Jake Wallis Simons: It is now far past time to stop paying attention to the lies of Hamas
A year ago, I wrote about "the devastating proof that Hamas is faking its death figures." Last week, it emerged that Hamas had quietly dropped 3,400 "identified" deaths from its casualty figures, including 1,080 children. These deaths never happened, but they had been verified by the UN and parroted by gullible - or ideologically blinkered - media.Charles Not In Charge
Further analysis of the data showed that among those old enough to be fighting for Hamas, 72% of the dead were male, a testament to the care and precision of the IDF on a battlefield often crowded with human shields.
Moreover, Hamas had unscrupulously included natural deaths in the list of supposed victims of the IDF, including infant mortality rates of around 780 each year. This amounted to 8,300 fatalities that any reporter acting in good faith would remove from the total.
If we take into account Israel's figures that 20,000 of the dead were combatants, that means about one civilian is killed for every fighter. This is a humanitarian feat that has never been equaled by any other army, in spite of the fact that Hamas herds its own people into the firing line. That is the true story of this war. But 98% of news reports repeat numbers provided by Hamas.
Every human life is sacred and it is macabre to talk about the grim arithmetic of death. But those on my side of the argument have no choice but to respond in such terms to the obsession with casualty numbers that has characterized coverage of this war. Do you have any idea how many civilians were killed when we destroyed Islamic State, or waged war in Afghanistan and Iraq? No? That tells you something.
REVIEW: 'Antisemitism in America: A Warning' by Chuck SchumerHamas demanded $500m from Iran for destruction of Israel
Chuck Schumer can't catch a break. Not long after being sworn in as the first Jewish leader of the U.S. Senate, the Democratic Party came down with a bad case of anti-Semitism. It inspired him to write a book, Antisemitism in America: A Warning, in which he recounts how John F. Kennedy's assassination really dampened the vibe at his bar mitzvah the following day. The ceremony went ahead as planned, unlike Schumer's tour to promote his new book, which was postponed due to threats of protest from anti-Semites and other Democrats fuming about his refusal to pick a pointless fight with Donald Trump. That's just as well, though, because the senator's warning about anti-Semitism appears to lack a viable constituency.
Emily Tamkin is a perfect example. She's a Jewish foreign affairs reporter at the Washington Post and a former Schumer intern (back in 2009, so not some Gen Z weirdo). If she won't endorse Schumer's warning about the rise of anti-Semitism in America, including the violently expressed sympathy from liberal activists for Hamas terrorists after Oct. 7, who will? Alas, Tamkin was not a fan. "Reading it ... made me realize that I didn't want a warning on antisemitism," she writes in her review for the Post. "I wanted the highest-elected Jewish official in American history to meet a moment that has already arrived."
Among other things, Tamkin faults Schumer for failing to embrace a more intersectional approach to anti-Semitism, a criticism he foresees in the book by lamenting the liberal Jews who are reluctant to discuss anti-Semitism without also addressing "Islamophobia or racism or competing narratives in the Middle East." The Senate leader's condemnation of anti-Semitism on the left is unfair, Tamkin argues, not least because he refuses to condone the Hamas sympathizers who accuse Israel of committing "genocide" in Gaza. She devotes three whole paragraphs (of her book review) to complaining about Donald Trump. All told, it's a pretty good summary of why Schumer's warning to his liberal allies—"Be careful. Do not let passion overwhelm your better instincts."—is unlikely to prevail.
That's a shame, because Schumer makes an earnest and compelling argument, drawn from personal experience and family history, about the unique perniciousness of anti-Semitism, as well as the existential importance of Israel as a "place you can go where you can be safe and be Jewish." He documents how several factors that exist today, such as social unrest and the democratization of media, have consistently fueled a rise in anti-Semitism at various points throughout history. Your humble (and gentile) reviewer found these portions of the book enlightening and persuasive. It's even charming at times, as when Schumer recounts his first visit to Israel and the pride he felt upon seeing a "Jewish garbageman." Nevertheless, when the personal anecdotes give way to politics, Schumer writes like a career politician who has held public office since age 25—afraid to offend anyone, and pleasing no one in the process. The pages are littered with euphemisms and languid caveats, endless variations of the "to be sure..." paragraph in an ultimately futile effort to assuage his critics.
Schumer recalls how his own staff urged him not to speak out about anti-Semitism after Oct. 7, when Hamas terrorists committed the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, and the campuses of elite universities were overrun by supporters of this "justified" act of anticolonial "resistance." Speaking out was "politically risky," they warned. Schumer agrees, but doesn't really explain why. If he's correct that anti-Semitism on the left is confined to the "radical fringe," then what's the big deal? He barely mentions the avowed Hamas sympathizers currently representing his own party in Congress. Rep. Ilhan Omar (D., Minn.) he commends for allegedly regretting her anti-Semitic outbursts. Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D., Mich.) he omits entirely.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz revealed, for the first time, communications between Tehran and slain Hamas leaders Mohammed Deif and Yahya Sinwar.
“This is definitive proof of Iran‘s support for Hamas’s plan to destroy Israel and for the October 7, [2023], massacre,” Katz said. “Deif and Sinwar demanded $500 million from the Quds Force commander to support the annihilation of Israel and the fight against the U.S.—and they got it.”
Katz visited the IDF’s Intelligence and Technological Systems Unit (AMASHT) on Saturday and received a briefing from unit commanders on its intelligence and operational activities.
“I’m here today visiting the AMASHT unit—a special unit established during the Swords of Iron war and composed of reservists with extensive civilian-sector expertise, who developed national-level capabilities that did not yet exist,” he said.
He added that this intelligence capability holds critical material physically collected from deep inside enemy territory, including Hamas archives, Hezbollah documents and other sensitive intelligence sources.
“Today I am presenting, for the first time, a transcript of conversations found in the tunnels of senior Hamas officials in Gaza, which proves a direct connection between Iran and Yahya Sinwar and Mohammed Deif, as part of Iran’s support for Hamas’s plan to destroy Israel. The document shows they requested $500 million from the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ Quds Force to help destroy the State of Israel,” Katz said.


















