Thursday, February 05, 2026

WAR ON DRUGS IN SAN ANTONIO

Federal agents find 550+ kilos of meth in shipment of lettuce heads, arrest 2 San Antonio men

Suspects charged with conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute 500 grams or more

 

By Ivan Herrera

 

KSAT.com

Feb 4, 2026

 

 


SAN ANTONIO – Federal agents arrested two San Antonio men on Tuesday in connection with the discovery of more than 550 kilograms of methamphetamines hidden in a shipment of lettuce heads, according to the United States Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Texas.

Gerardo Pineda-Gallegos and Jose Lopez-Ruiz were identified as meth distributors, according to court documents, accused of participating in the transportation, packaging and distribution of narcotics.

Pineda-Gallegos and Lopez-Ruiz were placed at a wholesale produce distribution warehouse on Dec. 15, 2025, where they received large shipments of meth concealed within the produce, according to the United States Attorney’s Office.

A criminal complaint said the two suspects were seen walking in and out of the warehouse multiple times before entering a cargo van and driving to an office space where the meth was stored and later prepared for distribution.

Drug Enforcement Administration and FBI agents, along with the San Antonio Police Department’s High-Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) unit, executed a warrant and searched the office space.

They found 100 boxes containing fresh heads of lettuce and 998 ball-shaped packages of meth that weighed 555 kilograms on Tuesday, federal officials said.

Pineda-Gallegos and Lopez-Ruiz were charged with one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute 500 grams or more of methamphetamine.

If convicted, they face 10 years to life in prison and a fine of up to $10 million.

WAR ON DRUGS IN GEORGIA

55 People Arrested in Glynn County Operation

 

FBI Atlanta 

Feb 4, 2026

 


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FBI Atlanta special agents, working with law enforcement partners from across Georgia and in other states, captured 55 of 56 people indicted in a large drug trafficking case based in Glynn County and St. Simons Island.

All suspects are charged with variations of possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance. Some also face firearms charges.

More than 150 special agents, deputies, and police officers from multiple agencies combined to make the early morning arrests. Multiple SWAT teams from FBI Atlanta, plus additional SWAT teams from FBI Jacksonville, Glynn County Police Department, and Brunswick Police, combined to make some of the most dangerous arrests.

The FBI Atlanta investigation, led by the agents in the Brunswick Resident Agency, found that members of the group were traveling to Los Angeles, Miami, Atlanta, and Jacksonville to source the drugs. One indicted suspect communicated with a supplier in China and had multiple kilos of drugs shipped to Brunswick from overseas.

The drug trafficking organization was responsible for distributing large quantities of methamphetamine, MDMA, fentanyl, cocaine, crack cocaine and marijuana throughout the area.

Agencies involved in the operation included the DEA, GBI, Glynn County Police Department, Glynn County Sheriff’s Office, and Brunswick Police.

FBI Dallas, FBI Columbia, and FBI Buffalo also assisted in arrests in Texas, South Carolina, and New York.

FBI Atlanta expects the final person indicted in this case to turn herself in in the coming days.

All indicted defendants are considered innocent unless and until proven guilty.

The case will be prosecuted by the United States Attorneys Office-South Georgia.

TEACHERS INFLUENCED BY THEIR MARXIST PROFESSORS

Texas Education Agency warns districts of potential state takeovers for “encouraging” student protests

The state education agency issued guidance to districts after Gov. Greg Abbott directed its commissioner to investigate the student protests of killings by federal agents. 
 
 

ODDS AND ENDS FROM CALIFORNIA

 By Bob Walsh

 

California Tourist Destinations Map


The Vallero refinery in Benecia in NorCal is now "cold."  Obviously the Breck girl, Gavin Newsom, was unsuccessful in his attempt at conning somebody into taking it over and operating it.  This will without a doubt have some medium term and long term effect on gas prices in California.

Also a pipeline bringing petroleum products from the central valley into the bay area is now shut down.  I don't know how many licensed haz-mat tanker drivers are available but trucks are the least efficient way possible to move things that can be moved by either boat or pipeline.  The screaming will start fairly soon, with any luck BEFORE the CA primary.  Maybe people will vote with that in mind.

This shortage will also very possibly effect JP-5 (jet fuel) in the very near future.  I wonder what a possible jet fuel shortage could do to air line scheduling?

Also acting today (Wednesday) SCOTUS declined to act on the Proposition 50 question.  Barring some truly unusual occurrence CA is going ahead with it's "tweaked" congressional redistricting.  Disappointing, but not wildly surprising.  It is NOT unconstitutional to engage in blatantly partisan redistricting. 

