Wednesday, November 19, 2025

  • Wednesday, November 19, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
The ICRC just introduced a new commentary on the 1949 Fourth Geneva Conventions, and surprise! It contains language written specifically to apply to Israel.

The original language of Article 49(6) in the Conventions says, "The Occupying Power shall not deport or transfer parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies." This was written as a result of Nazi German forcibly transferring parts of its population to territory, and displacing the existing residents there, to assert control.

This article has been widened and widened consistently all because of Israel, in various international instruments. And now the ICRC is finishing the job, saying in its new commentary
it is irrelevant whether parts of the Occupying Power’s population have been compelled to settle in the occupied territory or whether they have done so voluntarily but with the support and/or encouragement of the Occupying Power.... The very concept of transfer suggests that there must be some involvement of the Occupying Power, to which the prohibition is addressed (‘The Occupying Power shall not deport or transfer’ (emphasis added)). Such involvement may take a variety of forms, both direct and indirect. Indirect support or encouragement may include building roads leading to settlements, providing military security for settlements, supplying electricity or offering tax incentives relative to nationals living in the Occupying Power’s own territory. 
So, according to these oh-so-legal writers, Israel would be violating international law by trying to protect its own citizens - the number one priority of every state on the planet. (They can try to thread the needle by saying protecting civilians is also part of Geneva, but exactly how to do so when the presence of soldiers or police is considered illegal is a bit muddled.)

And:
Conversely, the wording of the provision (‘transfer’) does not allow mere inaction – even if benevolent and acquiescent – to qualify as a violation of Article 49(6). However, depending on the circumstances, such inaction may constitute a violation of Article 43 of the Hague Regulations, which obliges the Occupying Power ‘to restore, and ensure, as far as possible, public order and civil life’. If, for instance, under the prevailing circumstances, the voluntary relocation of the Occupying Power’s own population amounts to a threat to public order and civil life, the Occupying Power would be obliged to prevent such movements.
Who decides whether the Jews - nearly all of whom live in remote areas far away from Palestinians - are a threat to public order and civil life? The Palestinians, of course.

Notice that under this definition, Turkey is unquestionably violating 49(1) and 49(6). It has encouraged Turks to settle in Northern Cyprus and it has seemingly forcibly transferred Syrian refugees into Kurdish areas in northern Syria.

Yet there is no language here that seems to have been written for Turkey, or any of the other long term occupations in the world. Practically no one protests against Turkey's violations. All the respect for international law seems to disappear when Israel isn't twisted to become the violator. 

This is not international law, but it is heavily influential within IHL. It is just one more of an endless effort over decades by Israel's enemies to weaponize the law against the Jewish state - and changing the law when they can. 

(h/t Irene)




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Wednesday, November 19, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
As I've mentioned, I've been working hard on my Derechology book (and not blogging as much.) I have a workable manuscript but I still have a lot of editing to do and many appendices to add. 

But since Google just released its latest AI model for Gemini, I thought I would feed the entre manuscript (currently some 350 pages) into the AI and ask for a book review. This give me ideas of what needs to be done yet but also helps me see the forest while I work on the trees. 

This review gives you a good idea of the scope of my project, although I actually think it is even bigger than this review indicates.

The Engineering Manual for Morality

A Review of Derechology: The Science of Human Morality by Eldad Tzioni

We live in an era of institutional vertigo. Universities, media organizations, and public health bodies—once the bedrock of social trust—seem to be collapsing under the weight of their own incoherence. In Derechology, Eldad Tzioni argues this isn't a personnel problem; it’s a software problem. Western civilization is running on a corrupted operating system, one that has been crashing with increasing frequency since the Enlightenment tried to reboot it without its original kernel.

Tzioni’s ambitious, sprawling, and often brilliant book offers a replacement OS. He calls it "Derechology" (from the Hebrew derech, meaning "path" or "way"). It is an audacious attempt to reverse-engineer the survival strategies of Jewish ethics, strip them of their theological casing, and offer them as a universal architecture for a secular world that has forgotten how to function.

Athens vs. Jerusalem: The Core Conflict

The book’s central thesis is a high-stakes revisiting of the ancient tension between Athens and Jerusalem. Tzioni argues that Western philosophy, dominated by Greek thought, committed a foundational error by treating the isolated individual (the atom) as the fundamental unit of reality. This choice led to a 2,500-year struggle to solve insoluble problems: logic that breaks when values conflict, "rights" that have no mechanism for adjudication, and a definition of truth that demands impossible perfection.

In contrast, Tzioni posits a "Relational Ontology." The fundamental unit of reality, he argues—supported by metaphors ranging from quantum entanglement to mycelial networks—is not the particle, but the relationship.

From this pivot, the book constructs its most valuable contribution: the Ethoskeleton. Tzioni suggests that trustworthy systems (whether individuals, corporations, or nations) must possess specific structural components to survive entropy. These include "Override Logic" (a transparent hierarchy for resolving value conflicts), "Corrigibility" (the structural capacity to admit and repair error), and "Relational Integrity" (obligations that scale with proximity).

It is a compelling argument. By shifting the focus from content (what values we hold) to architecture (how our systems process those values), Tzioni offers a way out of the culture wars. He doesn't ask us to agree on every political outcome; he asks us to agree on a structure that makes disagreement survivable.

The Physics of Good

Perhaps the book’s most daring leap is its attempt to bridge the gap between "is" and "ought" using the Second Law of Thermodynamics. Tzioni defines "Good" not as a matter of preference or divine command, but as anti-entropic direction.

