Michigan antisemite plotted to massacre kids at Jewish daycare, tried to buy assault weapons to use for ‘God’s wrath’: feds

Michigan antisemite was plotting to massacre kids at a Jewish daycare and tried to illegally buy assault weapons after hurling threats at the preschoolers, federal prosecutors have revealed.

Hassan Chokr, 35, was out on bail when he drove through the parking lot of Temple Beth El in Bloomfield Hills, outside Detroit, and shouted antisemitic slurs and threats as parents dropped off their kids in December 2022, authorities said.

He pleaded guilty to federal gun charges on May 28.

US Attorney Jerome F. Gorgon Jr said Chokr’s attempted gun purchase was part of what authorities believe was a larger plot “to follow through on his menacing threats against parents and preschoolers as they walked into a place of worship.”

Immediately after his antisemitic rant, he drove to a gun shop in his nearby hometown of Dearborn — which is home to the country’s highest portion of Arab Americans — and tried to buy three semiautomatic weapons.

The Michigan man lied on the gun application, stating that he wasn’t convicted of a felony and didn’t have any pending felony charges, according to the Department of Justice.

But Chokr was already convicted in 2017 of felony theft. He also had a pending assault with a dangerous weapon charge.

While awaiting the results of a background check during the firearms purchase, Chokr stated “It ain’t a fair fight out here” and that he was “going to even the score” and “even the playing field real soon brothers, real soon,” according to court documents.

The gun store owner also overheard Chokr say that he intended to use the weapons for “God’s wrath.”

The federal background check detected the felonies, and he was denied the purchase.

The feds showed surveillance images from inside the store where he tried out a Del-Ton AR-15-style assault rifle, a Landor Arms automatic shotgun and a Glock pistol.

Prosecutors previously said Chokr had “posted videos and statements on Instagram where he talks about buying guns.”

One of the posts said “‘Your Jew tactics will only backfire on you, you have no place on this earth, Jew [expletive], Jew mother [expletives]. A storm is coming to wipe you all out of our lives,’” according to prosecutors.

At a court appearance after his arrest, Chokr pulled down his pants and exposed his rear-end to the judge to protest his arrest.

He now faces up to ten years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000.

Peace First – Then Statehood

Led by France, there’s a real chance that several Western countries will recognise the ‘State of Palestine’ in coming weeks.

I understand the frustration that has led to this. For decades, the peace process hasn’t gone anywhere, and the world wants movement. Me, too. I’ve been following this conflict my entire professional life. My PhD identified ways to dismantle the structural obstacles blocking Israeli–Palestinian peace. I want movement, but only if it’s in the right direction. If I thought that recognition of Palestine would help bring peace, I’d be all in. But it won’t. It will do the opposite.

Recognition would be a no-brainer if Palestine was a state. The 1938 Montevideo Convention provides the definition of statehood, and Palestine doesn’t meet it (and never has).

Which means recognition is about messaging: A country recognises Palestine to reward it; punish Israel; and/or signal its virtue.

Is the West rewarding Palestine? The Palestinian Authority (PA) was established in 1994, during the hopeful Oslo years, to develop the mechanics of statehood and prepare its people for peace alongside Israel.

From the moment of its creation, the PA has been dictatorial. Despite billions in aid money, the international community looked the other way as the PA suppressed Palestinian civil rights, including arbitrarily detaining (and sometimes killing) journalists and critics.

Its last election was 19 years ago.

It is riddled with corruption, which inhibits the international investment a viable economy requires.

And it has lost control of numerous Palestinian city centres to armed gangs, not least the entire Gaza Strip to the brutal, Islamist Hamas in 2007.

This is not Israel’s fault. Ironically, it is Israel’s frequent anti-terror raids in the West Bank that are keeping the PA in power. If Israel were to withdraw tomorrow, Hamas would likely seize control, as it did in Gaza. The resultant Palestinian state would be Somalia, not Singapore.

Through schoolbooks, cultural programming and financial rewards, the PA has promoted a culture that extols the virtue of violence to end Israel’s existence (not merely the occupation). Opinion polls, vox pops and spontaneous celebrations of successful terrorist attacks reveal this time and again. Is this what the international community seeks to reward?

