Wednesday, January 21, 2026

AN INTERNATIONAL STABILIZATION FORCE IS NOW WIDELY ACKNOWLEDGED TO BE UNWILLING TO CHALLENGE HAMAS'S AUTHORITY

Post-war, who governs Gaza matters more than who talks peace

Order requires the defeat not only of an armed force, but of the ideology and power structures that sustained it. 

 

By Stephen M. Flatow 

 

JNS

Jan 21, 2026

 

 

Hamas showed it still controls Gaza by carrying out public executions last October.
 

The opening of Phase 2 of U.S. President Donald Trump’s Gaza peace plan is being described as a case of realism. It risks reviving a dangerous illusion: that Hamas can be reasoned into relinquishing power if offered reconstruction, recognition or the promise of a “better life.”

That illusion should have died on Oct. 7.

American officials now speak of engaging and coordinating with Hamas on Gaza’s governance, as if the terror organization that planned and carried out mass murder can be separated from the political system it dominates. History suggests otherwise. Postwar peace depends less on declarations than on one decisive question: who is allowed to govern when the fighting stops.

After World War II, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, as Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, did not imagine that Nazi officials, even supposedly “reformed” ones, could be useful partners in rebuilding Germany. The Allied military government recognized and understood that reconstruction without political exclusion was not peace but postponement. Nazis were barred from public authority because leaving the architects and enforcers of mass violence in place would have guaranteed instability and future war.

The Gaza Strip is not Germany, and Hamas is not the Third Reich. But the governing principle is the same. You do not rebuild a society by legitimizing the movement that just demonstrated, in blood, what it is. Postwar order requires the defeat not only of an armed force, but of the ideology and power structures that sustained it.

The current trajectory of the reconstruction plan, however, points in the opposite direction.

An International Stabilization Force is now widely acknowledged to be unwilling to challenge Hamas’s authority. Arab states have made it clear that they will not confront Hamas on disarmament. Instead, the United States appears to be drifting toward coordination with Hamas on “practical” governance matters, a move that confers legitimacy while demanding little in return.

This is what Israelis have come to call the “Oct. 6 mindset”: the belief that economic incentives and political inclusion can tame a jihadist movement committed, by charter and practice, to Israel’s destruction. It is the same mindset that once treated Qatari cash as a moderating influence on Hamas, only to discover that the money subsidized tunnels, rockets and terror squads.

If Hamas truly wanted only “a better economic future for their families,” as one senior U.S. official recently suggested, then it would not have launched a massacre of civilians, nor would it still be holding a hostage body in violation of a now three-month ceasefire. The problem is not poverty. It is power.

Trump has publicly recognized this reality. He has stated plainly that Gaza will see no peace as long as Hamas wields authority, and he has called for comprehensive demilitarization, including the dismantling of Hamas’s terror tunnel network. That clarity is welcome. But it must be translated into enforceable policy, not diluted through bureaucratic engagement.

Disarmament cannot mean surrendering only “heavy weapons” while leaving Hamas’s small arms, command structures, recruitment networks and intimidation apparatus intact. An organization armed with thousands of assault rifles remains able to murder dissenters, suppress rivals and guarantee its political dominance.

Nor can a “Board of Peace” succeed if it includes representatives of states that openly support Hamas, while excluding Jerusalem from meaningful enforcement authority. Governance structures that tolerate Hamas influence, even indirectly, undermine the very premise of the plan, which explicitly states that Hamas is to have no role in Gaza’s future administration.

Reconstruction, too, must be conditional. Funds released without verified disarmament, without the return of the last hostage and without the dismantling of terror infrastructure will not build schools and hospitals. They will rebuild Hamas.

The lesson of postwar history is not that reconciliation is impossible. It is that reconciliation follows defeat, not the other way around. Germany rebuilt because Nazism was barred from power, not because it was invited to help manage the transition.

If the international community is unwilling to enforce Hamas’s removal from authority, then Israel will have to do so itself. The alternative is to pretend that a terror organization responsible for the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust can be transformed into a governing partner. That is not realism. It is denial.

Peace in the Palestinian enclave will not come from trusting Hamas to change, but from ensuring that it no longer has the power to intimidate, kill or govern.

DEERFIELD BEACH TO FORM IT'S OWN POLICE AND FIRE DEPARTMENT

By Bob Walsh

 

Aerial view of Deerfield Beach, Florida.


 

Since forever (35 years) the teeming metropolis of Deerfield Beach has gotten public safety services from Broward County, Florida.  In an effort to save some bucks the city has decided to set up their own police and fire departments.  

They seem to believe that they will save $500 million over 20 years with this move.  The vote by the city council was 4-1.  

Deerfield Beach has a population of 87,000.  The contract with Broward County expired in September.  The county has offered a two year extension and has offered to pay for an outside consultant to analyze the city's position.  The city hired their own consultant who came up with the guesstimate of $500 million.  

The old contract requires the county to continue to cover Deerfield Beach until September of 2027.    

TWO FORMER COPS GET $830,000 FROM THEIR FORMER DEPARTMENT

By Bob Walsh

 


Former Soddy-Daisy Officers File Lawsuit Alleging Wrongful Termination

 
Two officers of the Shoddy-Daisy (Tenn) Police Department are getting a settlement of $830,000 from their former employer for wrongful termination.

Former Lt. Jake Elrod and former Captain Eric Jenkins sued the city, Burt Johnson the city manager, Police Chief Billy Petty and the former police chief Mike Sneed back in August of 2024.  They allege they were fired for speaking out about the misbehavior of another officer.  They originally asked for $1 million each.