In a universe continually sliding toward disorder, "Good" is the creative, energy-consuming act of building and maintaining complex relationships over deep time. Evil is not a force, but the surrender to entropy—the dissolution of bonds, the degradation of systems, the slide into chaos. It is a definition that feels rigorous and surprisingly intuitive, grounding ethics in the physical reality of the universe rather than abstract idealism.

The "Antisemitism Diagnostic"

One of the book's sharpest tools is its analysis of antisemitism. Tzioni reframes antisemitism not merely as racism, but as a "system error flag." He argues that ideologies turn antisemitic precisely when Jews—who stubbornly refuse to fit into neat binaries like "white/non-white" or "oppressor/oppressed"—break the ideology’s categorical framework. When a system cannot tolerate complexity, it tries to eliminate the anomaly. Thus, antisemitism becomes a diagnostic tool: if a movement hates Jews, it is structurally incapable of handling complexity and will eventually turn on itself.

Strengths and Weaknesses

Derechology is not a light read. It is dense with coined terminology ("Yesod Ethics," "The Falsification Audit," "Secular Covenantalism") that can occasionally feel overwhelming. The author asks the reader to learn a new language to understand his new world.

Furthermore, while the book explicitly claims to offer a secular system, the final act makes a sophisticated pivot back toward theology, arguing that the structure of the universe implies a "Unbound Domain" (God). While logically consistent with his arguments, this may alienate the strict materialists the book works so hard to court in its opening chapters.

However, the "proof of concept" chapters—specifically the section detailing "AskHillel," an AI programmed with these ethical rules—are fascinating. They demonstrate that this is not just high-minded philosophy; it is computable logic. Tzioni shows that an ethical system with clear "override logic" can navigate complex dilemmas (like triage or self-driving car ethics) better than our current vague notions of "do no harm."

The Verdict

Derechology is a work of significant intellectual engineering. It moves beyond the tired "faith vs. reason" debates to offer something more practical: a blueprint for building institutions that don't collapse.

It is a book for the institutional homeless—those who find the rigidity of the far-right and the incoherence of the far-left equally uninhabitable. Tzioni offers a "place to stand," a foundation built on humility, transparency, and the relentless, anti-entropic work of keeping promises. It is a demanding book, but for a civilization currently crashing, it might just be the manual we need.

Rating: 4.5/5

______________________

If any philosopher, theologian or other credentialed thinker is interested in seeing the book as it stands now and is willing to give me feedback, let me know!




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Wednesday, November 19, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
It's been many years since I looked at British journalist Jonathan Cook, but his latest revisionist self-serving tweet excerpt from a recent speech rankles:

When I worked at the Guardian, the foreign editor – now a major columnist – once told me that he did not like his correspondents to spend more than a few years in difficult posts like the Jerusalem bureau because, given time, they were likely to “go native”. At the time I did not understand what he meant. But I learnt soon enough.

I moved to cover the Israel-Palestine beat as a freelance journalist in 2001. I had no editors breathing down my neck. I based myself in Nazareth, a Palestinian community inside Israel, thinking that taking a different approach – my colleagues were in Jewish areas of Jerusalem or in Tel Aviv – would make my journalism distinctive and interesting to editors back home.

In fact, my different perspective made me far less interesting to them. Indeed, as quickly became clear, it made them extremely nervous of me.

But the point is this: despite my unique circumstances, it took me years to fully “deprogramme” and emerge the other side relatively whole.

I first had to unravel the conditioning and training – both ideological and professional – that had encouraged me to assume Israelis were the Good Guys and Palestinians … well, they must be something less than the Good Guys.

And then I had to rebuild my ideological and professional worldview from scratch – like a child, trying to make sense of all the new information I was absorbing. Although I hid it at the time, the truth is it was a slow, frightening and painful awakening. Everything I believed in and trusted had crumbled to dust.

Is it any surprise that the vast majority of journalists never make such a transition. 

They are highly unlikely to have the opportunity to immerse themselves deeply in the lives of those “natives”. 

They are rarely allowed the time to step off the journalism treadmill to develop a bigger perspective. 

They are surrounded by family, friends, colleagues and bosses, who constantly reinforce received wisdom or enforce “professional” standards that shore up the existing consensus. 

They are disincentivised from straying off the path, when they have a salary to earn, a career to develop, bills to pay, a family to feed.

And ultimately, of course, there is the prospect of a terrifying journey ahead, down a dark tunnel to a destination unknown.

Now, let's fact check:

Jonathan Cook never wrote a pro-Israel article before he moved to Nazareth. He mostly wrote about domestic British topics. He went to SOAS and his MA thesis was on Israel allegedly confiscating land from Israeli Arabs in the Galilee. His entire reason for moving to Nazareth was to write a book (finished in 2006) about how Israel mistreats Israeli Arabs, a different angle than the "occupation" narrative that was and is so popular. There was no "deprogramming" in Nazareth - it was all confirmation bias.

He positions his colleagues as being motivated by money while he is pure. But he found plenty of outlets to buy his articles from Nazareth - hundreds of pieces in Al Ahram, Counterpunch, Electronic Intifada and, yes, The Guardian. His supposedly fearless reporting, riddled with errors and bias, gave him prestige and awards.

And where are all of these pro-Israel articles his fellow journalists are writing? The occasional article on Israeli victims of terror hardly counter the tsunami of articles that by default trust terrorist sources and doubt Israeli statements. 

Cook talks about his colleagues being infected with pro-Israel bias, "going native" by living in Jewish areas for so long. Yet Cook married an Arab Christian shortly after moving to Nazareth, they have children together and he even received Israeli citizenship because he was married to an Israeli. His colleagues bend over backwards not to appear pro-Israel, but Cook pretends to be immune from any bias while living among Israeli Arabs - most of whom reject the label he gives them of "Palestinians." 

