Thursday, June 19, 2025

From Ian:

Meir Y. Soloveichik: Having Faith While in Hell
This column is about faith and miracles, and it begins with an event wondrous to behold: the New York Times publishing a thoughtful, balanced, and inspiring article pertaining to the current moment in Israel.

The article features an interview with Omer Shem Tov, who until recently was held in cruel captivity by Hamas. Omer, the Times tells us, “had grown up in a largely secular home, and was living a relatively carefree existence after completing his compulsory military service.” Then, on October 7, 2023, he was suddenly snatched and subjected to torture in cramped surroundings for a year and a half. It was as a hostage that Shem Tov embraced the faith of his fathers:

A few days into his captivity, he said, he began to speak to God. He made vows. He began to bless whatever food he was given. And he had requests—some of which he believes were answered. “You are looking for something to lean on, to hold onto,” Mr. Shem Tov said in a recent interview at his family home in Herzliya, north of Tel Aviv. “The first place I went to was God. I would feel a power enter me,” he said.

“Faith kept me going,” he said, adding, “I always believed I would get home, though I didn’t know how or when.”

Shem Tov’s embrace of Jewish observance was not limited to prayer. We are further informed that he “decided to keep kosher as much as he could, eating either the cheese or the canned meat when they were given both, in line with Jewish dietary laws that prohibit mixing meat and dairy products.” The Times concludes by describing how Shem Tov “promised God that if he got home, he would pray daily with ‘tefillin’—the small leather boxes containing scriptures that worshipers tie onto their heads and one of their arms for morning prayers.” The article features a photo depicting Omer Shem Tov doing just that.

At this point, we must pause to ponder what might appear paradoxical. A young man has lived a largely secular life. Many in his circle, it is safe to say, would welcome an age in which Jews were “normalized,” in which they would be a people like any other, in which they would be left alone to create the Silicon Valley of the Middle East. Yet suddenly, at the very moment when he is being tortured for his Jewish identity, and when many of his fellow concert attendees at the Nova festival were murdered for the very same reason, his reaction is to embrace Judaism.

In this, Omer Shem Tov captures, in a certain sense, the story of Zionism itself. In 1897, a secular Jew, Theodore Herzl, had promised the possibility of normalization in his pamphlet The Jewish State. Living among Europeans, he argued, Jews would continue to be hated, but if a separate Jewish state could be created elsewhere, anti-Semitism would cease. The state Herzl originally described had little that was Jewish in its civic character. But not long after, as the Zionist movement suddenly and mysteriously, began to spread, the assimilated Austrian journalist began the ponder with wonder the history of which he was a part.
John Podhoretz: We Are Awesome: A Rant
Why am I praising us? I’m not, actually. I’m actually enraged at a great many of my fellow Jews, who promote cultural ideas I revile and vote for politicians and causes I believe are injurious to America, to civil society, to the world, and to the Jews, both here and in Israel.

No, what I am praising is our birthright—and the good fortune we have been granted because of it. This is something worthy of celebration, and we must give thanks for our forebears for being forbearing. Throughout Jewish history, being a Jew was not something you could say granted you worldly good fortune. But each Jew in history lived and bore children and kept the flame alive to bring us here today, to this moment. It would be a sin against the difficulties they faced, far worse than anything we’ve faced, not to connect ourselves to the thing that connects us deeper than blood.

They said the same prayers we say. They followed the same rules the more rigorous among us follow. If we met them across centuries, if we time-traveled to a Saturday morning in the Alteneuschul in Prague in the 13th century when it was first constructed, one or another of us would be able to say, Hey, that was my bar mitzvah parashah. And depending on how good our memory is, and how good our reading is, and how solidly we know trop, we could go up and take an aliyah and read.

These are all the reasons that being proud of being a Jew, teaching our kids why they should be proud to be Jews, and feeling that transcendent connection across time and space is everything.

No reason to apologize.

And yet so many do. The question is why.

Some of it is a natural occurrence of being a small band conscious of our differences and conscious that others feel we are different, such that we are hyper-aware of the way bad actors might reflect on us. Who among us hasn’t breathed a sigh of relief to discover that, say, some lunatic or evil killer or other—the guy in Idaho, or Luigi Mangione, or the Menendezes—are not members of the tribe? We feel this way because we feel it so keenly when one is. Madoff. Weinstein. Epstein. Whose heart has not sunk to the bottom of his or her chest at the sound of their names?

So we feel responsible for each other, and worry about blame affixing to us, because we are so few.

Now consider the condition of Jews in 2025. Worldwide. Israel was attacked in October 2023. It was invaded. Thousands were killed and injured. And that attack and those killings and casualties ignited an old-fashioned blood lust—a lust for Jewish blood, or at least Jewish humiliation, or capitulation.

That was surprising. I know because we were all surprised. And shocked. And dismayed. And depressed. And filled full of rage. And sorrow. And a sense that for the first time in our lives as American Jews, we were at some form of risk in the land that had been very nearly a paradise for us after 1,800 years in the Diaspora.

What was not surprising, alas, was the presence among those with that blood lust of Jews themselves—or what Eli Lake has called the “as-a-Jews.” The type that says, “As a Jew, I am horrified by the images on my television,” or “As a Jew, I believe in tikkun olam, and Israel is not healing the world the way it should.” I say this was not surprising because these people have been present in our public life since I was a kid. More recently, I think of the example of a 2021 letter issued by rabbinical students condemning what they called Israeli apartheid.
No, Trump Is Not ‘Weaponizing’ Anti-Semitism
If “a liberal is a man too broad-minded to take his own side in a quarrel,” as Robert Frost put it, then a Jewish liberal must be someone who begs for his nation to take anti-Semitism seriously—and then condemns the president of the United States for obliging.

