Thursday, March 05, 2026

HIGH PRAISE FOR ISRAELI FORCES

Hegseth hails “unmatched skill” of Israeli forces

US Secretary of War says it is refreshing to work with a “capable” and “determined” partner that understands the proper application of force.

 

By Ryan Jones

 

Israel Today

Mar 5, 2026

 

 

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth (C) receives Israel Defense Minister Katz (i) at the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, U.S., July 18, 2025. EFE/JIM LO SCALZO

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth (C) receives Israel Defense Minister Katz (L) at the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, U.S., July 18, 2025
 

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz and US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth hailed the results of the unprecedented cooperation between their two nations in Operation Roaring Lion/Epic Fury.

In less than a week, the combined US-Israeli aerial assault has eliminated most of the Iranian regime’s top leadership, fully destroyed the Iranian Navy, decimated the Islamic Republic’s ballistic missile forces and manufacturing capabilities, and severely weakened the forces used to suppress the Iranian population.

All of this was made possible by the rapid achievement of air superiority in the two allies’ areas of responsibility–Israel in western Iran and over Tehran, and the US military along the southern Iranian coast and up into central Iran.

“Changing history”

In an overnight call with Hegseth, Katz said that the US-Israel cooperation in confronting the Islamic Republic was “changing history.”

Katz expressed Israel’s deepest condolences over the deaths of six US troops during the first week of the campaign, and said Israeli forces would continue to do everything possible to defend their allies.

Hegseth in turn expressed America’s gratitude to Israel, and urged the Israelis to “keep going to the end–we are with you.”

High praise for Israeli forces

Hegseth told reporters at a Pentagon briefing that the US deeply appreciates working with such a capable ally.

“To our steadfast partner, Israel, your mission is being executed with unmatched skill and iron determination,” he stated, adding: “Fighting shoulder to shoulder with such a capable ally is a true force multiplier and a breath of fresh air. We salute your courage and your contribution.”

A day earlier, Hegseth effectively called out America’s other Western allies, and suggested they take notes on Israel’s conduct.

The US, he said, had “clear missions” in Operation Epic Fury aimed at protecting American and Western interests. And Israel is doing its part to bolster those missions while protecting its own interests.

“Israel has clear missions as well, for which we are grateful,” Hegseth said. “As we’ve said since the beginning, capable partners are good partners. Unlike so many of our traditional allies, who wring their hands and clutch their pearls, hemming and hawing about the use of force.”

Advanced timetable

Israel has originally planned to assault the Iranian regime in mid-2026, Katz revealed on Wednesday.

But the events that transpired in Iran in January, including the massacre of over 30,000 demonstrators by regime forces, and the opportunity to work with US forces to fulfill the promises of both President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to send help, necessitated advancing the timetable.

“Developments and circumstances—especially what happened inside Iran, the position of the US president and the possibility of creating a combined operation—created the need to move everything up,” Katz told troops during a visit to the IDF Military Intelligence Directorate.

Maj. Gen. Shlomi Binder, head of the Military Intelligence Directorate, joined Katz in applauding his troops, whose work in gathering deep intelligence on the Iranian regime had made possible the stunning success of the opening wave of US-Israeli airstrikes last Shabbat.

“Anyone who chooses to engage in such [hostile] actions against the State of Israel, against the residents of the State of Israel, against our future here, we will find them, and we will eliminate them,” warned Binder.

WHO ARE YOU GOING TO BELIEVE?

Don’t blame Israel for America defending itself against Iran

The Islamist terror regime, now allied to China and Russia, has been waging war against the United States for 47 years. But to Israel-bashers, it’s simply another Jewish plot. 

 

By Jonathan S. Tobin 

 

JNS

Mar 4, 2026

 

 

U.S. President Donald Trump oversees “Operation Epic Fury” at Mar-a-Lago, Palm Beach, Fla., March 1, 2026. Credit: Daniel Torok/White House.

U.S. President Donald Trump oversees “Operation Epic Fury” at Mar-a-Lago, Palm Beach, Fla., March 1, 2026.
 

When it comes to the reason why Washington has taken action against Iran’s terrorist regime, who are you going to believe? President Donald Trump—the man who ordered the strikes—or California Gov. Gavin Newsom, the writers at The New York Times, and media personalities Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly? 

Liberal and leftist publications, pundits and politicians have joined with far-right podcasters to oppose Trump on military strikes on Iran, which the president hopes will lead to the collapse of the regime’s Islamist government. In fact, they disagree on a lot. What they do seem to agree on is that the effort to put an end to Iran’s nuclear and missile programs, and its sponsorship of international terrorism, is a bad idea. More than that, they agree that the primary culprit for these actions is the State of Israel, which they say dragged Trump into starting a war for its own interests and not those of the United States. 

Trump declares his motivation

Trump is having none of it. He’s been explicit in declaring that it wasn’t the Israelis who pushed him into making his decision. At the White House, the president explained this week that the attempt to portray him as the catspaw of the Israelis was simply wrong. 

“We were having negotiations with these lunatics, and it was my opinion that they were going to attack first,” Trump said. “They were going to attack if we didn’t do it. They were going to attack first. I felt strongly about that. If anything, I might have forced Israel’s hand, but Israel was ready, and we were ready.” 

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth agree. The Islamic government and its mullahs have been quite explicit about the fact that they are waging a religious war against both the “great Satan” of the United States and the “little Satan” of Israel for 47 years.

Nevertheless, opponents of various stripes insist that Trump is being pushed around by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

By accusing Israel of strong-arming Trump into doing something that costs American lives and doesn’t make the United States safer, critics of Washington and Jerusalem have initiated charges going far beyond those of ordinary debate about foreign policy.

Of course, like any decision a president makes, the current military action is fair game for debate. So, too, are Israeli policy choices.

Scapegoating Israel

But scapegoating Israel, and by extension, its Jewish supporters, in this particular way is redolent of traditional antisemitic tropes about Jews of dual loyalty, buying political power in the halls of Washington, D.C., and exercising other nefarious behind-the-scenes influence. Indeed, it is difficult, if not impossible, to separate such wild distortions about the truth of the U.S.-Israel alliance and threat to both countries from Iran, and the equally inflammatory blood libels hurled at the Jewish state since Oct. 7, 2023. Those include accusations that Israel is committing “genocide” against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip or is an “apartheid” state, which have fueled a surge of antisemitism around the globe.

The particular motivations of those beating the drum for blaming Israel may differ, though all seem motivated by a mix of ideology and personal ambition.

The base of the Democratic Party has embraced toxic left-wing ideas like critical race theory, intersectionality and settler-colonialism that label Israel and Jews as “white” oppressors over people of color, who are the oppressed. They want to use opposition to the war to defeat Republicans in the midterm elections this November. Newsom, who understands that he is viewed as too centrist by many of his party’s primary voters, is aiming for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2028 by tilting to the left and smearing Israel with the “apartheid” libel.

On the right, Carlson wants to seize control of the GOP from Trump as part of an isolationist and antisemitic paleo-conservative movement that may not have very much support among party activists and officeholders, but has a broad audience on social media and the internet.