Cook's tweet does not hold up to simple facts. He is rewriting history and positioning himself as some kind of fearless, objective hero who managed to learn the truth by his dogged determination. In fact he was biased from the start and he himself has "gone native" far more than any of his journalist colleagues. 

(h/t Jill)



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Wednesday, November 19, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
From the (Chicago-area) Daily Herald:
A would-be congressional candidate from the North suburbs who has an extensive history of antisemitic social media posts was removed from ballot consideration Tuesday.

Zion resident John Minarcik won’t appear on spring 2026 Democratic primary ballots for Illinois’ 10th District seat because he didn’t gather enough petition signatures to qualify, the Illinois State Board of Elections ruled.

Only three people signed Minarcik’s petition, an elections board spokesperson said. Nearly 1,000 signatures were required to qualify in that primary race.

A fellow Democratic candidate, Mundelein’s Morgan Coghill, had formally objected to Minarcik’s petition.
Minarcik is a well regarded pathologist - and a completely obsessed Jew-hater.

His Facebook feed is filled with anti-Israel and antisemitic posts, along with videos of cute babies and dogs. 

Minarcik is the horseshoe theory personified. He loves Zohran Mamdani - but also Tucker Carlson and Candace Owens. The only consistent pattern is his hate for Jews.

Here are posts of his from only the past few weeks. 






I don't think Minarcik even campaigned for the signatures. One would think a Facebook page of a candidate would be filled with campaigning, but there's nothing but hate (and puppies with babies.) My guess is he only filed his petition to get publicity for his antisemitic positions. 

But it is interesting that he ran as a Democrat. 






Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

From Ian:

Seth Mandel: Fighting the Post-Oct. 7 Battles
Solutions are harder to come by than realizations, but the realizations are the essential first steps. As expected, the post-Oct. 7 world is a different place, and navigating that new world requires every Jewish leader and organization to acknowledge what has changed.

We see one example of this playing out right now. The Anti-Defamation League has taken steps to refocus on anti-Semitism after years of sacrificing its founding mission for a chance to be part of the progressive political coalition. ADL launched a “Mamdani Monitor” which consists of an anti-Semitism tipline for New Yorkers and a pledge to scrutinize the Mamdani administration’s actions and appointments. It’s an entirely reasonable, moderate approach, and it could be useful so long as the ADL follows through. The emerging Jewish consensus that bad actors must be held to account is healthy.

But it has inspired anger from, for example, the Nexus Project, a liberal critic of attempts to fight anti-Semitism and, though young, a relic of the pre-Oct. 7 status quo. Jill Jacobs, an activist with another progressive Jewish group, called the ADL “Islamophobic.”

Still, these attempts to conjure the naïve and dangerous fantasies that were shattered on Oct. 7 haven’t had much effect; reality is reality, and the Jewish community has been clear-eyed. As Emanuel said, “[I]f we don’t understand the depth of where we are, we’re never going to fix the problem.” The new normal isn’t pretty, but we don’t have to let it become permanent.
Seth Mandel: A Tale of Two Film Festivals
Late last month, Variety broke the story that IDFA was joining the boycott-and-blacklist trend aimed at the Jewish state. DocAviv, the main documentary film festival and organization in Israel, gets some public funding, as is common in the industry. So DocAviv, along with Kan and CoPro, were banned from IDFA. According to DocAviv artistic director Michal Weits, the groups received a letter from IDFA saying “that they are not going to provide us accreditation since we are complicit with the genocide, which is obviously not true.”

The Israeli government has no say in what DocAviv does or does not screen. Indeed, the dark irony in all this is that, if art is as powerful as we are told by the pompous anti-Israel industry figures, then the blacklists undoubtedly harm the Palestinian “cause” and do nothing to help it.

That’s not to say that there won’t be plenty of anti-Zionist agitprop at the festival. There will be. If you’ve made a documentary with the word Gaza in the title, as long as you’re not an Israeli Jew you’ll get your piece shown like everybody else.

But the festival will not have Israeli projects intended to drum up empathy for Gaza or make the case for coexistence because that would acknowledge the fact that Israelis are people. The flat-minded artistic activists at IDFA need Israelis to be a concept—faceless and devoid of humanity, no matter the subject. “Culture and films are the only way to communicate with each other,” Weits says. “But the boycott wants us to be isolated and disappear, and yet I think our voice is important.”

But it isn’t—not to the art world, anyway. The entire focus of anti-Zionist activism is the erasure of the Jewish state. If it’s any consolation, there will continue to be plenty of Chinese films to see.
If Hillel Is Not for Jews, Who Will Be?
What keeps me up at night is not the campus hordes. As I have tried to explain, I worry mostly about Hillel’s reaction to them. That is, I worry about the internal slackening of the Jewish attitude toward survival.

The New York Times columnist Ross Douthat observes that humankind is passing through a civilizational bottleneck. AI, social media, and accelerating digitization, alongside the deleterious social consequences of these phenomena, put all of what has passed for human culture at risk. The digital age “is killing us softly,” he writes, “by drawing people out of the real and into the virtual, distracting us from the activities that sustain ordinary life, and finally making existence at a human scale seem obsolete.”

What if we looked at the rise of campus anti-Semitism not as a threat but as a measure of internal strength in the fight for human culture? On the surface there are plenty of successes, in large part thanks to the efforts of the current administration to hold universities accountable. Internally it’s a different story.