American Jews have sounded the alarm on rising anti-Semitism for years, and the case was made when the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led attacks spurred terrorist sympathizers in the West to take their bigotry to the streets. Campuses revealed themselves as hotbeds of sympathy for the attackers. Universities did nothing to punish flagrant violations of civil rights laws committed by those sympathetic to Hamas, and the culprits remained undeterred. As reports from Harvard, Columbia, and other universities attest, faculty, students, and even administrators continued to bait Jews and Israel in class, on the quad, and everywhere in between. Student groups revealed themselves as unabashed collaborators with terrorist organizations, raising funds for them and promoting their propaganda.

Yet when the federal government finally took upon itself the cause of ridding our campuses (and, where possible, our nation) of these malignities, Jewish public figures rushed to condemn the deployment of state power on the Jews’ behalf. For perhaps the first time in history, a non-Jewish polity has decided that the fate of its Jews is intertwined with the fate of the nation as a whole and acts accordingly. And some Jews have chosen to stand athwart our defenders, yelling “Stop!”

Title VI of the Civil Rights Act prohibits universities from tolerating environments that are hostile to individuals because of their national origin. If schools do not do enough to crack down on discrimination against Jews and Israelis—both are considered “national origins” under federal law—they can lose their federal support. And under long-established immigration law, noncitizens who take up the cause of terrorist organizations may be deported.

These tributaries of antidiscrimination and immigration law have blended on elite campuses, where foreign students and faculty have spearheaded a campaign of discriminatory harassment in service of terrorist organizations. Joined by young American leftists, they have used bullhorns, cement, spray paint, and just about any other instrument at hand to turn campuses into platforms for radical views. They have repeatedly forced the cancellation of classes, disrupted study sessions, destroyed libraries, pulled fire alarms on guest speakers, and blocked off campus thorough-fares. As if to demonstrate the subordination of edu-cation to activism with crystalline precision, some professors held classes within encampments—those “Zionist-free zones”—or offered extra credit for participation in demonstrations.

Is this the system of higher education the American people want to support to the tune of billions per year? Clearly not. Enter the Trump 2 administration, which has made no secret of its antipathy toward higher education in its current state. “Too many Universities and School Systems are about Radical Left Indoctrination, not Education,” he tweeted in July 2020. “Our children must be Educated, not Indoctrinated!” Conservatives have long lamented the corruption of the university, manifesting in ideological uniformity, stifling speech codes, and the proliferation of thoughtless activism. It was a matter of time before a Republican administration would use its legal leverage and threaten to revoke universities’ federal funding and even tax-exempt status.

And pervasive anti-Semitism, which had exploded but met little pushback from the Biden administration, provided an opening. A newly formed federal task force nominally focused on anti-Semitism first targeted Columbia University, which had been wracked by building occupations, vandalism, and a vacuum of leadership. “We’re going to bankrupt these universities,” said its chair, Leo Terrell. “We’re going to take away every single federal dollar.” The task force first froze some discretionary grants while threatening that the worst was yet to come. Mimicking one part of the Title VI enforcement process—during which universities must be allowed to come into “voluntary compliance” with government-determined remedial measures—the administration made its demands. If Columbia did not expel or suspend students who had broken into and occupied Hamilton Hall, ban masks on campus, treat anti-Zionism as anti-Semitism, place the Middle Eastern Studies Department under academic receivership, begin reforming admissions procedures, and more, it would lose billions in federal support. Columbia’s interim president, Katrina Armstrong, agreed publicly to cooperate with the demands while privately vowing not to. She resigned a few weeks later. As of now, the extent of Columbia’s acquiescence remains unclear.
Branding the Jew: From Medieval France to Modern Times
But just as the badge has been used for humiliation, it has also been transformed into defiance.

On October 30, 2023, Israel’s Ambassador to the UN, Gilad Erdan, while speaking to the Security Council chamber he decided to wear a yellow Star of David emblazoned with the words “Never Again.”

This wasn’t submission. It wasn’t shame. It was an accusation. It was a statement of anger toward a world that, once again, was showing itself too comfortable with ignoring Jewish suffering—this time after the October 7 Hamas massacre.

Erdan declared:
“From this day on, my team and I will wear yellow stars…”

Some criticized the move, others, like me, saw it for what it was: the reclaiming of a symbol once used to mark Jews for death, now worn by a sovereign representative of a Jewish state at the heart of global diplomacy making a bold and clear statement, NEVER AGAIN. What was once imposed by kings, popes, and Nazis was now worn by choice, in defiance.

And look at where we are now. Today it’s not medieval kings or inquisitors—it’s the United Nations itself leading the inquisition. Just yesterday, they released a report accusing Israel of “exterminating” the Palestinian people, not only a complete distortion and lie, it completely ignored the crimes of Hamas. Complete reality inversion. Last year, on Holocaust Remembrance Day 2024, it was revealed that UN employees actively took part in the October 7 massacre—murdering, raping, kidnapping—while others helped conceal hostages or praised the slaughter online. Today, 622 days later, 53 hostages are still in Gaza in the hands of those who truly carried out acts of extermination.

Today is also the 23rd of Sivan, the day Queen Esther gave the Jewish people the legal right to fight back. A day to remember that survival, liberation and victory starts with that right. That is what Israel is doing against the Islamic Republic of Iran, a regime racing to get nuclear weapons, a regime who will do anything in its power to wipe Israel out of the map.

History echoes. It rhymes. And sometimes, if we’re not careful, it repeats. That’s why it shouldn’t just sit in books; it should be remembered and analyzed.

Always remember: It always starts with the Jews. But it never ends there.

Never again not just a promise, it is also recognizing the signs. And never again is not a slogan—it’s now.
From Ian:

How Israel Stunned Iran
Israel stunned and hobbled Iran when it pulled off an intelligence and military operation years in the making that struck high-level targets with precision.