By framing the debate about Trump’s decision as one of Jerusalem pushing Washington into fighting a war adverse to America’s interests, liberal politicians like Newsom and far-right hatemongers such as Carlson aren’t just critiquing Trump. By choosing this particular angle to oppose administration policy, they are seeking to exploit the surge of anti-Zionism and openly antisemitic invective spreading throughout U.S. public discourse since the Hamas-led Palestinian Arab terror attacks on Israel on Oct. 7.

It is entirely true that Netanyahu has long advocated for the West to take action against Tehran, repeatedly warning of the threat that its nuclear ambitions pose to the world. Indeed, there is a cross-party consensus on the issue within the State of Israel, as the overwhelming majority of its citizens understand that the Islamist regime is bent on the destruction of their country as a first step toward the imposition of Islam on the West. A poll conducted by the left-leaning Israel Democracy Institute published this week showed that fully 93% of Jewish Israelis support the airstrikes taking place right now.

Yet the notion that the United States had to be manipulated by its small ally into taking this step is a pernicious myth. While Americans may debate the timing of the military campaign—with polls showing that Republicans support the president’s decision, and most Democrats and independents opposing it—the need to stop Iran from getting a nuclear weapon and opposing its exporting of violence has been a position held by every American president in the 21st century.

Taking Rubio out of context

Trump’s opponents jumped on a statement lifted out of remarks uttered by Rubio that made it seem as if joining the attacks happened because the Israelis had decided to go in anyway, and Washington feared Iranian retaliation and chose not to wait to be hit.

Taken out of context, that bolstered the claim that the joint effort was primarily Israel’s doing. In the same statement, however, Rubio had made it clear that the primary reason for the initiation of the strikes on Iran was that its nuclear program and missile production is a threat to “the safety and security of the world,” and not only to Israel. What’s more, the timing of the decision was as much a sober evaluation of the futility of trying to expect a rational self-interested policy from a clerical regime that refuses to “make geopolitical decisions; they make decisions on the basis of theology—their view of theology, which is an apocalyptic one.”

What those harping on Israel’s role in this drama also forget is that Iran has become a key ally of America’s chief geostrategic foe: China. Beijing has kept the Iranian regime afloat when Western sanctions threatened to bring Tehran to its knees by cutting it off from the global economy. China buys up to 90% of Iran’s oil, which consists of as much as 13% of its oil imports, playing a crucial role in its ability to compete with the West while also undermining efforts to force the Islamist regime to give up its nuclear ambitions and terrorism.

The Iranians are also a strategic partner of Russia, another ally of China. The drones they supply to Moscow have been a key factor in allowing it to continue its war against Ukraine, which Trump has tried in vain to end via negotiations.

Still, nothing Trump or Rubio can say is stopping the groundswell of incitement coming from the left and the right that pins the responsibility for the conflict on the Jewish state.

Antisemitic conspiracy-mongering

The Times constructed a narrative in an article published two days after the latest chapter in the long struggle between the United States and Iran’s government, in which Netanyahu plays the featured role of instigator of the conflict. That dovetails with the claims aired by former Fox News personalities Carlson and Kelly on their popular programs, not to mention what was being said by even more extreme figures like podcaster Candace Owens and neo-Nazi groyper Nick Fuentes.

In an effort to make the current fighting sound like a rerun of the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq ordered by President George W. Bush, Carlson said the decision to strike Iran was based on “lies,” and that “this happened because Israel wanted it to happen. This is Israel’s war. This is not the United States’ war.” Going further—and doubling down on antisemitic tropes about Jewish manipulation of America—he falsely claimed that the Islamic Republic’s attacks on Arab countries in the region were actually the nefarious work of Mossad agents.

Kelly, who has abandoned her stance as a mainstream figure to appeal to a more extreme audience that clicks on content related to attacks on Jews and Israel, agreed. She said that any U.S. servicemen who were killed in the conflict were “dying for Israel,” not America.

They were, of course, outdone by the increasingly unhinged Owens, who said the war was enabled by a mythical Israeli assassination of Turning Point USA leader Charlie Kirk last September. Fuentes said Trump’s decision was further evidence that “organized Jewry” runs the country. “The United States is Israel’s bitch,” he said. “We all know that Israel is the boss, that Israel controls our country. Now you know it for a fact.” He concluded his rant by advising his audience to vote for the Democrats in the midterm elections.

While most Democrats weren’t echoing their antisemitic talking points, they, too, were declaring that the war was not merely illegal or wrong, but also linked to Israel. Newsom wasn’t the only one blaming it on Netanyahu. And it isn’t an accident that this comes at a time when growing numbers of members of the Democratic congressional caucus are refusing to accept donations from pro-Israel sources and attacking the AIPAC lobby. Indeed, Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) denounced AIPAC this week at the left-wing J Street conference as “anti-American” for advocating for the U.S.-Israel alliance and pushing for action on Iran. 

American national interests

All of the incitement against Israel and its supporters ignores the basic fact that every American president, including both Democrats and Republicans, for the past quarter-century has made it clear that preventing a nuclear Iran was a key national security goal. The only differences between them have been about how to stop them. Presidents Barack Obama and Joe Biden thought appeasement would work. But rather than preventing Iran from getting a weapon, with its sunset clauses, the 2015 nuclear pact would have guaranteed that they would eventually get one.

Trump has tried negotiating with Tehran, but rather than seeing an agreement, however weak and ineffectual, as a goal in and of itself, he believed that if a deal didn’t end its nuclear program (the objective that Obama promised in his 2012 foreign-policy debate with presidential opponent Mitt Romney), it was worthless. And instead of allowing the mullahs to prevaricate and delay until they got their way, he was prepared to act to stop them before it was too late.

Though his decision to strike now brings risks, the cost of continuing to wait would be far higher. Stripping the regime of its ability to inflict mayhem in the region via its own military might and its terrorist auxiliaries isn’t just in America’s interests. Doing so now to prevent the mullahs and their minions from using more time to build up their missile program and/or potentially race to a nuclear weapon with whatever material was left after last summer’s 12-day Israeli-American bombing campaign was an imperative.

That doing so helps Israel is not in question. Iran’s leaders have explicitly said they consider a genocidal effort to destroy the Jewish state—calling it a “one-bomb country”—would be worth it, even if it meant catastrophic retaliation from Jerusalem or other parts of the world.

Preventing such a catastrophe (and understanding that Israel is far from the only intended target of Iranian nuclear weapons and missiles) isn’t solely in the interest of the Jewish state. If Iran can achieve its objective of mass murder in Israel, it can do the same with allied Arab countries and those in the West.

At best, that would mean nuclear blackmail being conducted by religious fanatics, furthering the efforts of China and Russia to undermine the West.

At worst, it would present the possibility of nuclear war involving the entire world.