Wednesday, February 04, 2026

KRISTI NOEM SHOULD BE KICKED OUT ON HER ASS AND REPLACED BY TOM HOMAN

Tom Homan takes brutal shot at Kristi Noem as Trump border czar pulls 700 agents out of Minneapolis

 

By Jon Michael Raasch 

 

Daily Mail

Feb 4, 2026

 

 

White House 'border czar' Tom Homan speaks during a press conference at the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Wednesday

White House 'border czar' Tom Homan speaks during a press conference at the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Wednesday

 

Border Czar Tom Homan has taken a swipe at Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem as he announced the Trump administration is pulling 700 federal agents out of Minnesota.

Homan conceded that Noem's immigration crackdown had not been a 'perfect operation' at a news conference in Minneapolis on Wednesday after the fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti.

Noem's longtime rival Homan was parachuted into Minneapolis last week after the Homeland chief infuriated Donald Trump when she parroted White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller's claim that Pretti was a 'domestic terrorist.' 

Homan thanked Governor Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey as he announced a deal with the Democratic leaders to deport illegal immigrants from local jails, meaning fewer federal agents will be required on the streets to make arrests. 

'Effective immediately, we will draw down 700 people, effective today, 700 law enforcement personnel,' Homan said.

It comes after Vice President JD Vance denied the suggestion that Trump was backing down from his mass deportation pledge in an exclusive interview with the Daily Mail on Tuesday.

'We're not moving back on anything. We're just trying to actually encourage cooperation so that we get a little bit less chaos,' Vance told the Mail.

Operation Metro Surge has seen 3,000 additional immigration officers sent to the northern state. It has yielded thousands of immigrant arrests but also resulted in the deaths of two Americans who confronted law enforcement officers. 

 

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Homeland Security advisor Stephen Miller are seen during a roundtable event at the White House touting efforts on crime and immigration made by his administration on Oct. 23, 2025.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy Stephen Miller are seen during a roundtable event at the White House touting efforts on crime and immigration made by his administration on Oct. 23, 2025

Sherrif's officers keep an eye on protesters blocking the entrance to the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis, Minnesota on January 30

Sherrif's officers keep an eye on protesters blocking the entrance to the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis, Minnesota on January 30

 

The number of immigration officers would be closer to 2,000 after the draw down, Homan said. Before Operation Metro Surge began there were around 150 immigration officers in the state.

The Daily Mail embedded with ICE for two ride-alongs this week in which officials shared how difficult it can be to apprehend aliens in the field rather than in a controlled setting like a prison or jail.

On those ride-alongs teams of nearly a dozen agents patrolled the city for criminal alien offenders looking for the perfect time to apprehend.

After two days of ride-alongs, the Daily Mail only witnessed the arrest of two aliens, underscoring how operations in the field take significant time and money for any single arrest. 

Following the shootings of Good and Pretti, protests erupted around Minnesota and across the US.

Agitators furious with ICE operations have set up road blocks in the city to scan for immigration agents in an attempt to deny them access to certain neighborhoods being targeted by raids.

Homan was dispatched to the state shortly after Pretti's death at the hands of two Border Patrol agents, taking over from Noem.

The Homeland Security Secretary frustrated Trump when she branded Pretti a 'domestic terrorist' in the immediate aftermath of his death.

 

Officers grapple with Alex Pretti moments before he was shot dead in Minneapolis on January 24

Officers grapple with Alex Pretti moments before he was shot dead in Minneapolis on January 24

Pretti's death came just weeks after Renee Good, 37, was shot dead by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer in Minneapolis

Pretti's death came just weeks after Renee Good, 37, was shot dead by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer in Minneapolis

 

The President called Governor Walz last week in an effort to smooth relations.

Local leaders have accused the Trump administration of fueling unrest with heavy-handed tactics, while the federal government says the Democrats are obstructing its immigration enforcement operation.

In his announcement, Homan on Wednesday shared that since his arrival there has been 'unprecedented cooperation' between local Minnesota leaders and ICE. 

'We currently have an unprecedented number of counties communicating with us now and allowing ICE to take custody of illegal aliens before they hit the streets,' Homan said.

Allowing ICE agents to apprehend criminal noncitizens from jails 'requires only one or two officers to assume custody of criminal alien target, rather than eight or 10 officers going into the community and arresting that public safety threat.'

'This frees up more officers to arrest or remove criminal aliens. More officers taking custody of criminal aliens directly from the jails. Means less officers on the street doing criminal operations.'

ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF NO GOOD DEED GOES UNPUNISHED

Kind-hearted woman is CHARGED after she took in frightened stray dog she saw being dumped in street during snow storm

 

By Anna Wright 

 

Daily Mail

Feb 4, 2026

 

 

Dason Garner, a vet tech and groomer, rescued the pup and returned it to its rightful owner

Dason Garner, a vet tech and groomer, rescued the pup and returned it to its rightful owner

 

A kind North Carolina woman who took in a stray dog she saw dumped in the street during a recent snow storm has been charged by police.

Dason Garner saw Ring doorbell footage of someone dumping the frightened female labradoodle pup on a front porch in Wilson County on Saturday, where temperatures dropped to a bone-chilling 21F.

