Sunday, July 07, 2024

Why I am Not Out Protesting to 'Bring Them Home Now'


 

I’m not protesting today. I am not blocking main traffic arteries.

Before October 7th, I spent months demonstrating against Binyamin Netanyahu’s judicial putsch. Even then, I never blocked traffic because it is illegal. I do not want to get arrested, and I do not want to be responsible for keeping someone from their urgent appointments. Why punish motorists?

Since the war began, I see no justification for stretching police resources by holding protests. 

More to the point, I am not demonstrating because I do not want to meld two distinct causes:  (1) bringing the government down and (2) “Bring Them [the Israelis kidnapped by the Palestinian Arabs in Gaza led by Hamas] Home Now.”

Elections first: Yes, I want elections, but so long as the Netanyahu-led Likud, the Hardal parties of Smotrich and Ben-Gvir, and the Haredi parties of Agudat Israel and Shas hang together, I see no path to bringing down this government. If anything, the "Channel 14" la familia crowd will point to “leftists” protesting in wartime and harden the government’s resolve.  

Who in Likud even wants to stand up to Bibi? Anyway, of the handful of Likud MKs who don’t owe their places in the Knesset to Netanyahu, which is going to resist the Magician of Cesearea? Yuli Edelstein? Nir Barkat? Yoav Gallant? All three repeatedly chickened out. Most of the rest are brown nosing Bibi drones.

Like you, I oppose the Netanyahu-Hardal-Haredi government. Under Netanyahu, the Likud is irredeemable; rotten to the core. Hardal is messianic apocalyptic. These parties want Temple Mount sacrifices, Gaza re-settlement, and pop-up nonstrategic settlements in Judea and Samaria. They would like to make believe there are no Palestinian Arabs and that, anyway, we have no obligations to them. As for the Haredi parties, they want us to embrace the sanctity of parochial draft dodging and the blessedness of their insular, cultish mores. 

Blame yourselves if you voted for Likud or one of the “religious Zionist” parties or God-forbid the haredim. This was the axis Netanyahu promised all along: Likud, Hardal, + the haredim.

Now, let’s turn to the matter of the hostages: “Bring them home now!” should be read as capitulate to Hamas at any cost.

Hamas is not offering to release Israeli hostages in return for a ceasefire. Hamas is demanding an end to the war, a complete withdrawal, and, therefore, an IDF pullback from the Philadelphi Corridor. Caving in would renew the free flow of weapons and materials from Sinai into the Strip. Obviously, after disengagement, we should never have given up the Philadelphi Corridor. Plainly, we should have taken the Philadelphi Corridor at the beginning of this war, not long months into it. But we have, presumably, belatedly shut the spigot that made October 7th possible.

Far worse, “Bring them home now” hands Palestinian Islamists precisely what they asked for on Day One, namely the release of hundreds of Arabs justifiably incarcerated in our prisons. Netanyahu released Yihya Sinwar himself in an earlier trade that put the needs of the few over the safety of the many. Repeating Netanyahu's mistake, which had cost us hundreds of lives leading up to October 7th, would be reckless in the extreme.

 “Bring them home Now!” not only hands Hamas a victory, it encourages another October 7th either from Gaza or the West Bank or Lebanon – or, maybe, all three fronts. It encourages the Shi'ite Arab Houties in Yemen and the Shi’ite Arab militias in Iraq.  It will encourage Palestinian Islamic Jihad, which is building up in Judea and Samaria. It will embolden Hezbollah to try something like October 7th using its tunnels in South Lebanon. And it would send a clear signal to our arch-enemy Iran.

After 275 days of war, massive dislocation of Israeli civilians – north and south, nearly 1,600 Israelis killed, and God knows how many life-altering wounds suffered by our soldiers, not to mention our collective national trauma, “Bring them home Now!” raises a white flag that says: we are yielding. It is an invitation to kidnap more Israelis later.

And not incidentally, bring who home now? Does Israel even have a list of who is alive and who is dead? What normal country negotiates without knowing what it is bargaining about? 

Ceasefire now? No thanks. Fuck the Hamas. Fuck the Hezbollah.

