wish to know or engage with you. How embarrassing!

In case the fallacies above, the disinterest in truth, and the “persuasion is intimidation” (and now “harassment”) worldview weren’t enough to have you concerned about higher education today, she closes with a finale smorgasbord of bigotry and more fallacies.

Yes my reader is an alum of that same Ivy from some decades back. But why is she invoking his age? In what universe does that matter? He sent this budding academic an academic article challenging something she publicly alleges, using the email address she publicly posts when making her allegations. What matters is only whether what he (or the article) is saying, or arguing, whether it is true or correct or persuasive, not who is saying it or how old they are. The gratuitous meanness (“your big retired age,” “wasting your final days”) reveals what is happening here: she is attempting to dismiss him, discredit him without having to listen to him, as a worthless old fogey.

 

For the record, discrediting people on the basis of their age isn’t merely an additional ad hominem and poisoning the well fallacy: it’s also a form of bigotry. It’s called ageism—and it’s one of the forms of discrimination that her own graduate student group publicly claims it is opposed to. One only hopes she treats her grandparents, and maybe her more senior professors, with at least a little more respect than this. And may she merit that her future grandchildren not treat her the way she treats her seniors.

 

And of course two can play at that game: this young whippersnapper seems awfully sure of herself, for such a young, inexperienced whippersnapper. She is even arrogant enough to offer advice to my reader on how he should spend his golden years! That arrogance, incidentally, violates the standpoint theory quite prevalent in her social circles, according to which it’s considered offensive to speak to the experience of identities different from yours. Imagine a white person instructing a person of color how they should live their lives as a person of color; a man instructing a woman; a heterosexual instructing a gay. That offensive arrogance makes a truly painful combination with her simultaneous youthful ignorance. In her view, his interest in defending the truth—not to mention defending the Jews from the blood libels relentlessly flung against them—is not among her candidates for well-spent golden years time. To the contrary, when hate-filled young whippersnappers spread dangerous lies, I can think of little more meaningful activity than countering it—however old you are.

But don’t listen to me. I’m an older guy too.

“Wasting your final days ….”

This is not a serious person.

This is a young bully, self-absorbed into her echo chamber, slinging mud to shame and to silence.

Because ageism apparently isn’t bigotry enough she throws in some sexism as well, framing his missive as an instance of “harassing young women.” She may be a “young woman,” but why, exactly, is that relevant? As we noted, my reader regularly writes to many people who publicly espouse anti-Israel or antisemitic views, regardless of their age or sex, including many of the publicly anti-Israel professors that fill this graduate student’s Ivy campus and perhaps department. The email in question, he informed me, he bcc’d to some seven dozen people. Her accusation is trying to imply something sinister here, as if she were targeted for that identity, by the older man she has already disparaged for his age. What in fact was a reasonable attempt to engage intellectually, by challenging her publicly expressed position, is experienced as targeting her as a young woman. Again, this is a PhD candidate at an elite institution. Has no one told her that part of getting a PhD, of becoming an intellectual, an academic, a researcher, one who searches for truth—is having your claims, your allegations, your arguments actually challenged? Is every such academic challenge an attack on a “young woman”? Are men not allowed to challenge what women say? Or just older men aren’t allowed?

Or are just Jews not allowed?

Or is no one allowed to challenge her, ever?

Just what, oh what, are they teaching them in her graduate program?

7.

I try to be fair to the people I disagree with. That’s part of my own commitment to the truth: you won’t get at the truth unless you give alternative views the very best hearings you can give them, which includes giving one’s intellectual opponents a fair hearing and the benefit of the doubt. So I try to put myself in their shoes, to the degree possible.

All I know of this person is this email, and what I’ve read in a half-dozen articles by or about her in the Ivy student newspaper. Though I share the human inclination to make large, snap judgments based on partial information, I do my best to resist that here. For all I know she is a wonderful human being in many ways that I would recognize, so I take my remarks above to express judgments about that email alone and not ultimately about the person making them. Plus, I recently published a novel partly about how different we can become from our college-age (or graduate school age) selves, so I recognize: she’s a young whippersnapper, and has plenty of time to grow and change ahead.

I understand she sincerely believes a “genocide” is occurring. Though I am critical of the grounds on which she believes that, I recognize that if I believed that, I too would be deeply emotional, deeply active, and filled with not very nice feelings toward those I believed were perpetrating, complicit in, or just generally supportive of that genocide. That is why my feelings toward Hamas, and toward the many on campuses who either openly or implicitly support Hamas, are not very positive. So I get that.

The closest example I can think of for myself might be that of a Holocaust denier. Suppose someone sent me a long, documented article “demonstrating” that various aspects of the Holocaust never happened: challenging the numbers, denying the gas chambers, etc. Many such articles (and books) in fact exist, and are all too easy to find on the internet, and all too many people fall into that category. I can understand not engaging with such a person, because there is no point; I can understand, even, sending an angry email not dissimilar to the one this young woman sent to my reader (though more likely I would simply not engage at all). Genocide-deniers, indeed. So I even get that email, too.

In not engaging with the Holocaust denier, in even contemplating sending a similarly dismissive email to the Holocaust denier, am I guilty of some or all of the things I have just levied against her?

The cases seem profoundly different to me.

But that is a matter for another article, so I leave it here for now.

 Follow Andrew Pessin on substack (https://andrewpessin.substack.com/), twitter (@AndrewPessin), or at www.andrewpessin.com....

 



Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. 

Read all about it here!

 

 

  • Monday, July 29, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon
New York University's Palestine Solidarity Committee recently rebranded itself as the People’s Solidarity Coalition, keeping its anti-Israel focus but adding an anti-American emphasis as well.