Maybe it’s Israel that’s being punished? If Israel was actively preventing Palestinians from achieving statehood, that would make sense. Some of Israel’s policies have been unhelpful, but Israel is not the reason ‘Palestine’ isn’t a state. Israel offered Palestinians statehood or acquiesced to others doing so in 1937, 1947, 2000, 2001, 2008 and 2014. Every time, Palestinian leaders said no or didn’t respond.

Palestinians keep saying no because it’s easier being an internationally supported victim than bearing the responsibilities of statehood. Besides, their people have been indoctrinated to believe compromise is treason. This leaves Palestinian leaders up a tree.

That is why Palestinians – not Israel – have refused to enter final status negotiations since 2014. Should Israel be punished for this?

The current war is horrible. Western governments are frustrated by the lack of an Israeli ‘day after’ plan and are deeply concerned by the suffering. Is that the reason for recognition?

If so, the message the West wants to send it is not the message Palestinians will hear.

After Spain, Ireland and Norway recognised Palestine last year, Hamas spokespeople, Palestinian commentators and al-Jazeera crowed that it was the October 7attacks that brought about that recognition.

If what achieves Western recognition of Palestine is not a commitment to negotiations towards a two-state outcome, but the bestial violence of October 7 and the war it sparked, then recognition will become the final nail in the coffin of those Palestinians supporting non-violent resolution. Is that the West’s goal?

Why do it, then?

The most likely reason is because Western governments want to shake a monkey off their backs. Each Western country contains a very vocal group that has drunk the Palestine Kool-Aid, and won’t stop screaming about it. Recognition is a political attempt to remove Palestine as a distraction. It’s virtue signalling.

But leaders should realise that feeding the crocodile won’t satisfy it. Quite the reverse, in fact. The ‘Free Palestine’ crowd won’t be satisfied with recognition. They’ll pocket it, then keep agitating for ever more punitive policies against Israel. In short, recognition will reward the disruptive, divisive tactics we’ve seen to date, and so breed more.

For decades, the West has promised statehood for Palestinians as the end goal after they establish a democratic, peaceful entity alongside Israel. That the Palestinian entity is neither democratic nor peaceful is a key reason statehood hasn’t been achieved.

Diplomatic recognition is one of the biggest items in the Western bundle of incentives and can only be granted once. The West is about to grant recognition as encouragement for future Palestinian reform. It won’t achieve this, because rewards given before effort almost never work.

Helping attain viable peace should be the motivating principle, not impatience and certainly not domestic political considerations. Earlier this year, Foreign Minister Penny Wong said that a Palestinian state needs a reformed Palestinian Authority. If recognition is to come before statehood, it must be used, at minimum, as a reward for significant (and completed) Palestinian reforms that cultivate peace and viable Palestinian governance.

Anything less tells Palestinians that rejectionism and violence generates Western reward. That’s not the message the West wants to send, but it’s the message Palestinians will hear.

Dr Bren Carlill is the director of special projects at the Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council, and author of The Challenges of Resolving the Israeli-Palestinian Dispute.

Israeli ambassador: The two-state solution is over. We are no longer willing to jeopardise our security

Contrary to her combative image, Tzipi Hotovely, Israel’s ambassador to the UK, is softly spoken and seems slightly anxious. The night before this interview, she appeared on Piers Morgan Uncensored, where the host shouted at her about the body count in Gaza. The embassy is wary of a rematch.

So I put her at ease by calling Piers “history’s greatest monster”, causing her to laugh and relax. The problem with coverage of Gaza is that emotions run so high, every discussion ends up feeling like an interrogation – and the Israelis push back with force. What outsiders often forget is that beneath the rhetorical fireworks lies a deep pain.

Speaking at her embassy, flanked by UK and Israeli flags, with a bust of Golda Meir (the fourth prime minister of Israel) watching in the corner, Hotovely tells me “everyone in Israel is traumatised” by the events of Oct 7 2023. On that date, Hamas – which controls Gaza – invaded southern Israel, murdering and kidnapping more than a thousand people.

“We, as Israelis, have been through terror attacks in our coffee shops, on our buses, on our streets, but never in the past did we feel like our houses were not safe.” This is their new “vulnerability: the feeling that you cannot protect your own children”.

But foreign governments – even allies like Britain – are concerned about the safety of Palestinian children too: used as human shields by Hamas, and some killed in Israeli airstrikes.

How do you fight a terror group that rejects all the accepted rules of war?