Guided by spies and artificial intelligence, the Israeli military unleashed a nighttime fusillade of warplanes and armed drones smuggled into Iran to quickly incapacitate many of its air defenses and missile systems.

"This attack is the culmination of years of work by the Mossad to target Iran's nuclear program," said Sima Shine, former head of research at Israel's spy agency, the Mossad, and now an analyst at the Institute for National Security Studies.

An intelligence officer involved with selecting individuals and sites to target said Israel used the latest artificial-intelligence (AI) technology to quickly sift through troves of intelligence.
Israeli Secret Services Used Fake Phone Call to Lure Iran's Air Force Elite to Their Deaths
Israel's Mossad secret service used a fake phone call to trick 20 members of Iran's air force senior staff into gathering at a single location before taking them out in a targeted strike, Israel's Channel 12 reported on Monday.

Using falsified communications through Iranian channels, the Mossad triggered what appeared to be an emergency meeting that successfully drew the entire senior leadership of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Aerospace Force, including Commander Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, his deputies, and key technical personnel, into a fortified bunker outside Tehran.

The bunker was hit in a precision airstrike. There was no one alive to give the command to strike back.
10 Things They Don’t Want You to Know About Israel’s War With Iran
7️⃣ The Iranian TV Station Israel Hit Used to Broadcasts Torture and Forced Confessions
One of Israel’s precision strikes hit an IRIB (Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting) facility in Tehran. Western headlines breathlessly called it a “TV station.” What they didn’t tell you is that IRIB is a documented propaganda tool of the Iranian regime, broadcasting forced confessions, videos of prisoners tortured into false admissions, and televised “trials” of Iranian dissidents.

This wasn’t about silencing journalism.
It was about disrupting the machinery of state violence. IRIB is to journalism what ISIS beheading videos are to filmmaking.

8️⃣ Iran Used Cluster Bombs — A War Crime
During its retaliation, Iran used cluster munitions — weapons banned by over 120 countries — on Israeli civilian areas. These weapons are designed to scatter dozens or hundreds of small bombs over a wide area, maximizing civilian casualties.

Why didn’t the UN issue immediate condemnations?
Why didn’t the UN issue immediate condemnations? Because when the target is Israel, the rules don’t apply. The use of cluster bombs against civilians is the very definition of a war crime, yet major international human rights organizations have not even acknowledged it. The media is completely silent.

Meanwhile, for over 15 years, the same media and “human rights” groups have relentlessly pushed false allegations that Israel uses white phosphorus indiscriminately in civilian areas—claims never backed by credible evidence. White phosphorus is not banned under international law when used according to the rules of warfare. Yet these very organizations have chosen to ignore the clear use of cluster munitions by Iran, a weapon widely banned precisely because of its horrific impact on civilians.

This glaring double standard exposes a selective application of human rights rhetoric—one that protects certain actors while turning a blind eye to others’ crimes.

9️⃣ Hundreds of Iranian Regime Loyalists Are Already Living in Canada — More Are Coming
While Iran fires advanced missiles at Israeli civilians, hundreds of Iranian regime-connected insiders are living peaceful, suburban lives in Canada. Many have links to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), and more are seeking entry.

Where’s the urgency from Canadian government?
The same Canadian activists who scream about settler colonialism and apartheid won’t mention that Tehran’s ideological enforcers are buying homes and starting businesses in their own neighborhoods. Islamic Republic leaders seeking shelter in Canada now that is about to fall.
  • Thursday, June 19, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
Our weekly column from the humor site PreOccupied Territory.

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Valley of Hinnom, Jerusalem, June 19 - A Canaanite deity whose worship included the offering of one's offspring to him laughed today at your unspoken assumption that humanity no longer does that, as he gestured broadly toward every "system" that imposes its hierarchy of values on people, in so doing making the people subordinate to that system, inevitably requiring that the young and defenseless suffer and die so that the axioms of the system not be challenged.

Molech, also known as Moloch, whose child-sacrifice worship rituals the authors of the Bible found particularly detestable, chuckled in amusement this morning when informed that you think society has grown past the drive to sacrifice children to its gods - when, night and day, ideologues of all stripes sacrifice children and others on the altar of their political, economic, and social beliefs.

"It's so funny not to see the human sacrifice inherent in an unrestricted immigration policy," the god scoffed. "People are so wedded to their 'tolerance' and 'openness' and 'anti-racism' at all costs that they downplay or ignore those costs, among them the danger to one's own children that many of the migrants pose, coming as they do from cultures that do not share the host country's values of human dignity, tolerance, respect for property, consent..."

"But hey, you upheld your virtue, and that's what's important," the deity continued. "Now you can enjoy the spiritual prosperity of looking righteous to your peer group. That's what's important."

Moloch similarly invoked the draconian policies aimed at containing and mitigating the COVID-19 pandemic, which admonished people to "FOLLOW THE SCIENCE" when in fact "the science" indicated no need to stunt the social and educational development of several cohorts of children by keeping them out of school and isolating them from friends to forestall infection by a virus that affected an infinitesimally small number of children.

The same idol of SCIENCE also dictated that the government enforce restrictions on outside activities despite scant evidence, if any, that transmission of the virus could occur outdoors, thus sacrificing the economy and social cohesion on the altar of "trust of the experts."

More broadly, the body count of lives - not only those of children - sacrificed on the altar of Communism, fascism, Islamism, Palestinianism, and other ideologies continue to demonstrate that humanity has not, in any appreciable fashion, outgrown human sacrifice, and that observation provides nonstop guffaws to Moloch and his human-sacrifice-demanding colleagues across the world's pantheons.



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

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In my last post on my secularized Jewish ethics project I proposed a pluralistic model where different communities, with different values, can fit under a Jewish ethical framework, 

But I am also trying to position Jewish ethics as a universal grammar where communities who have different values can intelligently debate each others' ideas. If a community defines their values radically differently than another, how can they respect each other when their values are radically different?