Netanyahu has failed to tell the families of the hostages the painful truth. He has strung them along. And Israel's anti-government media is committing malpractice by not spelling out precisely what Hamas expects in return for the hostages.

Our prime minister also can’t bring himself to acknowledge that Hamas has to be replaced by some other Arab entity in Gaza, and the only possible alternative is the repulsive PLO. Thus, thanks to this benighted government, we have wasted lives and time with a Biden-like refusal to acknowledge harsh reality. The Gaza vacuum works against us.

Netanyahu told us we should let the PLO collapse in the West Bank as punishment for their lawfare campaign against us. It felt good to do so, I admit. Yet, now, the West Bank is militarily more dangerous than at any time since the Six-Day War. We actually need to use warplanes to pacify West Bank refugee camps. And for all his bluster and all his obsequious groveling to Trump, Iran is closer to a deployable nuclear weapon than ever. 

We need to acknowledge reality – if it is not too late – and work with the “moderate” Arab states to salvage the hideous PLO.

The irrational, ideologically driven policies of this government and Netanyahu’s relentless commitment to putting his personal interests first have brought us to a bad place. Indeed, to October 7th. That said, falling into the enticing “Bring Them Home Now!” trap only exacerbates our problems. It’s not what you want to hear, it’s not what I want to write, but this is no time for mass-delusion.

 

Sunday, June 30, 2024

Propaganda of the Deed - Near Central Park, NYC


It is art depreciation time.




Elements in this picture. 

1. Ultra-Orthodox garbed anti-Zionist cult members, including a child in sunglasses. Check.

2. Yankee fan who is also a Hezbollah campaigner holding up the photo of the terror group manager. Check. 

3. Woke person (presenting as female) unmasked doing a selfie for Instagram. Check.

4. Woke person (presenting as female) in COVID mask wrapped in tourist kaffiyeh. Check.

5. Woke person (presenting as male) in full-face Palestinian Arab kaffiyeh. Check.

The site appears to be Fifth Avenue and 67th Street. Hezbollah is a Shi'ite Arab terror group that has seized control of Lebanon. The group launched an unprovoked attack on Israel in solidarity with Hamas, which invaded Israel on October 7, 2023.

Hezbollah is responsible for the killing of hundreds of US Marines in truck bombings. 

TAGS: #anti-Zionist, #anti-Israel, #quislings #cult #woke #terrorism #Hamas #Hezbollah #woke 


Tuesday, June 18, 2024

Good Old Fashioned Political Power on Display - Adirei HaTorah

 


Watch some of this nearly five-hour video of a mass assembly that didn't get much coverage in the mainstream media. Yes, it is mainly a religious revival meeting, but if you read between the lines, it is also a powerful display of ultra-Orthodox political power.

Earlier this month, some 25,000 ultra-Orthodox American rabbis, their financial backers, young novices, and full-time adult yeshiva students gathered at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia for the third annual Adirei HaTorah convention.

The participants belong to a stream of American ultra-Orthodoxy that follows the philosophy of Rabbi Aharon Kotler (1892-1962), who was rescued from the clutches of the Holocaust before the US entered WWII. Kotler, from his Lakewood, NJ yeshiva, advocated that adult men should not work for a living but engage in full-time Talmudic and religious studies.

The all-male Adirei HaTorah convention brought together an all-star lineup of mostly Lithuanian-ultra-Orthodox clerics, including a guest appearance by the elderly and frail Rabbi Shmuel Kamenetzky, whose yeshiva operates out of Philadelphia.

I was thinking about what it costs to bring together so many people who do not work for a living. US nursing home czar Eliezer Louis Scheiner apparently bankrolled the gala event. Let's just say that Scheiner and his partner Teddy Lichtschein's modus operandi in running their nursing home network does not serve as a kiddush Hashem. Scheiner has helped organize nursing home industry support for the Trump campaign. He personally donated $750,000. The Trump administration was known for trying to relax federal regulations over how nursing homes are run. You might say there was an implied quid pro quo, but I could not possibly comment.