This goes beyond the fact that the alliance with Israel is not merely consonant with American societal norms rooted in the Western tradition, faith and common democratic values. It is also a function of American national interests. The United States never treated Israel as a strategic ally until after its victory in the Six Day-War in June 1967, when it proved it could be an asset to the West rather than a liability. And it wouldn’t be acting in close cooperation with the Israeli military against a common foe unless doing so was in defense of shared strategic interests.

It doesn’t require pressure from Israel or some sort of nefarious plot straight out of the antisemitic forgery The Protocols of the Elders of Zion to convince Americans to take the Iranian threat seriously. Only an American leader who cared nothing about defending his nation’s security interests or preventing a jihadist regime from dominating the Middle East and threatening Europe and Asia would ignore such a threat.

But for leftists and right-wing antisemites who hate Israel, as well as those like Carlson, who clearly seem to be under the influence of the Islamist regime in Qatar, the fact that Iran seeks the elimination of the one Jewish state on the planet seems to be an argument in favor of either appeasing or actively aiding them.

You don’t have to be an antisemite to embrace the notion that presidents ought to wait for congressional approval for the use of military force. But no president—and that includes Democrats like Bill Clinton, Obama or Biden—has hesitated to act without a Declaration of War or a direct authorization from Capitol Hill when they believed it to be in America’s best interest, as Trump has done now. Advocates for appeasement of Iran can also cling to the belief in that approach even though doing so has only enriched and empowered a dangerous regime to launch wars, spread terror and move closer to its nuclear goal.

But those who embrace a narrative that efforts to stop Iran can only be the result of an underhanded Israeli plot or Jewish efforts to bribe Congress and the executive branch to ignore American interests and fight an unnecessary “war of choice” are doing something else. They aren’t just distorting the truth about the alliance between the two countries, which is both close and mutually beneficial. They are crossing the line between a rational debate about a crucial policy choice and one that is inextricably linked to traditional tropes of Jew-hatred.

KEITH STARMER HAS PLACED BRITAIN ON THE WRONG SIDE OF THIS SEISMIC STRUGGLE

An alliance of light against darkness

The war against Iran may defeat the axis of evil—and put America and Israel at the head of a new world order. 

 

By Melanie Phillips 

 

JNS

Mar 5, 2026

 

 

Government Ministers Attend Weekly Cabinet Meeting 

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has now blown up Britain’s “special relationship” with America and has turned Israel into a pariah.

 

The war against Iran, in which America and Israel are rapidly degrading Tehran’s powers, doesn’t merely offer the hope of relief for the whole world by eradicating one of its most evil, murderous and far-reaching regimes.

We are also witnessing an even more momentous development—the likely birth of a new world order pivoted around that alliance between America and Israel.

Like a drowning man clutching at a boat he doesn’t even realize is holed and sinking, Britain’s prime minister, Sir Keir Starmer, is clinging to the “rules-based international order.” As a result, he refused to support the bombing of Iran because he said it was illegal under international law. According to those rules, war is only permitted as a response to an attack that’s imminent or already underway.

Defense is fine; attack is not. The fact that a pre-emptive attack might be the only effective form of defense is dismissed as against the rules.

This means that even if the creation of an Iranian nuclear bomb was a mere 10 days away, as was reportedly the case, Israel would have to sit on its hands until almost the point of detonation before it became legal for it to attack.

Law thus becomes a formula for national suicide.

When the war started on Feb. 28, Starmer refused to allow the Americans to use British-run air bases, including the crucial base on Diego Garcia, on the grounds that the war was illegal. He granted permission only after Iran started firing missiles at allies in the Gulf and at British forces stationed in Cyprus.

Starmer then hedged this belated gesture about by saying that British forces would be used to defend its allies but not to attack Iran. And it wouldn’t defend its American and Israeli allies because they had started an “illegal” war.

This was a wholly incoherent and morally unconscionable position. Such legalistic casuistry derives from the fact that liberal universalists like Starmer have made international law into a religion because they believe it replaces war by rules ordaining negotiation and compromise.

Far from producing an end to tyranny, persecution and oppression, however, this international order has created a world in which the United Nations, which administers the rulebook, is in bed with Hamas. And the world body has long empowered states that pose an acute threat to freedom, such as Russia, China, North Korea and Iran, to hold the whole world hostage to their predatory and murderous agendas.

Moreover, the entire international human rights and humanitarian establishment has been turned into a weapon against Israel. Far from promoting peace and justice, it facilitates and sanitizes terrorism, genocidal mass murder and gross injustice.

The result is that Starmer has brought shame and humiliation on his country. This is a nation that once led the world in warfare—an island nation whose storied navy dominated the seas and which in 1940 stood alone against the Nazis. Today, it has failed to defend its own people—some 240,000 Brits live in Dubai and Abu Dhabi—and won’t even get its warship out of mothballs to send to Cyprus before next week.

Starmer has provoked the undiluted fury of the Emiratis and Kuwaitis, who say they no longer see Britain as an ally because it refuses to join the battle against Iran.

U.S. President Donald Trump told reporters that he was “disappointed with Keir,” who is “not Winston Churchill.” And for once, that was a Trumpian understatement. Churchill must be turning over in his grave.

Starmer has now blown up Britain’s “special relationship” with America. He has turned Israel into a pariah—principally because it stands against the liberal universalist faith in negotiated compromise that it rightly believes would bring about its own destruction.

The resulting toxification of Israel has given rocket fuel to Islamists in an alliance with other anti-Zionists and antisemites that’s poisoning British politics and society and hanging British Jews out to dry.

What few have properly understood is the enormous change in the world order that may result from this war. Few have realized the extent to which Iran has propped up the axes of evil that have taken the world to hell in a handbasket.

The triumph of the Islamic revolution that brought the Tehran regime to power in 1979 galvanized, incentivized and provided material support for other Islamists to wage jihadi holy war against the West through strategies of infiltration, subversion and terror. Destroying the Tehran regime would deal a blow to the Islamist goal of destroying Western civilization.

It would also transform geopolitics by dealing a blow to China and Russia. Iran was indispensable to China in supplying it with oil. It was also crucial to China’s Belt and Road Initiative—its plan to create overland and maritime economic corridors to promote Chinese domination in global affairs.

For Russia, Iran has been vital as a major supplier of drones in its war against Ukraine and as the indispensable gateway for the International North-South Transport Corridor linking the Moscow region to the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas. With Russian influence much diminished in the Caucasus and in Syria, Iran was one of Moscow’s last bastions against the West in Eurasia.

Iran had recently finalized a 20-year comprehensive strategic partnership treaty with Russia and accelerated its 25-year co-operation program with China. If the Iranian regime is destroyed, the baleful grip on the world by this axis of evil would be replaced by a new alliance promoting freedom and prosperity.

At its heart is the military, intelligence and security alliance between America, which has recovered its position as leader of the free world rather than presiding over its surrender, and Israel, which has rediscovered its biblical warrior identity and has become the regional superpower in the Middle East.

Israel is poised to be the fulcrum of the developing India-Middle East-European economic corridor. This stands to push the Belt and Road Initiative into the shadows.