‘October 7 was a watershed moment’

Hotovely, 46, wears regal purple and leans forward as she speaks, injecting urgency into the conversation. Her parents, Gabriel and Roziko, migrated to Israel from the former USSR and raised Tzipi in Rehovot, an attractive city south of Tel Aviv. Conservative and religious, she studied and practised law before gaining attention as a pundit. In 2009, she was elected to the Knesset – its youngest deputy at the time – as a member of Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party, and went on to serve as minister for transport, science, foreign affairs and settlements. She lives with her husband, Or Alon, and their three daughters.

When she was appointed ambassador to London in 2020, some British Jews objected, labelling Hotovely too controversial for such a sensitive role. But perhaps that was the idea. Many states are shifting their diplomatic style from emollience to advocacy. Since October 7th, Hotovely has become a formidable presence in the media and on campuses , vigorously defending her government against accusations she often describes as “a blood libel” – against Jews as well as Israelis.

I begin by asking the mood of her citizens 19 months on from the Hamas pogrom. “I think that October 7th was a watershed moment… all across Israel. No one can say in Israel that he’s the same person after.” She sometimes finds “less sympathy among people around the world” – some governments still live in the mentality of “October 6th” – but Israelis have been shown “that if you have a jihadi, Islamist terrorist group that wants to destroy you on your doorstep, at the end of the day, it’ll end up in a massacre.” Think of it as living next-door to the “Third Reich”.

“Just this morning, we heard about […] a 15-day-old baby who died in a terror attack”: Israeli Ravid Haim, born by emergency C-section after his mother, Tzeela Fez, was shot and killed. Around 58 hostages remain in Hamas’s hands. To recover them, the Israeli army has launched “Operation Gideon’s Chariots” – aiming to seize control of the Gaza Strip, push the population south and cripple the enemy’s military.

“The aims of the war are very clear to Israel,” explains Hotovely, “Hamas shouldn’t exist as a political leadership and with military power after we finish.” Hamas “doesn’t care about human life […] doesn’t care about their own people’s life”.

Hence it has embedded its fighters in a network of tunnels “six floors down […] bigger than the London Tube”, and deliberately located beneath civilian areas. “They wanted to make sure Israel will be blamed” when civilians are killed during Israeli attacks. “We don’t call it collateral damage. We really care about human life. We don’t want anyone who’s innocent to get killed. That’s why we make sure that all Palestinians can move to a safe zone.”

But the UK Government has condemned the civilian impact of “Gideon’s Chariots”. Israel imposed a blockade on humanitarian aid and commercial supplies on March 2 – now lifted – that Foreign Secretary David Lammy called “morally unjustifiable, wholly disproportionate and counterproductive”; he cancelled talks on a trade deal and summoned Hotovely to the ministry to explain her government’s actions.

Lammy, she says, was wrong: “Israel’s policy from the beginning of the war was to deliver aid to Gaza.” Some “25,000 trucks of aid got into Gaza. This is not a starvation programme, this is actually a flooding Gaza with aid programme […] The reason why it had to stop was because it was being looted only to feed the terrorists” or “to sell the aid that people were supposed to get for free”.

I ask whether this is an example of Israel alienating its friends with such brutal logic. Hamas steals food – that’s bad; anyone would want to stop it. But if Israel cuts off food altogether, isn’t the outcome even worse for innocent civilians?

“If there is lack of food,” Hotovely replies, “I can understand your argument”, but the Israelis calculated that there was enough aid already within the Gaza Strip to pause deliveries while they build a “new mechanism” for distribution, not overseen by the UN. This would be the American-run Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, now operating in Gaza – accused of being partisan and insufficient, and there have been riots at its deliveries. “That was just the first day,” she corrects, “it’s been improving and I keep on monitoring it as ambassador.”

‘A clash of civilisations’

What about Labour’s other charge – that “Gideon’s Chariots” has driven up the death toll? I cite the case of Dr Alaa al-Najjar, a Palestinian doctor whose home was hit in an Israeli strike, killing nine of her 10 children. “How does that make you feel?”

“I’ll tell you how it makes me feel. It makes me feel how tragic the situation is that Hamas built this infrastructure that is hurting his own children. I have a lot of sympathy to human life. As a Jew, as an Israeli, we value life very much. Unfortunately, our enemies don’t […] I think it’s a clash of civilisations […] I find that Western people find it very hard to believe that on the other side, there are people who are using their own children as human shields,” but they do.