Garner, a vet tech and groomer, said she scooped the dog and took her back to her house before contacting animal control, WRAL reported.

They told her to bring the stray in but Garner declined, saying the matted dog was too neglected to be put in a shelter.

'In her condition, [and] as a vet tech and as a groomer, I don't foresee her coming like that,' Garner said.

'She wouldn't stand a chance in a shelter.'

Less than a day later, Garner said she was able to contact the dog's original owner and found out she had been missing for months.

The Wilson County Sheriff’s Office later identified Ashley Baker as the person who abandoned the dog in the video and charged her. To her surprise, Garner was also charged.

 

A woman, later identified as Ashley Baker, is seen dumping a matted stray pup on a stranger's front porch after a subzero snowstorm

A woman, later identified as Ashley Baker, is seen dumping a matted stray pup on a stranger's front porch after a subzero snowstorm

 

A sheriff’s spokesperson told WRAL she had been charged because she allegedly repeatedly refused to surrender the dog despite the office even contacting her family members. 

'I'm baffled. I'm confused. I have a lot of hard feelings right now. Unexpected court costs [and] lawyers' fees, all of this adds up,' she said.

Garner added that the financial strain is hitting her hard as she has a two-year-old son and has just returned to work.

She said she would do it all over again to save an animal in need if she had to. The original dog owner expressed deep gratitude for Garner’s actions. 

Garner is due in court later in February, and her family started a GoFundMe to help cover legal expenses, with a $6,000 goal. 

'I never imagined that helping rescue a dog would turn my life upside down - but here I am.,' her GoFundMe read.

 

Garner started a GoFundMe to help raise money to cover the staggering legal expenses for the ordeal

Garner started a GoFundMe to help raise money to cover the staggering legal expenses for the ordeal

 

'What started as an act of compassion has resulted in criminal charges, and I’m now facing significant legal expenses.

'I’ve always believed in standing up for those who can’t speak for themselves, and when I saw a dog in distress, I felt compelled to help,' it continued.

'If you believe in doing the right thing, in helping those without a voice, or in supporting a mom who’s trying to hold it all together - thank you. Your support truly matters.'

LA MAYOR'S UNDERHANDED ATTEMPT TO PROTECT THE CITY FROM LAWSUITS

Los Angeles Democrat Mayor Karen Bass COVERED UP part of report into Pacific Palisades fire over fears it would lead to lawsuits, sources claim

 

By Melissa Koenig 

 

Daily Mail

Feb 4, 2026

 

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has been accused of a cover-up, with insiders claiming she watered down a report on the fire department's failures to respond to the deadly Pacific Palisades fire. She is pictured here in January

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has been accused of a cover-up, with insiders claiming she watered down a report on the fire department's failures to respond to the deadly Pacific Palisades fire. She is pictured here in January

 

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has been accused of a cover-up, with insiders claiming she watered down a report on the fire department's failures to respond to the deadly Pacific Palisades fire. 

The LA Fire Department released its after-action report in October on the blaze that killed a dozen residents, destroyed 7,000 homes and caused damage worth $150 billion when it tore through the wealthy coastal neighborhood of Pacific Palisades for 24 days straight, beginning in January 2025.

But an investigation at the Los Angeles Times revealed that there were several edits made in the report to downplay failures by city and fire department officials.

Two sources with insider information now tell the outlet that after receiving an early draft of the report, Bass told then-interim Fire Chief Ronnie Villanueva that the report could expose the city to legal liabilities.

They said two people close to the mayor informed them how she wanted key findings about the LA Fire Department's response to the massive blaze removed or softened before the report was made public.

One of the confidants even reportedly told one of the unidentified sources who spoke to the LA Times that 'the mayor didn't tell the truth when she said she had nothing to do with changing the report.'

The source also said that the confidant advised Bass that altering the report 'was a bad idea' because it could hurt her political career.

Still, the two confidants told the unidentified source that Bass held onto the original draft of the report until after the changes were made. 

Both confidants are now prepared to testify under oath to verify their accounts of what happened if there were a legal proceeding, the sources said.

 

Two sources with insider information told the LA Times that after receiving an early draft of the report, Bass told then-interim Fire Chief Ronnie Villanueva (pictured) that it could expose the city to legal liabilities

Two sources with insider information told the LA Times that after receiving an early draft of the report, Bass told then-interim Fire Chief Ronnie Villanueva (pictured) that it could expose the city to legal liabilities

The fire killed a dozen residents, destroyed 7,000 homes and caused damage worth $150 billion when it tore through the wealthy coastal neighborhood of Pacific Palisades for 24 days straight, beginning in January 2025

The fire killed a dozen residents, destroyed 7,000 homes and caused damage worth $150 billion when it tore through the wealthy coastal neighborhood of Pacific Palisades for 24 days straight, beginning in January 2025

 

Yet the sources who spoke to the LA Times said they were unsure whether anyone at the mayor's office or at the fire department made line-by-line edits at Bass's specific instructions or if they imposed the changes after receiving general direction from the mayor. 