They both testified in court about the alleged untrustworthiness of another officer.  They also assert that that officer's sexual fantasies involving children were not properly investigated.  The former chief asserted that the two men acted in concert to get the other officer fired with false testimony and to gain more power within the department.

The settlement will be covered almost entirely by insurance.  Neither side is admitting fault.  The city has agreed to supply neutral references to future potential employers.  Both men agreed to not apply for any future job with the city without permission to do so from the city.

The ball started rolling on this mess after an unnamed female officer complained that a Sergeant with that department was producing kiddie porn.  The Hamilton County S. O. determined that the complaint was not founded and not credible.  

ARROGANT, DRUNK AND STUPID

ByBob Walsh

 

At-large councilor-elect Israel Rivera 

 

Israel Rivera, 40, is a member of the Holyoke (Mass) City Council.  Back in December he was stopped by the state police after blowing thru a red light.  He seemed to be quite drunk.  At least one of the statements he made, recorded on body cam, seemed to indicate he knew he was drunk.  He then went into the usual 'Do You Know Who I Am" bullshit.

He has been removed from the Public Safety Committee of the city council.  The council is not going to take any action against him until his case is adjudicated.  The charges against him are so far only misdemeanors and a misdemeanor conviction would not automatically remove him from office.

ORANGE MAN BACKS OFF ON GREENLAND

By Bob Walsh

 

May include: A graphic design featuring a cartoon taco with the letters "T.A.C.O." in red above it. Below the taco, the text reads "TRUMP ALWAYS CHICKENS OUT" in a mix of colors. The background is black.

 

President Trump declared yesterday that he will NOT use force to acquire Greenland.  How much of this was generated by a change of heart and how much of it was caused by stock market reactions isn't clear.

He is still saying very clearly that he WANTS the U. S. to own Greenland.  I actually have no problem with that.  He has said that he wants to get it by convincing the people involved it is the right thing to do and get them to go along with the program.  

COURT WATCHERS SAY IT LOOKS LIKE THE HAWAII VAMPIRE RULE IS LIKELY DEAD AND STINKING

By Bob Walsh

 


 
Trying to figure out what SCOTUS will do based on what questions the justices ask is far from an exact science.  That being said the court watchers are asserting that it looks like Hawaii's Vampire Law is going byebye.

The name is based on popular fiction wherein it is said that a vampire can not enter a human dwelling unless first invited in.  The current law in Hawaii and four other states says that a person with a valid gun permit can not enter private property opened to the general public (such as a retail establishment during normal business hours) while carrying a gun unless there is specific signage posted permitting the carrying of firearms on the premises.  

I am fairly confident that, if the ruling goes against them, the four states in question will try very hard to come up with additional work-arounds in order to continue to deny honest, law-abiding citizens their constitutional rights.  That is just where their heads are at.  

The other states are California, New York, Maryland and New Jersey.  The law in Maryland was recently overturned by the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals.

CA STATE REPUBLICANS APPROACH SCOTUS

By Bob Walsh

 

A side by side comparison of California's congressional maps 

 

The CA Republican State Committee has approached SCOTUS to ask them to roll back the state congressional district map.  The cause for action is the allegation that the "new" map was drawn primarily to increase the political power of Hispanics, and thereby decrease the political power of other voter groups.

There is no doubt that that was the EFFECT.  Whether or not that was the intention is another question.

They also approached the Ninth Circuit to hold the current ruling in abeyance pending further legal action.  The open period for filing for elections for these seats is rapidly approaching.

My guess, for what that might be worth to you, is that there is small chance that the Ninth Circuit will oblige and a moderate chance (but less than 50%) that SCOTUS will oblige.  

ERIK SWALWELL MAY HAVE A PROBLEM

By Bob Walsh

 

 Eric Swalwell during a news conference at the U.S. Capitol Building,


Erik Swalwell is running for the Democrat-Socialist spot on the primary ballot for CA Governor.  He is actually ahead in that field, showing how thin the field actually is.  

He may have a legal issue.  His "residence address of record" in CA is his lawyer's office.  In CA you can not run for governor unless you are an actual resident of CA and have been so for 5 years.  Swalwell has no record of owning, renting or leasing a residence in CA in that period of time.  

The Republicans in CA have filed with the CA Sec of State to exclude him from the ballot on that basis.  It isn't a completely bullshit issue and may actually work. 

(The rules for this are different than the rules for his residence for his seat in Congress.)

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

ROBOCOP ..... FOR REAL

China's real-life 'robocops': City deploys AI-powered humanoid police officer that barks orders at civilians and works 'around the clock'


By Olivia Allhusen

 

Daily Mail

Jan 20, 2026

 

 

China’s real-life ‘robocops’: City deploys AI-powered humanoid police officer that barks orders at civilians and works ‘around the clock’

WAITING FOR KRISTI NOEM TO EXPLAIN ICE GOONS WERE 'FOLLOWING TRINING'

Disturbing moment US citizen with no criminal record is arrested by ICE in Minneapolis and marched out into snow in his underwear

 

By Sophie Gable 

 

Daily Mail

Jan 20, 2026

 

 

ChongLy Thao, 56, was forcibly removed from his home in St Paul by ICE agents on Sunday, pictured above

ChongLy Thao, 56, was forcibly removed from his home in St Paul by ICE agents on Sunday, pictured above 

 

A Minnesota US citizen with no criminal record was seized from his home by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents and paraded in front of his neighbors in his underwear in frigid conditions.