Its "Statement of Intention" embraces "armed struggle," - not only against Israel but against pretty much everyone they don't like, including NYU itself.


Decolonization and abolition are not metaphors. We uphold the right of any oppressed people to resist their oppression, by any means necessary. Any actions we as people within the Imperial Core take to halt the war machine or support liberation efforts in any corner of the world must follow the lead of those on the front lines and be consistent with the goals of their movement. 
The movement for people's liberation is not a monolith; we recognize and welcome the diversity of tactics that lead to victory. Resistance takes many forms, including armed struggle, non-violent direct action, cultural production, and world building. NYU PSC is not an organization of its own but a web of disparate groups taking action against the university. As members of the NYU PSC, we will not condemn the brave actions of our allies nor will we limit ourselves to resistance through organizational means. 

Members of the coalition stand against any normalization efforts, including actions of the university to sanitize or legitimize the Zionist Entity as a state. The NYU Tel Aviv campus is one such normalization effort that we must vehemently reject as students, scholars, and humans of conscious. "Academic opportunity" does not come from campuses occupying stolen land. While we collectively struggle for the end of the Zionist Entity, we must de-normalize its existence, including in NYU programs. ...
Through our values, we name our common enemies: NYU's empire, U.S. imperialism, and the Zionist Entity and its allies.
If NYU is their enemy and armed resistance as well as "any means necessary" is a valid tactic, this is a threat of violence against NYU, its faculty, staff and students.

NYU released a statement that most of the media missed condemning this statement:
NYU condemns the recent posting by the group calling itself ‘People’s Solidarity Coalition,’ which includes a deplorable ‘embrace’ of ‘armed struggle’ as a valid ‘tactic’ in achieving its aims on campus.

This University has zero tolerance for the use of violence, and is shocked that any members of our campus community would endorse ‘armed struggle’ as a ‘tactic.’  We call upon the People’s Solidarity Coalition to immediately retract their statement  and repudiate it, as well as related conduct, such as vandalism, destruction of property, and threats and intimidation.

Just to be crystal clear: NYU will respond to any threat or use of violence swiftly, decisively, and severely.  Any violence will result in the immediate involvement of law enforcement as well as University disciplinary processes up to and including expulsion or dismissal.

So far this year, universities generally were tolerant towards calls to violence on campus as long as the victims were merely Jews. The new school term will be interesting indeed as campuses try to balance free speech with direct threats against the universities themselves. 






Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. 

Read all about it here!

 

 

  • Monday, July 29, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon
France24 mentions a curious fact:
The road to Paris was not a straightforward one for the Palestinian competitors. Only one of the eight Palestinian athletes going to this year’s Games qualified under the official criteria, the other seven having received special invitations from the IOC.
Ouriel Ohayon dug into this on X/Twitter, He found that the only member of the team to actually qualify was Omar Yaser Ismail, in taekwondo.

Ismail was born in the UAE.

Only two of the eight Palestinian Olympic team members were born in or live in the territories; none of those qualified for the team by their own merits. 

Typical is Valerie Tarazi, who looks whiter than most Jews. She was born in Illinois to an Orthodox Christian family whose "family roots" are in Gaza, whatever that means. 
·
She makes no bones about the fact that she is there for propaganda purposes.  She says she's there to “speak up for the people who can’t.” 
 
Which brings up the question, how does one get "invited" to the Olympics?

As far as who is allowed to participate, the International Olympics Committee largely allows the national Olympics committees to decide on who is considered a "citizen" or not, only cracking down on egregious examples of "passport shopping" athletes. Since Palestinian law considers all descendants of Palestinians to be Palestinian, it appears that this part of the program is legitimate.

The real question is why there are seven Palestinian athletes who were "invited" by the IOC. 

In general, the IOC  has the right to invite athletes who wouldn't qualify when they come from small countries with underdeveloped Olympics programs, in order to maximize the number of nations participating. 

But the Palestinian delegation is eight strong, with one athlete who actually qualified. There are 86 countries with fewer athletes than "Palestine" attending the Games. Four countries  (Belize,  Liechtenstein,  Nauru and Somalia) have only one representative. 

Why would the IOC invite such a large number, when 41% of all national Olympics teams have smaller delegations? 

Why should there be eight athletes from "Palestine" with only one of them qualifying, when Tanzania has only seven athletes all of whom qualified? Isn't that an insult to the smaller countries and territories who actually did qualify or who received far fewer invitations? 

The reason appears to be politics. The IOC agrees with Jibril Rajoub, terrorist-supporting head of the Palestinian Olympics committee, who has worked hard for years to politicize Palestinian sport and use it to demonize Israel and expel Israel from international competitions. Indeed, Palestinian boxer Waseem Abu Sal wore a shirt showing children being bombed for the opening ceremony - another violation of Olympics rules that the IOC is overlooking.

Gaza's dominance of the news seems to be the reason the IOC wants to bend over backwards to maximize Palestinian participation in the Games. way beyond what they deserve.  Instead of promoting Olympics ideals, this cheapens the value of every single other athlete from every other country. 




Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. 

Read all about it here!

 

 

On Sunday, Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan appeared to threaten to invade Israel.

As with other anti-Israel statements out of Turkey, the Western news media rarely associates them with antisemitism. The narrative that Muslims aren't antisemitic, and only anti-Zionist, and antisemitism is regarded as anomalous, with Turkey insisting that the Jews were welcome members of the Ottoman Empire.

But a quick survey of Turkish news media, looking for the word "Jews" ("Yahudiler"), finds that Turkey's media is just as antisemitic as any Arab state. Few are discussing this. 