The fire department had also formed an internal crisis management team and brought in a public relations firm to help shape its messaging ahead of the report's release.

Still, one of the sources said, 'All the changes [the LA Times] reported on were the ones Karen wanted.' 

According to the LA Times' investigation, the fire department's initial draft of the after-action report said the LA Fire Department's decision to pre-deploy all available engines 'did not align' with the department's policy.

The final version that was released to the public, however, said that the number of companies that were pre-deployed 'went above and beyond the standard LAFD pre-deployment matrix.'

Another deleted passage in the report said that some crews waited more than an hour for an assignment on the day of the fire, and a section saying fire department crews and leaders violated national guidelines on how to avoid firefighter deaths and injuries was similarly removed, the LA Times reports.

Other changes appeared to be more superfluous, including renaming a section on 'failures' to 'primary challenges' and changing the photograph on the front of the report from palm trees on fire to a simple LA Fire Department seal.

The changes wound up being so extensive that the author of the report, Battalion Chief Kenneth Cook, declined to endorse the final version because of changes that altered his findings and made the report, in his own words, 'highly unprofessional and inconsistent with our established standards.'

 

Bass has previously denied any involvement in making the edits to the report

Bass has previously denied any involvement in making the edits to the report

An aerial view of two properties cleared of debris amid the ruins of homes destroyed in the Palisades Fire, on February 27, 2025 in Pacific Palisades, California.
She has also been criticized for her efforts to rebuild the wealthy conclave following the fire

 

Bass has previously denied any involvement in the edits, with a spokesperson for the mayor's office saying in December: 'The report was written and edited by the fire department. We did not red-line review every page or review every draft of the report.'

The spokesperson then claimed that the mayor's office asked only that the fire department fact-check any findings regarding the effects of the city's finances and high-wind forecasts on the department's performance in the fire.

In an interview with the LA Times last month, the Democrat mayor also insisted she did not work with the fire department on the changes, nor did the department consult her about any changes it was making.

'The only thing that I told them to do was I told them to talk to Matt Szabo about the budget and funding, and that was it,' she said, referring to the city's administrative officer.

'That's a technical report,' she added. 'I'm not a firefighter.' 

In a statement to the Daily Mail, the Los Angeles Fire Department noted that the report was conducted before Chief James Moore was appointed to the position.    

'Chief Moore has been clear that he is determined to foster a culture of transparency and accountability,' Public Information Director Stephanie Bishop said. 

'He is committed to strengthening the department by taking corrective action wherever appropriate and to ensuring the Los Angeles Fire Department improves its operations and readiness to make Los Angeles a safer city for all Angelenos.'

Department officials also announced on Tuesday that most of the 42 recommendations in the after-action report have been implemented, including mandatory staffing protocols and red flag days, as well as training on wind-driven fires, tactical operations and evacuations. 

 

In November, critics branded Bass a 'fraud' and 'incompetent failure' after she falsely announced that the city has issued its first certificate of occupancy for the reconstruction of a property in Pacific Palisades. A sign reading 'Fire Mayor Bass' is pictured on a construction site in the Palisades nearly one year after the fire

In November, critics branded Bass a 'fraud' and 'incompetent failure' after she falsely announced that the city has issued its first certificate of occupancy for the reconstruction of a property in Pacific Palisades. A sign reading 'Fire Mayor Bass' is pictured on a construction site in the Palisades nearly one year after the fire

 

But this is not the first time Bass has faced backlash for the city's response to the destructive fire.

In November, critics branded her a 'fraud' and 'incompetent failure' after she falsely announced that the city has issued its first certificate of occupancy for the reconstruction of a property in Pacific Palisades.

The newly-constructed home on Kagawa Street was not a rebuild from the blaze. however, as the demolition project began before the Palisades Fire erupted.

Thomas James Homes applied for a permit to demolish the one-story single-family home and its attached garage in November 2024, LA building and safety records revealed. 

Critics had earlier hit out at the mayor  for neglecting to disclose when the builders applied for the permit in her statement. One even went as far as calling her the 'worst mayor in America.'

A resident-led watch group has also warned that the city's error may suggest LA leadership cannot 'manage the complexity of rebuilding an entire coastal town.'

Daily Mail has reached out to Bass's office for comment.

WE NEED INFOWARS'S ALEX JONES, WHO EXPOSED THE MOON LANDING HOAX, TO TELL US WHICH MOVIE STUDIO PRODUCED THE THREE ORBS

US military footage captures multiple 'orb' UFOs flying in formation over Persian Gulf

 

By Chris Melore 

 

Daily Mail

Feb 4, 2026

 

 

Leaked military video from 2012 revealed three orbs captured flying over the Persian Gulf

Leaked military video from 2012 revealed three orbs captured flying over the Persian Gulf

 

New video from a US military drone has captured what UFO investigators are calling a formation of mysterious orbs flying over one of the most contentious regions in the world.