ChongLy Thao, 56, was snatched by the federal officers from his home in St Paul on Sunday afternoon, according to his family and videos from witnesses. 

ICE agents broke down the door of his home, pointed guns at his family, and handcuffed him while his four-year-old grandson cried in horror. 

He was marched outside in the freezing cold in his underwear and a blanket he quickly grabbed from the couch. 

Thao told Reuters and the Associated Press that he asked his daughter-in-law to find his identification for the officers, but the agents said they didn't need to see it and detained him anyway. 

Officers denied him the chance to put on clothes and he was forced outside wearing Crocs on his feet.

'I was shaking,' he told AP. 'They didn't show any warrant; they just broke down the door.'

Neighbors captured the horrifying moments on camera and screamed at ICE agents to release Thao. 

 

Thao, pictured above in an interview on Monday, is a legal US citizen and doesn't have a criminal record

Thao, pictured above in an interview on Monday, is a legal US citizen and doesn't have a criminal record 

Thao's family said he asked agents for an opportunity to put clothes on and provide identification, but was denied

Thao's family said he asked agents for an opportunity to put clothes on and provide identification, but was denied 

 

He recalled that agents drove him to 'the middle of nowhere' and photographed him outside. Thao said he feared they would assault him. 

When officers ran his fingerprints, they realized Thao was a legal citizen with no criminal record and brought him back to his home a few hours after detaining him. 

Thao said he didn't receive an apology or an explanation for the alleged inhumane treatment. 

'I was praying. I was like, God, please help me, I didn't do anything wrong. Why do they do this to me? Without my clothes on,' he told Reuters. 

Thao is a Hmong man born in Laos. His adopted mother, Choua Thao, delivered him while she served the American side in the Secret War, a series of covert CIA operations in Laos.

Choua had to flee Laos with her children when the communists took over in the 1970s because she treated US soldiers. 

'Choua raised her children with deep values of service, dignity, and responsibility, and she ensured all of them became naturalized US citizens,' Thao's family wrote in a GoFundMe description. 

'She believed strongly in doing things the right way and in protecting life and family.'

 

Thao, pictured above on Monday in front of his home, is a naturalized citizen from Laos. His mother served as a nurse and treated American soldiers and citizens during the Secret War

Thao, pictured above on Monday in front of his home, is a naturalized citizen from Laos. His mother served as a nurse and treated American soldiers and citizens during the Secret War 

Thao, pictured above in his home, feared he would be assaulted by officers and has filed complaints with the ACLU

Thao, pictured above in his home, feared he would be assaulted by officers and has filed complaints with the ACLU 

 

Thao's family said his mother treated countless civilians and American soldiers during the war. She died in December. 

'To have her son treated this way — dragged from his home, weapons pointed at him, in front of his family and a small child — while the family is still grieving her loss, is heartbreaking, unjust, and deeply traumatizing,' the family added. 

The Department of Homeland Security told Reuters and AP that they were investigating two sex offenders who lived at Thao's address. 

'He matched the description of the targets. As with any law enforcement agency, it is standard protocol to hold all individuals in a house of an operation for safety of the public and law enforcement,' a DHS spokesperson said in a statement. 

Thao's family said that one of the men wanted by DHS previously lived in the home and was a former spouse of a family member. 

Thao's son said he was stopped by ICE agents earlier in the day while driving a friend's car. 

He added that the friend shares the first name of another man on the sex offender registry, but that the two people are not the same, AP reported. 

 

ICE agents broke down the door and pointed guns at Thao's family as they detained him and removed him from their home, pictured above

ICE agents broke down the door and pointed guns at Thao's family as they detained him and removed him from their home, pictured above 

Neighbors and community members video taped the horrific moments and screamed for Thao to be released, pictured above

Neighbors and community members video taped the horrific moments and screamed for Thao to be released, pictured above 

 

St Paul Mayor Kaohly Her told the Minnesota Star Tribune that she was 'livid' over the incident, adding that Thao is a family friend whom she knows personally. 

'It’s devastating to watch. And I am not outraged because these are people personal to me. This is happening across our city, across our state,' she said. 

'The federal government, ICE is not doing what it is that they say they’re doing. They’re not going after hardened criminals. 

'They’re going after anyone and everyone in their path. It is unacceptable. That is un-American.'

Thao's family said that although he wasn't physically injured, the incident had traumatized him and left him with psychological harm. 

He also lives with severe psoriasis, which is worsened by extreme stress, according to his family. 

Thao has filed complaints with the American Civil Liberties Union of Minnesota and the state's attorney general. His family is raising money for his mental health therapy and medical care.

 

Thao, pictured above hugging his sister, has suffered psychological harm from the incident. His family is raising money for his therapy

Thao, pictured above hugging his sister, has suffered psychological harm from the incident. His family is raising money for his therapy 

 

Thao's family is just one of many impacted by the increased ICE raids in Minneapolis. DHS and ICE have been under fire for carrying out violent and unjustified raids in the city. 

At the beginning of the month, a legal citizen named Renee Good, 37, was fatally shot by officers in her car. 

Protests have erupted across the state, resulting in violent clashes between citizens and law enforcement. 

Minnesota Mayor Jacob Frey and Governor Tim Walz have condemned the federal government's actions, frequently demanding that the raids subside.  

The Daily Mail has reached out to DHS and ICE for additional comment.  

AN HONOR WELL DESERVED

Costco, Walmart and Trader Joe’s thrashed as Texas supermarket chain H-E-B  is named America’s best grocery store 

 

By Martha Williams 

 

Daily Mail

Jan 20, 2026

 

 

 HEB El Dorado 

The El Dorado H-E-B supermarket where I get most of my groceries

 

An adored Texas supermarket chain has been ranked the best grocery store in America yet again.