Here are some examples of classic antisemitism in Turkish media from just the past week.

In Dogruhaber, an article by Dr. Abdulkadir Turan who has written many antisemitic articles in recent months starts off by freely admitting and glorifying Turkish antisemitism:
Among us, the most serious insult was to call someone a beraz (pig) or a jew (jew). ....

What does a Jew do? He destroys faith with his insidiousness. If he sells you something, he cheats, gets inside you and makes you fight each other. With these characteristics, all the evils that Muslims face in our classical works are somehow associated with a Jew.
In Ardahan Haber, Dr. Meryem Çıldır spins an insane antisemitic conspiracy theory blaming all Turkish ills on Jews:

According to the evil and know-it-all Zionist Jews, everyone on earth who says “There is no god but God, and Muhammad is the Messenger of God” is a terrorist. The child of a mother and father who recites the Shahada should be killed while still a baby by tons of bombs being dropped on him, or by phosphorus bombs being dropped on him and his bones being reduced to dust,

According to the Zionist Jewish imperialist terrorists, anyone who confirms this should be killed, destroyed, and never given the right to life;  The logic is that they should be tortured, left hungry and thirsty, and even burned to death in agony…

 She goes on to claim that an opposition Muslim movement in Turkey was "founded by Zionists' and then that Israel's territorial aims are not only fromt he Nile to the Euphrates but also parts of Turkey, Libya and Iran. And then she blames Jews for homosexuality in Turkey (but notes that Turkish doctors are coming up with cures.)

A series of articles in Ilke Kocaeli claim Jews, including Chabad,  are trying to take over northern Cyprus. 

When it comes to the demands of the Zionist Jews, it makes no difference whether those who come to power are Democrats or Republicans.

Because the American deep state is in their hands.

All the cosmic rooms of the USA have been taken over by Zionist Jews.

The entire USA has become a toy serving the desires and interests of the Jews. Now let's take a look at Kamala Harris: Her father is Jamaican, her mother is Indian, she is very close to Joe Biden's son, she is famous for preventing pedophilic perverts from being punished while she was the Attorney General of the State of California, she is strongly supported by the son of Hungarian Jew Soros, she is the most ardent defender of the so-called Armenian genocide lies, she practically shouts at every opportunity and everywhere that she serves the Jews with all her heart... 

Again, this is only this week. I didn't see any articles sympathetic to Jews in Turkish media. (The only Muslim majority country I have seen that consistently publishes positive articles about Jews is Morocco.)

The Jewish community in Turkey listed lots of significant  antisemitic events over 2023, including a Nazi banner unfurled in a public park and signs along an anti-Israel march route that said "Death to Jews" and calling to attack Jews in Turkey.


Antisemitism is mainstream in European Turkey, a member of NATO and which aspires to join the EU. 

Shouldn't Western countries be more critical of Turkey's antisemitism than that of Arab Muslim countries? et I have yet to hear (as of this writing) any criticism from NATO about its member state threatening to invade Israel.

If we cannot even have a conversation about Muslim antisemitism, we cannot possibly fight against it.



Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

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Sunday, July 28, 2024

From Ian:

Michael Oren: Hezbollah a ‘strategic threat,’ Hamas a ‘tactical’ one
Some 80,000 Israelis have been displaced from northern Israel since Oct. 7, their towns and villages declared as military no-go zones under constant threat from Hezbollah.

JNS recently caught up with Michael Oren, Israel’s former ambassador to the United States, who took a detailed security tour of the north earlier this month and has spoken extensively with displaced families about how to re-establish an Israeli civilian presence along the Lebanese border. (JNS spoke with the former envoy prior to Hezbollah’s deadly rocket attack on Majdal Shams in the Golan Heights on Saturday, that killed 12 children and wounded over 30 people.)

“The army’s estimate,” Oren told JNS, “was that as many as 40% of the population will not come back even if there is a ceasefire.”

That estimate was anecdotally affirmed when JNS spoke with seven Israelis displaced from the north that Oren brought to Washington in June.

Among the group, only one said she would definitely go back to her home if the threat of Hezbollah was not decisively resolved.

“I would, but I don’t have children and I believe in fate,” said Judith Javor, 77, from Metula.

Javor’s husband George died of a stroke in December. She buried him in the dark, under rocket fire. The frequency of attacks in the north has prevented her from erecting a proper headstone for the grave.

Karmelle Yang, a single mother of three children, said that the Oct. 7 attacks, which included the mass abduction of women and children, made her question how she had previously lived within range of the Lebanese terrorist organization.

“I look back, like, wow, I would just get out of the house, go into the car and go on with my day or go for a walk right by the border,” she said. “What was I doing? I personally cannot go back.”

With Hezbollah guerillas operating just hundreds of feet from abandoned Israeli towns, the open question is what military response Israel could take against the terrorist group that would allow these people to safely return to their homes.

“It would mean basically laying waste to southern Lebanon,” said Oren.

‘The U.S. believes there’s actually a place called Lebanon’
U.S.-Based Entities Can’t Be Allowed to Aid Hamas
Alarmingly, the terrorist connection at People Media Project goes far beyond Aljamal. Indeed, the second defendant in Jan’s lawsuit, Ramzy Baroud, who serves as editor in chief of the Palestine Chronicle, has worked with an organization led by an individual convicted of terrorism-related crimes; this same organization hosted a conference sponsored by Hamas and Muslim Brotherhood–affiliated groups. The third defendant, John Harvey, listed as People Media Project’s secretary and treasurer, organized a campaign to make the Hamas stronghold of Rafah a sister city of Olympia, Wash., according to the Washington Free Beacon.