Jeremy Corbell, investigative journalist, documentary filmmaker, and co-host of the WEAPONIZED Podcast, revealed footage allegedly obtained from intelligence sources which captured three objects flying over the Persian Gulf on August 23, 2012.

The minute-long recording was taken by a MQ-9 Reaper drone being operated by the US Air Force while it was using its infrared sensors just after 6pm local time. 

According to Corbell and podcast co-host George Knapp, the Pentagon described these three lights as 'orbs' flying in formation instead of coming from one triangular shaped object.

In the video, one of the lights could be seen suddenly dropping back behind the other two, before seemingly being slingshot forward to lead the group.

Corbell and podcast co-host George Knapp added that the orbs appeared to be flying in an almost 'playful' manner and were intelligently coordinated, maintaining equal distances without any visible wings, tails, fins, or engine exhaust of any kind.

Corbell and Knapp pointed out that the leaked recording clearly showed unidentified flying objects displaying one of the 'five observable' behaviors often linked to UFOs - unusual flight movements that defy basic physics.

In this case, the one orb moving between the other two exhibited clear signs of instant acceleration without any visible thrust, something human aircraft haven't publicly shown an ability to do.

In a breakdown of the sighting, Corbell noted that the US Department of War officially designated the orbs as 'UAP,' which stands for Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena and is the new term for UFOs.

The video was reportedly placed in a separate archive specifically for evidence of non-human craft or objects that clearly weren't birds, balloons, or other explainable items.

The WEAPONIZED Podcast hosts added that the credibility of the sighting was indisputable, since the footage was taken by the military, using technology that accumulates more data than a standard camera or everyday person's smartphone.

'This is a military recorded sensor generated image of what looks like a triangular UFO, like one big triangular craft with dots on each of the three ends. And clearly, you watch this, and that's not what it is,' Knapp said in the January 30 episode.

'Your government has labeled this UAP and you were never supposed to see this footage,' Corbell added.

The two men noted that the area where this recording was made, between Saudi Arabia and Iran, has become a hotspot for UAP activity in recent years, with personnel on US Navy vessels in the region reporting multiple encounters with bright objects in the sky.

In one incident allegedly recounted to Corbell, an unknown object flooded the bridge of a Navy ship with extremely intense light, so bright that a commanding officer claimed she raised her hand to shield her eyes but she couldn't see her own hand in front of her face.

In another incident recently revealed during a bombshell hearing in Washington, military drone footage captured the moment a Hellfire missile struck and merely bounced off the hull of a UFO flying over the nearby country of Yemen.

 

The video of the orbs was taken by a US Air Force Reaper drone between Saudi Arabia and Iran

The video of the orbs was taken by a US Air Force Reaper drone between Saudi Arabia and Iran

Congressman Eric Burlison of Missouri revealed video of a US military drone striking an orb-shaped UFO with a missile, which bounced off and did not stop the craft

Congressman Eric Burlison of Missouri revealed video of a US military drone striking an orb-shaped UFO with a missile, which bounced off and did not stop the craft

 

Congressman Eric Burlison of Missouri produced the shocking, never-before-seen footage from October 30, 2024 during the congressional UAP hearing with a group of military whistleblowers last year.

The black-and-white video captured the 100-pound class air-to-ground precision weapon bouncing off the mysterious orb, which continued traveling at extreme speed off the coast of Yemen, roughly 1,000 miles away from the Persian Gulf.

Witness Jeffrey Nuccetelli, a former Air Force military police officer for 16 years, called the Hellfire video 'exceptional evidence' of the existence of UFOs.

'I imagine there's members of Congress that would like to see it, who I don't even know if they've asked to see the repository of UAP videos that we've mentioned to them in the past,' Knapp said.

'But it must be frustrating for them to know that this kind of stuff exists and they're not allowed to poke into it or get get a glimpse of it at all.'

Officially, the US government and the Pentagon have declared that there has never been any physical evidence recovered that proves UFOs or extraterrestrial beings exist.

The podcast hosts noted that ARRO, the Pentagon department in charge of reviewing all UAP incidents, has released very few videos showing clear UFO sightings, despite whistleblower footage continuing to be leaked to the public.

TRUMP'S PLAN IS NOT THE GAZA THAT ISRAEL, AFTER INDESCRIBABLE COST IN LOST LIVES AND GLOBAL REPUTATION, WANTED AND NEEDS TO SEE AFTER THE WAR

Hamas strengthens and the PA returns — this is no recipe for security and stability

As the terror group bolsters its hold on Gaza, a Palestinian Authority-led administration ostensibly prepares to govern alongside it, at odds with it, and outmuscled by it. Whatever happened to Israel’s war goals?