H-E-B, which operates 435 stores across Texas and Mexico, has topped grocery data company Dunhumby's annual ranking of the 81 largest grocery stores for the fifth year in a row.

New England favorite Market Basket held on to second place, while Wisconsin-based Woodman's surged into the top three for the first time — pushing Costco down from third to fourth. 

Aldi, WinCo Foods, Trader Joe's, Amazon, Wegmans, and ShopRite round out the top 10. Sam's Club fell six places after coming in eighth place last year.

Family-owned H-E-B, founded in 1905 when Florence Butt began selling food from the ground floor of her Kerrville home, has long enjoyed near-cult status in Texas. 

Shoppers praise it for combining affordable everyday essentials with Texas-made brands and popular in-house products.

The study, in its ninth year, asked 11,000 shoppers how stores meet their day-to-day needs. They were asked if prices feel affordable, shops are easy to use, shelves stay stocked, and whether deals and loyalty perks genuinely help stretch budgets. Online ordering, delivery, and overall convenience also factor in.

Those shopper experiences are blended with financial results to produce Dunnhumby’s annual retailer performance index, a snapshot of which grocers are winning in today’s fiercely competitive $1 trillion US grocery market. 

 

H-E-B has been ranked the best grocery store in America yet again. More than 750 customers lined up for the opening of a new store in Manor, Texas, last year

H-E-B has been ranked the best grocery store in America yet again. More than 750 customers lined up for the opening of a new store in Manor, Texas, last year

 

For the first time ever, America's top three grocers are all regional chains, proving that big wins don't always come from big boxes. 

And what's driving this friendly food fight? According to the RPI, it's all about stretching a dollar. 

A record 41 percent of a retailer's long-term success now comes down to how well it helps shoppers save — through sharp prices, tempting promotions, and loyalty perks. 

In today's grocery game, the real winners are the stores that keep both carts and wallets feeling full.

'2025 threw a lot of curveballs at the US consumer. Shopper confidence dropped as concerns about higher prices, fewer job opportunities, and stagnant wages eroded purchasing power,' said Matt O'Grady, president of the Americas for Dunnhumby.

'Consumers across all income levels are feeling the squeeze and making more price-conscious choices. In this environment, building trust with American shoppers has never been more critical.' 

Aldi and Walmart have remained steadily popular over the years, despite economic uncertainty, because they offer some of the cheapest prices without sacrificing quality. 

 

H-E-B operates 435 stores across Texas and Mexico

H-E-B operates 435 stores across Texas and Mexico 

H-E-B is beloved by locals for its fresh ingredients and distinctive in-house products. A customer shops in the organic vegetable isle at a H-E-B supermarket in Austin, Texas, in April 2024

H-E-B is beloved by locals for its fresh ingredients and distinctive in-house products. A customer shops in the organic vegetable isle at a H-E-B supermarket in Austin, Texas, in April 2024

Market Basket snagged second place for the second year in a row

Market Basket snagged second place for the second year in a row

Aldi announced plans to open 180 new stores in the US, after opening 225 last year

Aldi announced plans to open 180 new stores in the US, after opening 225 last year

 

Aldi announced plans to open 180 new stores in the US, after opening 225 last year — a true testament to the German supermarket's success. It is a bold move at a time when many retailers are shutting stores — but one that reflects a simple reality for American shoppers: price now trumps everything.

Aldi now operates more than 2,600 US stores and is aiming to reach nearly 3,200 by 2028 — one of the most aggressive expansion plans in American grocery retail, and enough to make it the fastest-growing national chain.  

The rise of Aldi — alongside rival German discounter Lidl and value favorite Trader Joe's, which operate similar private-label-heavy models — is squeezing traditional grocers such as Kroger and Albertsons. 

Even big-box giants like Walmart are feeling the pressure. 

While Walmart still wins on selection, national brands, bulk buying and its one-stop-shop appeal, Aldi is generally cheaper on everyday staples and store-brand essentials — exactly where consumers are cutting costs. 

Amazon, which is rapidly expanding its grocery ambitions online and through Whole Foods, which it bought in 2017, is also emerging as a major threat to traditional stores. 

In December, Amazon expanded same-day delivery of fresh food to more than 2,300 cities and towns, with plans to broaden the service further this year.

Amazon and Aldi compete fiercely in the budget grocery market, with Aldi generally winning on ultra-low prices for its private-label staples, while Amazon counters with convenience.  

TRUMP'S BOARD OF PEACE DIMINISHES THE UN

A US-controlled rival to the UN: Inside Trump's Board of Peace

Is President Donald Trump building not only an alternative to the United Nations but also a substitute for the international organization's authority to use force?

 

by Danny Zaken  

 

Israel Hayom

Jan 20, 2026

 

 

US Launches “Board of Peace” for Gaza, Invites Global Leaders to Rebuild and Demilitarize Territory

SMOTRICH: 'GAZA IS OURS. ITS FUTURE WILL AFFECT OUR FUTURE MORE THAN ANYONE ELSE'S'

Smotrich calls for end to Trump-led Gaza plan, urges Jewish resettlement

Finance minister warns foreign-led Gaza plans risk repeating the 2005 disaster and says Israel must reassert control over the Strip.