The Philadelphia gathering heard from prominent religious figures. Among them was US-born Moshe (Milton) Hirsch, 88, an Aharon Kotler protege who traveled from the Holy Land to address the multitude. Hirsch, who is a spiritual adviser to Degel HaTorah, the Lithuanian wing of the Ashkenazi Israeli political party United Torah Judaism, heads an Israel-based charitable outfit HaMeshivim, which supports full-time yeshiva study for adult men and Lev Shomea which provides counseling.

In his homily (pick up around 2:56 in the clip), Hirsch warned that "leftists" in Israel were intensifying their fight against "Yiddishkeit" by cutting money to adult male yeshivot. To make matters worse, these same leftists are demanding that able-bodied ultra-Orthodox youth serve in the army or do some other form of national service. Hirsch did not have to state the obvious: that in Israel, this tumbledown lifestyle is mainly funded by the taxpayers thanks to the disproportionate power of the two ultra-Orthodox political parties, United Torah Judaism and Shas, and the connivance of Binyamin Netanyahu's Likud.

 

 

Monday, June 17, 2024

What 255 Days of War Has Taught Me – Ten Takeaways …


1. War is brutal – Sounds trite, but the jingoists forget. Eight of our soldiers were killed on Shabbat morning in an RPG attack on their explosive-laden APC in the southern Gaza Strip. Another died from wounds incurred Erev Shavuot in a booby-trapped building blast. By the close of the weekend, one more had been killed in yet another explosion.

Our war of no choice has forced us to kill not just armed jihadists but also inadvertently noncombatants who were in the wrong place at the wrong time. In practically all wars, civilian casualty rates are consistently and inevitably high – as often as not, more innocents die in war than bad guys.

Humanitarian crises often follow in the wake of war. Each side is responsible for looking after its own homefront. Except, peculiarly, in the case of the Palestinian Arabs.

2. The veneer of civilization is thin. The Palestinian Arabs launched Operation Al-Aksa Flood on October 7 with military precision that cadets at West Point will be studying for years to come.

Yet the blitzkrieg was about more than inflicting a martial blow against Israel. Integral to the onslaught was its barbarism. High on amphetamines, the Islamists raped, pillaged, and burned. Scores of ordinary Gazans followed behind the Nukhba forces to participate in the bloodlust. Long months afterward, forensic pathologists in Israel were still working to identify victims' remains. That's how vicious the massacre was.

While Hamas gunmen were still on Israeli territory and before the IDF was able to mobilize its citizen-soldier reserves – anti-Israel campaigners swarmed into Times Square, carrying Palestinian flags and chanting "Resistance is Justified," "Globalize the intifada," and "Smash the settler Zionist state."

They smelled Jewish blood. They sensed Israel's vulnerability. The prospect that the Zionist enterprise was a paper tiger was too tempting to ignore. And if Israel was going down, then maybe the Diaspora was vulnerable too – the identifiably Jewish Jews. The pro-Israel Jews. The condescending civil rights Jews. The philanthropic museum Jews. The white Jews.

The tsunami of anti-Israelism and antisemitism rather than ebbing has, with time, only consolidated and intensified. This mass hysteria of Jew-hating has burned through large swathes of Western civilization.

3. This is how Nazi Germany and its enablers did it. Like many of my baby boomer contemporaries, I have studied a fair amount about the Holocaust and the events leading up to WWII. Watching a clip of feverish, kaffiyeh-wearing, COVID-masked Gaza campaigners crowding into a NYC subway carriage last week on the way to Union Square (their usual protestdemonstrationsgelände) gave me a visceral sense of how an advanced cultured polity can be whipped asunder by frenzied mobilization.

The university encampments, assaults against cultural institutions, vandalism at homes of prominent Jews, attacks on religious Jews on the streets, along with the incremental purging of "Zionists" from woke media, recall the Weimar Republic.

I know that history doesn't literally repeat itself, but who wants to test that truism?

4. Neither a uniform nor rank connotes wisdom. We have a splendid military that reflects Israel at its human and technological best. Yet the disgrace of October 7 runs deep and wide. The strongest army in the Middle East could not muster one Apache helicopter gunship on the morning of Black Saturday.