At least six Palestine Chronicle writers and contributors have been linked to Iranian propaganda outlets, the Free Beacon reports. Iran, the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism, backs Hamas and similar groups globally. At least one Palestine Chronicle writer posted to social media instruction videos about how to most effectively stab Jews with a knife. Earlier this month, the U.S. director of national intelligence revealed that “actors tied to Iran’s government” have co-opted and funded some anti-Israel protests in the U.S.

It is illegal for a U.S. nonprofit to provide support for terrorism. In fact, there is clear precedent under international law and the U.S. tax code for revoking the tax-exempt status of organizations supporting terrorism. According to House Ways and Means Committee chairman Jason Smith (R., Mo.), the Internal Revenue Service has previously revoked tax-exempt status for other organizations after public reporting suggested they provided material support to a terrorist organization. On July 10, Smith and two other House committee chairmen, James Comer (R., Ky.) and Virginia Foxx (R., N.C.), sent a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland calling for a criminal investigation of the Palestine Chronicle.

The United States has long recognized Hamas as a terrorist organization. The group’s track record of violent attacks against civilians and its explicit goal of annihilating Israel and targeting Jews worldwide leave no room for doubt. Since its founding, Hamas has committed “countless acts of violence against both military and civilian targets,” including bombings, shootings, stabbings, kidnappings, and rocket attacks. On October 7, Hamas terrorists murdered more than 1,200 Israelis and people of other nationalities, injured more than 6,900 people, and took more than 200 hostages.

We now know that three of those hostages were held by a Hamas operative supported by People Media Project and subsidized by American taxpayer money. (The fourth hostage rescued on June 8, Noa Argamani, was held in another home in the same neighborhood.) Today, some 80 hostages believed to be alive remain in captivity, including the two Bibas children and their parents.

People Media Project cannot be allowed to continue operating with impunity and with American taxpayer dollars. To allow it to do so is tantamount to supporting terrorism, the October 7 atrocities, and the immense human suffering of the hostages — among them five Americans believed to be alive.

The U.S. must not turn a blind eye to People Media Project’s blatant abuse of nonprofit status and complicity in crimes against humanity. May Almog Meir Jan get the justice he deserves, for himself and for so many others still in captivity.
Aviva Klompas: How disinformation became the greatest threat to global order
Sometimes, the problems originate with the platforms themselves. TikTok promotes itself as an open forum that fosters personal connections among its billion users. But the dark truth is that the Chinese-owned company appears to suppress topics critical of the Chinese government.

A report from the Network Contagion Research Institute found that TikTok squashed conversations about China’s treatment of the Uyghurs and protests in Hong Kong while amplifying conversations that undermine America and its allies.

When The Wall Street Journal created accounts registered as 13-year-old users, it took just a few hours before they were shown highly polarized content, including pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel content.

The disinformation about Israel spreads well beyond TikTok.

A day after the October 7 attacks on southern Israel, more than 40,000 fake social media accounts that had been inactive for over a year suddenly began posting pro-Hamas messages hundreds of times a day, according to Cyabra, an Israel-based social threat intelligence company. They used hashtags like #IStandWithIsrael to reach audiences and peddle pro-Hamas propaganda.

As videos circulated online showing Israeli women and children taken captive by Hamas, these fake profiles declared that no harm would come to them because Hamas was known for its “humanity and compassion.” We see these false narratives persisting today even as former hostages have revealed the barbaric conditions in Hamas captivity.

Across Facebook, X, Instagram, and TikTok, Cyabra found that 26% of the profiles — one in four — participating in conversations about the Hamas-Israel war were fake. Frighteningly, the tactics seem to work. While 79% of Americans support Israel in its war against Hamas, 43% of 18-24 year-olds back Hamas. Not surprising for a demographic that disproportionately receives news through social media.

As the Director of National Intelligence recently warned, Iran is covertly encouraging protests against Israel on social media platforms, “seeking to stoke discord and undermine confidence in our democratic institutions.”

“Americans who are being targeted by this Iranian campaign,” she said, “may not be aware that they are interacting with or receiving support from a foreign government,”

It’s time for government agencies and social media platforms to take more proactive steps to fight these disinformation campaigns. The rest of us also have a part to play. We must educate ourselves to identify disinformation, verify what we see online, seek out trustworthy sources, and — most crucially — apply critical thinking skills before hitting the share button.
  • Sunday, July 28, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon
The Western Standard reports:

In 2023, Jews were the most frequently targeted group in police-reported hate crimes across Canada, despite making up less than one percent of the population, according to Statistics Canada.

[T]he agency reported that anti-Semitism led all other hate crime categories last year.

Jews were identified as the leading target in 900 separate hate crimes, surpassing sexual minority Canadians (860 reported crimes), blacks (784), Arab Canadians (265), indigenous Canadians (262), Muslims (211), and Catholics (49).

With Jews numbering 335,000 out of Canada’s 40 million people (less than 0.9 percent), the disproportionate targeting is stark. In contrast, Muslims number 1.8 million in Canada.


Here is a chart of anti-Jewish vs. anti-Muslim hate crimes since 2014, according to Statistics Canada data.


Anti-Jewish hate crimes have more than quadrupled since 2014 with the biggest spike in 2023 - but the numbers had been growing alarmingly even before last year.

This year, it will undoubtedly be worse. Already in 2024 there have been multiple attacks on Jewish schools and synagogues. In May, Belz Yeshiva Ketana at the Young Israel of Montreal synagogue was hit with gunfire. The week before, two masked men jumped out of a vehicle and fired shots at the Bais Chaya Mushka school in Toronto. 