 

By Ryan Jones

 

Israel Today

Jan 20, 2026

 

 

Minister of Finance and Head of the Religious Zionist Party Bezalel Smotrich leads a faction meeting at the Knesset, the Israeli parliament in Jerusalem, January 5, 2026. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90

Minister of Finance and Head of the Religious Zionist Party Bezalel Smotrich leads a faction meeting at the Knesset, the Israeli parliament in Jerusalem, January 5, 2026.
 

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich on Monday urged Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to dismantle the US-led Civil Military Coordination Centre (CMCC) operating in southern Israel, saying the Trump administration’s postwar plan for Gaza threatens Israel’s sovereignty and security.

“The time has come to dismantle the headquarters in Kiryat Gat,” Smotrich said in a statement, referring to the center coordinating international efforts on Gaza’s postwar future. He described the CMCC as a channel for foreign influence that undermines Israeli interests and decision-making, specifically naming Egypt and the United Kingdom as “hostile” actors within the facility.

The CMCC, established in October 2025 by US Central Command, includes representatives from over 60 nations and organizations, including France, Germany, and Canada. It has played a central role in facilitating humanitarian aid into Gaza since a ceasefire began in October of last year, and forms a core pillar of President Donald Trump’s 20-point Gaza plan, which recently moved into its second phase of implementation.

While Smotrich thanked Trump for his help securing hostage releases in recent deals, he said the broader US plan “is bad for the State of Israel and must be shelved.” Instead of international committees and reconstruction roadmaps, he called for decisive Israeli control over the Gaza Strip—including military rule and the reestablishment of Jewish communities.

“Gaza is ours,” Smotrich said. “Its future will affect our future more than anyone else’s.”

The finance minister made the remarks during an event celebrating the founding of Yatziv, a new Jewish community in Judea, just south of Jerusalem. His speech focused heavily on the 2005 disengagement from Gaza, which he described as a “sin” that Israel has a duty to reverse.

“Wasn’t the most terrible massacre that has befallen the Jewish people since the Holocaust enough?” Smotrich asked, referring to the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led massacre in southern Israel. He argued that the terror attack exposed the consequences of Israel’s withdrawal from Gush Katif, the Jewish bloc of 17 settlements inside Gaza evacuated under Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

A binary choice

Smotrich proposed issuing Hamas a short ultimatum to disarm and flee, after which the IDF would launch a full military campaign to destroy the group. Once defeated, Israel would impose direct control over the territory and encourage emigration of hostile elements abroad. He framed the strategic options as binary: either full Israeli control and permanent settlement, or continued instability and foreign interference.

The Trump administration’s current plan calls for amnesty for Hamas members who disarm and pledge peaceful coexistence, as well as safe passage for those who choose to leave Gaza. It also includes the creation of a “Board of Peace” to oversee Gaza’s reconstruction, with seats for Qatari and Turkish officials—two nations Smotrich strongly criticized.

“Erdogan is Sinwar. Qatar is Hamas. There is no difference,” he said, condemning the inclusion of these nations in postwar planning. “It is either us or them.”

The Prime Minister’s Office and US State Department did not comment on Smotrich’s remarks. Nor did the UK or Egyptian governments, both singled out by Smotrich for undermining Israel’s security.

While Smotrich’s proposal has not been adopted as policy, it reflects a growing tension within Israel’s government over how to manage Gaza after the war. His call to shut down the CMCC and reintroduce Jewish presence into Gaza directly challenges the American-led approach and reopens questions long considered politically untouchable.

NATO NATIONS EXPECT THE US TO DO IN GREENLAND WHAT IT HAS ESSENTIALLY DONE FOR THE REST OF EUROPE SINE 1945 - PAY FOR ITS SECURITY AND MEEKLY ACCEPT THAT THE BENEFICIARIES OF ITS LARGESSE GET TO COMPLAIN ABOUT AMERICANS PUSHING THEM AROUND

From Greenland to Israel: What America should expect from allies

President Trump’s demand that Denmark sell the Arctic land mass is dismissed as megalomania. That said, Europe’s dependence on America raises questions about NATO. 

 

By Jonathan S. Tobin 

 

JNS

Jan 20, 2026

 

 

Danish military personnel walk past a building of the Danish Arctic Command in Nuuk, Greenland, on Jan. 19, 2026 European leaders are scheduled to meet later this week to formulate their response to U.S. President Donald Trump's recent threat of punitive tariffs against countries who obstruct the U.S. goal of acquiring Greenland.  Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images.

Danish military personnel walk past a building of the Danish Arctic Command in Nuuk, Greenland, on Jan. 19, 2026 European leaders are scheduled to meet later this week to formulate their response to U.S. President Donald Trump's recent threat of punitive tariffs against countries who obstruct the U.S. goal of acquiring Greenland. 
 

At first, it seemed as if it was just one more example of President Donald Trump trolling his critics. When, following his re-election in 2024, the president revived the idea of the United States acquiring Greenland by one means or another, most of his supporters probably didn’t think he was all that serious about it.

But in recent weeks, as his demands that Denmark sell the Arctic land mass escalated, it became clear that he wasn’t kidding. His threats that America might punish NATO allies with tariffs if they didn’t go along with the scheme or that the United States might even take Greenland by force have turned the question of the ownership of one of the least green places on earth into a foreign-policy crisis.

Rather than just a function of what critics consider his megalomania and instinctive authoritarianism, control of Greenland is an important issue that requires serious examination. More than that, the discussion raises serious questions about not just how to value allies but what the United States has a right to expect from them. This applies not just to U.S. relations with NATO but to what America can expect from Israel, as well as what, in return, Jerusalem should expect from Washington. Meanwhile, NATO countries are wringing their hands and bewailing what they consider to be Trump’s bad behavior.