Dr al-Najjar wasn’t using her own children as a shield though, was she? “No, I didn’t say that, but I said Hamas built all its terrible infrastructure within the population, in the schools, in the hospitals… Are we doing our best to make sure that population civilians will be out of harm? Yes, we are. We give them messaging before we strike… Now, think about it. Do you think the UK would have continued living next to a terror organisation that is a threat to your children in Kent? Or in London or in Liverpool? I don’t think so.”

I point out that it isn’t just non-Israelis who are turning against the war. Ehud Olmert, a former prime minister of Israel, and formerly member of Likud, is now at odds with Netanyhu, writing that the conflict is one of “devastation, indiscriminate, limitless, cruel, and criminal killing of civilians.” He has concluded that his country “is committing war crimes”. What does Hotovely say to him?

“It is a lie. Yes, it is. It is a pure lie.” The Israeli Defence Forces “work with all the mechanisms of our international law experts” and the country is “fighting with one hand tied behind our back” because it always defers to lawyers. “Olmert is completely doing a political statement to hurt the government… It’s coming from very political reasons, not to do with what’s happening on the ground.”

So why are the families of hostages – and even a former hostage – protesting against Netanyahu? At a demonstration this week, Keith Siegel, who was once held prisoner by Hamas, declared: “Our families have become the victims of cheap politics at the hands of the prime minister. Instead of ending the war and bringing everyone home, his allies prefer to occupy the Gaza Strip than to save the hostages.”

Hotovely says: “I have sympathy to every hostage family for being so worried about their loved ones, I cannot put myself in their shoes. At the same time, I must say, they need to remember Israel said yes to any framework offered by the Americans” for a ceasefire: “This is the leverage on Hamas, the military pressure together with the American diplomatic pressure, and if Hamas is saying ‘no’ and saying ‘no’ again and again” to hostage release “what else can we do? We can just carry on with the pressure.”

Following our interview, it was reported on Friday that Hamas appears to have rejected a ceasefire deal orchestrated by the Americans and accepted by the Israelis.

Recognition of Palestinian state ‘a reward for terrorism’

Lammy’s condemnation of the embargo was, says Hotovely, “the wrong timing” because it was issued “the same day the [Netanyahu’s] cabinet made the decision to let aid in”; plus the “wrong message because, I’m sure you heard the head of the opposition, Kemi Badenoch, saying: ‘when Hamas is praising you’” – as Hamas praised the UK – “‘then you need to check whether your politics is the right policy’.”

“We are expecting the international community, including the UK Government, to be very vocal about the fact that Hamas is holding our hostages and it must release them.”

Britain and Israel are “fighting mutual threats. I know how much the UK is concerned about Iran’s influence in the region, and you need to remember that this war Israel has been fighting is a proxy war with Iran […] We’ve seen how most of the weapons being found are produced in Iran, how Iran was training the terrorists.”

As for a French-Saudi initiative, scheduled for mid-June, to discuss the recognition of Palestine as an independent state: “This is probably the worst timing ever to go this path […] this is a pure word for terrorism and sends the wrong message to the region […] What did October 7th prove? First of all, unfortunately what we’ve seen is big support among Palestinians towards the massacre.”

One poll, she claims, found 86 per cent of West Bank residents sympathised with the pogrom. Gaza previously voted for Hamas, “so recognition basically means Hamas” and would be a “reward for terrorism”.

I ask if this means the concept of a two-state solution is off the table and she replies in the affirmative. “It was rejected by the Palestinians again and again. Israelis had hope [in it] in the 1990s and were willing to compromise, but […] every time there was some type of negotiation, there was more terrorism […] So Israelis are no longer willing to jeopardise their security any longer.”

This is a critical point – one that many Britons don’t grasp. Governments like Labour talk about the two-state solution as if it were genuinely on the table, but the two sides gave up on it years ago. In that case, what does the Israeli government see as the future of the Palestinian community?

They must be re-educated. “It’s a good lesson to learn from the Second World War,” when Germany and Japan were beaten: fascism “didn’t end in one day, there was a whole process of denazification, a whole process of rebuilding the institutions to a democratic country. The Palestinians, when they were offered to have democratic elections” – in January 2006 – “they ended up with having an even worse dictatorship that doesn’t believe in any human rights.”