In Montreal, there were more anti-Jewish hate crimes in the single month from October 7 to November 7 than the total number of hate crimes of all types in all of 2022. 

The latest hate crimes report from the Toronto Police, from 2022, showed a steady increase in antisemitic hate crimes over the previous years, outpacing all other categories. And that has only increased since then. 



The number increased from 63 to 135 in 2023 At the end of May, Toronto police reported that nearly half of all hate crimes reported so far in 2024 were antisemitic crimes. At that pace, the number of antisemitic hate crimes this year would hit over 210.

But don't worry: the Toronto District School Board is on top of things. In their latest report, they describe what they are doing to combat antisemitism. They are very happy to emphasize the Holocaust , but they do not mention the word "Israel" or "Israelis" or "Zionism" once, completely denying any connection between the surge of antisemitism and the unhinged hate of Israel.

They do, however, highlight "Palestinians."

The TDSB introduced  a new category of bias to teach students about: Anti-Palestinian Racism.  This is in addition to their existing initiatives on Islamophobia


So while Jews are being attacked, the school district is doing more to protect Palestinian-identifying learners than the Zionist Jews that are being demonized on the streets of every major Canadian city, every day. 

Maybe, just maybe, there is a relationship between the pro-Palestinian policies of Canadian institutions and the huge increase of antisemitism in Canada. Perhaps some academic scholars will spend a couple of years to look at it and then pretend to debunk it, because they don't want to admit what it glaringly obvious to anyone who isn't already infected with  antisemitism.  





Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. 

Read all about it here!

 

 

  • Sunday, July 28, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon



Hezbollah, along with pro-Hezbollah Lebanese politicians and Palestinian terrorists, claim that the deadly Majdal Shams rocket attack that murdered 11 children was the result of an errant Iron Dome Tamir interceptor.

Israel has identified the rocket as a Falaq-1 Iranian rocket, which belongs to no other Lebanese group besides Hezbollah.

Hezbollah bragged about shooting a Falaq-1 missile at a target not far from the soccer field at the time, while at the same time attacking other targets in Israel:


Iron Dome interceptors do not carry a huge explosive payload. Their main effectiveness comes from the speed of the impact with rockets, not from explosions. The idea that an Iron Dome interceptor falling to the ground could kill 11 children is absurd.

The Falaq-1, on the other hand, has a 110 lb. warhead and has been  used sparingly by Hezbollah so far this war. 

No one has even bothered advancing an alternative theory that would explain the explosion. The entire point is to exonerate Hezbollah, not to find the truth. 

Even so, the  BBC has been so, so even handed in its reporting between what a terror group claims with no evidence and what Israel says backed with large amounts of evidence.


The children weren't killed or murdered, they just somehow died. Hezbollah is not mentioned.

Even today, as evidence mounts, the BBC reports both sides' claims as equivalent.

Here's the BBC's YouTube summary of a video report - placing Hezbollah's denial above the actual attack!
Hezbollah has denied any involvement in an air strike which killed 12 in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

Children were among the fatalities when a rocket hit a football pitch in the Druze town of Majdal Shams.

But Israel has blamed the Lebanese militant group for the attack, and now many fear an all-out war in the middle east.
Obviously, the BBC doesn't bother to ask any military experts whether Iron Dome could possibly have been responsible for the deaths. No, Hezbollah's denials are all they need to cast doubt on the idea that it was an Iranian rocket.

Now, look at how a BBC correspondent in Lebanon, Nafiseh Kohnavard,  has been tweeting the incident - and his use of scare quotes:
Breaking 
A Hezbollah official tells me that they have nothing to do with the attack on the soccer field in Majdal Shams, Northern Israel that has killed 9 people so far.

 Despite Hezbollah’s denial, Israeli officials blame the group for the attack on the football field in Majdal Shams, Northern Israel.
“The response will be very strong.” Israel’s PM office says

There are many questions regarding what has happened in Majdal Shams, Northern Israel.
Hezbollah says “it wasn’t them”. Israeli army says “they are sure, it was Hezbollah.”
Some sources are speculating if it was an “Iron Dome misconduct”?
The pattern of Hezbollah’s attacks in the past 10 months, kind of shows that the group was mainly focused on military targets. Even after each attack on a civilian property on the other side, the group has justified that the place “was used by Israeli soldiers”. 
Hezbollah has fired more than 6000 missiles & drones. Despite that the number of casualties (both military & civilians) stayed low. Of course Israeli air defence system plays a big role here but Hezb’s target focus too. 
So was this a miscalculation? Or other Hezbollah allied groups were involved? 
Whatever it was, Israeli side confidently blames Hezbollah and is planning for a “strong revenge.”
Israeli army spokesman emphasises that based on “the intelligence” they have got, the army is confident that Hezbollah is to blame for the attack on the soccer field in Majdal Shams, Northern Israel that have killed at least 9 civilians so far.
Israeli army says “Ali Muhammad Yahya, a Hezbollah commander” is “responsible” for targeting Majdal Shams”
11 “children” were killed in a rocket attack on a soccer field in the town in northern Israel.
“Iran-made Falaq 1 missile was used by Hezbollah in the attack on Majdal Shams” 
Israeli army spokesman says based on “intelligence” they got from the attack site
Pro Hezbollah channels are covering the funeral for the children who were killed yesterday in Majdal Shams, Occupied Golan Heights. 
Al Mayadeen calls the victims “the martyrs of the Israeli massacre” 
Hezbollah has publicly denied its involvement in “rocket attack” on the soccer field in Majdal Shams. 
Israeli officials blame the group for it, promising a “tough response”.
At least 3 children who were wounded in Majdal Shams soccer field yesterday are in “critical condition”. A hospital in Safed tells Israeli media.  
He doesn't quite believe the victims are children. He doesn't believe that Israeli intelligence is really reporting that it was Hezbollah. He is not sure it was a rocket attack even a day after. He doesn't quite believe three children are in critical condition. 

