Wednesday, November 06, 2024

ABBAS AND ALBANESE, TWO PEAS IN A POD

Abbas calls for sanctions against Israel at UN

The Palestinian Authority chief said Israel should be penalized for its not fulfilling "its obligations upon gaining U.N. membership in 1949." 

 

JNS

Nov 6, 2024

 

 

Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas is demanding that the UN sanctions Israel

Palestinian Authority chief Mahmoud Abbas demanded on Monday that the U.N. sanction Israel for alleged breaches of its charter and failure to implement resolutions, Ramallah’s Wafa news outlet reported.

Addressing the U.N.’s World Urban Forum in Cairo, Abbas said Israel should be penalized for what he called its “failure to fulfill its obligations upon gaining U.N. membership in 1949 and for not adhering to General Assembly resolutions 181 and 194,” according to the Wafa news report.

U.N. General Assembly Resolution 181 was adopted in 1947 and called for the partition of the British Mandate into two states: one Jewish and one Arab. It was rejected by Palestinian and Arab nations, with the latter launching a war of annihilation against the nascent Jewish state.

Resolution 194 (1948), which is not legally binding, recommends that “refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbors should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date.”

Abbas claimed that the “implementation of relevant U.N. resolutions, especially the recent General Assembly decision on the International Court of Justice’s advisory opinion, along with granting Palestine full U.N. membership, are essential for achieving justice and stability.”

The P.A. chief’s remarks closely resembled those of Francesca Albanese, the United Nations special rapporteur on Palestinian rights whose anti-Jewish statements have been widely criticized, who told the Democracy Now outlet last week that Israel should be suspended from the world body due to Jerusalem’s alleged attempts to “erase Palestinianness.”

 

UN special rapporteur on Palestinian rights Francesca Albanese says  that Israel should be suspended from the UN due to its alleged attempts to “erase Palestinianness.
 

“There has been the violations of hundreds of resolutions by the—on Israel, over occupied Palestinian territory, by the Security Council, the General Assembly, the Human Rights Council, and steady violation of international humanitarian law, human rights law, the Apartheid Convention, the Genocide Convention,” Albanese charged.

Last month, Abbas claimed that Israel is a “colonial project” that would be defeated if the United States withdrew its support, the Jewish state’s Kan News public broadcaster reported, quoting Russian state-controlled media.

The Kan report cited an interview that aired on Russia-1 with Russia Today chief editor Margarita Simonyan, who met Abbas on the sidelines of the BRICS summit on Oct. 22-24, held in Kazan in central Russia.

According to Simonyan, the Palestinian leader told her over coffee, “We have an issue with the United States. They are the ones perpetrating everything. Who brought Zionism to this country? The colonizers.”

Officials of Abbas’s ruling Fatah faction sat down with Hamas terrorists in Cairo in recent days for talks on the establishment of a body to manage Gaza after the conclusion of Israel’s war against terror.

Last month, a P.A. official told Reuters that the terrorist groups were in negotiations to form a committee to run Gaza and manage its border crossings after talks for a unity government faltered. At the time, the committee’s form and duties remained unclear, the P.A. official said.

On Sept. 25, P.A. Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa announced that Fatah had agreed to meet with Hamas in Cairo. Mustafa said the talks would focus on forging initial deals “to arrange the situation” in Gaza. He confirmed his “readiness to administer the Gaza Strip the day after the war,” the Ma’an News Agency reported, “without excluding anyone.”

A NICE GESTURE

Argentina’s new foreign minister sworn in on Torah

At Gerardo Werthein's inauguration, President Javier Milei referenced the weekly Torah portion, suggesting it's a divine sign to follow Abraham's lead. 

 

UNRWA AND HAMAS ARE ONE AND THE SAME

Israel banishes UN ‘terror organization’ from its soil, West has meltdown

No nation would allow a terrorist organization that undermines the security of its host country to operate on its soil. 

 

By James Sinkinson

 

FLAME

Nov 5, 2024 

 

Israeli soldiers operate next to the UNRWA headquarters, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas.

Israeli soldiers enter UNRWA's headquarters in Gaza City on February 8, 2024


Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, overwhelmingly passed two laws last week that ban the U.N.’s Palestinian aid agency, the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), from operating in the Jewish state. UNRWA serves as an incubator of terrorism and a key infrastructure agency under Gaza’s Hamas rulers, thus prolonging the subjugation of millions of Palestinians and impeding prospects for peace with Israel.

Israel’s decision to ban UNRWA is a major step towards dismantling the agency, which will reduce Hamas’s threat to the Jewish state and help liberate Palestinians from Hamas’s brutal authoritarian rule.

In truth, UNRWA is fundamentally a terrorist organization itself, its staff and facilities are inextricably bound to Hamas, and operate under Hamas’s control. Millions of dollars of UNRWA funding support the terror group’s priorities. No wonder an Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman once quipped that “Hamas has infiltrated UNRWA so deeply that it is no longer possible to determine where UNRWA ends and where Hamas begins.”

Many UNRWA employees are members of Hamas. Some of these employees directly participated in the Oct. 7 massacre, while others supported it wholeheartedly. UNRWA facilities are frequently used by Hamas and other terrorist groups as bases from which to attack Israel. The agency’s schools indoctrinate Palestinian children to embrace Hamas’s goal of hating and killing Jews. Hamas oversees UNRWA’s social-welfare programs.

UNRWA also perpetuates the Palestinians’ 75-year-old refugee crisis, nurturing the myth that, one day, Palestinians will destroy Israel and return to their “native homeland,” territory that few Palestinians have ever set foot in.

Yet, the “international community,” including the United States, wants UNRWA to endure, claiming no one else can do the work it performs. In fact, many aid organizations can deliver the same services that UNRWA does without supporting terrorism.

Rather than condemn Israel for banning UNRWA, the world’s nations could more wisely help the Palestinians by praising Israel’s actions. Better yet, United Nations sponsors should themselves follow Israel’s example and ban the corrupt U.N. agency. Surely, no nation would allow a terrorist organization that undermines the security of its host country to operate on its soil.

Many UNRWA employees are also members of Hamas or other terrorist groups. Israeli intelligence indicates that about 10% of UNRWA’s Gazan employees have ties to Hamas, Islamic Jihad and other terrorist groups. Many UNRWA employees enthusiastically supported the Oct. 7 massacre. Indeed, UN Watch uncovered a Telegram group of 3,000 UNRWA staffers who celebrated the atrocity.