The equation of Judaism with social justice is a key spiritual failing of Hillel. It has the unforgivable consequence of tying Judaism’s significance to Jews’ adherence to ever-changing moral litmus tests du jour, up to and including hatred of Jews. But Judaism as a civilizational project has survived in large part because of the steadfastness of its moral vision, often despite being in opposition to mainstream cultural mores. Its enduring teachings, including the gifts of hospitality and charity and profound respect for one’s parents, are not modeled after what is normal or popular at any given moment.

In 1924, the year after Hillel was founded, Congress passed the Johnson-Reed Act, limiting immigration. The number of legal Jewish immigrants dropped from 119,000, in the year before the bill’s passage, to 10,000 the following year. The gates were closed. Instead of the status quo of mass immigration, which for 40 years led American Jewry to believe that its native-born population would be continually renewed and replenished from abroad, now the existing population was all that Jews could practically rely on. American Jewry would have to renew itself.

Hillel, then, didn’t just provide young Jews with social and spiritual community in an era of incipient assimilation; it gave American Jewry a tool to fashion new generations to lead and sustain the community. In those years, Hillel believed in the future. Today, still, Hillel is uniquely constituted to lead American Jewish youth, the rising generation.

But to do so, Hillel must embrace the gifts of the past, and recognize that civilizations can die; history is littered with the corpses. The Jews are a small people, vulnerable to destruction along with their ideas. That is not to say that extinction is their fate—but, to borrow a line from Charles Krauthammer, “only that it can be.”

Hillel has a decision to make. Whether to face not only Lasch’s question, but Hillel the Elder’s—If I am not for myself, who will be for me?—as well as the choice Moses put before the People of Israel long ago, as recorded in Deuteronomy: “I call heaven and earth to witness against you this day: I have put before you life and death, blessing and curse. Choose life—if you and your offspring would live.”
From Ian:

Trump Says He and Saudi Crown Prince Have ‘Reached an Agreement’ for Country To Join Abraham Accords
President Donald Trump said Tuesday that he and Saudi crown prince Mohammed bin Salman have "reached an agreement" for Saudi Arabia to join the Abraham Accords, bringing the region’s central power broker closer to normalizing relations with Israel.

Tuesday marked the first time both leaders confirmed that Saudi Arabia seeks to join the Abraham Accords, which initially included Israel, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco. Kazakhstan became the latest Muslim-majority country to join the pact earlier this month.

"We want to be part of the Abraham Accords," bin Salman said during a joint press conference with Trump at the White House. "But we want to be sure we secure a clear path towards a two-state solution. We had a good discussion about moving forward."

"We want peace for Israelis," he added. "We want peace for Palestinians. We want peace for the region."

The Saudi crown prince’s statement came on the heels of his country’s decision to support the U.N. Security Council resolution endorsing Trump’s plan for post-war Gaza. It also follows Trump’s announcement that he plans to sell Saudi Arabia F-35 fighter jets, advanced planes the United States has only sold to Israel.

While the Israel Defense Forces opposed the Saudi F-35 deal, arguing it has the potential to erode the Jewish state’s air superiority in the region, Trump hinted that Israel will be happy with the eventual terms of the deal.

"Israel’s aware, and they’re going to be very happy," he told reporters in the Oval Office.

Trump did not elaborate on the terms of the tentative deal, but it is expected to couple the F-35 sale with Saudi Arabia joining the Abraham Accords, and may also involve a path toward a Palestinian state.
Lee Smith: Farewell to the Abraham Accords
Even assuming the Saudis have the best of intentions—that is, they’re not simply using the White House to get a leg up on their Gulf rival—the problem is that the Palestinian file can’t be wrested from regional troublemakers since it was designed by bad actors to be used for bad purposes. The Saudis understand this in part: For instance, they don’t want Gazan refugees because the Palestinians have brought chaos and violence to every state they’ve inhabited (Jordan, Lebanon, and Kuwait, as well as Gaza and the West Bank), and a Palestinian presence in Saudi Arabia would therefore destabilize the kingdom and spell the end of the reform program of the 40-year-old crown prince. But Riyadh seems not to have gamed out other imminent risks.

Let’s say, for instance, that the Israelis did accommodate Saudi Arabia’s demands, even though there’s no good practical reason for Netanyahu to pursue a normalization agreement with the Saudis; the prospects of him winning a Nobel Peace Prize are slim, whereas detonating his own domestic political coalition in the effort is a certainty. But suppose that, for sentimental reasons, Jerusalem wanted to pocket Riyadh’s promises to use its wealth and global influence to nurture a more moderate Islam and embrace the Jews as part of the Abrahamic covenant. Some Israelis might like the sound of that, however meaningless those pledges might be in reality. Still, those empty phrases would immediately supply the pretext for the next Qatari-Muslim Brotherhood information operation targeting the Saudi kingdom and the crown prince who, in Qatar’s telling, betrayed the Palestinians to the Zionists.

For Israel, a normalization deal with Saudi is worth little more than the paper it’s written on. For Saudi Arabia, especially if it gets Israel to agree to a two-state framework, a normalization agreement could cause large and unforeseeable dangers. The Palestinian file has proven itself to be a curse to those who wield it, like the Soviet Union, Nasser’s Egypt, the Assads’ Syria, and Saddam’s Iraq, all of which have faded from history even as the Islamic Republic of Iran now teeters on the abyss.

As for Trump, he’s already had his big Middle East victory—a win much more significant and durable than a normalization agreement. Not only did he, in partnership with Netanyahu, eliminate the Iranian threat, but also he revived the U.S.-led regional order that is crucial to American peace and prosperity. Israel is America’s regional enforcer, and a good destination for tech investors. The Saudis pump cheap oil to stabilize global energy markets, buy U.S. arms systems, and invest in U.S. industry. That’s a regional order that works well for everyone—starting with the United States. Now it’s time to get the Middle East and the black hole in the middle of it, the Palestinians, off the front page and turn to the bigger issue on which Trump’s historical legacy will rest: China.
The "Beetlejuice" Peace
Here’s the brutal truth everyone knows but pretends not to: Hamas will not disarm. The countries supposedly contributing to the ISF? They have no intention of disarming Hamas. That leaves one actor capable of removing Hamas—and the only actor who can bring about the “peace” everyone claims already exists: Israel.