Stepping back, I realized that even the definition of "values" is not so clear. 

In Aristotelian virtue ethics, moral virtues include courage, wittiness and patience.  But are those values moral? A suicide bomber shows courage. A terrorist can show much patience while planning an attack. The best con artists are very witty.

Perhaps we need to distinguish between ethics and morality. Ethics, as I understand it, can be any self-consistent, cohesive decision making framework. That is why Marxism, revolutionary ethics and even Mafia codes of conduct are ethical - they are consistent and cohesive systems.

But they are not moral. 

Morality is an ethical system that is objectively good - that promotes human dignity, justice, and life, 

Aristotle's virtue ethics is certainly ethical - but it is not necessarily moral. His virtues are attributes that can be used for good or bad. Having those attributes does not make a person virtuous, in the sense that the word is used today.

So I would argue that those virtues are not real moral values.

Similarly, I excluded from my secular Jewish ethics framework ostensibly positive ideas like "peace" and "love." They may be nice sentiments, but they are not really actionable or practical as means to help a person make decisions. Sometimes war is necessary for peace and love can be manifested by sternness. 

So what, exactly, is a value?

Using Jewish thinking as my guide, I came up with this definition: 

A true moral value must result in an ethically meaningful transformation - of the self, of relationships, or of the world. If a claimed value does not catalyze change in alignment with structured moral responsibility, it is not a value at all.

Vague terms like "authenticity," "empowerment" and "strength" are not moral values because they are not tied to moral good. But beyond that, values must be tied to responsibility. 

Transformation is not enough. A moral value must also impose responsibility. That’s what distinguishes it from raw preference or sentiment.

In Jewish ethics, nearly every moral value is expressed through obligation:

  • Pikuach nefesh (preserving life) isn’t an ideal—it’s a duty to act.

  • Emet (truth) isn’t just being honest—it’s a binding obligation to seek and uphold truth, even when inconvenient.

  • Teshuvah (repentance) is moral not because it “feels right,” but because it transforms one into becoming a better person, which is in fact an obligation everyone has to themselves.

Even internal transformation counts—as long as it binds the self in covenantal responsibility. You are obligated to become someone better. That’s the core of teshuvah, repentance. Jewish ethics values not just what you do, but who you are becoming—and how that transformation enables you to better serve others.

This definition is important because we live in a time where moral language has become a weapon, Words like “freedom,” “equity,” or “justice” are invoked without serious definition, without structure, without accountability, and without clarity.

My framework offers a grammar - a set of criteria - to ask: 

  • Does this “value” produce ethical transformation?

  • Does it impose responsibility on someone to act or become better?

  • Is it embedded in a moral structure that prioritizes life, dignity, and justice?

If not, it’s not a moral value.

It might be a feeling, a branding strategy, or a political posture. But it is not morality.

It is interesting to read Rambam (Maimonides) as he describes Aristotelian values. He describes virtues and the golden mean, but he doesn't stop there - he ties these attributes to acting like God,  imitaio Dei.  They are not moral values without being connected to the source of all moral good. And of course Rambam's Mishneh Torah is oriented around real obligations - mitzvot - not cultivation of character traits. Those traits are precursors to action and positive transformational change.

It is not unreasonable to ask other systems to translate their values into this structure. We don’t have to demand conformity—but we can demand clarity. Maybe “rights” isn’t a value—but states and communities are obligated to protect dignity and freedom. That’s the translation. That’s the grammar.

The goal of ethics is not self-expression.
The goal of ethics is transformation for the good.

Everything else is commentary.




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Thursday, June 19, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
This story from Iran International in April flew under the radar:

The leader of a Swedish criminal network accused of assisting Tehran in attacks on Israeli-linked targets in Europe is currently living in Iran under the protection of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), sources told Iran International.

Rawa Majid received funds from Iran’s embassy in Denmark to help coordinate attacks against Israeli diplomatic facilities in Copenhagen and Stockholm, according to a source familiar with the matter inside the IRGC.

The source also said the gang leader travels between Iran and Afghanistan for operations overseen by the IRGC.

Majid leads a criminal group, Foxtrot, recently sanctioned by the UK and the US for its alleged role in orchestrating attacks on Israeli interests. Both governments accused the group of working as a proxy force for Iran in Europe. Tehran has denied the charges.

The attacks are part of an apparent broader strategy that has alarmed European security services. In a December 2024 report, Bloomberg detailed how Iran-affiliated groups have increasingly recruited local criminals — including minors — to carry out assaults on Jewish and Israeli institutions across Europe.
Israel Hayom details new information from a Swedish TV investigation:
Investigation findings indicate a comprehensive "target catalog" Iran provided to Foxtrot encompassing Israeli embassy attacks, defense contractor strikes, Israeli citizen kidnappings and assassinations, plus assaults on Jewish community facilities and synagogues throughout Europe. The report details how the organization's sources received directives to expand operations into Germany, Belgium, and Britain, including the elimination of Iran International television's exiled journalists. "They deploy us as pawns in their strategic game," one participant explained. "Their operations can surface anywhere across the continent – provided Israel remains the target."
So Iran has been directing criminal gangs to attack Jews and synagogues in Europe.

And this hardly gets reported. 





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Thursday, June 19, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon


This morning an Iranian ballistic missile slammed into the Soroka medical complex in Beersheba causing massive damage and (likely) casualties.

In a statement, Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) said strategic missiles and suicide drones were used in tandem on Thursday, primarily targeting a key command and intelligence center of the Israeli military near one of the hospitals, making the direct impact.

The statement added that the intelligence and high-precision power of missiles belonging to the Iranian armed forces is for the whole world to see now, noting that the entire occupied territories have been turned into a military fortress now.