UNRWA staffers joined in the Oct. 7 massacre, and many serve as Hamas commandos. At least 12 U.N. staffers participated in the massacre. Some took hostages. One hostage released in the November 2023 ceasefire reported that he was held captive by an UNRWA teacher. Just a few weeks ago, the Israel Defense Forces killed Fateh Sherif, a top Hamas commander who was also an UNRWA employee.

 

The 12 staffers at UNRWA alleged to have been involved in the October 7 onslaught. (Used in accordance with Clause 27a of the Copyright Law) 

The 12 staffers at UNRWA who participated in the Oct. 7 massacre.

 

UNRWA facilities frequently house terrorists and their weapons. Israel has revealed more than 30 UNRWA facilities containing terrorist infrastructure, such as tunnel shafts supplied by UNRWA electricity and stocked with UNRWA food aid. Hamas even operated a computer server farm directly under—and connected to—UNRWA’s Gaza headquarters. Israel passed this information on to UNRWA Commissioner Philip Lazzarini, the media and donor countries, but all have chosen to deny or ignore it.

UNRWA teaches Palestinian children to hate and murder Jews. UNRWA schools use textbooks that, according to numerous studies and findings of the United States and the European Union, are steeped in antisemitism and support for terrorism. Children are taught to kill Jews and violently destroy Israel. They are assured that dying as a martyr for this cause is the highest possible honor. How can Israel—or any nation—sponsor an organization with such a curriculum?

UNRWA maintains Palestinians as perpetual welfare recipients. UNRWA defines refugees as not just Palestinians who left Israel during the 1948-49 War of Independence but also their descendants-without-end. UNRWA convinces them their only hope of salvation is a mythical “right of return” to Palestine once Israel is destroyed. Unlike the U.N. High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), which helps millions of other refugees worldwide find new homes and overcome their refugee status, UNRWA offers Palestinians no realistic chance of overcoming their welfare status.

Part of Palestinians’ dependency springs from the fact that 80% of UNRWA’s 30,000 employees are Palestinians themselves—a veritable gravy train. While the agency prioritizes direct benefits like food and education, it neglects job training, and UNRWA itself is the career goal for many. Moreover, the agency’s huge staff assists only 6 million Palestinians, while the UNHCR, with only 20,000 staffers, has assisted 122.6 million refugees globally.

UNRWA is notoriously ineffective as an aid organization. Israel’s decision to ban UNRWA has been condemned by Western countries, including the United States, and U.N. Special Rapporteur for Palestine Francesca Albanese has suggested that Israel be suspended from the United Nations. These critics argue that Gaza is utterly dependent on bloated UNRWA services, which no other organization can provide. Nonsense. Inefficient UNRWA convoys leave thousands of tons of food supplies rotting in the sun and virtually assist Hamas in hijacking its trucks.

Some 13 other aid agencies work in the Gaza Strip, and 23 agencies in Judea and Samaria support the Palestinians. They are fully capable of replacing UNRWA’s services. In Gaza, for example, UNRWA today handles only 13% of the humanitarian aid that enters the coastal enclave. 

UNRWA undermines any attempt to achieve a two-state solution. Countries whose mantra is “two states for two peoples” should cheer Israel’s efforts to shut down UNRWA. The U.N. agency does not cultivate peace with Israel but rather promotes endless warfare against Israel, serving the futile fantasy that Palestinians will someday conquer the Jewish state. Indeed, it’s supremely hypocritical to support both two states and the U.N. agency that effectively sabotages this solution.

If the international community, and particularly Western countries, want a peaceful resolution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict, they should shut UNRWA down. Put a stop to the corruption and the promotion of murderous martyrdom, and the destruction of the Jewish state.

GOOD NEWS, REALLY VERY GOOD NEWS: I WAS WRONG! I WAS WRONG! I WAS WRONG!!

By Howie Katz

 

Trump strode on to the stage at around 2.30am (ET), stern-faced and somber, the weight of history upon him.

The President-elect, Melania and Barron celebrate his victory at the Palm Beach County Convention Center

 

On October 8, 2024, I predicted that on January 20, 2025, Kamala Harris would be sworn in as our new president.

I am very happy to admit that I was wrong, dead wrong!

As of noon Texas time, Trump had  292 electoral votes. He needed 270 to win. Trump also won the popular vote.

By noon, the Republicans were also sweeping both houses of Congress, 52-43 in the Senate and 201-184 in the House. 

Kamala Harris was unable to word salad her way into the White House. Her 'chicken in every pot' promise did not work. Neither did her screeching on women's reproductive rights. 

What won it for Trump? Let me quote what Jim Carville said in 1992: "It's the economy, stupid."

At his rallies, Trump asked, "Are you better off now than you were four years ago?"  To America's workers the obvious answer was "no". The economy was by far the top issue, followed by illegal immigration and abortion.

 

 

Kamala Harris was unable to word salad her way into the White House. 

 

Barack Obama's campaigning for Harris did not help her and now he won't be serving his fourth term as president.

One of Trump's first acts as president should be to throw the Obama-holdovers out of the government, especially those in the State Department.

Trump's victory is not just good for America, but it is also good for Israel. Although he and Netanyahu have grown apart, Trump will never threaten Israel with an arms embargo like the Biden-Harris administration has done.

I'm a happy camper now and I'm very glad that I was wrong in predicting a Harris win. 

AND SHE WAS CONSPICUOUS BY HER ABSENCE

By Bob Walsh


a woman speaking into a microphone with a blue background behind her
 
 
Kamala Harris did NOT address her peeps last night, she sent a road dog out to do it.  She is supposed to address her loyal followers sometime today.  Maybe.  If the wind is blowing in the right direction.  She might very well refuse to make any statement until ALL of the votes are in and counted, which could be more than a week.

I wonder just how pissy her concession statement will be.  Maybe she will give a Daniel Boone speech.  That would be cool.  

I wonder if she can find work at McDonalds.  They hire a lot of senior citizens these days. 