Bad optics, important question

The spectacle of Trump and other administration officials bullying little Denmark has gone over badly abroad. And for Trump’s domestic critics, who are already acting as if his enforcement of immigration laws marks the end of democracy, if not Western civilization itself, outrage about his Greenland policy is just one more reason for them to view him with disgust.

It may be difficult as it is to look beyond the bad optics of picking on the Danes or the question of whether a dispute about Greenland is worth risking the possible destruction of the NATO alliance. But it turns out that Trump’s concerns about the strategic importance of the massive ice-covered island are not frivolous. Nor is it outrageous for him to think that leaving it in the hands of the Danes while the United States is obliged to pay for its defense, as well as the rest of the West, is unfair.

That was the upshot of one of a flurry of New York Times articles aimed at skewering Trump’s position. In it, the liberal newspaper conceded that in an era of cyber warfare and development of the Arctic driven by sophisticated technology and concerns about the future of the ice that covers most of it, Greenland really is vital to the security of the West.

Despite the obsessive concerns of environmentalists about the polar icecaps, the world hasn’t paid much attention to the fact that the Arctic has become the scene of a new “great game” rivalry between the United States and its allies on the one hand and the Chinese and the Russians on the other. Of course, the article also claimed that Trump had an “exit ramp” he could easily take to end the controversy. Since an existing treaty gives America the right to build bases there, Washington could just go ahead and do so with Denmark’s blessing, and spare Europe and the world from further tensions.

As the piece makes clear, although Denmark and other NATO nations that have spent the last weeks huffing and puffing about Trump’s bad manners in raising the question of Greenland’s future, these areas have no intention of contributing to dealing with what even the Times agrees is the danger posed by Russian and Chinese aggression in the Arctic.

Benefiting from America and complaining about it

In other words, they expect the United States to do in Greenland what it has essentially done for the rest of Europe since 1945: pay for its security and meekly accept that the beneficiaries of its largesse get to complain about Americans pushing them around.

Much of the coverage of the controversy centers on some of the less than flattering aspects of Trump’s bluster about a country that is more ice than green, such as the report that he sent a text to Norway’s prime minister, saying since he had been denied the Nobel Peace Prize (which is awarded by the Oslo-based Nobel Committee and not the Norwegian government), he doesn’t feel obligated to play nice with Europe.

But when placed in the context of the necessity for the West to invest heavily in security in Greenland and the long record of prosperous NATO countries letting the American taxpayers pay the bill for their defense, Trump’s demand seems less unreasonable.

So, if the Times and the other Trump critics are going to wax lyrical about the way Trump’s rhetoric and potential actions could break up the NATO alliance, it might be a good time to ask what should be expected from America’s allies, other than smoldering contempt for the president.

‘America First’ model ally

That’s why the Greenland controversy sheds insight on why the U.S.-Israel alliance —despite the carping about it from those who hate the Jewish state and resent the $3 billion in aid it receives from Washington—is actually far more equitable in many ways than the much-lauded NATO alliance.

The price tag for U.S. military assistance to Israel does remain high. And yet, to put it in perspective, it is a fraction of the hundreds of billions of dollars that Washington has sent to Ukraine in the last four years. Israel would be wise to reduce and eventually phase out the aid completely since it is a political liability to the Jewish state and its supporters.

But what those Israel-bashers who moan about billions going to Israel that they think should be spent at home forget is that almost all of the money is spent in the United States, not overseas. It does enable Israel to purchase weapons and ammunition that are vitally needed to maintain its strategic advantage over its foes and to fight long wars such as the battles against Hamas and Hezbollah terrorists.

Even if the aid continues, it is money well spent in terms of the advantages it brings. Israel’s victories in those battles also benefit America, which is the ultimate target of its Islamist foes. And the arms that Israel buys in the United States are then improved by Israel’s technological prowess. The joint projects have not only enabled our nation to have a viable missile-defense program, but the intelligence shared by Israel with Washington offers invaluable advantages.

More than that, Israel is an ally that is prepared to defend itself. It just needs help procuring the weapons it needs.

By contrast, the NATO nations have been relative freeloaders for many decades, sitting back and letting Americans pay for their defense, and even stationing troops and bases in Europe to ensure that it remains free. Rich Western European countries like Denmark have enjoyed the umbrella of U.S. security since World War II and have only occasionally reciprocated the assistance by actions that show they are ready to share the burden.

While, thanks to Trump’s advocacy on the issue, many NATO allies are now paying for more of their defense, the current situation remains one in which America is still largely subsidizing European defense, despite heightened regional concerns because of Russian aggression against Ukraine. And rather than that assistance doled out in legislation labeled as “aid,” much of what U.S. taxpayers give to Europe is hidden in the U.S. defense budget, making it harder to see just how indebted these nations are to their generosity.

By contrast, and as Vice President JD Vance said in a speech last year, Israel is the ideal American ally from an “America First” perspective. He spoke of how it is “on a per capita basis one of the most dynamic and technologically advanced countries in the world.” That is beneficial to the United States because, as he noted, it gave America “missile-defense parity” with its foes.

More than that, he said, it was fair to ask what America should want from its allies.

“Do we want clients who depend on us, who can’t do anything without us? Or do we want real allies who can actually advance their interests on their own with America playing a leadership role,” Vance said. As he made clear, Israel fits his definition of “real allies,” while the NATO countries do not.