It will enable goods to move from Southeast Asia via India across the Middle East through Saudi Arabia and Jordan, and on to Israel. From there, goods will be shipped to multiple points in Europe and on to the United States.

India is key, and the visit to Israel by its prime minister, Narendra Modi, on the eve of this war was deeply significant. As he told the Knesset, India has been the fastest-growing major economy in the world and will soon be among the top three. And under Modi, India is a staunch ally of Israel in their common struggle against Islamic holy war.

In addition, further normalization agreements between Israel and moderate Arab states, not to mention a West-facing Iran itself, could usher in years of regional stability and economic prosperity.

In other words, the destruction of the Iranian regime may unlock a really brave new world. So this is a war in which there is everything to play for in the otherwise Sisyphean attempt to defend civilization against barbarism.

And Keir Starmer has placed Britain on the wrong side of this seismic struggle.

The “rules-based international order” to which he so slavishly adheres and was supposed to usher in the brotherhood of man has merely ushered in the Muslim Brotherhood, which is now well advanced in subverting and conquering Britain and other Western countries for Islam.

This war against Iran may end in chaos or the survival in some form of the Tehran regime, which would be a tragedy for the oppressed Iranian people, and a setback for peace and justice everywhere.

But it may be seen with hindsight as the pivotal moment when the old international order gave up the ghost of its own decadence and was replaced by a new global framework in which Israel, the light unto nations, was finally able to see that radiance begin to illuminate the world.

CONGRESSIONAL OPPONENTS TO THE WAR ON IRAN ARE IGNORANT OF HISTORY

Lawmakers with blinders

What seems to be missing in the indignant, self-absorbed statements by certain Congress members is a severe absence of self-respect for their country and for the “values” they say they hold. 

 

By Daniel S. Mariaschin 

 

JNS

Mar 5, 2026

 

 

A person wearing glasses speaks into a microphone while seated at a desk in a government hearing room, with nameplates visible on the desks and other people blurred in the background.
Democratic U.S. Rep. Eric Swalwell made the incredulous comment on Iran that “they showed nothing to the American people as to any threat posed to the United States or any imminent threat posed to our allies who are in the region.”

 

Congressional critics of the war with Iran are not in short supply. Their statements and social-media posts read as if they come from the same song sheet. No surprise there.

These voices are marching in lockstep on the applicability of the War Powers Act, breaches of “international law” and “illegal regime change.” And there is no question that party politics play a role in all of this.

Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) decried the attack on Iran that occurred during Ramadan, saying, “I am convinced it isn’t what these countries [Iran now and Iraq in 2003] have done to violate international law, but about who they worship.” Not a mention of Iran and its nearly 50-year history of sponsoring terror globally, or about its race to produce nuclear weapons.

Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-Texas) stated, “Make no mistake, this war may be in the interest of Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Israel, but it is not in ours.”

Then there was Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), who lamented “wasting American tax dollars” on the war. Again, no mention of Iran as the puppet master of proxy, terrorist armies or the regime’s gunning down of tens of thousands of Iranian protesters only a month ago.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) weighed in with charges that American military operations were nothing more than “aggression.” Nothing at all about the decades the Tehran regime has spent as the world’s most frequent abuser of juvenile and LGBTQIA rights. Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican, proclaimed that the president’s assertions about Iran’s nuclear program are “always lies.”

And then there was the incredulous comment on Iran that came from Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.), saying “they showed nothing to the American people as to any threat posed to the United States or any imminent threat posed to our allies who are in the region.”

What is striking about all this is the generational ties that bind these most vehement of critics. Many were not born when Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini returned in 1979 from exile in France to lead the Iranian Revolution and begin a 47-year reign of terror carried out by him and his successor, Ali Khamenei. There seems to be no recollection of the takeover of the U.S. embassy in Iran and the 444-day ordeal for the 66 American hostages grabbed by regime-backed street toughs in November of that year.

A few were toddlers when Iran’s Hezbollah henchmen blew up the Marine Corps barracks in Beirut in 1983, resulting in the death of 241 American servicemen. And 35 years ago, when some of these congress members were pre-teens, a truck bombing of the Khobar Towers near Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, carried out by Hezbollah, killed 19 U.S. Air Force personnel and injured a total of 498 persons.

Many of these examples may be ancient history to these lawmakers, though certainly not the assassination attempt on Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the United States by Iranian agents at Cafe Milano in Washington, D.C., in 2011. Or the killing of an estimated 2,000 American servicemen and the wounding of countless others from Iranian-supplied IEDs (roadside bombs) in Iraq in 2003 and 2004. Not to mention what many believe were Iranian-directed attempts last year on the life of U.S. President Donald Trump.

Of course, many were not born when Nazi Germany invaded Poland in 1939, and Pearl Harbor was attacked by Japan in 1941. Still, we fully understand the rationale behind the need to defeat those tyrannical regimes. In the case of Germany, it, too, had proxies: those collaborators in lands under its control who carried out crimes against humanity just like their masters in Berlin.

What seems to be missing in the indignant, self-absorbed statements by these members of Congress and others in the media, academia and elsewhere is a severe absence of self-respect for their country and for the “values” they say they hold. Iran paid no serious price for any of the above crimes committed against the United States and its citizens, save for periodic economic sanctions which it worked furiously to evade.

The self-negating isolationism and “don’t confuse me with the facts” attitude of those who are outraged by the campaign against the Iranian regime suggests a shallow understanding of history and a frightening disregard for American national interests.

The prospect of a nuclear Iran and what that could mean not only for Israel and the Middle East and the United States, but for an international order of global stability, seems to draw yawns from those in Congress who would give the tyrants in Tehran a pass for crimes committed and those yet to be carried out.

A worldview that is in denial about the threats posed by Iran does not augur well for the kind of national resolve so necessary for the United States, as it is buffeted by threats—terror, cyber, nuclear—both near and far. In the meantime, the clear-eyed campaign to bring an end to Iran’s despotic regime moves forward. Its success is in everybody’s interest.

UKRAINE STEPS IN WHERE PAPER SANCTIONS FAILED

Quantifying Ukraine’s Strikes on Russian Energy Infrastructure 

 

By Gabriel Collins 

 

Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy

Mar 2, 2026

 

 

A Russian oil refinery struck by a Ukrainian drone

 

Paper Sanctions Versus Kinetic Sanctions

What options are available to a country facing attacks from a larger, more powerful neighboring state whose economy heavily relies on natural resource exports?

This question is currently being tested in Ukraine. After years of paper sanctions that saw major volumes of Russian oil and refined products still enter the market and subsequently provide Russia with revenue, Ukraine undertook a different approach in 2025: physical or “kinetic” sanctions. This approach demonstrates how dynamic actions can slice through the maneuvers that Russia utilizes to continue its oil shipments.

From 2022 through 2025, Russia’s so-called “shadow fleet” — comprised of opaquely owned and marked ships that trade and transport the country’s oil — could generally circumvent sanction lists and enforcement actions. However, when the response moves from European and American courts and compliance bureaucracies to Ukrainian drone and missile teams, decision speed and effects invert. While creating new shell companies and reflagging oil tankers is fast and relatively cheap, replacing energy assets struck by steel and explosives is much slower and far more expensive.