THE MARKET LIKED THE RESULTS

By Bob Walsh


SOME RESULTS FROM CALIFORNIA

By Bob Walsh

Vote Yes on Prop 36
 

Much to the irritation of Greasy Gavin, the God-Emperor of the formerly great state of California, Proposition 36 passed by about 70-30.  This makes committing crimes again illegal in CA.  It focuses especially on organized retail theft and fentanyl sales.  The thing Gavin most hates about it is that it will almost certainly increase the prison population at a time when he is closing down prisons and putting felons either in county jails or on the streets so they can commit more crimes.  In 2020 voters overwhelmingly rejected a similar proposal.  I guess they decided that they didn't like rampant lawlessness after all.  

Also Proposition 4 passed.  This kicks down about $10 billion in bond money to various warm and fuzzy projects including water storage, the thinning of forests for wildfire prevention, restoration of beaches and coastal bluffs being billed as a Climate Change project, and other potentially useful projects.  

IT LOOKS LIKE THE REPUBLIC IS SAFE FOR AT LEAST THE NEXT FOUR YEARS

By Bob Walsh


a man in a suit and tie is wearing a hat that says " great again "
 

It is now 11:30 p.m. on the west coast.  It is now clear that Trump has won and won convincingly.  He may even win the popular vote.  He also has a majority in the senate and it is POSSIBLE that the Republicans will hold on to the house, though that is less for sure.

That means that Trump will be able to get the federal judges he wants and the cabinet he wants.  That is (probably) a good thing.  

I don't know if Trump is a genius at planning political campaigns or he owes a great big THANK YOU to the Democrat-Socialists for running a moronic autistic hyena against him.  More likely a combination of both. 

I do hope he starts acting a little bit like a president and not like a candidate.  It would be nice.  

It is sometimes nice to be an eyewitness to history. 

Tuesday, November 05, 2024

TED CRUZ APPEARS TO HAVE BEEN REELECTED TO THE US SENATE

By Howie Katz

 

 


With 87.4 percent of the Texas vote counted, Senator Ted Cruz had an insurmountable lead of one million votes over his Democratic challenger Congressman Colin Allred.

Allred received millions of out-of-state dollars for his campaign, but that did not lead to the victory the Democrats hoped for.

Cruz's reelection is not only good for Texas and the United States, but it is also good for Israel. Cruz has been a longtime good friend and strong supporter of the Jewish state.

At this writing, Trump appears to be headed for a win. Even though Trump is a lunatic, I hope he will end up defeating dumbass Harris. It's far better for the country to have a lunatic than a dumbass in the White House.

LETTERS TO KAMALA HARRIS AND DONALD TRUMP

A letter to the 47th president

Harris positions herself as Biden's successor, someone who can correct his mistakes. And when it comes to Iran, he's made quite a few. The Iranians are savvy negotiators. Trump might be the only one who can outwit them. An appeal to both candidates.

 

By Nitzan David Fuchs and Makor Rishon

 

Israel Hayom

Nov 5, 2024

 

 

Welcome, President Harris. You have a full agenda, but the Middle East might demand your immediate focus.

Here's a key piece of advice: don't listen to your advisors. It's likely that at the top of your shortlist for National Security Advisor is Philip Gordon, your current advisor. Gordon is an experienced, practical figure with a PhD in international relations and over a decade of Middle East involvement. He has proven experience in strategizing, coordinating, and executing policy. The problem is, Dr. Gordon might end up destabilizing the Middle East.

The Iranians want a new nuclear deal, much like the one Dr. Gordon helped craft in 2015. At first glance, such an agreement seems like just what the region needs: it would halt Iran's march towards a nuclear bomb and allow the U.S. to pivot towards East Asia and China. However, this kind of deal could actually worsen the situation, for two main reasons.

The first reason is that easing sanctions on Iran would give it new resources to bolster its proxy organizations across the Middle East. An Iranian proxy, Hamas, triggered the current crisis. There's no guarantee that Iran would exercise better control over other proxies, like the Houthis or even Hezbollah. If you ease the pressure on Tehran, sooner or later the region will ignite again.

The second reason is Israel's response to such an agreement. It's no secret that the Israeli right-wing isn't thrilled about your election. In government corridors, they likely view you as a strategic challenge, if not a disaster. A new nuclear deal might push Israel to conclude that they're out of options and have no choice but to strike Iran's nuclear facilities to prevent it from obtaining a bomb. If the Israeli government expects hostility from you, it might assume it has nothing to lose and that time is not on its side.

What should you do? The fact that the Iranians want a nuclear deal indicates that sanctions are affecting them. Allowing Iran to maintain its status as a nuclear threshold state while granting sanctions relief would not only enable it to further enhance its nuclear capabilities but also grant it more resources to do so. Dr. Gordon and many within the Democratic establishment will argue that this is the only way to prevent an Iranian bomb and stabilize the Middle East. When Israel responds militarily and Iran destabilizes the region, these same advisors will recommend trying to prevent escalation, continuing the very failed strategy tried thus far. The end result would be that your administration could face four years of regional war in the Middle East.

Instead, it's better to increase economic pressure on Iran and restore Israel's confidence. Accelerate the supply of essential weapons to Israel, while clarifying to Tehran that any deal must include a significant reduction in its nuclear capabilities. A firm approach is the only way to avoid further deterioration.

 


Welcome back, President Trump. I know, you don't really want to deal with the Middle East. But it seems you don't have a choice.

The Middle East isn't just hanging by a thread—it's teetering on the edge. Iran and Israel are openly trading blows, and a regional conflict is underway, even if the previous Biden administration hasn't yet acknowledged it as such. The question is how you can stop or contain the descent into chaos. To succeed, you should understand what each of the main players in this drama—Iran and Israel—want from you.

Here's how it breaks down: The Iranians are actually the simpler side to understand. They can be divided into two camps. The first camp, led by Iranian President Massoud Pazhekian, wants a nuclear deal. He wants sanctions relief and is willing to limit Iran's nuclear activity to achieve it. He won't fully give up Iran's nuclear program, but why not see how far he's willing to go for some sanctions relief?

The second camp, composed of Revolutionary Guard members and radical conservatives, wants the U.S. out of the region and is prepared to use military force to make it happen—not directly, of course, but through proxies in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen. We know that you don't think the U.S. should remain in these countries, but if American troops are there, you certainly don't want them under fire.

The two camps aren't necessarily at odds with each other. The Iranians might believe that escalating military pressure will lead you to be more flexible in negotiating a new deal. They're shrewd negotiators, and they won't enter talks without trying to apply leverage on you. You can expect their proxy activity to increase in 2025, even as they pursue a diplomatic track to secure an agreement. The question is, what will you do?