The future of NATO

That’s why all the European posturing about divorcing from NATO and the United States because of the dispute over Greenland is just hot air. If the countries involved wanted to pay for their own defense, they could do so. However, it’s painfully obvious that most of them consider even minimal contributions to the effort to deter Russia and China to be unreasonably burdensome. What they want from America is for it to keep quiet and continue to fork over funds for their security, including the massive investment needed in Greenland.

Trump thinks that’s not fair. And he’s not wrong to view it that way.

Does America require sovereignty over Greenland to ensure that the Arctic doesn’t become a Russian or Chinese lake? Not necessarily. But if the Europeans aren’t going to pay their fair share for defending it, then it’s not crazy for Trump to say that Denmark should just sell it.

Prior American governments have sought to purchase it, going back to the postwar Truman administration and even to the 1860s (when Secretary of State William Seward vainly sought to buy it, but then settled for getting Russia to sell Alaska). So, depicting the request as just vintage Trumpian insanity is misleading, even if the manner in which the president has pursued it is hard to defend. On the flip side, if he wasn’t blustering and making threats about Greenland, would the Europeans even listen to his arguments?

Regardless of how this matter is resolved, the dustup over Greenland should serve as the starting point for a serious discussion about what alliances mean in the 21st century. NATO served a vital purpose during the Cold War. But as the debate about Greenland and the Europeans’ reluctance to either support its development as a security hub or to sell it to the Americans illustrates, it increasingly seems more a tribute to the past than an essential element of U.S. security in 2026. By contrast, Israel, which does not have the advantage of being a member of NATO—and all the rights and privileges that go with it—is more important to U.S. defense than ever.

NEITHER QATAR NOR TURKEY HAS THE SLIGHTEST INTEREST IN SEEING HAMAS DISARMED

Gaza’s Executive Board and the illusion of international salvation

Tyrannies do not change their nature because Western leaders wish them to. 

 

By Fiamma Nirenstein 

 

JNS

Jan 20, 2026

 

 

 Palestinian militants stand guard on the day that hostages held in Gaza since the deadly October 7, 2023 attack, are handed over to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), as part of a ceasefire and hostages-prisoners swap deal between Hamas and Israel, in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, October 13, 2025. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed 

Hamas fighters stand guard during a prisoner swap with Israel in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on October 13, 2025

 

The sudden enthusiasm surrounding the so-called Gaza Executive Board is striking. A mass of countries, a plethora of supervising and sub-supervising bodies, committees layered upon committees—all presented with great confidence in the future and one another. U.S. President Donald Trump unveiled this international architecture to the world as if it were a promise of order, stability and hope.

We have seen this movie before.

It recalls the recent announcement by Steve Witkoff, Trump’s special envoy to the Middle East, that 800 Iranian prisoners on death row would be spared. The Islamic Republic quickly ridiculed the claim, and soon afterward, Erfan Soltani, just 26, was executed along with others by the murderous regime. A scorpion cannot help but sting. Tyrannies do not change their nature because Western leaders wish them to.

Meanwhile, reality intrudes. Forty-eight American F-35 fighter jets are now deployed in Jordan, the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln moves closer to the region, and logic suggests what diplomacy prefers not to say aloud: Sooner or later, an attack will come.

Back to Gaza—and to hope.

Vast, almost pharaonic structures are being designed to rebuild the devastated Gaza Strip. One hopes quickly, and one hopes well. But hope cannot replace clarity. The announcement of the new Executive Board is not merely broad but dangerously incoherent. Turkey and Qatar—open adversaries of Israel—appear among its members, metaphorically seated on Israel’s border. Soon enough, Pakistan and Russia also surfaced.

Upon hearing the first two names, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated plainly that the decision “was not coordinated with Israel and runs contrary to its policy.”

The reason is self-evident. Qatar is Hamas’s principal financial patron and its most powerful media ally through Al Jazeera, not to mention the generous host of Hamas’s terrorist leadership, which has never concealed its goal: the destruction of the Jewish people.

Turkey, for its part, is the ideological home of the Muslim Brotherhood, the matrix from which Hamas was born. Its president, Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan, has plotted against Israel for decades, openly and consistently.

For Phase 2 of any Gaza arrangement to truly begin, two conditions remain unmet: the return of the body of the last kidnapped Israeli, and the complete disarmament of Hamas. These requirements are written into the agreement itself. Yet neither Qatar nor Turkey has the slightest interest in seeing them fulfilled. On the contrary, they seek influence, legitimacy, and above all, continued favor with Trump. They present themselves as “guarantors,” while guaranteeing nothing that matters.

If it plays its cards well, Israel may yet neutralize the damage. This U.S. administration has never told Israel “no,” and Jerusalem will insist that these intrusive actors send no troops, carry no arms and exercise no decision-making or verification authority. They may sit at the table, but they must not touch the cards.

Still, the sheer scale of this project is telling. Between the board, the Executive Committee, the high representative for Gaza and his staff, the NCAG (National Committee for the Administration of Gaza) and the International Stabilization Force, the number of involved states could easily grow from the 60 invited—20 of which have already accepted—to 80 or more. Add to this an army of dignitaries, billionaires, investors, diplomats, democracies and dictatorships, the West and political Islam, rich and poor, allies and enemies.

Does this sound familiar?

Perhaps Trump has simply grown weary of the United Nations. Perhaps he is attempting something unprecedented: the construction of an alternative international forum, not under the shadow of the old Soviet-Third Worldist axis or its ideological descendants, but under an American aegis. If so, it would be a historic shift.

The reaction from Paris strengthens this interpretation. French President Emmanuel Macron promptly declined the U.S. invitation. Though relatively young, he is already a leader on his way out, shaped by a distinctly French anti-Americanism. Macron likes the United Nations. An American center of power—especially one that rebuilds Gaza without delegitimizing Israel—disturbs him. He says so openly.