You cannot have peace with Hamas in power. And removing Hamas will not be peaceful.

These are not opinions. They are facts. Mutually exclusive realities. No amount of wish-casting, press releases, or glossy declarations can change that.

A “peace plan” that leaves Hamas in charge is not a plan. A “peace agreement” that forces Israel to tolerate a genocidal militia on its border is not an agreement. It is political fantasy, being marketed as reality.

If the world wants peace, it must start with an adult premise: obstacles must be removed. The obstacle here is clear. The only one capable of removing it? The IDF. The only one willing to do so? Also the IDF.

So go ahead: say “peace” three times into a mirror. Wave your glossy resolutions. Print your headlines. Hope really hard. But unlike Beetlejuice, peace will not appear until reality does—and reality does not negotiate with Hamas.

Until that truth is faced, talk of “agreements,” “plans,” or “historic deals” is just theater. An expensive and dangerously misleading theater.
* Note Twitter embedding is broken today.
  • Tuesday, November 18, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
Third World Quarterly published this article this month:

Re-indigenising feminism: gender, genocide and Gaza
Banah Ghadbian

Abstract
In this article, I analyse why the ongoing genocide in Gaza is a feminist issue. I reflect on the term ‘reproductive genocide’ as defined by the Palestinian Feminist Collective and situate how genocidal violence is gendered, while remaining critical of the ways in which gender is deployed to essentialise oppression. I explore how colonial, imperialist feminists use the discursive strategy of purplewashing and deploy notions of gender to justify genocide. I locate my analysis in Third World feminist frameworks which understand how colonial structures use heteropatriarchy and sexual violence as part of their conquest of Indigenous people. I draw from Black, Indigenous, transnational, Third World, Palestinian and inter/national feminisms that insist on remembering decolonisation and re-indigenisation. I conclude by centring calls by Palestinian feminists in Gaza themselves, including Gazan feminists calling for an international strike on Women’s Day, arguing that they embody an intersecting critique of capitalism, colonialism, patriarchy and state violence simultaneously that insists on remembrance and reindigenisation.
Just more anti-Israel propaganda dressed up as feminist studies. It doesn't take much effort to see that anyone can claim anything in an academic paper. 

Her first footnote says:
I use the term Zionist entity instead of Israel intentionally, as Israel has violated international law since its inception.   
So Third World Quarterly knowingly allows its papers to single out Israel as the only nation that is so heinous that its name must not be mentioned - the Voldemort of nations. 

By singling out and denying the Jewish State altogether, the paper is functionally antisemitic. 

It is hardly the only one - there are dozens of academic papers in respected journals over the past year that don't debate "Gaza genocide" but use it as an assumed fact to expand it into even more bizarre areas as if "genocide" is an axiom, not a lie and not even disputed. after all, they have footnotes to other papers that accuse Israel of genocide! That's "science!"

What does this have to do with Tucker Carlson? 

As bad as Carlson's platforming neo-Nazis and Holocaust deniers is, he is still a media personality. His promotion of toxic hate is irresponsible and must be condemned, even if the President supports his right to host whomever he wants. (There is no contradiction there. He can say what he wants and everyone can condemn him.)

But which is worse - an influential podcaster platforming Jew haters, or academic journals mainstreaming antisemitism in the guise of scholarship?

The journals wear the costume of objectivity. They cloak ideological hostility in peer-reviewed legitimacy. And they go unchallenged , not despite the academy’s moral standards, but because of how those standards have collapsed. The very ethical frameworks used to detect bigotry and bias in other cases are suspended when the subject is Jews or Israel.

Even the media has mechanisms for correcting mistakes. these journals are building a pseudo-intellectual infrastructure for antisemitism that remains in the academic ether forever. Newspapers are forgotten but researchers continue to cite these papers as if they are proven theories to build upon decades after they are written. 

Where are the Leftists railing against the hijacking  of academia by antisemites? 

Yes, this article only has a few dozen views and Carlson reaches millions. In that sense there is no comparison. But unlike Carlson, academic journals are supposed to have standards, and social science journals pretend that their papers have the same rigor as scientific papers. 

Hate like this lives on forever in the dusty corners of universities, waiting to be resurrected when a new toxic theory emerges. And a hell of a lot of those theories happen to center on Jews. 

Monday, November 17, 2025

  • Monday, November 17, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon


The apparent language in the US Peace Plan for Gaza UN Security Council resolution seems to make Palestinian statehood a distant possibility rather than a requirement.

 UNSC Resolution 1397 (2002) affirmed a "vision of a region where two states, Israel and Palestine, live side by side within secure and recognized borders." 

UNSC 1515 (2003) "Endorses the Quartet Performance-based Roadmap to a Permanent Two State Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict."

But this resolution steps back from those ideas, and weakens them significantly. It says (based on the draft text, the full resolution text has not been released at this writing):

Welcomes the establishment of the Board of Peace (BoP) as a transitional administration with international legal personality that will set the framework, and coordinate funding for, the redevelopment of Gaza pursuant to the Comprehensive Plan, and in a manner consistent with relevant international legal principles, until such time as the Palestinian Authority (PA) has satisfactorily completed its reform program, as outlined in various proposals, including President Trump’s peace plan in 2020 and the Saudi-French Proposal, and can securely and effectively take back control of Gaza. After the PA reform program is faithfully carried out and Gaza redevelopment has advanced, the conditions may finally be in place for a credible pathway to Palestinian self-determination and statehood. The United States will establish a dialogue between Israel and the Palestinians to agree on a political horizon for peaceful and prosperous coexistence.