One approach is to ramp up sanctions as much as possible and force the Iranians to concede more and more until they satisfy your demands. But economic pressure will lead Iran to escalate militarily, just as they did in the summer of 2019. In that scenario, you'll need to decide whether to divert expensive military resources to the Middle East, instead of Europe or East Asia. If you're not careful, you might get drawn into a war in the region.

Here, Israel could be useful, but you'll need to clarify a few things to the Israelis. Prime Minister Netanyahu and his cabinet will likely want the U.S. to act directly against Iran. You don't want that, and you have no interest in being drawn into yet another endless war in the Middle East. It would be wise to be honest with the Israelis from the start: there won't be an American strike on Iran. But there will be strong American backing for Israel to act against Iran and its proxies.

What you'll want to do is flood America's allies in the region with American-made weaponry: bunker-busting bombs for Israel, advanced jets for the Emirates, and precision weaponry for the Saudis. This would enable them to deter Tehran and, if necessary, confront it themselves. Coupled with economic pressure on Iran, you'd have a strategy: pressure Iran into concessions while trying to maintain stability in the Middle East. And remember, stability in this region is always a relative concept.

NETANYAHU IS PRAYING FOR DONALD TRUMP TO RETURN TO THE WHITE HOUSE

The US election from the Israeli perspective

Whoever wins, Israel will enter a critical phase from the day after the election until the next president’s inauguration on January 20, 2025.

 

By Yossi Aloni 

 

Donald Trump or Kamala Harris? Who will win the US presidential election?

Donald Trump or Kamala Harris? Who will win the US presidential election?

 

He won’t admit it, but Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is praying for Donald Trump to win over Kamala Harris and return to the White House.

In private conversations, Netanyahu previously accused Democratic administrations, including the current one, of trying to overthrow him. There’s a lot of bad blood between Netanyahu and the Democratic Party. The Democrats have always been suspicious of him and his team. It’s no coincidence that Ron Dermer, Netanyahu’s right-hand man responsible for US relations, was previously seen as a high-ranking Republican activist.

In the case of Trump, Netanyahu must be cautious: there’s an American saying, “Be careful what you wish for.” Trump is unpredictable and could cause Netanyahu far more trouble than Harris.

 

The former and perhaps future US President Donald Trump with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu before Trump’s departure to Rome on May 23, 2017 at Ben Gurion Airport. 
 

Let’s start with the fact that this would be Trump’s last term. Unlike in his first term, when pro-Israel Evangelicals strongly pressured Trump to support Israel, this time he would owe nothing to anyone. We could see an American president doing only what benefits him. Trump, in his second term, would be free from Evangelical influence. In this context, Trump might revive the so-called “Deal of the Century,” which includes creating a Palestinian state and normalizing relations with Saudi Arabia. The Deal of the Century envisioned two states, 70% of the so-called “West Bank” for the Palestinians, and 100% of Gaza. Given Trump’s unpredictability, he might decide to broker peace to win a Nobel Peace Prize, which could overshadow all his scandals and legal battles. If it meant forcing Netanyahu into concessions, he’d do it — Trump has no sentimental ties to Bibi or anyone else.

If Harris were to win, it would be her first term, and she would continue to face political pressure from the Jewish community. This could protect Israel if Jewish organizations unite to advocate for it. With all due respect to the Muslim vote in Michigan, the Jewish community there is more than twice as large, and generally, Jews have a much stronger presence in the US than Arabs or Muslims.

It’s fairly clear that Kamala Harris would be less pro-Israel than Joe Biden. A Democratic administration would likely exert strong pressure on Israel regarding the Palestinian issue, pushing for a two-state solution or progress toward a separation that considers Israel’s security and human rights. It’s likely that a Harris administration would increase pressure on Israel to minimize harm to civilians and combat settler violence. Measures Biden has taken against violent settlers could be intensified under Harris. We might even see sanctions against illegal outposts and perhaps against Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich.


Today the Americans decide who will take over the office of president.  
 

Whoever wins, Israel will enter a critical phase from the day after the election until the next president’s inauguration on January 20, 2025. It’s likely that President Biden will increase pressure to leave a “clean slate” for the next president. Both Harris and Trump have stated they will push for an end to the war and the return of hostages.

Regarding Iran, neither Trump nor Harris rules out a new nuclear agreement, but Trump is expected to put more pressure on Iran and be more generous toward Israel than Harris.

When it comes to the Palestinians, Harris and the Democrats have a more pro-Palestinian stance. Harris is expected to push harder than Biden on the “day after Gaza” and on reviving the Palestinian Authority.

What could be the difference between Trump and Harris? It seems Trump would pay more attention to Israeli interests. Regarding the ceasefire (Resolution 1701) in Lebanon, Israel wants to change it and put pressure on Hezbollah, which might be easier with Trump. However, because Trump is unpredictable and the Arabs fear him more than they fear each other, he could force Israel to make concessions.

A key question will be whom Trump and Harris will appoint. If figures like Mike Pompeo return as Secretary of State or Defense, Israel will be the big winner. David Friedman, who was ambassador to Israel under Trump, is also considered a candidate for a high position, possibly even Secretary of State.

Other candidates for Secretary of State include Senator Marco Rubio and Nikki Haley. All of these would be very positive news for Israel. Jared Kushner and Jason Greenblatt likely won’t hold official positions, but could continue to influence Trump. Netanyahu can count on pro-Israel senators like Lindsey Graham to keep Trump leaning in Israel’s favor.

 

A large poster in Tel Aviv, a few days before the US presidential election, in favor of a Trump return to the White House. 

Harris would be less pro-Israel than Biden but not necessarily anti-Israel. Many fear her appointees will come from the left wing of the Democratic Party, all of whom harbor deep dislike for Netanyahu. Harris’s team will likely consist mainly of Obama allies. Potential candidates for various roles include Phil Gordon, Ilan Goldberg, Wendy Sherman, and Rahm Emanuel.

Both teams share a desire to avoid military conflicts.

One concern for Israel is that a Trump victory could increase isolationist tendencies within the Republican Party. That would be very bad news. Trump is surrounded by people who preach American isolationism and non-interference in international conflicts. This could harm Israel directly and indirectly and strengthen the Russia-China axis. The first test will be the war in Ukraine and continued American support for Taiwan.