Numerical Tally of Ukraine’s Strikes

Figure 1 offers a holistic view of the number of confirmed and suspected Ukrainian strikes on Russian energy infrastructure, since near the beginning of the war to the present. This data set currently counts 272 discrete strike events.

 

Figure 1 — Confirmed and Suspected Ukrainian Strikes on Russian Energy Infrastructure by Asset Type, April 2022–February 2026

Bar graph

 Source: Reuters; Bloomberg; NPR; Al Jazeera; Politico Europe; Euronews; France 24; ABC News; The Guardian; The Kyiv Independent; Ukrainska Pravda; RBC (Russia and Ukraine); Kommersant; TASS; The Moscow Times; RFE/RL (Radio Svoboda); Meduza; Novaya Gazeta Europe; ISW; Defence Express; Militarnyi; United24; regional Russian outlets; official regional governor Telegram channels; company releases (e.g., Rosneft, NOVATEK); Wikipedia; and Google Earth (specifically for facility background and coordinates). Note: To create this dataset, the author reviewed a range of English, Russian, and Ukrainian media outlets and other sources using both manual inspections and AI-enabled deep searching that drew upon the deep-research functionalities of ChatGPT 5.2, Gemini 3 Pro, and Claude Opus 4.6. Searches focused on drone and missile strikes and sabotage operations against oil, gas, and electricity infrastructure within Russia’s internationally recognized borders. This dataset is available upon request.

 

How Ukraine’s Campaign on Russia’s Energy Has Evolved

In the earlier parts of the Russia-Ukraine war, at least three key factors restrained Ukrainian targeting of Russian energy assets.

  1. Ukrainian leaders prioritized immediate survival and battlefield action, as many likely believed the current war would be relatively short in duration rather than longer than the span of the Germany and the Soviet Union conflict during World War II. This initial expectation matters because targeting the adversary’s economic center of gravity typically yields effects in a prolonged war. The war’s extended length did not become clear until 2024.
     
  2. Until 2024 and 2025, Ukraine lacked the drone and missile capabilities for sustained, long-range strikes deep into Russia.
     
  3. Over concerns regarding the potential oil price spikes and their political impacts, the Biden administration discouraged Ukrainian strike campaigns against the Russian oil industry. Subsequently, U.S. political constraints on Ukrainian targeting of energy assets in Russia eased as Ukraine’s indigenous strike capabilities matured. Increased disruptions and operational challenges soon followed for Russian energy infrastructure.

Ukrainian Strikes on Russian Energy Infrastructure

The Ukrainian military are applying an effects-based approach to an entire energy value chain by targeting Russia’s upstream production assets, including oil platforms in the Caspian Sea; key pipeline pumping stations on export systems, such as the Druzhba Pipeline; power plants and substations; oil storage sites; oil loading ports, such as Novorossiysk; and most of all, oil refineries.

Multiple strategic factors underpin Ukraine’s specific attention to Russia’s oil supply chain. First, crude oil and refined products sales are Russia’s main source of externally generated income and largely fund its war efforts. Second, interdicting oil storage and refining capacity can also impede Russian battlefield logistics. This is reflected in the large number of strikes on oil storage assets located in western Russia as well as the fuel facilities supporting the Engels Bomber Base.

Third, Ukraine appears to be prioritizing economic and military effects over direct impacts on civilians in Russia. Put differently, Russian consumers may experience higher gasoline prices or increased reliance on public transportation, but electrical services have typically remained interrupted. Ukraine’s demonstrated energy strike capabilities at this point — including successful but limited strikes in late 2025 on key high-voltage power substations in central Russia — suggest that leaving Russia’s electricity infrastructure intact is thus far a conscious choice by Kyiv.

Impact of Ukraine’s Strike Campaign

A strike campaign on oil systems as large, complex, and resilient as Russia’s requires a long, sustained effort to have substantial impacts. Toward the end of 2025, Russia’s crude oil export volumes remained steady, but oil product exports began to decline at levels not previously observed during the war, notwithstanding the sanctions environment (Figures 2–3).

 

Figure 2 — Russian Oil Product Exports by Port, April 2022–October 2025Bar graphSource: Kyiv School of Economics and author’s analysis.

Figure 3 — Russian Crude Oil Exports By Port, April 2022–October 2025Bar graphSource: Kyiv School of Economics and author’s analysis.

 

Since 2024, Russian crude oil exports were steady, but refined product exports fell. That divergence indicates a significant shift.

Among other responses, the Russian government temporarily restricted oil product exports. The steadiness of crude oil exports and the decline in products exports are likely related, due to Ukraine’s campaign against Russia energy infrastructure. More specifically, Ukrainian strikes have clearly damaged a meaningful portion of Russia’s refining capacity, which both reduces plants’ abilities to process crude oil and produce refined products.

The result is that more crude oil is shifted from domestic refineries to export markets; this maintains the appearance of operational continuity, while product exports decline. If Ukraine intensifies its strike campaign against crude oil pipelines and ports, it is likely that the volumetric data of Russia’s crude oil and exports, expected to be released in the coming months, will both show noticeable declines.

This is where material disruptions — or kinetic sanctions — markedly diverge from legal paper sanctions. Legal risk tends to create price discounts. Then, profit opportunities can attract bad actors willing to sidestep laws. In Russia’s case, this scenario has reportedly culminated into an arbitrage ecosystem of shell companies run by Russia-linked middlemen and its “shadow fleet” that move oil to market.

Additionally, enforcement tends to be limited. If one refinery’s compliance department rejects an oil cargo, another will likely accept it at a discount. Likewise, a ship can avoid ports where it might be detained and then transfer oil to another vessel offshore or blend it to obscure its origins. Under these circumstances, risk is tightly bounded and relatively easy to avoid. Ultimately, once the oil enters the refinery and becomes diesel, gasoline, or jet fuel, the product can be sold anywhere in the world. Since the war’s start, the pricing of Russia’s Urals oil relative to Brent — a global pricing benchmark — reflects this adaptation cycle (Figure 4).

 

Figure 4 — Average Export Price of Urals Crude Oil Versus Brent Crude Oil, 2012–25Bar graph 

Source: Argus Media, Cbonds, Energy Information Agency, International Energy Agency, Interfax, Rigzone, Russian Ministry of Finance, and author’s analysis.

 

Kinetic risk is very different. It removes physical volumes of the product. If barrels cannot enter the market, the arbitrage window for practical purposes expires, at least from Russia’s perspective. Another seller of heavy, higher-sulfur crude would likely gain access to a new market opportunity — such as Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, etc. — but those countries’ exchequers, rather than Russia, would receive the new revenues.

Kinetic sanctions through Ukrainian strikes at large scale can effectively disconnect Russia from the market and therein lies the key strategic impact. Strike impacts are not currently at this level, but if Ukrainian forces were to significantly damage the Primorsk and Novorossiysk oil ports and reattack on a weekly basis, physical disconnection would become a real possibility. Even if Russia lost 50% of its export capacity and global oil prices rose by 25% in response, Russia’s financial position — and ability to fund and fight a war — would decline rapidly.