 

 

 

The Times of Israel

Feb 4, 2026

 

 

Ali Shaath (center) and his National Committee for the Administration of Gaza 
  

Israel went to war after the Hamas-led October 7, 2023, massacre with two essential goals: to get back the hostages, and to destroy Hamas and any other potential deadly threats to Israel. Among the subsequent conditions Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also vowed to impose was that there would be no role for the Palestinian Authority in a postwar Gaza unless the PA underwent radical reform.

With the return of all the hostages, living and dead, and the Trump administration’s declaration that we have now entered phase two of the US president’s broad Gaza peace plan, however, Hamas still rules half of Gaza, is targeting Israeli troops in the other half, and is not planning to disarm. And the PA, in more and less overt guises, is assuming a significant role during this fuzzy period of semi-war, semi-ceasefire. The Mahmoud Abbas-led PA, that, in a previous iteration, Hamas murderously and swiftly booted out of Gaza when seizing power there almost 20 years ago.

At President Donald Trump’s instruction, the Rafah Crossing between Gaza and Egypt has been reopened to limited entry and exit of people. And it is the PA, along with Egypt and European representation, that is managing the process — a fact that official Israel prefers not to acknowledge. (Israel, it should be stressed, is vetting and thus determining who is permitted to come in or go out, just not at the crossing itself.)

Furthermore, the main body formally delegated to oversee Gaza’s civil governance, the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza (NCAG), is largely a Palestinian Authority entity. Its Gaza-born chief commissioner, Ali Shaath, is a former deputy minister in the PA. Several more of its members have held posts in the PA, including Sami Nasman, assigned the Interior portfolio, a senior figure in the PA’s General Intelligence Service. (Nasman fled Gaza over 30 years ago, wanted by the Shin Bet over the alleged killing of collaborators during the First Intifada, and came back at the time of Yasser Arafat’s return in 1994.)

It was Shaath who announced, in a video message broadcast during Trump’s launch ceremony for Gaza’s Board of Peace in Davos on January 22, that the Rafah Crossing was about to reopen in both directions, possibly blindsiding and certainly discomfiting the Israeli government.

Shaath and his team are supposed to enter Gaza next week to take up their responsibilities — operating in the half of the Strip controlled by Hamas, which was directly involved in the talks in Egypt that determined who would sit on the committee.

Ahead of its first days on the job, the NCAG this week cut through the diplomatic euphemisms and misnomers and changed its logo — from the original design of a bird in Palestinian colors to the PA’s very own eagle with flag symbol, merely switching the word “Palestine” to NCAG. A case of “in your face, Israel.”

 

The newly changed logo of the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza, now nearly identical to that of the Palestinian Authority.
 
 
What the symbol symbolizes, of course, is that the PA is back in Gaza. Back, that is, alongside, at odds with, and outmuscled by its sometime rival, ally and enemy Hamas.

Practically speaking, this portends a West Bank-style reality for Israel.

Netanyahu will likely resist withdrawing the IDF any further from the Strip, because Hamas will either overtly refuse to disarm or attempt to disguise its retention of weaponry by ostensibly entrusting it to the NCAG — the committee it helped select and with which it will have an extremely fraught relationship.

After four hours of talks with Trump’s key envoy Steve Witkoff on Tuesday evening — talks that surely focused in large part on Trump’s preparation for war and/or diplomacy with Iran — a brief statement from Netanyahu’s office chose to focus on Gaza. It emphasized Israel’s uncompromising demand for Hamas to be disarmed, Gaza to be demilitarized, and the PA to be excluded from “governing the Strip in any way.”

But rhetoric aside, the PA is already playing a role in Gaza. And Hamas, as the IDF recently informed Netanyahu, is deepening its hold on the non-IDF-held half of the Strip — including by “integrating its operatives into government ministries and the security apparatuses.”

As things stand, Hamas will continue targeting Israeli troops. The IDF will continue to hit back. In the short term, the US will doubtless attempt to maintain the ceasefire that came into effect in October, Trump may repeat his declared assessment that Hamas “is going to disarm,” and he may keep on declaring that he brought peace to Gaza.

But what is unfolding on the ground is no recipe for security and stability. It stems at least in part from Netanyahu’s failure in the highly complex task of enabling the installation of credible, effective non-Hamas governance. With the government seeking to eliminate Hamas, and refusing to consider the PA for any legitimizing role in an international mechanism, we are winding up with both of them. And that certainly does not meet Israel’s essential war goals.

This is not the Gaza that Israel, after indescribable cost in lost lives and in its global reputation, wanted and needs to see after the war.