Israel, meanwhile, bears the cost of unwanted presences as it always has. It must defend itself from the indefensible. Islamist hatred remains an existential threat, not a diplomatic misunderstanding. The first priority is therefore unchanged: disarm Hamas.

If the ayatollahs in Tehran are finally removed from power, the entire terrorist network will lose its strongest patron. The board may be large, the table wide and the players many, but Israel’s red lines are few and nonnegotiable.

If Israel must act again, it will. Another Oct. 7 is not on the agenda. And whatever this new board may declare, Trump will let Israel do what it must to survive.

THE UNLICENSED DAYCARE CENTER WAS A DISASTER WAITING TO HAPPEN

Parents, beware of nannies and the nanny-state

Israel, like Judaism, promotes the directive to “be fruitful and multiply.” But that doesn’t mean the government is responsible for raising our children. 

 

By Ruthie Blum 

 

JNS

Jan 20, 2026

 

 

Emergency services arrive at the unlicensed daycare center where two babies died, Jerusalem, Jan. 19, 2026. Photo by Chaim Goldberg/Flash90.

Emergency services arrive at the unlicensed daycare center where two babies died, Jerusalem, Jan. 19, 2026.
 

Three-month-old Lia Tzipora Golovnetsitz and six-month-old Aharon (Ari) Katz died on Jan. 19 at a private (pirate) daycare center in Jerusalem’s Romema neighborhood. Emergency services responded promptly to calls from the women running the unlicensed, unsupervised facility—two or three small apartments in a residential building—reporting that many of the children had become ill.

Chaos ensued when EMTs arrived on the premises and discovered that there were more than the 50 kids under the age of three suffering from an unknown ailment. Triage was extremely difficult, with efforts to resuscitate the two babies in critical condition ultimately failing, and dozens of others evacuated by ambulance to local hospitals.

The confusion that followed was unavoidable. Mothers and fathers rushing to locate their kids at the scene or find out where they had been taken for treatment. That most of the victims could not yet speak and carried no identification made information on this score initially scarce for the panicked parents.

Nor was it clear to medics and police what had caused the mysterious affliction. At first, they suspected toxic chemicals. When that was ruled out, investigators pivoted to possible carbon monoxide poisoning from a defective heater and poor ventilation.  

Finally came the conclusion—yet to be verified—that dehydration was the culprit. Two lives lost not to a sudden accident or an unforeseeable act of God, but to neglect that defies comprehension.

Or does it? Well, not really.

Paying attention to the needs of so many babies and toddlers, most of whom are still in diapers, would be virtually impossible for anything less than an army of nannies. And from what appears at this stage to be the case, there were maybe three adults in charge—though even that number remains vague.

It is fitting, then, that the daycare owner and main caregiver were detained for reckless endangerment, or worse. More details will emerge after their scheduled appearance on Tuesday before a judge.

Predictably, the tragedy has become yet another bone of political and cultural contention, since the people involved are haredim. Never mind that disasters of all kinds have occurred in both licensed and unlicensed daycare centers, in various socioeconomic areas with no particular religious affiliation. Any issue surrounding “ultra-Orthodox” communities is fodder for furious, often ugly, debate.  

The right is blaming Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara for having cut daycare subsidies for haredim who refuse to perform mandatory service in the Israel Defense Forces, thereby forcing them to seek underground alternatives to government-supervised frameworks.

Yet, as certain pundits have pointed out, when five children of African asylum-seekers lost their lives in undocumented daycare facilities in Tel Aviv 11 years ago, the Prime Minister’s Office announced the allocation of 15 to 20 million shekels (the equivalent, at the time, of $4 million to $5 million) to rectify the situation.

The left, on the other hand, which always supports the African migrants, doesn’t tolerate haredim, whom it accuses of draft-dodging and self-imposed poverty, of using yeshiva studies to avoid entering both the Israel Defense Forces and the workforce.

To make matters more complicated in the current case, haredi protesters blocked roads and clashed with police on Monday night over the plan to perform autopsies on the two dead babies. Though such an examination will determine how the infants perished—a procedure that not only will aid the investigation, but hopefully prevent similar incidents in the future—the rioters opposing it cite the Jewish religious prohibition against desecrating the dead.

Perhaps, then, they should take more measures to safeguard the living—by not throwing themselves in front of moving vehicles during demonstrations, for example. Or by exercising greater discretion when it comes to hiring babysitters.

The makeshift daycare center in Romema may not have been subsidized by the government, but it certainly cost money. Interesting that no reporter thus far has been asking how much.  

Which brings us to what the Israeli right and left, religious and secular, Ashkenazi and Sephardi have in common, often without even realizing it: espousal of the nanny state—no pun intended.

While it’s true that the State of Israel, like Judaism, promotes the directive to “be fruitful and multiply,” this doesn’t mean that the government is responsible for raising our children. That job falls to us, as parents.    

From mere seconds of footage of the daycare in question, it was obvious that the place was a disaster waiting to happen. Filth, disarray and dangerous overcrowding were clearly visible. Babies lay everywhere, including on the floor next to a toilet with its seat up.

Does a lack of finances override the most elemental maternal and paternal judgement? I’m sorry, but no lack of money can explain a parent ignoring such obviously perilous conditions.

Lia’s and Aharon’s families deserve our sympathy for their unfathomable loss—a punishment that far outweighed their oversight. But let their plight be a lesson to all parents who might lose focus and look the other way when the going gets tough.