Strategic Lessons From Ukraine’s Approach

Throughout late 2025 and onward, Ukraine has demonstrated the importance of low-cost, scalable indigenous strike capabilities. Strikes on targets 1,000 or more kilometers into the territory of an adversary with capable air defense was considered, prior to Russia’s invasion, a domain in which perhaps only the U.S., Israel, China, and Russia possessed the requisite capabilities.

The barriers to entry into long-range precision strike capabilities are considerably lower now. Ukraine’s national GDP before the war amounted to approximately one-fourth that of the Greater Houston area. Yet its combination of survival motivation, a talented and educated population, industrial base, and access to key imported components is culminating into a drone and missile complex — one that is highly capable and can credibly threaten key infrastructure assets up to 2,000 km from its borders.

Indeed, as recently as Feb. 21, Ukrainian forces significantly damaged a key missile factory located more than 1,300 km into Russia — roughly the distance from Houston to Jacksonville, Florida. That strike used the Flamingo, a Ukrainian-made cruise missile that can carry a 2,500 lb. warhead. In other words, it is a considerable weapon that would substantially impair refineries, oil ports, power plants, or any other energy infrastructure that Ukraine may choose to target.

In a world where middle-ranking powers may increasingly aim for independent deterrence capabilities, Ukraine offers an example of how a smaller country without nuclear weapon capacities can strike strategic level targets in a powerful adversary’s territory. Taiwan, Poland, Pakistan, and many other countries are likely paying close attention to Ukraine. Japan plans to upgrade its indigenous strike capabilities, and South Korea possesses a formidable domestic strike arsenal.

Many analysts’ attention has focused on the rising risks of nuclear proliferation. Yet long-range conventional strikes also deserve close examination, particularly since for every country with the technical base for pursuing a nuclear weapons program, there are likely five or more with the wherewithal to build indigenous long-range domestic strike weapons, as demonstrated by South Korea, Iran, and Ukraine. Nuclear weapons are designed to intimidate whereas conventional long-range strike systems are largely made with the potential of use. This distinction is increasingly significant in a world where prior restraints on striking another country’s soil have eroded in recent cases, such as Israel-Iran, India-PakistanThailand-CambodiaU.S.-Iran, and Russia-Ukraine.

In addition to the military strike dimensions, the Ukrainian energy campaign also highlights the importance of maximizing infrastructure connectivity. Kazakhstan, and to a lesser extent, Hungary and Slovakia have each experienced collateral impacts because of Ukraine’s strikes on Russian oil and gas processing and transportation assets.

For Kazakhstan in particular, diversification of oil export routes now holds a new strategic urgency. Ukraine’s fall 2025 sea drone strikes shut down the Caspian Pipeline Consortium Terminal at Novorossiysk, Russia, causing significant reductions in Kazakh oil output. Around this same time, Ukrainian air drone strikes on Russia’s Orenburg gas processing facility also negatively impacted Kazakh gas production at the Karachaganak Field just across the border.

Building alternative oil and gas export routes that are not directly tied to geopolitical risks associated with Russia and China is an expensive and complex challenge that Astana had previously been able to overlook. Now, however, export diversification is likely back on the table with an intensity, perhaps not seen since the 1990s. U.S. and partner company investments could look to address this issue, a topic the center aims to examine in coming months.

Future Considerations for Ukraine’s Energy Campaign

As Ukraine significantly reduced its strikes on Russian energy infrastructure in January 2026 and the first half of February, a few questions remain: 

  1. What happens to Russian refineries, product supplies, and export potential if Ukraine’s long-range strikes resume a sustained attack pace similar to that of late 2025? Russia has been able to lean on a combination of redundancy conferred by infrastructure built for higher Soviet-era demand levels, along with patchwork repairs. If Ukraine increases strikes again and begins to incorporate heavier weapons — a likely evolution in 2026 — Russia’s reconstitution potential will likely erode. Export volumes would fall accordingly.
     
  2. What happens as Ukraine becomes more able to integrate heavy missiles, such as the FP-5 Flamingo, Long Neptune, and indigenous ballistic missiles, into its energy strike campaigns? These munitions appear to be currently prioritized toward targets of immediate military relevance, such as the Votkinsk Missile Plant recently struck with Flamingo missiles. If Ukraine continues to increase production and heavy strike missiles become more numerous, these missiles could be used more frequently in energy strikes given that their 500 lb. to 2,500 lb. warheads are exponentially more damaging than the 100 lb.-range warheads currently used on Ukraine’s longest-ranged drones.
     
  3. If oil and product exports are significantly impeded, how would Russia and its war effort evolve? Ukrainian and Russian soldiers are largely motivated by different factors shaped by their respective national circumstances: national defense considerations in Ukraine’s case and economic incentives in Russia’s case. Russia’s ability to recruit men — particularly from rural, impoverished areas — heavily depends on financial incentives, which is revenue derived from its crude oil and product exports. This system is primarily driven by a stark but rational set of calculations: a soldier receives regular compensation, and in the event of death, the soldier’s family collects a substantial payment, likely worth more than an income earned for decades of work.

As noted in this commentary, Ukraine has considerable incentives to diminish Russia’s income by reducing and destroying its oil and gas production and export systems. Simultaneously, Ukrainian arms manufacturers continue incrementally advancing indigenous heavy long-range strike capabilities. This intersection of Ukrainian survival imperatives plus Kyiv’s increasing strike capabilities suggests potential challenges ahead for Russian oil, refined product, and gas exports.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky recently expressed frustration at what appeared to be Russia’s attempt to stall the latest peace talks; noting that time is of the essence, he stated, “So we have to decide, and have to finish the war.” If sanctions are economic pressure and battlefield operations are tactical pressure, Ukraine’s energy strike campaign is strategic pressure, representing an initial step in a potentially broader effort.

TRUMP'S WORTHLESS SECURITY INITIATIVE WITH KRISTI NOEM APPOINTED TO EMBARRASS THE US

What is the 'Shield of the Americas,' Trump's new security initiative in the Western Hemisphere?

 

Associated Press

Mar 5, 2026

 

 
ICE operation perspectives

President Donald Trump said he is appointing Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to serve as his "Special Envoy for The Shield of the Americas" as he announced her ouster from the Department of Homeland Security Thursday.

Trump will gather with the leaders of 11 Latin American countries for a "Shield" summit on Saturday at his golf club in Doral, Florida.

The name of the gathering is supposed to reflect Trump’s vision for U.S. national security strategy to put a greater emphasis on the Western Hemisphere, as he looks to leverage U.S. military and intelligence assets unseen in the region since the end of the Cold War.

The leaders of Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Honduras, Panama, Paraguay, and Trinidad and Tobago have confirmed they will attend, according to the White House.

Noem, speaking in Nashville, confirmed she will be at the summit and that Trump will announce "a big agreement" that will detail "how we’re going to go after cartels and drug trafficking in the entire Western Hemisphere."