Does this claim hold up?

There are no Israeli military facilities in the vicinity of Soroka Hospital. The IDF’s Southern Command base is located over two kilometers away.

There is a high tech industrial park, Gav-Yam, about 1.5 km away from Soroka, that might have some military applications being developed there. 

Iranian missiles are accurate. They simply cannot make a mistake that is over  kilometer from the intended target. Missile accuracy is rated by Circular Error Probable (CEP) - the radius around a target that 50% of all missiles would hit. The CEP for Iranian ballistic missiles range from 5-10 meters to, inthe case of older missiles, 50-100 meters.

The chances that the missile was aimed at anything other than the hospital are extremely small. Even if the missile was partially intercepted, it would land within a couple of hundred meters of the intended target, not 1.5 or 2 km away.

Between the hospital and the technology park are dormitories, a sports center and a beer factory.

The IRGC itself is bragging that the missile hit accurately: "the intelligence and high-precision power of missiles belonging to the Iranian armed forces is for the whole world to see now."

To get a better idea of pure Iranian evil, the PressTV report is proudly claiming that there were more civilian casualties than have been officially reported so far: "The regime in Tel Aviv has imposed ban on publication of any report regarding casualties or collateral damage, however, some reports put the death toll on Thursday at over 50."

Putting it all together, it is nearly impossible for the target of the missiles (and, they claim, drones) to have been anything other than the hospital itself. 

As we've noted,  Iran's war strategy has been psychological. By targeting a hospital and maximizing casualties, they are hoping that the people of Israel will rise up against the government, projecting the way their own people are responding to the ineffectiveness of their own air defenses. 

It is true that they are also targeting some military infrastructure. But the many missiles that have hit purely residential neighborhoods and, now, a well known hospital prove that Iran is deliberately targeting civilians as a major part of its war effort.




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Thursday, June 19, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon

Iran heavily reduced its Internet connectivity, claiming that this was meant to stop Israeli cyberattacks.

And if you believe that one, I have a mountain in Fordow to sell you.

Art the same time, it blocked phone landlines, told people to delete WhatsApp (claiming Israel is using it to spy on users) and also blocked Telegram. 

Iran isn't worried about Israeli infiltration. It is worried about its own people revolting.

Because it has done this before. It blocked the Internet in 2019, when protesters complained about high gas prices - and the regime murdered hundreds of them.

It did the same in 2022, after it arrested and caused the death of Mahsa Amini for not properly wearing a hijab. Again, it restricted apps like WhatsApp and internet access to stop the demonstrations, and again they killed hundreds of protesters.

So we have a track record. Iran will cut out Internet to stop its own people from communicating and organizing, not to stop Israelis from hacking.

(Although the Mossad apparently did use Internet to kick off the fighting, with many of the weapons that took out anti-aircraft rockets having been fired by remote control. )




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Wednesday, June 18, 2025

From Ian:

Seth Mandel: The ‘America First’ Crew’s Complete Disregard for American Lives
As an American, I have a hard time shrugging this off. As an American, I find it increasingly difficult to even understand the psychology of those who can shrug it off. And as an American, I find it incomprehensible that the defenders of these innocent American victims are accused of being disloyal Americans.

“They were schoolyard bullies,” Trump said of Iran this morning. “But now they’re not bullies anymore.” He specifically mentioned the Iranians’ motto of “Death to America,” which was also their battle plan and organizing program. He seemed pleased that there were finally consequences for Iran’s long war on the United States, that there is a price to be paid for all Iran’s mischief.

And here is the most interesting part: The price Iran has paid has not, in fact, been steep or cruel and unusual. In the history of mankind, no nation’s civilians have been safer while an enemy state controls their airspace during a live war. There’s nothing really to even compare it to. We are watching something no one has ever watched before. Israel, in response to Iran’s pursuit of the destruction of the Jewish people, not to mention its role in the worst daylong mass murder of Jews since the Holocaust, took control of Iran’s airspace and used that to patiently eliminate the sources of the Iranian regime’s power to oppress its people.

Trump supports this. If it feels to the keyboard warriors of isolationism like there is a degree of pressure to support these strikes, that is because those who are comfortable with Iranian nuclear acquisition, which would grant the regime full immunity from all its ongoing crimes against America and Americans, are in the minority.

It is also because they must intuitively question, on some level, their own decision to draw the line in the sand right here. When Trump ordered the elimination of ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in Syria in 2019, the handwringing from his MAGA supporters was muted. The same is true for the assassination of Qasem Soleimani, the Iranian terror general in charge of a global campaign to murder Americans. It was not cause for much in the way of hysterical warnings of apocalyptic warmongering.

The difference this time, of course, is Israel’s direct involvement. Most Americans seem to think this is a good thing—we have an allied nation willing to sacrifice to keep our common enemies down—but a few are uncomfortable for reasons they do not try very hard to disguise.

Whatever “America First” means, surely it ought not to mean a coldblooded heartlessness toward the victims of totalitarian terror, many of whom are Americans themselves. Nor should it mean an instinctive suspicion of anyone who seeks the defeat of America’s enemies.
John Ondrasik: My 2001 Hit Song, ‘Superman,’ Is for the Hostages in Gaza
I turned to “Superman,” hoping to remind the world that the hostages are people, not statistics. They are brothers and sisters, sons and daughters, husbands and wives. Music would bring out this shared humanity after the Jewish people experienced their worst trauma since the Holocaust, just like music uplifted an America shattered by 9/11.

“Superman” is a message of hope, solidarity and unity. Yet the unity of 2001 feels elusive. In response to my compassion for the hostages, I’ve been called a sellout and propagandist. For whom or what, I don’t know. I’ve been told I should “stick to music.” My new video with Alon’s family—shared by hostage families, supported by human-rights advocates, played in synagogues and town halls—triggered an onslaught of online vitriol.