His Twitter/X bio claims he is a "multilingual" Middle East  "correspondent" for BBC World Service who was ""honoured"with an "award" for  a "documentary" he says he made.

See how that works?

This is the pattern with most reporters during this war. Nothing Israel says is believed without a non-Israeli confirming it, but everything Hamas and Hezbollah says are implicitly assumed to be correct until someone catches them in the lie.





Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. 

Read all about it here!

 

 

  • Sunday, July 28, 2024
  • Elder of Ziyon


From Arab News:

An ancient Christian monastery in Gaza was recognized as a World Heritage in Danger site during a UNESCO session in New Delhi on Friday.

Founded in about 340 by Saint Hilarion, the monastery is part of Tell Umm Amer, an archaeological site located in the Nuseirat refugee camp of Gaza’s Deir Al-Balah governorate.

The move was submitted by Belgium and sponsored by 18 other members of the World Heritage Committee, who resorted to the emergency procedure provided for in the World Heritage Convention and agreed to inscribe the Saint Hilarion monastery complex on both the World Heritage and World Heritage in Danger lists.

Under the terms of the convention, its 195 states parties — including Israel — are barred from directly or indirectly damaging the site and are committed to providing their cooperation for its protection.
Of course, Hamas is not a signatory to the convention. Which means that UNESCO just provided Hamas with a perfect place to store weapons or shoot rockets from. 

If UNESCO cares about protecting the site, this is the worst thing they could do. If UNESCO is aware that Hamas is already using the site today, they are protecting terrorists.

Either way, it is a spectacularly stupid thing to do. 




Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. 

Read all about it here!

 

 

Saturday, July 27, 2024

From Ian:

Hezbollah rocket kills 11 children and teens in Golan Druze town, injures 38
Eleven children and youths were killed and at least 38 were wounded when a Hezbollah heavy rocket hit near a soccer field in the Israeli Druze town of Majdal Shams in the Golan Heights on Saturday evening.

“The Hezbollah terrorist organization is behind the rocket launch at a soccer field in Majdal Shams which caused multiple civilian casualties, including children, earlier this evening,” the Israel Defense Forces said.

The rocket strike at 6:18 p.m., part of the third barrage fired from Lebanon that evening, was carried out by the Iran-backed Hezbollah terrorist organization, according to an IDF situational assessment and intelligence information.

“All the fatalities are children, aged 10 to 20. We share in the grief of the families and embrace the Druze community in its difficult time,” IDF Spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari told reporters at a briefing.

“In the past hour, Hezbollah has been lying and denying responsibility for the incident. Our intelligence is clear: Hezbollah is responsible for the murder of innocent children,” he added.

At least 34 casualties with wounds of varying degrees were evacuated to hospitals by Magen David Adom first responders and IDF helicopters.

“We arrived at the soccer field and saw destruction and items on fire,” MDA medic Idan Avshalom said. “Victims were lying on the grass, and the scenes were difficult. We immediately began triaging the injured.

“During the incident, there were additional [rocket] alerts, and medical treatment for the injured is still ongoing,” added the first responder. Ambulances evacuate injured people from the site of a Hezbollah rocket attack in Majdal Shams, July 27, 2024. Photo by Ayal Margolin/Flash90.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu moved up his return flight from the U.S. following the incident in northern Israel, his office said.

“The prime minister will convene the Security Cabinet immediately upon his return to Israel,” the Prime Minister’s Office said.

IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi, Northern Command head Maj. Gen. Ori Gordin, Operations Directorate head Maj. Gen. Oded Basiuk, Air Force commander Maj. Gen. Tomer Bar and other members of the General Staff were conducting a situational assessment.

President Isaac Herzog tweeted following the incident, “The terrible and shocking disaster in the Druze village of Majdal Shams in the north of Israel is truly heartbreaking. There are no words that can comfort the families of the young victims who lost their lives through no fault of their own.”

He continued, “Hezbollah, armed and funded by Iran, does not distinguish between child or adult, soldier or civilian, Jew or Muslim, Druze or Christian.”
Jonathan Schanzer: The Terrifying Lebanon Scenarios
The Israelis have wanted to respond to Hezbollah since the first weeks of the war. The Biden White House has restrained the Benjamin Netanyahu government. But after today, Team Biden is not likely to restrain the Israelis any longer. It’s also notable that Biden is now a lame duck, which means that he holds considerably less sway over Israel’s military calculus.

Without knowing exactly what Israel’s response might be, here are some potential scenarios we might expect.
1. Israel Responds, Hezbollah Absorbs: While there could be some tough hours or days ahead, there is a chance that Hezbollah restrains itself. Perhaps more accurately, there is a chance that Iran restrains Hezbollah. This would be the rational decision. But it would require Tehran and its most powerful proxy to believe that they would pay a price for any further escalation. While this is certainly possible, it seems unlikely. Thanks to weak American responses after nine months of Iranian aggression, and an Israeli government that has yet to make a consequential decision related to the undeclared war in the north, the Iranian axis is not deterred.

2. A Hostage Deal Dials Everything Back: We continue to hear about efforts by the CIA, Mossad, Egyptian intelligence, and the Hamas-financing government of Qatar to reach a hostage deal. Hezbollah has indicated for months that if there is a ceasefire in Gaza—one that results from a hostage deal or is struck under other terms—the group would cease firing upon Israel. A deal is far from certain, and even if one is reached, it is likely still several weeks away. Thus, the chances of a hostage deal dialing back a wider war in the north seems unlikely right now.