Another question is how dominant the progressive wing will be in Harris’s administration. The stronger their presence, the more Israel should be concerned.

Regardless of who wins, Israel will need to closely monitor developments in Washington to adapt to new realities and secure its interests in the Middle East.

NETANYAHU SHOULD HAVE FIRED GALLANT LONG BEFORE NOW

Netanyahu fires Gallant, foreign minister Israel Katz to be appointed in his place

"Unfortunately, over the past months, the trust between me and the minister of defense has been broken," said Netanyahu. 

 

JNS

Nov 5, 2024

 

 

Blinken Gallant 

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant meets with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Tel Aviv on Oct. 22, 2024.

 

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu decided to fire Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, the premier’s office announced on Tuesday.

Foreign Minister Israel Katz will be appointed to Gallant’s position, while Minister-without-Portfolio Gideon Sa’ar has been offered to fill the post of Jerusalem’s top diplomat, according to Netanyahu.

“Unfortunately, over the past months, the trust between me and the minister of defense has been broken. There were significant gaps regarding the management of the [military] campaign, and these gaps were accompanied by statements and actions that contradicted the decisions of the government,” the premier said in a video statement.

“I made repeated efforts to bridge these gaps, but they only widened. These issues even reached the public in an unacceptable manner, and, worse, became known to our enemies, who took pleasure and found advantage in it,” added Netanyahu.

In a missive published by Channel 12, the premier told Gallant that his dismissal would be effective 48 hours after the delivery of the letter. “I would like to thank you for your work as defense minister,” Netanyahu wrote. A meeting between the two was said to have lasted three minutes.

The Channel 12 report noted that, as part of the move, Netanyahu and Katz are expected to launch a bid to replace Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi and other senior Israeli security officials.

Responding to his firing on X, the defense minister wrote, “The security of the State of Israel was and will always remain my life’s mission.”

 

 post-img

Israel Katz huddles with Netanyahu in the Knesset on October 13, 2024.

 

Katz thanked Netanyahu for entrusting him with the responsibility, vowing to lead the Israeli military “towards victory against our enemies and to achieve the goals of the war: The return of all the hostages as the most important mission, the destruction of Hamas in Gaza, the defeat of Hezbollah in Lebanon, the curbing of Iranian aggression and the safe return of the residents of the north and south to their homes.”

Netanyahu and Gallant had been at odds since the 2023 judicial reform crisis. In May of last year, while Netanyahu was abroad, Gallant called a solo press conference and urged the prime minister to halt the judicial reform legislation amid massive street protests throughout Israel.

Some 24 hours later, Netanyahu announced his intention to fire Gallant. Nationwide protests against the government’s now-shelved judicial reform agenda intensified, and the premier reversed his decision.

Six months ago, Netanyahu and other members of his coalition slammed Gallant after he demanded that Jerusalem commit to Palestinian control over the Gaza Strip post-war with Hamas.

In September, after news broke that the Israel Defense Forces found the bodies of six hostages in a Hamas tunnel in southern Gaza, Gallant demanded that Netanyahu renege on a decision to keep IDF troops on the enclave’s border with Egypt, known as the Philadelphi Corridor.

Gallant apologized in a bid to stave off his dismissal, Maariv reported later that month, citing conversations among the premier’s associates.

The majority of Likud Party voters lost faith in Gallant and wanted to see him fired, according to a JNS/Direct Polls survey carried out in July.

Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir praised Tuesday’s move, writing on X, “I congratulate the prime minister on the decision to fire Gallant. With Gallant, who is still deeply trapped in the [pre-Oct. 7, 2023, security] concept, it is not possible to achieve absolute victory—and the prime minister did well to remove him from his position.”

Meanwhile, opposition leader Yair Lapid (Yesh Atid Party) called the firing an “act of madness,” urging his supporters to take to the streets.

Following the announcement of Gallant’s dismissal, protesters blocked Tel Aviv’s Ayalon Highway while lighting bonfires. At the same time, police erected barriers in front of Netanyahu’s Jerusalem residence.

“Israel Police officers are deployed in large forces at the protest hotspots throughout the country with the purpose of maintaining security and public order, as well as to enable a balance between the freedom to legitimately protest and the freedom of movement,” police stated.

“We call on the protesting public to obey instructions of police officers at the scene and to behave in a way that will not endanger the safety of the protestors, the police officers and road users,” the statement urged.

THE BLOODY HAMAS OCTOBER 7 ATTACK ON ISRAELI MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN STILL HAS THE SUPPORT OF 54% OF PALESTINIANS

Even after Sinwar’s death, ceaseless calls for a ceasefire play into Hamas’s bloody hands

Despite the havoc wreaked on Gaza and intense Israeli operations against terror cells, polls have consistently shown significant support by Palestinians for Hamas’s Oct. 7 terrorist attacks. 

 

By Bob Schwartz

 

JNS

Nov 5, 2024

 

Palestinians take part in a protest in support of Hamas, in Hebron, Nov. 24, 2023. Photo by Wisam Haslmaoun/Flash90.
Palestinians take part in a protest in support of Hamas, in Hebron, Nov. 24, 2023
 

The death of Yahya Sinwar, the monstrous military and political leader of Hamas in Gaza whose sickeningly twisted mind conceived and executed the horrific events of Black Shabbat on the morning of Oct. 7, 2023, is a cause for celebration.

Yet as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in his address to the nation, the job is not done as long as Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad have not been completely destroyed, the living hostages have not been released and the bodies of the dead have not been repatriated to Israel (and other nations) for proper burial.

The prime minister is correct. Also important is his offer to provide safe passage for Palestinians to leave the Gaza Strip or a monetary reward to any Palestinians holding hostages or who can provide information about the location of hostages to be released unharmed.

An appeal to the Palestinians’ sense of morality and compassion for fellow human beings may seem a waste of time after witnessing their ecstatic displays of bloodlust and bestiality on Oct. 7, gleefully recorded on their cameras and phones. Perhaps an appeal to their venality and instinct for survival might achieve better results. If not, they will pay the heaviest price and receive the severe punishment they deserve.

Yet even before Sinwar’s blood was dry, voices began calling on Israel to “take the win” and start planning for the “day after” in Gaza by agreeing to an immediate ceasefire to bring the hostages back and end the war.

A ceasefire negotiated with whom? Under what terms? Expecting what outcomes?