“Superman” isn’t political. It’s emotional. It’s all of us. I can’t understand how connecting it to the obvious cause of Israeli hostages unleashed a torrent of hate from people who have never listened to the lyrics, never watched the video, and never cared to understand what this moment is truly about. To them, taking a stand—any stand—means choosing sides in someone else’s war. Yet the hostages aren’t political. This is a basic moral issue.

I’ve written political music before. When I released “Blood on My Hands” in 2021, condemning the botched U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, I expected blowback. I got it. But I accepted that because the song was overtly political. It pointed fingers, demanded accountability. It became the voice for veterans of the war in Afghanistan who were gutted by the withdrawal. Similarly, I wrote “Can One Man Save the World” to support Ukraine, and then recorded a video for it with a Ukrainian orchestra in the bombed-out Antonov airport. I chose a side, and again expected the criticism I received.

Yet there is no way to pick a side over Oct. 7. The horrors of that day stand alone. My critics believe that expressing empathy for one group means you must hate another. You have to either be “oppressor” or “oppressed,” though I’m not sure who Alon Ohel is oppressing from the tunnels of Gaza. In the face of these absurd labels, there’s no room for conversation, let alone reality.

When did we lose the ability to say “I see suffering, and I choose to respond with compassion”? How can anyone be reluctant to say a simple phrase like “Free the Hostages”? Would anyone prefer they stay put, starving and abused underground? When did we become so tribal that Americans could label a song dangerous, divisive or, worse, genocidal, simply because it refuses to dehumanize one side over the other?

Music is where we should be able to meet honestly without enmity. As I sing in “Superman,” I’m not naive. I know a song can’t stop a war, but it can start a conversation. It can open a heart. It can remind us that behind every headline is a human being who bleeds and loves and cries just like we do.
Rigged, Corrupt, and False: The UN Just Accused Israel of “Extermination"
The UN’s latest accusation of “extermination” against Israel is not just false—it’s the culmination of a rigged, corrupt process designed to shield terrorists and slander the Jewish state.

International law was created to protect humanity from horrors like genocide, mass murder, and systemic oppression. But what happens when those very laws are hijacked—used not to protect the innocent, but to cover for terrorists and smear their victims?

Welcome to the world of the UN Human Rights Council’s Commission of Inquiry on Israel, chaired by Navi Pillay. The COI’s latest June 2025 report accuses Israel of the crime of extermination—a grotesque inversion of reality that exposes the entire commission for what it is: propaganda in legal drag. The UN’s Permanent Inquisition

Unlike past UN inquiries that had defined time frames, this Commission of Inquiry is permanent. Established after the 2021 Hamas-Israel war, it was designed to create an endless cycle of condemnation against Israel, regardless of facts. The COI doesn’t just investigate events—it investigates Israel’s existence.

Its leadership? Activists pretending to be in judges’ robes.
Navi Pillay has long lobbied for sanctions against Israel and supports the antisemitic BDS movement.
Miloon Kothari publicly ranted about “the Jewish lobby,” comments so outrageous even the U.S. condemned them as “antisemitic, inappropriate, and corrosive.”
Chris Sidoti mocked accusations of antisemitism, claiming that “Jews throw around accusations of antisemitism like rice at a wedding.”

This is not impartiality. This is a rigged trial. The methodology behind the COI's latest report has raised significant concerns, particularly regarding its lack of transparency. The report relies heavily on anonymous testimony and unverifiable sources, with little to no forensic evidence to back up its claims.
From Ian:

Roz Rothstein: Iran’s Nuclear Escalation Is Not Just Israel’s Problem — It’s the World’s
Many talking heads who disagree with Israel’s preemptive attack on Iran are asking, “What is Israel’s endgame?” The answer should be obvious. Israel’s end goal is to prevent an existential threat from, and denuclearize, a theocratic government that has openly called for the destruction of not just one nation, but an entire people. Iran left Israel no choice. The alternative would have been to wait for a nuclear-armed dictatorship to make good on its promises of annihilation.

It is important to remember that this is not Israel’s first confrontation with existential threats. From its founding, Israel has been forced to defend itself against those who sought its destruction. But what we are seeing now is different. This is not another border conflict or skirmish with a non-state terrorist actor funded by Iran. This is a direct confrontation with Iran, a regime that has both the ideology and, increasingly, the capacity to inflict catastrophic damage, not only on Israel but on the broader international community.

What would the world expect Israel to do in this moment? Sit silently while its enemies prepare weapons of mass murder? Wait until the regime that funds more terror proxies than any other country in the world gains the ability to launch nuclear warheads? Every sovereign nation has the right — and the duty — to defend its people. When that nation is the first target of a radical regime’s nuclear ambitions, that duty becomes urgent and non-negotiable.

Now is the time for moral clarity and international resolve. A maniacal regime with nuclear ambitions that openly threatens to destroy Israel, the U.S., and the West, cannot be appeased or ignored. This is not just an Israeli problem. It is a test of the world’s ability to recognize evil, call it by its name, and confront it before it is too late.

Israel is on the front lines, but the danger reaches far beyond its borders. What Iran is attempting is not just a regional conflict — it is a challenge to the global order. If the world fails to stop Iran now, the consequences will be felt from Jerusalem to London to New York and beyond. The safety of our shared future depends on our ability to see the threat that is staring us in the face, and to act — not with delay, not with equivocation, but with unity, courage and resolve.
By defanging Iran, Trump would also bloody China and Russia
Clearly, it is in America’s best interest to give Israel what it needs to succeed, and to pursue a strategy that exploits Iran’s multiple internal and external pressure points to further weaken the regime’s hand.