What's no less worrying is the number of infiltrations of military bases since October 7; this exposes a poorly supervised IDF.

The multiple examples of soldiers misbehaving in Gaza (today, two soldiers idiotically posing holding bras to their chests in a Gaza residence) amplified on social media points to an army where discipline is way too slack.

The IDF can carry out a pinpoint strike hundreds of miles from our borders but can't find a terror mastermind hiding a short driving distance from the Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv. Let's say our military prowess is uneven.

Historian Stephen Ambrose, in his biography of Dwight Eisenhower, says Ike hated to be surprised.

"As a general rule, the easiest way to achieve complete strategic surprise is to commit an act that makes no sense or is even self-destructive. In 1941 it made no sense for the Japanese to initiate a war with the United States; thus the surprise at Pearl Harbor. It made no sense for the Germans to invade Russia; thus the surprise of Operation Barbarossa. In 1944 it made no sense for Hitler to use up his armor in a hopeless counterattack, rather than reserve it for the defense of the Rhine; thus the surprise in the Battle of the Bulge."

So, in fairness to our decision makers who were taken by surprise on October 7 – the Hamas onslaught made no sense. That it would leave Gaza devastated was foretold.

What we Israelis failed to consider, though, is that for Palestinian Arab leaders, what matters is keeping their cause (a state from the River to the Sea) at the forefront of world attention. Whether it is killing athletes at the Olympics, smashing the skulls of babies against a rock, blowing up a university café, or hijacking jetliners – the world will not pull back in revulsion. It will pay attention. It will ask, "What is the root cause of this behavior?" and it will blame the Jewish state.

5. Our political regime needs changing. Binyamin Netanyahu, who has been prime minister for the better part of 16 years, is blameworthy for October 7. The IDF high command and the domestic spy chiefs are culpable.

Recall that on the day before October 7, Netanyahu was trying to carry out a putsch under the guise of judicial reform. And that he was told for nearly six months that his behavior was undermining Israeli deterrence.

So, we need to do more than rid ourselves of the corrupt, smug, power-hungry, and inept. And we certainly should not replace them with their pale imitations, the likes of Yossi Cohen, Avigdor Leiberman, or Ayalet Shaked.

Above all, we need a system that takes human nature into account. Israel's political system requires structural refinement. We deserve a constitution that protects us from the passions of raw majority rule and irresponsible elites. Some variant of constituent representation is called for.

We need to separate Synagogue from the State. We need a regime that incentivizes the many tribes of Israel to accommodate each other. To live and let live. Even if that is anathema to the haredim.

Presently, the system is not designed to incentivize anyone to think of the greater good and to vote for broad-based nonsectarian parties. Instead, there is every incentive to support extremist or parochial or single-issue parties. Our electoral system gives bad actors – Itamar Ben Gvir, Bezalel Smotrich, Aryeh Deri, Yitzhak Goldknopf, and Moshe Gafni – disproportionate influence.

Moreover, if we change the constitutional regime, more citizens would be obliged to share in the burden for the upkeep and protection of the Zionist enterprise. There would be no financial or political incentives for Arabs or the insular ultra-Orthodox to avoid doing their bit. Whole communities that shirked any form of national service (in hospitals, nursing homes, schools, agriculture, sanitation, public works) would find themselves cut off from the state's social welfare safety net.

6. The masses are asses. Watching men in skirts and snowflake adolescents marching across the Brooklyn Bridge alongside jihadists and woke people of various hues made me understand that too many people today feel obliged to have a political opinion about the Arab-Israel conflict.

Political ignoramuses, regardless of age or dysphoria, can lead perfectly fulfilling lives. It used to be that Joe Sixpack enjoyed staying home watching sports. Alas, social media has transformed politics into a reality show. Demagogues and nefarious movements use social media to co-opt the dimwitted to serve as their useful idiots. Further, it fosters the manipulation of even well-meaning and erudite folks to serve what they naively think is a just cause.

Mobs are dangerous. Mobs comprised of stupid people mobilized by demagogic messages are particularly hazardous to Jews.