This means that the PA must show it can govern Gaza and it must go through a significant reform program before we can even think about a Palestinian state. Only after that may the conditions be in place - not for a state, but for a credible pathway that could lead to self-determination (which can mean autonomy) and a state. 

That's a lot of steps. And the extremely tentative language indicates, as international law expert Eugene Kontorovich points out, "there is no legal or practical obligation to create a Palestinian state" according to the Security Council. If there way, it wouldn't have used this tentative language. 

And although Russia and China opposed it, they didn't veto it because Arab states - including the PA itself! - supported the resolution. 

So even the entire Arab world does not support  a Palestinian state as something that should happen unilaterally. Also, the UK and France voted for this resolution, even though they recognized "Palestine" earlier this year with far fewer preconditions. While there is a lot of leeway in how diplomats word things, this seems to indicate that their recognition was more performative than legal. 

From what I can tell, this resolution is just about as good as Israel could ever hope for. It makes clear that Israel must approve any Palestinian state - which always was the case but it enshrines it. This is a completely different trajectory from what we've been seeing internationally over the past year, and it is  a refreshing return to reality. 




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

From Ian:

Christine Rosen: Hating Jews for Fun and Profit
How did anti-Semitism become mainstream so quickly, especially among younger Americans? Perhaps because it has become a form of mass entertainment.

In the wake of the Hamas terrorist attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, and the significant increase in attacks on Jews and Jewish institutions in the U.S., this is an urgent question. A squad of prominent public figures, elected officials, and cultural arbiters has emerged to promote ideas many thought permanently relegated to the unsavory fringes of American life—and they are gaining an increasingly enthusiastic hearing.

Case in point: Tucker Carlson’s fawning reception of self-proclaimed white nationalist and leader of the so-called groyper movement, Nick Fuentes. As a guest on Carlson’s show, Fuentes, a fan of both Hitler and Stalin, obligingly performed his predictable routine, complaining about “organized Jewry” and the Jews “controlling the media apparatus.” Smiling and nodding along, Carlson did remind Fuentes that “going on about the Jews helps the neocons” but otherwise agreed with him, noting that Christians who supported Israel have been “seized by this brain virus.” An internal conservative battle erupted soon after, when Kevin Roberts, the president of the Heritage Foundation, one of the conservative movement’s major institutions, produced a video defending Carlson and calling him a friend.

Water finds its own level, and Roberts’s unwillingness to denounce Carlson’s endorsement of anti-Semi-tic conspiracy theorizing places him and, by association, his institution in the most polluted part of the conservative movement’s pond. That this happened was entirely by design. As Fuentes himself gleefully noted on his show after the Heritage debacle unfolded, “We are thoroughly in the groyper war, the civil war for the GOP.”

In previous eras, anti-Semitism spread in the form of propaganda published in largely fringe newsletters, a few newspapers (like Henry Ford’s Dearborn Independent) and books, and notoriously, on radio broadcasts like those of the Canadian-American priest Charles E. Coughlin. Political organizers such as America First Party founder Gerald L.K. Smith (who, like Carlson, was fond of theories about UFOs and demons) also tried strenuously to mainstream anti-Semitism, but the effort never achieved widespread acceptance.

Today, by contrast, anti-Semitism lives and thrives on the entertainment platforms of the young and very online. YouTube, streaming sites like Rumble, and social media platforms have vastly expanded their reach and scope while presenting no barriers to entry and providing anonymity to millions of people who crave communities of the like-minded—often with little regard to what they are endorsing with their time and attention. Popular streamers like Fuentes and Carlson are the arbiters of an online culture that now permeates real-world politics daily. Fuentes boasts more than 1 million followers on X and hundreds of thousands of viewers of his America First streaming show on Rumble, where he regularly, proudly, and unashamedly makes racist, misogynistic, anti-Semitic, and anti-American claims. Carlson is among the most popular public-affairs podcasters on platforms such as Spotify and Apple, where he muses about “globohomo” conspiracies and “the Antichrist’s newest manifestation.”

Motivated toxic actors like Fuentes and Carlson and Candace Owens, combined with streaming platforms and DIY media, have created a massive amount of content that can be consumed by millions almost hourly. And unlike the anti-Semitic propaganda of old, this new form allows for active, rather than merely passive, consumption. Viewers post comments, swap memes, and form fan chat groups. They feel connected to peers while enjoying the posture of being skeptical renegades “just asking questions” about how the Jews control everything. The Two Minutes Hate is available 24 hours a day.
John Podhoretz: Kevin Mamdani and Zohran Roberts
Roberts cannot be saved from himself, though perhaps his Lord can save him; my Lord doesn’t work that way. For us, “repentance, prayer, and charity avert the evil decree,” as we say on Yom Kippur. Salvation is not on the menu; we must be mindful of our evil inclinations and understand that it is our duty as decent people to fight against them every moment of every day. It is through the knowledge that we have led decent and meaningful lives that we are saved by the posterity we make possible.

So Kevin Roberts, hear me. Since you are friends with a Nazi, or are friends with someone who gives a microphone to a Nazi and chitters like a cicada as that Nazi spews his Satanic bile, you, too, should and must be anathematized—simply to create the condition in this country under which there can be a public square at all.