EVEN IF YOU OPPOSE TRUMP, THE CONSEQUENCES OF ALLOWING THE COUNTRY TO GO DOWN A RABBIT HOLEIN WHICH A 'RESISTANCE' IS SEEKING TO THWART ALLEGED NAZIS - I.E. THE ELECTED GOVERNMENT'S EFFORTS TO ENFORCE THE LAW - IS A CATASTROPHE FOR DEMOCRACY

The resistance rabbit hole and the end of democracy

Legitimizing Nazi comparisons to ICE agents and treating the debate about illegal immigration as akin to a fight against fascism cannot be separated from the rise of left-wing antisemitism. 

 

By Jonathan S. Tobin 

 

JNS

Feb 4, 2026

 

 

 

People partake in a "National Shutdown" protest against US Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on January 30, 2026.
 

For those who oppose President Donald Trump, the tragic shootings of two individuals in Minneapolis last month while protesting efforts to enforce immigration laws, demonstrated that the administration has gone too far. But it is now also painfully clear that the now widespread and growing willingness of his opponents to analogize both the president and the agents of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency with German Nazis has also taken this debate beyond the bounds of acceptable public discourse.

And it’s imperative that the pushback against not merely cheapening the memory of the Holocaust, but the sort of rhetoric that is antithetical to a working democracy, not just come from the president’s supporters or others who agree with his policies. To date, there haven’t been many indications that there actually is a critical mass of centrist Democrats who are ready to take on the left wing of their party over this matter. But, as with the increasing volume of antisemitism and anti-Zionism coming from some of the same people throwing around irresponsible Nazi comparisons, it’s important that the debate about this issue not be one fought strictly along party lines.

A debate among Democrats?

So, it was encouraging to see that one Democrat whose experiences have become part of the discussion about the normalization of the tropes of Jew-hatred in his party was willing to speak up about the escalation of the rhetoric about Trump and ICE. Last month, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro injected himself into the debate about antisemitism. Now, he’s spoken up about comparisons between ICE and the Nazis, and is being roundly bashed by left-wing Democrats.

Whether or not this is a cynical tactic by an ambitious liberal politician looking to position himself in the moderate lane in the 2028 Democratic presidential race doesn’t really matter. That can be true even if it turns out that there is no room at the top of the Democratic ticket for anyone who says such things. What’s needed most is a willingness on the part of people on both sides of the political aisle to oppose the way that extremists are seizing control of the public square.

The point being that even if you oppose Trump, the consequences of allowing the country to go down a rabbit hole in which a “resistance” is seeking to thwart alleged Nazis—i.e., the elected government’s efforts to enforce the law—is a catastrophe for democracy. Just as important, it needs to be recognized that those who are pushing this kind of discourse are largely the same voices that have promoted blood libels about Israel committing “genocide” and fueling a surge in Jew-hatred.

Though he claims to be solely focused on what is likely to be an easy campaign for re-election as governor, Shapiro, 52, laid down a marker for 2028 by discussing his vetting for the vice presidency in 2024 by Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris’s staff. He does that in his new memoir, Where We Keep the Light.

His revelation that Harris’s handlers asked him if he had “ever been an agent of the Israeli government,” or if he was prepared to apologize for condemning the mob-like protests and tent encampments at the University of Pennsylvania in the wake of the Hamas-led terrorist attacks in Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, may have shocked many observers. But it was no secret that some prominent Democrats, including then-President Joe Biden and Harris, were so intimidated by their party’s intersectional left-wing base that they were falling over themselves to distance themselves from Israel and its supporters. Many Democrats thought the fact that Shapiro—though a conventional political liberal and by no means an outspoken supporter of the Jewish state’s efforts to defend itself against Hamas terrorists—was simply too Jewish and insufficiently anti-Israel to fit on their presidential ticket in 2024.

Shapiro is obviously seeking to preempt efforts by left-wing Democrats to recycle that talking point in 2028. And by criticizing Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner’s claims that ICE agents are “wannabe Nazis” and calling those remarks “abhorrent,” he was similarly seeking to draw a broad distinction between centrist Democrats like himself and the party’s hardline base.

In response, Krasner bashed Shapiro as a “wimp” who was knuckling under to a Republican administration that was using a “Nazi” and “fascist playbook.”

Does this tiff on the left matter?

To conservatives who have become infuriated by the way liberals and left-wingers alike are opposing the efforts of ICE agents to enforce laws and repair the enormous damage done to the country by the previous administration’s open borders policies, Shapiro’s comments are too little and too late.

Instead, they think the main issue is whether Democrats reviving the “resistance” tactics they employed during Trump’s first four years in the White House will derail the president’s second term. And they rightly think that the liberal media’s pile-on against Trump and ICE in the aftermath of the deaths in January of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, both 37, is transparent partisanship. It is part of an effort to ensure that the president can’t fulfill his campaign pledges to deport the millions of illegal aliens, including those who have committed more crimes since entering the United States, let in under Biden. They are particularly exorcised by the way the liberal media has focused on the plight of Good and Pretti but have largely ignored the stories of the many Americans who have been murdered by illegal aliens protected by the Democrats’ “sanctuary city” laws from being arrested by ICE and deported.