7. Disregard world leaders when they say, "Israel has a right to defend itself." It is vacuous dribble. When Western Europeans invoke this pablum, they probably mean it – literally. If Hamas crosses into Israel again, we can defend ourselves. However, if Hamas or Hezbollah shoot at us from their territory, we would be prudent to focus on trying to intercept their rockets, missiles, and drones. Should we go on the offensive, some random Arab civilian could get hurt, and that takes us into "disproportionate" or maybe even "genocide" territory.

7b  America does not have Israel's back. The Biden administration has been as supportive as we have a right to expect. It has resupplied our arsenal and given us substantial diplomatic covering at the hostile UN. Thank you!

However, US and Israeli interests are not in harmony. We need to ensure Hamas can not attack again. For that to happen, we need to control the Philadelphi Corridor, maintain a buffer area near our Negev settlements, and retain the capability of going in and out of Gaza as military requirements dictate – maybe for years to come.

The Biden administration needs us to stop fighting – certainly by the Democratic National Convention in late August. We are not free agents. We are hugely dependent on the US. That said, if we don't exercise sovereignty when our life as a country depends on it – then what is the point of a national Jewish homeland?

8. Anti-government Israeli demonstrators are deluding themselves. Hamas does not crave a ceasefire. Nor is it interested in a one-for-one prisoner exchange. Hamas claims not to know how many of our captives are even alive. So, we are negotiating blindly.

Those who are rallying "to bring home the hostages now" are essentially calling for the release of thousands of sociopathic Palestinian killers. I mean the kind of Hannibal Lecters who'd sexually mutilate the Israelis they've murdered. And the master terrorists who sent them on their missions. Hamas says thank you for your unwitting assistance.

Freeing its "resistance fighters" was the demand that Mohammed Deif made on Day 1 of the war. I can visualize a grinning Yehya Sinwar doing his meet and greet as each bus in a long convoy disgorges its jihadis in Gaza City. Maybe he'd spring Marwan Barghouti, leader of the Aksa Martyrs Brigades during the second intifada. The media calls Barghouti a moderate and a fitting president of Palestine. I don't doubt his fitness. Still, there would be a lot of blood to airbrush out of his bio.

A mass prisoner release would solidify Hamas as the legitimate representative of the Palestinian Arabs. It would take over the Palestinian Authority and get Fatah's seat at the UN and its embassies worldwide. I would rather see us pull out of Gaza without a hostage deal than have that happen.

The rosy conceit that it doesn't matter who gets freed since we can hunt down and re-incarcerate the prisoners is risible. The Hamas leaders in Qatar, Turkey (which runs West Bank operations), and Gaza were mostly released in Netanyahu's Shalit deal. How's the hunt for Sinwar going so far?

9. "As-a-Jews," those self-haters of Jewish extraction who cite their Jewishness in joining the jackals are the vilest of the vile.

This has been one of the most painful times in our lives as Israelis and Jews. Friends, family, and former colleagues abroad who cared were in touch to inquire about my well-being. It meant a great deal. And those who didn't reach out signaled their attitudes loud and clear.

But there is a special place in my purgatory reserved for the quislings of Jewish extraction who melded with the enemy. Your perfidy is a permanent stain through which you will always be viewed. No Arab kafiyyah or COVID-like facemask can disguise your treachery. Your heartless and ostentatious renunciations during our darkest hours are unpardonable. Apostates, you are, and apostates, you will die.

Once you've served your purposes, the jihadists and woke commissars will turn against you. When that happens, you'll get no sympathy from this quarter.

10. A land offensive in south Lebanon against Hezbollah would be a mistake. We are taking an awful beating in the north. The urge to embark on a Third Lebanon War is palpable. I get it.

Unfortunately, right now, we are not in a position to take on Hezbollah. On the bright side, we may not be deterring, but we are hurting Hezbollah. Hundreds of their gunmen have been liquidated. We are destroying some of Hezbollah's vast infrastructure.

And contrary to the impressions of exasperated Israelis, life is not peachy in South Lebanon while we suffer.