Trump announced he would nominate Oklahoma Republican Sen. Markwayne Mullin to replace Noem as homeland security secretary.

ICE BARBIE BOOTED INTO NEW POSITION

Trump fires Homeland Security Secretary Noem after mounting criticism over her leadership

 

By Michelle L. Price and Rebecca Santana 

 

Associated Press

Mar 5, 2026 

 

 

DHS Secretary Kristi Noem has earned the moniker 'ICE Barbie' for her appearances in front of the camera in full glam


WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Thursday fired his embattled Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, after mounting criticism over her leadership of the department, including the handling of the administration’s immigration crackdown and disaster response.

Trump, who said he would nominate Oklahoma Republican Sen. Markwayne Mullin in her place, made the announcement on social media after Noem faced a two-day grilling on Capitol Hill this week from GOP members as well as Democrats.

Noem’s departure marks a stunning turnaround for a close ally to the president who was tasked with steering his centerpiece policy of mass deportations. But she appeared to increasingly become a liability for Trump, with questions arising over her spending at her department and over her conduct in the aftermath of the shooting deaths of two protesters in Minneapolis earlier this year. 

Trump said he’ll make Noem a “Special Envoy for The Shield of the Americas,” a new security initiative that he said would focus on the Western Hemisphere.

Noem, who appeared at a law enforcement event in Nashville, Tennessee, moments after Trump’s announcement, did not address her ouster there. She read from prepared remarks and was not asked by attendees about the development.

Later, in a social media post, she thanked Trump for the new appointment and touted her accomplishments as secretary.

“We have made historic accomplishments at the Department of Homeland Security to make America safe again,” she wrote.

The administration’s immigration crackdown faced criticism, especially in Minnesota

Noem is the first Cabinet secretary to leave during Trump’s second term. Her tenure looked increasingly short-lived after hearings in Congress this week where she faced rare but blistering criticism from Republican lawmakers. One particular point of scrutiny was a $220 million ad campaign featuring Noem that encouraged people in the country illegally to leave voluntarily.

Noem told lawmakers that Trump was aware of the campaign in advance, but Trump disputed that in an interview Thursday with Reuters, saying he did not sign off on the ad campaign.

Noem has faced waves of criticism as she’s overseen Trump’s immigration crackdown, especially since the shooting deaths of the two protesters in Minneapolis at the hands of immigration enforcement officers. The former South Dakota governor was also criticized over the way her department has spent billions of dollars allocated to it by Congress.

Her department, DHS, has been at the center of a funding battle in Congress over immigration enforcement tactics and has been shut down for 20 days, although many of the employees are continuing to work, often without pay.

Even before Noem’s appearance before key congressional committees this week, Republican lawmakers had been anticipating the secretary’s eventual ouster, particularly after her handling of the immigration enforcement crackdown in Minneapolis.

As they tried to end the ongoing Homeland Security shutdown, Senate Republicans had noted privately to Democratic senators that Noem was likely on her way out and that that should prompt Democrats to move forward with agreeing to fund the department again, according to two people familiar with the discussions.

Democrats did not see that as an actual concession by Republicans, considering Noem was becoming a political liability for the GOP, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private negotiations.

DHS leadership changes come at a pivotal time

Aside from immigration, Noem also faced criticism — including from Republicans — over the pace of emergency funding approved through the Federal Emergency Management Agency and for the Trump administration’s response to disasters.

Mullin would need to be confirmed by the Senate, but under a federal law governing executive branch vacancies, he would be allowed to serve as an acting Homeland Security secretary as long as his nomination is formally pending.

Voting in the Senate just after Trump’s announcement, Mullin said he has “no idea” how quickly his nomination will move.

“The president and I are good friends. So we look forward to working closer with the White House, and obviously I’m gonna be over there a lot more,” he said.

Mullin would need to be confirmed by the Senate, but under a federal law governing executive branch vacancies, he would be allowed to serve as an acting DHS secretary as long as his nomination is formally pending.

Mullin would take over the third-largest department in government that has responsibility for carrying out Trump’s hardline immigration agenda. And he would assume the role at a pivotal time for that agenda.

Immigration enforcement during the first year of Trump’s administration was largely defined by high-profile, made-for-social-media operations with flashy names, often led by Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino, who reported directly to Noem. Noem herself often went out on those operations, riding along with officers when they went out to make arrests.

But those high-profile operations in places like Los Angeles, Chicago and Minneapolis often led to clashes with activists and protesters that were captured on video and drove opposition to the president’s immigration agenda.

That culminated with the shooting deaths in Minneapolis after which Trump shuffled leadership of the operation. The number of officers there was drawn down shortly after.

THE ELDERLY ARE EASY MARKS FOR SCAM ARTISTS

Six Arrested in $2.8 Million Elder Gold Scam; Police Recover $766,000 for Victim

 

KGTX 7

Mar 4, 2026 

 

 

NO BIG DEAL BECAUSE ECUADOR AIN'T MEXICO

US military assists Ecuador in 1st land operation against cartels

Southern Command said the U.S. and Ecuador conducted joint military operations.

 

 
ABC News
Mar 3, 2026
 
 
U.S. Southern Command - PHOTO: The United States and Ecuador conducted joint military operations against “designated terrorist organizations in Ecuador,” U.S. Southern Command announced, Mar. 3, 2026.
U.S. Southern Command - PHOTO: The United States and Ecuador conducted joint military operations against “designated terrorist organizations in Ecuador,” U.S. Southern Command announced, Mar. 3, 2026.
 

The United States and Ecuador carried out a joint military operation against “designated terrorist organizations in Ecuador,” though the U.S. role was limited to advising Ecuadorian troops, and they did not participate in the actual ground operation, a source familiar with the operation told ABC News.

The joint operation was announced by the U.S. Southern Command on Tuesday.

"The operations are a powerful example of the commitment of partners in Latin America and the Caribbean to combat the scourge of narco-terrorism," U.S. Southern Command wrote in a post on X.

This marks the first time that the U.S. military has worked in a land operation as part of the Trump administration’s fight against Latin American drug cartels.

Until now, the U.S. military had only carried out airstrikes targeting drug smuggling boats in the Eastern Pacific and Caribbean. 

The U.S. military's role in the joint mission was the presence of military advisors in Ecuador who provided planning, intelligence, and operational support in preparation for the mission, a source familiar with the operation told ABC News.

They advised Ecuadorian forces, but they did not participate in the actual ground and airlift operation, which was carried out by Ecuadorian forces, the source said.

No details were provided by SOUTHCOM about the operation.

In announcing the joint operation, U.S. Southern Command also released a video, which appears to show the Ecuadorian forces and aircraft, though no context was provided. 