As noted in a New York Post editorial, “Terrorist killer Yahya Sinwar did not want peace. Not once, not ever. New reporting reveals that as the hunt for him ramped up, this brutal killer gave orders that after his death, Hamas should refuse any concessions Israel might offer. Why? Because, as he saw it, the high civilian casualties of the war increased Hamas’s negotiating power against Israel.”

Can there be any credible expectation that Sinwar’s likely successor, his brother Mohammed—who stepped in to fill the blood-soaked shoes of the late unlamented master terrorist Mohammed Deif, killed by the Israeli military in July—will be any less defiant and intransigent? In what universe would the desperate and decimated remnants of Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad leadership be willing to part with any captives?

They understand that the hostages represent the only remaining insurance policy they possess that ensures their survival—even as a diminished force—and preserves their heroic stature in the minds of Palestinians and their supporters around the world. Then, Hamas could emerge as the only “resistance” organization that, after inflicting an unprovoked, vicious attack on Israel, survived the response of the Zionist enemy and lived to fight and kill Jews, which they have every intention of doing “again and again” until the Jewish state and its people are wiped off the map.

The destruction of Gaza’s infrastructure and the sacrificial deaths of thousands of Gazan civilian “human shields” (innocent or not) are a price worth paying from Hamas and PIJ’s perspective.

This assumption is confirmed by every poll taken since Oct. 7 by Khalil Shikaki’s Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research. The latest, Poll No. 93, released on Sept. 17, shows some decrease in support for the Oct. 7 Hamas terrorist attacks, but that is more likely due to Israel’s military success and Gazan Palestinian suffering than diminished enthusiasm for the terror group’s policies and objectives.

Despite the havoc wreaked on Gaza and increasingly intense Israeli operations to eliminate Hamas, PIJ and the Al-Aksa Martyrs Brigade terror cells in the Judea and Samaria, poll numbers have consistently shown significant support by Palestinians for Hamas’s attack, currently at “54%, compared to 67% three months ago, in June 2024, and 71% six months ago, in March 2024, said it was the right decision.”

The pollsters felt the need to add the following comment: “It is important to note that support for this attack does not necessarily mean support for Hamas and does not mean support for any killings or atrocities committed against civilians. Indeed, almost 90% of the public believes Hamas men did not commit the atrocities depicted in videos taken on that day.”

This obscene denial of well-documented acts might be the most disturbing and infuriating finding in this poll. Perhaps equally offensive is the pollster’s outrageous attempt to whitewash this response as not condoning the inhumanity on display that day. In fact, those heinous acts were the bitter fruit of the poisonous seeds of hate that Hamas and PIJ have sown in the fertile brains of Gazan children through U.N. schools, camps and media for generations.

In another attempt to somehow justify the Hamas massacre, which also shows the degree to which Palestinians have been brainwashed into believing that their only path forward lies through rivers of blood shed by innocent Israeli civilians, the report contended that: “Support for the attack, however, seems to come from another motive: findings show that more than two-thirds of the Palestinians believe that the attack has put the Palestinian issue at the center of attention and eliminated years of neglect at the regional and international levels.”

Or, as Sinwar himself said in an interview with an Italian journalist in The Wall Street Journal in 2018: “We make the headlines only with blood … No blood, no news.”

Sinwar was talking about the blood of his own people. In the same WSJ article, the delusions of visceral grandeur that drove his warped vision are displayed: “In an April 11 letter to Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh after three of Haniyeh’s adult sons were killed by an Israeli airstrike, Sinwar wrote that their deaths and those of other Palestinians would ‘infuse life into the veins of this nation, prompting it to rise to its glory and honor.’”

The rest of the survey’s results reinforce the mentality of defiance and denial that the Palestinians in Gaza and, especially those in Judea and Samaria, have shown since Oct. 7.

Palestinians anticipate the “resistance” forces’ ultimate victory over Israel (50%) and the continuing Hamas control of Gaza post-war (57% overall). The latter figure is divided with just 37% in Gaza agreeing but 70% in P.A.-controlled areas of Judea and Samaria, where the popularity of Hamas and PIJ has exploded exponentially at the expense of the Palestinian Authority and its leader, Mahmoud Abbas.

Not only do Palestinians expect Hamas to continue to rule Gaza, but they also prefer it to alternative arrangements. Nearly 60% said they “prefer the return of Hamas.” When broken down by area, that total represented 73% of people in P.A.-controlled areas and 36% in Gaza. The remaining results found that “20% chose the Palestinian Authority, 4% chose the Israeli army, and 12% chose to bring the Gaza Strip under the control of international forces”.

These responses fly in the face of the proposed plans for “the day after,” as expressed by the Biden administration through Secretary of State Antony Blinken and U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan. If any further evidence was needed to undermine their unwavering, pious pronouncements underpinning the future governance of Gaza, the opinions of the Palestinians themselves cannot be misinterpreted or ignored. As the results found, “ … when we specifically asked about support for the return of the P.A. to control the Rafah Crossing and the Gaza Strip after a ceasefire, 70% expressed opposition and 27% supported it. … The idea of an Arab security deployment in Gaza to assist the P.A. security forces is opposed by two-thirds of the public, compared to three quarters three months ago.”

In The Washington Post article, “Sinwar’s Killing a Blow but Not a Death Knell for Hamas,” Israel Defense Forces Maj. Gen. (ret.) Yakov Amidror noted, “Hamas today cannot attack Israel. But Hamas has morphed into a guerrilla force and remains strong enough to ‘kill any substitute’ in a postwar scenario.”

Under such conditions, neither the P.A. nor any Arab state will dare risk entering Gaza.

Since the survey was conducted in early September, subsequent weeks have seen the Israel Defense Forces continue to grind down Hamas and PIJ forces and leadership, culminating in the assassination of Sinwar.

Like a bad penny, Blinken has once again turned up in Israel to push Netanyahu to seize an imaginary opportunity for a ceasefire supposedly opened by Sinwar’s death since, in Blinken’s assessment, he was the obstacle to a deal.

However, the defiant statements coming from Hamas officials and supporters stress the futility of continuing to pursue the same dead-end diplomacy and expecting a better result. Nothing has changed regarding Hamas’s modus operandi and objectives. Their maximalist demands remain unchanged. There is no deal to be made.