Read Sheren Falah Saab's story in Friday's Haaretz on the dislocation and suffering along the Lebanese border with Israel. Digest with care the partisan BBC dispatch by Ali Abbas Ahmadi from Alma al-Shaab, a Christian hamlet, about the travails of the people of that town.

Hezbollah does not care a whit about the Christians (or Sunnis) and uses their territory to launch attacks against Israel. However, it does its best to shelter the area's Shi'ites.

Our main leverage is to undermine Hezbollah's claim to be Lebanon's protector. If we do go to war with Lebanon, Beirut would need to look like Gaza. The US and the "international community" did not let us win the Second Lebanon War, and they would probably behave similarly in any future war. I grant that the transactional policies of any second Trump administration are not possible to predict.

Finally, there is a convincing analysis of the Times of Israel's diplomatic reporter Lazar Berman, in which he argues that now is not the time to fight Hezbollah.

"The challenges the IDF would face in Lebanon would be orders of magnitude greater [than it has faced in Gaza against Hamas]. Hezbollah has far more advanced anti-tank weapons and attack drones. Fighting in prepared defenses in open territory, they would be able to target IDF forces from kilometers away.

Moreover, reservists would be facing their third and fourth rounds of service this year. They would mostly show up, but the strain on families and businesses would be even greater."

My view is that if we handle our disentanglement from Gaza with uncharacteristic wisdom – i.e., we do not take advice from the Americans, we do not capitulate, and we offer Gazans an alternative to Hamas perhaps a PLO 2.0 – we can ameliorate the immediate threat from the north.

***

These are all interim lessons. And my education is continuing.

 

 

 

Sunday, June 09, 2024

Why Make it Easier for the Mullahs?

 


My witty childhood friend Aaron Kopolowitz of blessed memory once commented that if you've got nothing nice to say about somebody, you must be thinking of the Ayatollah Khomeini.

I thought of Aaron and what he said about the gepaygerter Ayatollah when I spotted a photo in The New York Post of former president Jimmy Carter looking hospice frail at 99. Carter and Khomeini go together in my mind.

Ruhollah Khomeini, from exile, led the Islamist opposition to the Shah of Iran during the revolution that culminated on February 11, 1979.

The overthrow of the Shah’s Pahlavi dynasty allowed for the emergence of what is indisputably the most wicked regime in the Middle East.

Shah made the mistake of crushing secular opponents of his rule, which left the Islamists poised to lead the resistance. When anti-government demonstrations began in October 1977 against the Shah, Jimmy Carter's administration had no good options to save this vital American ally. US intelligence had been blindsided by the revolution. The ailing monarch fled Iran on January 16, 1979, leaving behind the reasonable Shapour Bakhtiar as interim leader. Bakhtiar was assassinated by the Islamist regime while in French exile on August 6, 1991.

In the event, on February 1, 1979, Khomeini returned from exile in France to a tumultuous welcome. And by February 11, he was ensconced as leader until he died on June 3, 1989, at age 86. Not only did the people of Iran welcome Khomeini, but in March 1979, they also overwhelmingly backed the referendum declaring the country an Islamic Republic.

While the embers of the revolution still smoldered, PLO leader Yasser Arafat arrived in Tehran on February 17, 1979, to celebrate the Shah's overthrow with Khomeini. Iran and Israel had close, if unofficial, ties. Most of Israel's oil came from Iran. Meantime, Arafat had connected with all the contending anti-Shah groups based in Lebanon (the south of which was then his Fatahland). Eventually, he put most of his cards on anti-Shah factions loyal to Khomeini. The PLO would later take credit for suggesting that Iran form the Islamic Revolutionary Guards.

Not unappreciative, Khomeini turned the Israeli diplomatic mission (one of our largest anywhere) in Teheran over to the PLO.

The regime began a series of executions of Jewish community leaders on accusations of Zionist sympathies, starting with Habib Elghanian.

Khomeini agreed with Arafat that Israel had to be wiped off the face of the earth. Iran has never deviated from this position. That is why Teheran opposed the March 1979 Egyptian-Israel peace treaty and worked to isolate Egypt from the Muslim world.