NYPD COPS WILL BE LESS LIKELY TO PUT THEIR LIVES ON THE LINE FOR A CITY THAT THEY DO NOT FEEL HAS THEIR BACK

Mamdani putting NYPD 'between rock and a hard place' in move that could ultimately help his goal: expert

Critics in recent weeks have accused Mamdani of not siding with police in key moments

 

By Andrew Mark Miller  

 

Fox News

Mar 3, 2026

 

 

Zohran Mamdani Just Inherited the NYPD Surveillance State 

 


Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s recent reactions to law enforcement, which some have interpreted as pushing back against the New York Police Department, likely won’t hurt him as much as previous mayors, a local crime expert told Fox News Digital, and could end up working to his overall political advantage. 

"It may not hurt Mamdani in the way that it might hurt another mayor," said Manhattan Institute fellow Rafael Mangual. 

"I do think that Zohran Mamdani is OK with being an opponent and a critic of the NYPD. I think he comes from a sort of ideological perspective that does not believe that the NYPD actually reduces crime. So, if the NYPD pulls back and crime goes up, I think he will see that as an opportunity to further criticize the NYPD and point to reasons why it should be defunded in favor of this Department of Community Safety and some of these other proposals that he would much rather invest in."

Two significant events in the city indicate that the mayor will not defend the police department, according to Mangual, and could result in cops pulling back due to lack of support. They include an incident last month in Washington Square Park, dubbed "Snowballgate," where a mob of roughly 100 people pelted NYPD officers with snowballs, leaving two officers injured. 

Rather than condemning the assault, Mamdani appeared to downplay the violence, referring to the perpetrators as "kids" taking part in a snowball fight. 

"Mamdani did not come out in support of the NYPD in that incident. Instead, he seemed to kind of brush it off and even refused to call for the prosecution of the perpetrators," Mangual said, adding that the actions of the mob clearly qualified as an assault against police officers. 

"Unfortunately, I think the mayor’s response was found wanting. He seemed unwilling to condemn it as an assault. He seemed unwilling to even say that it was something that shouldn't be done in the future, and I think that is going to create a sense in the NYPD that this administration does not have their back."

Perhaps more concerning, according to Mangual, was Mamdani’s reaction to a recent officer-involved shooting in Queens where, despite bodycam footage showing an officer being immediately attacked with a deadly weapon after entering a home at the owner's invitation, Mamdani called on the district attorney to not prosecute the knife wielding suspect who was reportedly having a mental health episode. 

Additionally, Mamdani visited the attacker and his family after the incident.

"For Mayor Mamdani to come out and not just meet with the family as if this individual is some sort of crime victim, but to also make an open call to the Queens DA not to prosecute the individual for the obvious and clear assault with a deadly weapon on a police officer, I think is just completely irresponsible," Mangual said. 

"But it also will reinforce that sense in the NYPD that I think is already existing: that this administration is an opponent, not a partner. And if that dynamic continues, and it reaches further down into the rank and file, I do think that the city is going to see a more reluctant police force at a time in which it needs it to be proactive."

As a candidate, Mamdani attempted to distance himself from previous support of police defunding but faced backlash last month when he announced that part of his plan to balance the budget involves cutting the NYPD’s budget and canceling 5,000 new officer hires.

"I think what we've seen in the early days of this administration is that Mamdani is not yet willing to position himself as an open partner of the NYPD," Mangual said. "He is still trying to make a decision about whether he is going to lean into his more natural identity of an opponent of the NYPD."

The NYPD is "between a rock and a hard place" under Mamdani, Mangual said, adding that officers will be "less likely to put their lives on the line for a city that they do not feel has their back."

"He’d be perfectly happy with a world in which he can say, 'Look, the NYPD is a failure, it’s not keeping crime down, it’s time to try other approaches,'" Mangual said.

Fox News Digital reached out to Mamdani's office for comment. 

KAMALA STILL FEEDING AT THE GOVERNMENT TROUGH

By Bob Walsh

 

LAPD

The LAPD’s union openly criticised the deployment of city officers for Harris’ personal protection

 

It was revealed yesterday that CA taxpayers are providing a security contingent of "dozens" of CHP officers for Kamal's book tour.  Neither she nor the state are saying how much this is costing.  Neither are saying if she is reimbursing the state for any of these costs as her "book tour" is a personal, commercial enterprise and not a political undertaking.

Don't forget that the travel and per diem expenses for these people can cost significantly more than their salary, which is not small.  Since nobody is saying ANYTHING about this I expect the cost is large and maybe massive.

This is being justified by her prior service in CA state government and documented threats to her safety, which I have no doubt are real.

Wednesday, March 04, 2026

BUT WILL HE DEFEAT HIS DEMOCRATIC OPPONENT IN NOVEMBER? ... THAT IS IF HE'S NOT CONVICTED IN THE MEANTIME

Father accused of murdering his 14-year-old daughter's rapist WINS primary race to become county sheriff

 

By Alexa Cimino 

 

Daily Mail

Mar 4, 2026

 

 

AARON SPENCER FULL_frame_58038.jpeg
Aaron Spencer is now the top Republican pick for his county's sheriff position - despite being on trial for murder
 

A father accused of killing the man who allegedly raped and abducted his teenage daughter has won the Republican primary for county sheriff in Arkansas - despite him still awaiting trial for murder.

Aaron Spencer, 37, secured 53.5 percent of the vote in Tuesday’s Republican primary for Lonoke County sheriff, defeating longtime incumbent John Staley, who received 26.5 percent, according to the Arkansas Secretary of State. A third candidate, David Bufford, received nearly 20 percent.

The result puts Spencer in the unusual position of potentially becoming the top law enforcement officer in the same county that charged him with murder.

But his criminal case remains unresolved.

Spencer has been accused of fatally shooting Michael Fosler, 67, in October 2024 after discovering the man with his teenage daughter. 

Fosler had been out on $50,000 bail while facing 43 criminal charges involving the girl, including internet stalking of a child, sexual assault, sexual indecency with a child and possession of child pornography.

Spencer has admitted to shooting Fosler but pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder.

The case began shortly after midnight on October 8, 2024, when Spencer and his wife, Heather Spencer, 38, discovered their daughter missing from her bedroom at the family’s farm in Cabot, Arkansas.

 

Aaron Spencer, 37, pictured with his wife, Heather, secured 53.5 percent of the vote in Tuesday¿s Republican primary for Lonoke County sheriff while still awaiting trial for murder

Aaron Spencer, 37, pictured with his wife, Heather, secured 53.5 percent of the vote in Tuesday’s Republican primary for Lonoke County sheriff while still awaiting trial for murder

Michael Fosler (pictured) was charged and booked with rape and internet stalking of a child on July 11, 2024 but was released quickly on a $50,000 bond and then kidnapped Spencer's daughter

Michael Fosler (pictured) was charged and booked with rape and internet stalking of a child on July 11, 2024 but was released quickly on a $50,000 bond and then kidnapped Spencer's daughter

 

The parents called 911 but soon began searching the area themselves after realizing their daughter may have been with Fosler - a man police say had previously groomed and raped the girl and was the boyfriend of a family friend. 

Fosler had been arrested months earlier in July 2024 on charges including rape and internet stalking of a child but was later released on bond despite a no-contact order barring him from contacting the teenager.

Heather said she had feared the worst.