This is important not just for containing Iran, but because of the message it will send Iran’s autocratic allies, Russia and China, about America’s commitment to restoring deterrence.

Make no mistake: Russia and China are also — at least metaphorically — being bloodied by Israel’s success.

The collapse of the Assad regime in Syria last year already dealt a blow to this alliance’s strategic depth in the region; the prospect of a weakened or collapsed Iran puts put an even larger dent in the armor of this dangerous partnership.

More importantly, by demonstrating American resolve on the issue of nuclear proliferation, dictators like Xi Jinping will have to think twice before making any aggressive or destabilizing moves — for example, in the South China Sea, or toward Taiwan.

To critics who argue that America is on the verge of being dragged into yet another Middle Eastern entanglement, it’s worth remembering that wars generally start when bad actors perceive weakness — not the other way around.
Brendan O'Neill: Israel’s clash with Iran is nothing like the Iraq War
For the Iraq comparison to carry moral weight, Saddam would have had to have attacked the US and the UK – and savagely. In Britain, which has a population of 70million to Israel’s nearly 10million, he would have had to have funded a terror army that slaughtered 8,400 of our people. And sponsored fanatical militants who fired 35,000 rockets at our cities, causing nearly half a million Brits to be displaced. And fired 2,500 of his own missiles directly at our cities. I was implacably opposed to the Iraq War, but if Saddam had visited such horrors on my countrymen I would have supported action against him. I’m an anti-imperialist, not a hippy.

Regionally, too, the Iraq comparison speaks to the ahistoricism of Israel’s critics. The worst thing about the Iraq War is that it was a violent pummelling of a destitute nation. War with Iran, war with Kuwait, war with its own freedom-yearning Kurdish population, war with America, the UN-enforced partition of its lands, the UN’s sanctions that caused chronic hunger and disease – Iraq was a feeble, pathetic half-nation in 2003. ‘Our’ war against it was pure moral pantomime, with well-known deadly consequences.

Iran, by contrast, is an energetic actor in the Middle East. It does pose a strategic threat. It deploys its proxies to the imperial end of extending its theocratic writ across the region. It has fought brutal proxy wars with Saudi Arabia, most notably in Yemen. And it unquestionably menaces Israel. Its missiles and its proxies’ pogroms are testament to that. Iran’s dream – openly – is to eradicate the Jewish State. Which other nation on Earth would be told to chill out in the face of such an extremist neighbour which in both word and deed had made plain its annihilationist aspirations?

The ‘invoking of the spectre of Iraq’ deserves ridicule. If people want to campaign against US or UK assistance for Israel’s war with Iran, that’s their business. I don’t want to see Western boots on the ground in Iran – let the IDF and the mullahs fight this war that Iran started. But the frothing anger with Israel for waging a supposed ‘forever war’, the feverish depiction of Israel’s leaders as modern-day Bushes or Blairs promising the world nothing but catastrophe, smacks of political infantilism. An addiction to the easy anti-war positions of the 2000s has blinded people to the moral and even civilisational questions raised by the multi-pronged Islamist effort to destroy the Jewish State.

Israel’s critics see themselves as being on the side of peace. Really? In railing against Israel for striking back against the regime that has visited extreme violence on its people, they are essentially instructing the Jewish State to live meekly alongside an existential hazard. They want to maintain a status quo ante in which the permanent threat of annihilation hangs over Israel. They see the existential endangerment of the Jews of Israel as a small price to pay for their own peace of mind. That isn’t ‘peace’ – it’s the displacement of war on to the Jews in order to save non-Jews’ arses.

It’s understandable that Iraq gave rise to a new isolationism. But it’s clear now that concern about that war has curdled into a deep and fretful cynicism where military action of any kind is viewed suspiciously. The role of the ‘Iraq spectre’ in public life is less to promote a principled opposition to Western interference in the affairs of other states than to institutionalise a politics of precaution in which every nation is encouraged to batten down the hatches lest ‘another Iraq’ occur. Between this nervous isolationism and the imperial hubris of those who smashed Iraq, there’s something else: internationalism, a support for democratic liberation everywhere. Israel has a right to defend itself against anti-Semitic tyrants, and Iranians have the right to choose who rules them – those are my uneasy positions.
John Spencer: What Is the Bomb Israel Needs from the U.S. to Quickly Destroy Fordow?
Why Fordow Is the Ultimate MOP Target
The Fordow facility is not just underground. It is inside a mountain, roughly 260 to 295 feet below the surface. Iran’s engineers designed it to survive even advanced airstrikes. The facility is thought to be constructed beneath at least 80 meters of rock, potentially reinforced by concrete and blast-resistant barriers. It is one of the most protected uranium enrichment plants on Earth.

Fordow’s depth and fortification render it immune to standard air-to-ground munitions. Even advanced Israeli bunker busters like the GBU-28 would likely fail to reach the centrifuge halls.

Some analysts believe that two MOPs may be required to guarantee mission success at Fordow. The first would weaken or breach the protective layers, and the second, following in short succession, could then reach and detonate inside the heart of the facility. This tandem-strike approach would maximize the likelihood of collapsing the internal chambers or destroying centrifuges beyond repair.

Could Fordow Be Attacked Another Way?
While the GBU-57 is the most capable conventional weapon for destroying the Fordow facility, it is not the only potential option. Israel has demonstrated alternative approaches, most notably in Operation Many Ways in 2024, where Israel conducted a complex, multi-domain campaign deep inside Syrian territory. That operation involved deception, intelligence penetration, cyber disruption, precision strikes, and a special forces raid on the ground to eliminate the high-value missile construction facility by placing explosive inside it and then extracting the Israeli soldiers. A similarly bold campaign could theoretically be designed to target Fordow, possibly involving cyber attacks to disable critical systems, electronic warfare, or even special operations forces inserted to destroy key components from within. However, such an approach would carry significantly higher risks, including mission failure, and loss of personnel. Compared to these contingencies, the GBU-57 remains the most direct, reliable, and strategically low-risk option to ensure the physical destruction of Fordow’s deeply buried enrichment infrastructure.