When, in October 1979, the Shah was admitted into the US for medical treatment, the Muslim Student Followers of the Imam's Line took over the American Embassy on November 9, 1979. Khomeini promptly blessed the capture. Fifty-three Americans were held hostage for 444 days from November 4, 1979, until January 20, 1981, and freed just as Ronald Reagan was about to be inaugurated.

When in 1993, Arafat himself disingenuously professed to accept the existence of Israel in the Oslo Accords, Persian Iran's three proxy groups Hamas, Islamic Jihad (both Sunni Palestinian Arab), and Hezbollah (Shi'ite Lebanese Arab) intensified their jihadist resistance. Alawite-led Syria, another Iranian satellite, also joined the rejectionist camp.

***

Fast forward to June 2024. Israel, isolated and condemned in the international arena, prepares for all-out war with Hezbollah. The possibility that Iran will not stand on the sidelines is real. Iran is a formidable enemy – a massive country with a population of 88 million. Its major export trading partners are China and Turkey. Iran's other key allies are Russia and North Korea. Ordinary Iranians may regret the embrace their elders gave to the Islamists, but there is no freedom of expression in Iran, and all broadcast media is state-run.

Now, Israel finds itself fighting a multiple-front war – funded, instigated, and enabled by Iran:

-       Hezbollah-controlled Lebanon

-       Syria

-       Iraq (where pro-Iranian militias have a free hand)

-       West Bank (Iran funds various terror groups besides Hamas)

-       Yemen (Shi'ite Houties control large parts of the country)

-       Gaza (Hamas and Islamic Jihad remain dominant)

-       Iran itself

***

On the threshold of nuclear weapons, Holocaust-denying, genocide-instigating Iran and its so-called Axis of Resistance is responsible for untold death and suffering across the Middle East (and beyond, including fatal attacks against Jewish targets around the globe).

Iran sees itself in a zero-sum conflict with the West and Zionism. It is Israel's mortal enemy. However, Europe does not see itself as being at war with Iran. Iran Air flies to Paris and London. In February 2024 alone, Europe's trade with Iran was estimated at €847 million. The US seeks any opportunity to engage with Iran, most recently holding secret talks last month in Oman. Both the UN General Assembly and Security Council paid tribute to the memory of Seyyed Ebrahim Raisi, the Iranian president who, together with his foreign minister, was killed in a helicopter accident on May 19, 2024. Alas, no one held a moment of silence for the thousands of Iranians Raisi ordered hanged when he sat on the regime's Death Commission.

How far will Iran push its hatred of Israel? Will its Twelvers' eschatological Shi'ism lead it to disregard rationality by attempting a surprise knockout blow against the Jewish state? Such a decision may await the demise of the current Supreme Leader, 85-year-old Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. He is the final decision-maker on issues of war and peace. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and its hyper-terrorist Quds Force branch are loyal to him.

Iran is the most significant external strategic threat to Israel, no doubt.

None of its proxies are mindless puppets, but the mullahs in Teheran provide the essential military, diplomatic, and logistical wherewithal.

***

Now, let’s cut to the chase. Iran has somehow been able to bridge the usual divide separating Turks, Persians, and Arabs, not to mention Shi'ites and Sunnis. We need to ask ourselves whether any of Israel's policies have contributed to Iran's extraordinary achievement. What might we be doing to infuriate Muslims in a way that makes them willing to overlook their historic ethnic and theological differences?

Here's something to ponder. Israel has ostentatiously changed the status quo on the Temple Mount. Mohammed Deif cited this in the Hamas declaration of war of October 7, 2023. You can say that the enemy does not need an excuse to strike out. But the unity among Muslims is unprecedented. What do you think explains it? Or, maybe you think that on principle that praying, prostrating, and prancing on and around the Temple Mount – may be schecting a lamb – is a price worth paying. And the Iran-led united front against Israel will crumble because our God is bigger than theirs. In other words, our apocalyptic vision will prevail over theirs.

On the other hand, if you don’t see the world through this sort of messianic prism, you, like me, are left to wonder if we are imprudently uniting our enemies even as we fragment ourselves.

Jerusalem Day, 2024. Prostrating near Temple Mount