3. Amos Hochstein Prevails: For the last several months, the White House has deployed energy envoy Amos Hochstein to try to reach a diplomatic deal between Israel and Lebanon/Hezbollah to prevent a wider war. Hochstein brokered a 2022 maritime gas deal between Israel and Lebanon that yielded Lebanon the Qana gas field. That deal was supposed to prevent escalations like the one we are witnessing now. But with the benefit of hindsight, Hochstein’s effort should be seen for what it is: a failed attempt to appease Hezbollah. His current stab at haggling with the government of Lebanon with the goal of convincing Hezbollah to withdraw from south Lebanon to territory north of the Litani River and halting its aggression, are ongoing. But the Lebanese regime is a caretaker government that wields no power in a failing state controlled by Hezbollah. The terms that Hochstein is trying to reach are already spelled out in UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which should have been implemented nearly two decades ago. Iran and Hezbollah have refused. The Lebanese government has not even tried to change the equation. And the West has stood by and watched. Of course, the fear of a devastating war could yield a situation in which cooler heads prevail. But it’s hard to believe that Hochstein has the answers.

4. A Limited War in Southern Lebanon: The conventional wisdom holds that neither Hezbollah nor Israel want a full-blown conflagration, given the devastation that such a war would likely leave in its wake. This is not wrong. The estimates suggest that thousands of Lebanese and Israeli citizens would die, with billions of dollars of damage incurred on both sides. This is why my Lebanese friends are convinced that there would be some sort of gentleman’s agreement in the war to come. Israel would only strike Hezbollah assets and infrastructure south of the Litani River, and Hezbollah would only strike Israeli assets in the country’s northern third. Unfortunately, the likelihood is low that both sides willingly exercise restraint in the event of an escalation. This is simply not how wars work—particularly between these two foes. Their wars have long been marked by escalation through miscalculation.

5. A Big War in the North: This may be the most likely scenario if things escalate quickly. And it’s not pretty. Hezbollah has 200,000 rockets in its arsenal, thousands of drones, and an estimated 1,500 precision guided munitions that can strike military assets or even strategic infrastructure in Israel. To be clear: skyscrapers could fall. Hezbollah’s Radwan forces are highly trained and lethal; they have trained alongside the Russian and Iranian militaries. They could try to cross into Israel to conquer Israeli towns. The Israelis know what’s coming. They have plans to deal with all of it, and the future of Lebanon looks bleak as a result. But the Israeli forces are tired from nine months of fighting, the nation’s arsenal is depleted to one extent or another from the Gaza war, and there are concerns that this new war could be long and brutal. Israeli officials say privately that they would prefer to wait a year for this war. Hezbollah knows this. So does Iran. And they may believe that a war right now would be one they have the best chance of winning. This is likely yet another grave miscalculation on the part of the Iranian Axis—once again they will have started a conflagration Israel cannot afford not to win—and one that could have grave consequences for the region.

6. The Ring of Fire: There are no guarantees that a war in the north stays in the north. It’s not often acknowledged, but Israel is currently at war on no less than seven fronts. Iranian proxy forces in Gaza, Lebanon, West Bank, Syria, Iraq, and Yemen continue to attack Israel with various levels of intensity. And don’t forget that the Iranian regime fired more than 300 missiles and drones at Israel in mid-April. The activation of this “ring of fire” might be more likely if Hezbollah finds itself on the ropes in a war with Israel. Indeed, Iran is not likely to simply watch from afar if its most valued proxy is in mortal danger. It’s a fair bet that under this scenario, Israel would get help from British, US, Jordanian and Saudi missile defense—as we witnessed when Iran attacked Israel. But that may be of little consolation if there is a steady stream of incoming projectiles from across the Middle East. To be clear, this scenario is a regional war.

7. Nuclear Breakout: There is a school of thought in Israel which holds that there is only one reason Iran would deploy its most powerful proxy to wage war against Israel. Specifically, Hezbollah would only engage in a fight to the finish with Israel to prevent Israel from striking Iran as it endeavors to dash to a nuclear bomb. We continue to hear estimates from various agencies and officials that Iran is weeks away from what it needs to build a bomb. Assessing Iran’s calculus for such a dangerous move is not simple. But such a scenario cannot be dismissed.

Friday, July 26, 2024

From Ian:

Sen. Mitch McConnell in conversation with Jewish Insider
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) sat down with Jewish Insider on Thursday for an interview about Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s visit to Washington, the surging rates of antisemitism in the United States, and the foreign policy divisions within both parties.

The conversation came one day after Netanyahu’s joint session and the subsequent protests that turned violent and saw the defacing of Union Station, and hours after McConnell called on the Department of Justice to pursue the same maximum sentences for those involved in the Wednesday’s violence that prosecutors sought “for the Capitol rioters of Jan. 6.”

Below is a transcript of the interview, edited for length and clarity:

Jewish Insider: I want to start with what you said on the floor this morning about what we’ve seen occur at the Watergate and at Union Station over the past few days. I’m going to quote you, you said it “only underscores the challenge facing the world’s only Jewish state.” Taking a more domestic view, what do you think these last 36 hours say about the current state of antisemitism in the United States and what do you think needs to be done to address it?