These patently unacceptable terms amount to nothing less than a demand for Israel’s surrender without achieving any of its declared war aims and at the painful cost of IDF heroes dead and injured. The urgency of the hostages’ return is undeniable, but the selfless sacrifices of Israel’s brave defenders must also be honored by ensuring that they were not made in vain.

There is no alternative to the IDF’s methodical and careful, relentless but expeditious fighting for final victory over Iran’s terrorist proxies in Gaza and beyond.

IN THE MIDDLE EAST, AMERICA'S MOST RELIABLE, CAPABLE AND MOTIVATED ALLY IS ISRAEL

How America benefits from its security partnership with Israel

Israel may not have one of the largest economies in the world and is not an industrial superpower, but it’s a technological powerhouse. 

 

By Bradley Bowman

 

JNS

Nov 5, 2024 

 

IAF F-15 BAZ TOPSHOT 

Israeli F-15 'Baz' Eagles

 

Anyone who has spent time on a playground knows it is good to have friends when bullies come along. That also holds true in international relations.

China, Russia, Iran and North Korea are increasingly cooperating to undermine the United States and its interests. Unfortunately, despite our large economy and powerful military, the United States lacks sufficient resources to confront this growing axis of aggressors alone.

Fortunately, the United States has an unparalleled network of allies with whom we can work to defend common interests and counter common adversaries. In the Middle East, America’s most reliable, capable and motivated ally is Israel.

Years ago, while working as a Senate national security adviser accompanying a congressional delegation to Israel, I asked a U.S. military colonel assigned as an attaché to the Israeli military what Americans should know about our ties with Israel. He told me that we Americans get far more than we give in the relationship with Israel. 

The more I have learned since then, the more I understand how right he was and how supporting Israel is a wise American investment.

Consider two categories: enemies and military technology.

All of Israel’s enemies are America’s enemies. Washington has no more capable or determined ally than Israel when it comes to going after that subset of U.S. adversaries, including Iran and its terror network.

More than 100 Israeli fighter jets, air refuelers and reconnaissance aircraft conducted a complex, long-range military operation last month that severely degraded Iran’s strategic air-defense capabilities and destroyed a significant portion of its missile-production capabilities.

For years, U.S. administrations of both parties have said that the United States will not allow Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon. If Iran decides to make a sprint for a nuclear weapon and leaves the United States no choice but to intervene, Israel just made the mission for the U.S. Department of Defense easier.

In addition to the skill of the Israeli pilots, Israel just demonstrated the superiority of American aircraft and weapons over Russian air- and missile-defense systems. The Israelis used American-made F-15I, F-16I and F-35I aircraft (with Israeli enhancements) in the strikes against Russian-made S-300 air-defense systems.

Any country that has ordered Russian air and missile defenses may want to request a refund. That would deprive dictator Vladimir Putin of revenue for his war of aggression in Ukraine and increase orders for American weapons. That will employ more Americans, bolster our economy and help revitalize our defense industrial base. Thank you, Israel.

Moreover, American engineers, military planners and pilots will undoubtedly draw from their Israeli counterparts the lessons learned in the recent military operation on improving U.S. technologies, systems, operations, tactics, techniques and procedures. That will save American lives in the next conflict. Israel brings the same effectiveness when it comes to battling Iran’s terror network, including groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah, which have killed hundreds of U.S. citizens and service members.

Consider the case of Fuad Shukr. He was a top Hezbollah commander who the U.S. government says played a key role in the 1983 Beirut U.S. Marine barracks bombing that resulted in the deaths of 241 U.S. military personnel.

As part of the Rewards for Justice Program, the United States offered a $5 million reward for information that would bring him to justice. That U.S. effort did not yield any results. But on July 30, as part of its military operations against Hezbollah, Israel killed Shukr. He will never again harm American troops—thanks to the Israelis.

Israel also helps Americans when it comes to military technology. It may not have one of the largest economies in the world and it is not an industrial superpower, but it’s a technology powerhouse. It consistently creates world-class weapons and capabilities, and exhibits an impressive ability to field them quickly.

Technologies, for example, that Israel developed and honed years ago to detect, map and destroy Hezbollah and Hamas tunnels were shared with Americans. The United States then used these Israeli technologies to find and neutralize drug-smuggling tunnels under our southern border that could also be used by terrorists to infiltrate the United States. These same technologies developed in Israel also helped U.S. troops deployed to the Middle East to defeat the Islamic State group and other terrorists that use tunnels to approach, surveil and attack U.S. military bases.

Due to necessity, culture and size, Israel is so effective at developing cutting-edge military technologies and fielding them quickly that Congress authorized the establishment of the U.S.-Israel Operations-Technology Working Group in the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal 2021.

Understanding the value of working with Israel, the Department of Defense established the working group with Israel’s Ministry of Defense on Nov. 1, 2021. Then it established six sub-working groups on artificial intelligence/autonomy, directed energy, counter-unmanned aerial systems, biotechnology, integrated network systems of systems and hypersonic capabilities.

These efforts with Israel can help ensure that Americans will not confront better-armed adversaries in the future, whether in the Middle East, Europe or the Pacific.

Iran and its terror proxies who hate the United States as much as they do Israel are attacking the Jewish state on seven fronts—yet our ally Israel is fighting and winning. As the United States confronts difficult days ahead, that’s just the kind of friend we are going to need.

At a moment when authoritarian bullies are circling and have discovered the value of partners, Americans should not take our ally Israel for granted.

 

Previously published in The Washington Times.

FRANCE HAS A HISTORY OF AN AFFINITY FOR TYRANNY

Something rotten in the land of tricolor

While France is the origin of the principles of modern democracy, it has also shown a disturbing affinity for tyranny. 

 

By Martin Sherman

 

JNS

Nov 5, 2024

 

France sets dates to emerge from pandemic lockdown

 

“I have tried to lift France out of the mud. But she will return to her errors. … I cannot prevent the French from being French.” — Charles de Gaulle

Bizarre developments seem to be emerging in what is considered by many—rightly or wrongly—the home of modern democracy, for there appears to be a growing alignment between Paris and the tyrannical theocrats of Tehran, particularly over the fate of war-torn Lebanon.

Reuters reported that the speaker of the Iranian parliament, Mohammad Baqer Ghalibaf, was quoted in a recent interview with Le Figaro as saying his country would be ready to “negotiate” with France on the implementation of U.N. Resolution 1701, the very motion that failed so disastrously to bring stability to Lebanon following the 2006 Second Lebanon War.