The media’s sole focus on the alleged meanness of this roundup of criminals—whose invasion of the country has had a catastrophic impact on working-class wages and housing costs, as well as overwhelming the social services of many communities—is not a reasonable critique of ICE. It’s a campaign to distract the country from the cost of illegal immigration, and in particular, the welfare fraud scandal in Minnesota by Somali immigrants that diverted billions to lawbreakers, including some connected to terrorism.

Parallel causes

Though they’re not wrong about that, the question of how to conduct a debate about illegal immigration in America is equally important. And that is why the divide between conventional liberals like Shapiro and ideologues like Krasner deserves our attention.

Krasner is a typical example of the sort of pro-criminal prosecutors that have been elected in cities around the country by the efforts of left-wing billionaire George Soros. Many on the left have falsely claimed that criticisms of Soros—a Jew born in Hungary who has used his money to fund a host of extremist groups, including those who oppose the existence of the State of Israel—are inherently antisemitic. But there is nothing antisemitic about pointing out that his efforts to “reform” the criminal justice system by largely dropping enforcement of the laws are making many cities unlivable.

Krasner, whose father was Jewish, likes to play the antisemitism card against his and Soros’s critics. Still, he did little to defend Jewish students when they were being targeted by pro-Hamas mobs in the aftermath of Oct. 7. Indeed, his visit to an encampment of Israel-bashers at Penn, along with pro-Hamas Philadelphia City Council member Jamie Gauthier, sent the message that Jewish safety was not his priority.

That people like Krasner are doubling down with claims that Trump and ICE are Nazis, while not opposing those who seek Jewish genocide or cheer for it here in the United States, is not an accident. The notion that Trump’s efforts to stop illegal immigration by closing the border and arresting those who have entered without permission are a crime against humanity has its roots in the same toxic leftist ideologies that falsely claim that Jews and Israelis are “white” oppressors. And those who think that it’s a righteous cause to obstruct, harass and attack ICE officers while they are carrying out their duties seem to be cut from the same cloth as those chanting for Jewish genocide (“From the river to the sea”) and terrorism against Jews everywhere (“globalize the intifada”).

So if Shapiro and the few other Democrats speaking up against such excesses, like Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.), another legislator Krasner has derided as a “sellout” for criticizing his Nazi analogies, can help shift the national discussion away from this destructive, anti-democratic resistance narrative, that’s something that should be encouraged. That is the case even if you disagree with some or many of their political stands.

Avoiding violence

It can be argued that the shootings amid Minneapolis mayhem were proof that ICE agents have not received sufficient training to be able to deal with the problems of crowd control. As a result, they have made fatal mistakes under pressure. That can be true even if the shootings were not crimes and the protesters were far from the nonviolent saints the liberal media have been depicting. Violence could also have been avoided if local authorities, including Gov. Tim Walz, who himself falsely compared the illegals to Holocaust diarist Anne Frank, had cooperated with federal authorities rather than obstructing them.

But what has happened isn’t merely the result of a possible shift in the national mood on the issue of what to do about a situation the Biden administration created when it stopped enforcing the laws, allowing several million illegals to enter the United States with impunity. Trump’s opponents aren’t merely protesting what they consider to be bad or illicit behavior by ICE agents. They are treating all of the agency’s efforts to arrest migrants with deportation orders as proof that the United States is now governed by fascists who are employing the moral equivalent of Nazi storm troopers to target the innocent.

Making that leap from a normal debate about policy to a position in which much of the Democratic Party is now speaking as if it is conducting a “resistance” against an illegitimate authoritarian government that must be stopped by any means possible has not just caused chaos in Minneapolis. It is, once again, turning up the political temperature to the point where apocalyptic pronouncements about the end of American democracy—routine throughout the 2022 and 2024 election cycles—are not just being recycled. The overheated and disingenuous rhetoric of Trump’s foes is creating an atmosphere in which normal political discourse is being replaced by hyperbole inciting the kind of street violence that is antithetical to democracy.

It is that same sort of ideological framework that has been on display since Oct. 7, as antisemitic invective, coupled with the delegitimization of Israel and Jewish rights, was mainstreamed and normalized. A country where the rule of law is considered less important than leftist ideological objectives about illegal immigration is one where Jew-hatred and anti-Zionist politics will also become mainstream.

Wherever you may stand on immigration, the damage done to U.S. political discourse by misguided Holocaust analogies and efforts to depict the debate as one against fascism can’t be denied. That’s why it is important that as broad a cross-section of Americans as possible reject the language and actions of those who are justifying “resistance,” rather than loyal opposition. This is a debate that need not pit Republicans against Democrats; it’s one of the reasonable political center versus extremists on both ends of the spectrum. If that doesn’t happen, then it will become not just a matter of street violence about immigration but an environment in which extremist Jew-haters will be emboldened.