I am under no illusions here. I do not have the power to anathematize anyone, only to counsel it. I am part of a small people, 2 percent of the American population, whose position and standing in this country and around the world are growing more parlous by the day. But especially because of that, this is no time to accept disingenuous apologies. This is no time to find common ground with those who seek to kill us. And this is no time to sue for peace, even though we are so gravely outnumbered.

Israel is outnumbered, too, and it has demonstrated over the past two years that it will not lie down and die to give the Zohran Mamdanis of the world the satisfaction of having subdued a nation that is their superior in purpose, virtue, and meaning. And here at home, Kevin Roberts and his ilk will not guide the right into the arms of the Nazis and the America-haters without being stood up against.

Two months into the war, I wrote a piece called “They’re Out to Get Us.” I followed it up with a piece about how they’re trying to drive us underground. They’re still trying to get us. They’re still trying to drive us underground. The Passover Haggadah says, “In every generation they rise up against us to destroy us.” But as is true of everything in this century, time is speeding up. “Every generation” is now “every week,” or “every day.” It’s from the left. And it’s from the right.

But at least we can be comforted by this: Jews have survived worse than this self-righteous twerp from Uganda and Morningside Heights, and America has survived worse than the Nazi catamite brought to you courtesy of the Tucker Carlson charnel house.

Tucker Carlson has millions of listeners and viewers, and so does Nick Fuentes. And they have friends, like Kevin Roberts. Just as nuts have aflatoxin. Their continued common presence will send the right into anaphylactic shock.

We are the EpiPen.
The Desecration of Our Heritage
What Roberts calls “the vile ideas of the left” have become the lingua franca of this new “right.” The conspiracy has changed its costume, but not its creed. The radicals who shout loudest about treason to the nation have themselves become mouthpieces for its enemies. The dialectic of grievance, the politics of victimhood, the scapegoating of Jews and “globalists”—all were spoken long ago on the campuses that the podcast right claims to despise.

Founded to preserve the principles that won the Cold War and rebuilt the free world, the Heritage Foundation now labors to unmake them. Roberts speaks the language of patriotism but rejects its substance—advancing ideas and would-be leaders who would make America weaker, lonelier, and more vulnerable to the forces that openly despise her. When America forgets that her strength lies in fidelity to the values that made her great, she does not find safety in retreat. She invites defeat. Its leaders preach “America First,” yet the policies they advance would leave America last—abandoned by allies, emboldening enemies, and unmoored from the moral purpose that once bound liberty to restraint.

If America owes allegiance only to herself, then every sacrifice made in Europe and Asia and in the long vigilance of the Cold War was a mistake. Walk the cliffs of Normandy, and you will see the covenant written in marble and grass—the white crosses and Stars of David standing in their thousands, row upon row, facing the sea they crossed to free. The same order stretches across the Ardennes, across Anzio and Manila—fields of faith and duty where the living made a vow to the dead. Those who fell there did not die for profit or power. They died for a moral order carved into stone and sanctified in blood—the order that made the West worth defending. This is the moral inheritance of the Judeo-Christian tradition. It forged liberal democracy not as an abstraction, but as a way of life: a covenant between faith and freedom, duty and mercy. If America forgets this, the West will follow—and if the West forgets, freedom itself will fade from the earth. And when that happens, it will not be because the wolves were strong, but because the shepherds lost their faith.

This is not a quarrel within conservatism. It is a quarrel between those who still believe in civilization and those who would sell it for applause. The battle now is the oldest of all: between memory and amnesia. The Heritage Foundation was once built to defend the first against the second. Under Roberts, it is threatening to embody the reversal.
James Kirchick: Neither American nor Conservative
Last August, the American Conservative magazine heralded a scoop on its website: Republican Congressman Riley Moore of West Virginia had sent a letter to President Donald Trump urging him to award Patrick J. Buchanan—author and television pundit, former aide to Presidents Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, and himself a candidate for the presidency in 1992, 1996, and 2000—the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

That Moore chose the American Conservative to announce his nomination of Buchanan for the nation’s highest civilian honor was fitting. Along with the journalist Scott McConnell and the Greek aristocrat Taki Theodoracopulos, Buchanan founded the magazine in 2002 as a populist and paleoconservative rejoinder to the free trade, free market, and hawkish foreign policy ideas then regnant in the Republican Party. “Not all conservatives do agree that the United States should engage—for reasons that hardly touch America’s own vital interests—in an open-ended war against much of the Arab and Muslim world,” the trio declared in the magazine’s first editorial. The mission of the American Conservative would be “to reignite the conversation that conservatives ought to have engaged in since the end of the Cold War, but didn’t.”

The following week, Moore co-authored an article for the magazine with Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts elaborating on why Buchanan deserves the honor. Decrying “neoconservative gatekeepers” who “dismissed him as a nativist, a protectionist, and an antisemitic isolationist,” Moore and Roberts wrote that “looking back now, his speeches read like prophecy.” They pointed to Buchanan’s address to the 1992 Republican National Convention, which he delivered after waging a bruising yet ultimately unsuccessful challenge to George H.W. Bush for the party’s presidential nomination. “There is a religious war going on in this country,” Buchanan declared, an unnerving assertion that would do more to help Bill Clinton than Bush. “It is a cultural war, as critical to the kind of nation we shall be as was the Cold War itself, for this war is for the soul of America.” Moore and Roberts also called attention to a clause in Buchanan’s speech accepting the presidential nomination of the Reform Party eight years later in which he implored, “There has to be one party willing to drive the money changers out of the temples of our civilization.”