Mitch McConnell: I think from the very beginning, this effort to try to convince people that there’s some sort of moral equivalence between how Israel is conducting the war and how it started has been outrageous. [House Speaker Nancy] Pelosi yesterday attacking the prime minister of Israel for what I thought was one of the best speeches I’ve ever heard shows you that on the political left in this country, they’re confused, in my view, about the moral equivalency between being attacked and defending yourself and going after the attackers. So, I think it tells you something about the critics that they can’t tell the difference between Hamas, which started the whole thing and murdered 1,200 people, and the response to that, which has been about as selective as the Israeli military could be.

JI: About Democrats, do you have any thoughts on the dichotomy between [Senate Foreign Relations] Chairman [Ben] Cardin, who presided in Vice President Harris’ place and praised the address, with [Senate Minority] Leader [Chuck] Schumer still not offering his thoughts on the speech? What do you make of that? Is it that Chairman Cardin is retiring and doesn’t have to worry about political considerations?

MM: He was the only one willing to do it. The vice president, who should have been there, was not there. The president pro tem [Patty Murray] took a pass. I think the Democrats in the United States are confused about which side we ought to be on, unequivocally on. They’re divided by a fanatically sort of anti-Israel crowd. Frankly, I’ve been surprised by the level of antisemitism in this country. I had no idea, I thought this was something we had gotten past years ago. I’m pleased that in my party there seems to be no confusion about which side we ought to be on. I’m proud of our folks for sticking with Israel, our Democratic ally. Even the Biden administration trying to tell the Israelis how to run the war or the majority leader saying they ought to have an election, it’s not our job to tell a Democratic ally defending itself how to conduct a war, and by the way, you ought to have an election to get a new prime minister. We don’t do that normally, and I’m certain the Israelis are not confused about seeing the difference in this country.
Seth Mandel: Harris’s Naivete on the Mideast
The question that first came to mind watching Kamala Harris’s brief monologue (it was billed as a press conference, but there were no question taken) after her meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was: Who is she talking to? Who is the audience for this?

By the end of her comments, I realized she wasn’t actually trying to convince or reassure anyone of anything. It would have been quite useful to hear her answer questions in the moment, but alas we’re not yet at that stage of the Kamala rollout.

One point of continuity between Harris and Biden, however, was made clear when the vice president seemed to address a Democratic base that no longer exists. She went to great efforts to project empathy for the Palestinians when the progressive activist base doesn’t want to hear anything about Palestinians. Their focus is Israel, exclusively.

Hence, “Israel has a right to defend itself, and how it does so matters,” is crafted to appeal to both sides. And that might have succeeded… in 1994. The activists who have been interrupting President Biden’s speeches and press conferences and church visits don’t believe Israel has a right to defend itself and therefore “how it does so” doesn’t matter at all to them. The rioters attacking police officers yesterday while painting “Hamas is coming” graffiti, the “tentifada” students on college campuses, and the captured academic institutions all share a strong belief that Israel’s self-defense is itself illegitimate.

Indeed, the UN’s special envoy for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Francesca Albanese, rejected outright Israel’s right to self-defense after Hamas’s October massacre.

“The right to self-defense can be invoked when the state is threatened by another state, which is not the case,” Albanese said in November. “It cannot claim the right of self-defense against a threat that emanates from a territory it occupies, from a territory kept under belligerent occupation.”

Israel’s putative occupation of Gaza ended 20 years ago, but Albanese is speaking the language of the global left, which does not acknowledge this indisputable reality. A very popular slogan among the demonstrators is “Resistance is justified when people are occupied.”
Seth Mandel: Identity Politics and the Israel-Hamas War
In May, the New York Times looked into why antiwar sentiment at black colleges didn’t turn into pro-Hamas encampments. “The reasons stem from political, cultural and socioeconomic differences with other institutions of higher learning,” the reporters wrote. “While H.B.C.U.s host a range of political views, domestic concerns tend to outweigh foreign policy in the minds of most students. Many started lower on the economic ladder and are more intently focused on their education and their job prospects after graduation.”

There is also a sense of self-awareness at these colleges that is sorely lacking at a ridiculous elite circus like Columbia. “Whether people support the decision or not,” Morehouse President David Thomas said of the school hosting a speech by Biden, “they are committed to having it happen on our campus in a way that doesn’t undermine the integrity or dignity of the school.”

One gets the sense that, just as dignity is not a word readily associated with the behavior of students and faculty at Columbia or the University of Pennsylvania, dignity is also unlikely to be a factor in the considerations of a hundred thousand white women for Harris—the latter are heavily invested in self-actualization, not self-awareness.

So are these white wonder women going to turn their self-love army into anti-Kamala riots in Chicago? Unlikely. Will they interrupt Harris’s speeches to accuse her of not caring about “brown people”? I don’t think they will. Legions of white women who think saving the world requires a vote for Kamala Harris aren’t going to protest Kamala Harris as an avatar of white supremacy and colonialism.

The Washington Post’s Karen Attiah, one of the more prominent voices to amplify celebrations of Hamas’s slaughter on October 7, wants Harris to believe the threat is there. “If Harris does not get Gaza and protests right, especially as colleges start the fall semester — the campaign will be in *SERIOUS* trouble with young + PoC voters,” she posted. Attiah added: “Do people not understand that these groups could just as easily organize massive ‘Young People for Uncommitted’ Zooms just as quickly as people mobilized for Harris?”

No, they can’t. And they won’t. Harris’s speech yesterday suggests she, unfortunately, won’t seek to take much advantage of the neutralizing of this factional revolt when it comes to the war in Gaza. Harris seems dedicated to presenting the conflict as a false equivalence between Israel and Hamas. But her strong statement against the pro-Hamas protesters and rioters on Wednesday was a sign that she understands that the insulation from protests that Biden had pales in comparison to what Harris has in her pocket.

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