Accordingly, it appears that Paris and Tehran view Lebanon not as an independent state with its own sovereign government but rather as a vassal state subordinate to them both.

This bilateral initiative, with its manifest disregard for Lebanon itself, drew a sharp rebuke from Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati, who stated that such a negotiation was the prerogative of the Lebanese state. In a rare and audacious reproach of Iran, he expressed “surprise” at Ghalibaf’s move, describing it as “blatant interference in Lebanese affairs” and an attempt to “establish a rejected guardianship over Lebanon.

Significantly, The Tehran Times, a regime-affiliated media channel, reported on an Oct. 12 telephone conversation from Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian to French President Emmanuel Macron devoted to increasing pressure on Israel to stop what he described as “genocide” and “war crimes” in Gaza and Lebanon. Pezeshkian praised the recent steps taken by the French government condemning Israeli actions in Lebanon and suspending arms shipments to the Israel Defense Forces, citing them as positive moves towards peace.

Complicit in suppression?

Another perturbing development has recently come to light following a two-year investigation by France 24 revealing that hunting cartridges made by the Franco-Italian ammunition manufacturer Cheddite were used during the violent crackdown on the 2022 “Woman, Life, Freedom” protests sparked by the death in police custody of Mahsa Amini, a young Kurdish-Iranian woman, arrested for not wearing hijab as required. Reportedly, 551 people died (including almost 70 children) as a result of the regime’s repression in the months that followed the initial uprising.

According to the France 24 probe, these cartridges are widely available across Iran—in stark violation of the 2011 sanctions imposed by the European Union. It appears that the ammunition may have been routed into Iran via Turkey, where Cheddite held shares in a weapons manufacturing company. Interestingly, similar munitions were reportedly used against Southern Azeris—an ethnic minority constituting nearly a third of Iran’s population—during the suppression of a protest against persecution, discrimination and erasure of Azerbaijani culture and language by the regime.

France’s aberrant conduct—as a power allegedly associated with the West, its values, and its objectives—is apparent elsewhere regarding the provision of arms.

Useless UNIFIL

Indeed, as I pointed out last November, French Defense Minister Sebastien Lecornu approved the delivery of several dozen French-made armored vehicles to the Lebanese Army, ostensibly to “assist them in their patrol missions within the country [so] it could coordinate well with UNIFIL [the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon] as tensions mount between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah in Southern Lebanon.” In other words, as i24-News remarked, France is providing armored personnel carriers to the Lebanese Army for use in the areas controlled by Hezbollah, despite previous knowledge that Western military equipment supplied to them has ended up in the hands of the Iranian terror proxy. As the ALMA think-tank warned, Hezbollah’s infiltration of the Lebanese Army, and its utilization of its infrastructure, materiel and personnel, implies there is a tangible risk that French equipment and armaments will end up being used against Israel.

French animosity toward Israel was also on display in Paris’s sharp rebuke of the IDF when it fired on UNIFIL positions in Southern Lebanon. France accused Israel of endangering UNIFIL personnel and preventing them from fulfilling their peacekeeping mandate—blithely ignoring that (a) the force has been an abysmal failure in keeping the peace in Lebanon; and (b) Israel urged that its troops evacuate the combat zone so as to avoid the risk of injury.

Paris’s pernicious policies

Further revelations of French anti-Israel bias have been exposed regularly over the last several months. In June, France’s Defense Ministry issued a decree banning Israeli participation in a premier weapons exhibition, Eurosatory. The fact the ban was struck down by the French judiciary did little to deter the Macron government from trying to impose an additional ban on Israeli companies from taking part in another event—Euronaval Salon, a naval defense fair scheduled to take place between Nov. 4 and Nov. 7. Israel has once again vowed to challenge this decision in French courts.

To top all this off, Macron, whose own country has been the victim of Islamist savagery, is—astonishingly—promoting an arms embargo against Israel for its military response to even greater Islamist savagery, in which 1,200 of its citizens were massacred and mutilated—the equivalent of almost 8,000 French citizens in proportion to its population, almost seven times that of Israel’s. 

Sadly, Paris’s pernicious policies extend beyond the Middle East and into the Caucasus, where a perturbing convergence of Iranian and French objectives appears to be emerging. This centers largely around their approach towards Armenia, which for years functioned as a conduit for goods to Russia and Iran in contravention of the Western sanctions against those two countries.

Diverging from the West?

Of course, Armenia and its neighbor Azerbaijan have been bitter adversaries for decades, which periodically erupted into military conflagrations, specifically over the Armenia-dominated enclave of Nagorno Karabakh. However, since Azerbaijan’s decisive victory in 2023, there has been a spluttering peace process, which may hold out the promise of a lasting resolution of the hostility between the two countries. In this regard, some have suggested that France and Iran have a vested interest in undermining this process. Indeed, Azerbaijan has complained that Paris has been biased against it, regularly favoring Armenia, arguably because of the influence of the substantial Armenian diaspora in that country.

Moreover, there are growing ties between Armenia and Iran involving multi-billion dollar deals and military cooperation that have led to assessments that Armenia is becoming an Iranian proxy in the Caucasus. The tension between Tehran and Baku is hardly surprising. After all, Azerbaijan is Israel’s leading supplier of crude oil, an important commercial partner and a large importer of Israeli armaments. These cordial relations between the Jewish state and Azerbaijan, a Shia Muslim state, is an anathema to the Iranian regime, Israel’s most virulent enemy.

Iran is aware of the potential for closer ties with France. Indeed, earlier this year, the then-newly appointed Iranian ambassador to France stressed the importance of the ties between Tehran and Paris. According to informed sources, Iran perceives France as standing apart from the rest of the West—specifically the United States and its Anglophonic allies, including the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

An affinity for tyranny?

 

Was Vichy France a Puppet Government or a Willing Nazi Collaborator?  

Philippe Pétain (left), the leader of the Vichy government, shakes hands with Adolf Hitler 


It remains to be seen if the recent events in the Middle East and Israel’s resounding successes against Iran and its emasculated proxies cause Paris to consider recharting its ill-advised course. Of course, in assessing this issue, it would be prudent to remember France has a history of an affinity for tyranny.

After all, it was not only the source of the noble ideal of Liberté, Égalité and Fraternité but also of the home of the Vichy government that willing collaborated with Nazi Germany, the all-time tyranny of tyrannies.