It was innuendo like this that had prompted William F. Buckley Jr. to publish, nearly a decade earlier, a 40,000-word essay in National Review ruefully concluding that Buchanan, his longtime friend and political ally, was guilty of espousing anti-Semitism. But to Moore and Roberts, it wasn’t Pitchfork Pat who was at fault in this exchange but rather the father of the American conservative movement, who had pushed a “spurious accusation of antisemitism” against a noble patriot whom “history has vindicated.”1

Moore’s proposal to give the Medal of Freedom to Buchanan, which the Heritage Foundation touted in a short hagiographic video titled “Pat Buchanan Was Right About Everything,” won the support of MAGA-aligned think tanks such as the America First Policy Institute and the Center for Renewing America (the latter founded by Russ Vought, the past and present director of the Office of Management and Budget). The leader of American Moment, an influential nonprofit for conservative youth, recently told Politico that “Buchanan has been revered by the under-30 crowd basically the entire time that I’ve been working in professional politics.” When Moore pitched his idea at the National Conservatism Conference, an annual gathering of the populist right, it was one of the weekend’s biggest applause lines.
From Ian:

Israeli gov’t to form independent panel to probe Oct. 7, rejects state inquiry
The Israeli government decided on Sunday to appoint an independent commission of inquiry to probe the failures that precipitated the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led massacre, nixing a formal state commission of inquiry.

According to the government decision, a ministerial panel appointed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will be determining the members and mandate of the Oct. 7 commission, as well as the probe’s scope.

Since the Gaza ceasefire, “fighting has shifted into a sort of interim state, and the government seeks to use this to advance the establishment of a commission that will be independent, have full investigative powers, and gain as broad public consensus as possible,” the decision stated.

The government said it will seek commission members who have “as broad public approval as possible,” according to Sunday’s resolution.

The ministerial panel was given 45 days to submit its recommendations to the government, ahead of a 60-day deadline Jerusalem was given by the Supreme Court, sitting as the High Court of Justice, to respond to a petition demanding that it announce a state commission of inquiry.

Netanyahu’s government has resisted launching a state commission of inquiry—which has the power to compel testimony and demand files, including classified documents—saying it would harm the war effort.

In response to petitions filed with the Supreme Court demanding a state commission, the government has argued that the president of the High Court of Justice cannot be trusted to appoint an unbiased committee per the State Commissions of Inquiry Law, 1968, and that the panel’s conclusions would not be acceptable to large swaths of the public.
Khaled Abu Toameh: Why Most Arab Countries Do Not Want Palestinians
[C]ountries such as Jordan and Lebanon had extremely negative experiences with the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and other Palestinian armed groups who were trying to overthrow or destabilize their governments (Black September in Jordan in 1970 and the Lebanese Civil War 1975-1990).

Arab leaders often make strong statements, issue condemnations of Israeli actions, and attend high-profile summits that express solidarity with the Palestinians. Their gestures, however -- apart from Iran and Qatar -- are often not matched by decisive steps...

The refusal of the Arab countries to absorb Palestinians (including the ex-prisoners) is... proof why it would be a mistake to rely on the Arab countries to help rebuild and demilitarize the Gaza Strip.

US President Donald J. Trump, who seems to be pinning his hopes on the Arabs to assist in funding and establishing a new government as well as deploying an international force in the Gaza Strip, needs to bear in mind that most of the Arab heads of state and regimes actually do not care about the Palestinians.

By now, most Arab heads of state see Palestinians as having caused immeasurable harm wherever they have gone and as having rewarded with treachery whoever stretched out a hand to them.

For the Arab leaders, the Palestinian issue is just another tool to advance their own political objectives, shore up their own popular support at home, or unite various factions against a common enemy.

Most Arab leaders, in short, will continue to pretend that they are eager to help the US administration with its efforts to implement Trump's 20-point plan for peace in the Gaza Strip. In reality, the Arabs will continue to do their utmost to stay away from the Palestinians -- apart from helping them to regroup in the Gaza Strip.
Hamas bus bomber who killed Briton is now among 15 terrorists freed in Turkey - and is happily wandering the streets
A Hamas terrorist who murdered a British woman is among more than a dozen dangerous extremists living freely in Turkey after being released from Israeli jails.

Security experts have warned of 'a serious concern' for the four million British tourists who visit each year.

Ishaq Taher Salah Arafah, 39, murdered Scottish-born Bible translator Mary Jane Gardner, 59, in a 2011 bomb attack in Israel.

The Daily Mail can reveal he is now at large in Istanbul. Social media posts show him meeting his family in a hotel and walking the streets as well as conducting interviews with friendly media.

In July he told Al Jazeera that 'God willing' the city of Jerusalem would be destroyed.

Last month the Daily Mail told how 154 convicted terrorists serving life were being put up in a five-star hotel in Cairo, Egypt.

Israel was forced to release them in exchange for hostages held by Hamas and allied Palestinian groups in the first stage of Donald Trump's peace deal.

Today we can reveal that 15 Hamas and Palestinian extremists previously serving life but who were released as part of the previous January's ceasefire deal are now living in Turkey.
  • Monday, November 17, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon

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

Now it is the wrath of protesters. 

Plus ça change...



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Any final thoughts?

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

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

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





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

AddToAny

Printfriendly

EoZTV Podcast

Podcast URL

Subscribe in podnovaSubscribe with FeedlyAdd to netvibes
addtomyyahoo4Subscribe with SubToMe

search eoz

comments

Speaking

translate

E-Book

For $18 donation








Sample Text

EoZ's Most Popular Posts in recent years

Search2

Hasbys!

Elder of Ziyon - حـكـيـم صـهـيـون



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.

Donate!

Donate to fight for Israel!

Monthly subscription:
Payment options


One time donation:

Follow EoZ on Twitter!

Interesting Blogs

Blog Archive