A Strategic Choice for the United States
As Israel weighs its military options against Iran’s rapidly advancing nuclear program, the question is not whether it has the will to strike Fordow. It is whether it has the means. The United States is the only country in the world with the capability to field the GBU-57. Granting Israel access to the weapon would involve not only transferring the munition but also addressing the delivery platform, a logistical and geopolitical decision of the highest order.

There is no substitute for the GBU-57 in this mission set. It is not just the bomb Israel needs. It is the only bomb that can do the job.


Disclaimer: the views expressed here are solely those of the author, weekly Judean Rose columnist Varda Meyers Epstein.

Benjamin Netanyahu has often referred to a divide between Iran’s regime and its people. The Israeli prime minister seems convinced that the Iranian people, as distinct from its oppressors, desire friendship with Israel. “Israel wants peace. We want peace with all those who truly want peace with us,” said the PM in an address to the Iranian people six months ago. “And I have no doubt that you, the People of Iran, know this. I know that just as we want peace with you, you want peace with us.”


If true, it sure would be an amazing thing to get Khamenei out of the picture and watch this friendship bloom.

Cyrus II le Grand et les Hébreux, Jean Fouquet, 1470 

More recently, in his June 13 address to the Iranian people, Netanyahu said, “Israel's fight is not against the Iranian people. Our fight is against the murderous Islamic regime that oppresses and impoverishes you. The nation of Iran and the nation of Israel have been friends since the days of Cyrus the Great.”

The idea of a friendship between Israel and Iran can be hard to reconcile with years of “Death to Israel” chants and regime-backed propaganda. How do we square what we’ve seen and heard with what Bibi tells us? Is there real evidence to support his assertion that the Iranian people might want peace—or even friendship—with Israel?

Let’s take a look:

Signs of Friendship from the Iranian People

Despite decades of regime-sponsored antisemitism, surveillance, and repression, many Iranians—both inside the country and across the diaspora—have expressed admiration, sympathy, and even affection for Israel and the Jewish people.

💬 Voices from Inside Iran

As Israel’s June 2025 strikes on Iranian military infrastructure shook the Islamic Republic, some Iranians were not trembling—but cheering.

“I … lost my control and was shouting, thanking Netanyahu for killing these criminals.”
Zahra, a 50-year-old mother of two in Karaj near Tehran, speaking to NPR

Another Iranian told Ynet:

“Iranians are not worried about Israel’s attack because we all know that the Israeli government has no problem with the Iranian people,” said “A” from Ahvaz. “This is not just my opinion. We all wish to see the destruction of the Islamic Republic as soon as possible.”

In other words, some Iranians trust the Israeli military more than their own rulers.

Just over a year ago, after an Israeli airstrike in Damascus eliminated seven Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps officers, graffiti appeared in Tehran encouraging the Jewish state to hit them harder next time.”

'Israel go ahead and strike; they don’t have the courage'

'Hit them harder next time Israel, they’ve s*** themselves'

🕊️ Support in the Streets and on Social Media

Social media has become a powerful window into Iranian public sentiment—particularly among younger generations and diaspora voices. After Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel, many Iranians online expressed solidarity with Israeli victims using hashtags like #IraniansStandWithIsrael and #IranIsHappy.

Here are just a few examples:

Meanwhile, Iranian attorney and activist Elica Le Bon, a prominent voice in the diaspora, has called Iranians and Israelis “old friends,” echoing a shared historical bond. On June 13, 2025, she tweeted, “Praying for the safety of the people of Iran and Israel. There has never been a war between our people, only a failed attempt to divide an ancient bond between old friends.” Her words resonate as a bridge across decades of division.


🕯Clerical Courage 

It didn't win him any popularity contests for saying so, but former senior Iranian cleric, dissident Ayatollah Hadi Ghabel, spoke of friendship between Jews and Iranians as far back as 2021:

“Iranians and Jews have many years of friendship. I haven’t met Iranians who don’t have a positive opinion of Israel.”

As we see, even within the heart of Iran’s religious establishment, there have been flickers of goodwill.

🌺 Conclusion: A Friendship Waiting to Blossom?

There could be no more hostile regime to Israel than that of Khamenei—but these brave, hopeful, often anonymous voices through the years, suggest that the people of Iran may indeed want peace, friendship, and even cooperation with the Jewish State. Of course, most of all, they want out from under their repressive regime. And Israel is making that happen even now as you read this article.

For years, Netanyahu has spoken of Iranian-Israeli friendship—and now, for the first time, it feels within reach. From defiant graffiti and diaspora rallies to viral hashtags and heartfelt tweets, there is mounting evidence that Iranians are not Israel’s enemies. In fact, many are potential allies.

Perhaps, when the ayatollahs are gone, we won’t need to imagine peace between Israelis and Iranians.

We’ll simply watch it unfold.



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  • Wednesday, June 18, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon

Iran isn't the only regional power with balletic missiles. Israel has the Jericho-3 and older Jericho-2 - not thousands, but hundreds. 

But there is little reason to use them.

First of all, fighter jets are more accurate and effective for the missions Israel is embarking on - attacking specific buildings, for example.

Another reason is that the Jericho missiles are really meant as a deterrent, especially since they are almost certainly nuclear capable.

But the other reason is simple: more innocent people would be killed if Israel shot conventional warhead ballistic missiles. They aren't as accurate and their explosive charges are generally greater than most bombs being dropped by Israeli fighter jets.

In other words, Iran is shooting missiles because it has no air force to speak of anymore, and it considers civilian casualties to be a bonus, not something to be avoided.



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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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