She implies that if fresh elections were held again in Gaza, we’d see Hamas victorious again, so she says “we need to build the path not just for peace as a formal peace but a real peace, people to people, like the one we have with the Gulf countries via the Abrahamic Accords”, as negotiated by Donald Trump.

‘We never deny the rights of us to live next to our neighbours – they deny our rights’

Surely there must be some give and take between communities, I suggest? In that case, the Israelis must cease building settlements in the West Bank – 22 of which have just been recognised by Netanyahu.

“There is a myth about settlements I never understood,” says Hotovely, “because when Israel [dismantled its] settlements in Gaza” – when it physically withdrew the strip in 2005 – “we didn’t see anything that has improved in the Palestinian attitude.”

When Palestinians are asked “what is the main problem,” she tells me, they never say the settlements but instead demand “the right of return,” which means “bringing people from all around the Arab world to move into small Israel.” I suggest that, on the contrary, they are protesting against Israelis settling on land that even Israel officially recognises as Palestinian – and Hotovely disagrees.

“Definitely not. I think that it’s clear for Israelis when we’re speaking about Judea and Samaria [better known as the West Bank], and we’re speaking about Jerusalem, we’re speaking about the Golan Heights, we’re speaking about the Jewish historic land.”

In conservative Israeli rhetoric, the term “Judea and Samaria” implies that the West Bank is Israeli as bequeathed by the Bible. “We’re talking about some places that Jewish people have been connected to for thousands of years,” says Hotovely. Yes, I reply, and Palestinians have been connected to them for a very long time, too. “We’re not denying that. That’s what’s nice about our attitude,” she says, “we never deny the rights of us to live next to our neighbours – they deny our rights.”

We turn to the subject of anti-Semitism – on May 21, Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Lynn Milgrim, staffers at the Israeli embassy in Washington DC, were shot and murdered outside a Jewish museum. The killer cried “free Palestine.” Can Hotovely see a line between anti-Israeli protest and a rising level of threat against Jews across the world?

“We had very difficult days right in the embassy here. I gave a talk to our embassy staff and we wanted them to feel very open with us about their concerns.” She is grateful for the protection of the British authorities but doesn’t feel “anti-Semitism is under control [… ] Let’s speak about how the propaganda in the streets of London, New York and Berlin can influence a terrorist that is taking a weapon and killing two young, beautiful people […] This is the kind of madness we’re dealing with, something totally irrational, and I think it’s been fuelled by anti-Semitism and the fact that some of those marches that are calling for horrific things against Jews are allowed in Western main cities.”

I bring up Gary Lineker, who infamously shared an anti-Semitic image of a rat – a genuine error, he insisted, for which he subsequently apologised – and wonder, to quote a friend, if we’re seeing the revival of an “oblivious anti-Semitism”: old tropes being used in ignorance of the offence they cause. The winner of Eurovision, for example, has suggested that Israel be banned from next year’s show in Vienna – without a shadow of irony or historical awareness.

“I agree, but I think that it’s not the majority of the people in this country. I think the minority is vocal. And I think when the majority keeps silent about bad things, this is when we get to hear the radicals, raising their voice.”

‘Many Western countries that used to feel safe don’t feel safe anymore’

Anti-Jewish hate “is dangerous to this country, just like it’s dangerous to America and Australia and many other Western countries that used to feel very safe and they don’t feel safe anymore.”

Hotovely cites the success of Israel at Eurovision – top in popular vote, pushed into second by the juries – as a possible expression of “sympathy” for October 7. “I don’t feel like we’re isolated, but I do feel like people forget your own country’s history” – Britain’s fight against Hitler, what we endured and what we had to do to win.

“I was invited to a very beautiful event in Westminster Abbey, celebrating your VE Day, and I was moved by all the historic moments that you remember and cherish from your heroism. But then I’m asking myself why, when Israel stands in fighting a very different version of a very radical ideology, why [the British elite] don’t understand it’s exactly the time to have patience and resilience – to wait for Israel to really conclude the job, until this terror organisation will be defeated and not to urge Israel all the time to end the war, even if the consequences are to let Hamas control the Gaza Strip.”

Watch the full Tzipi Hotovely interview on ‘The Daily T’ podcast. You can also listen on SpotifyApple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts

Israel’s war against Hamas is succeeding. No wonder the West wants it to end

Believe it or not, six weeks from today is the 40th anniversary of Live Aid. For most people, the images that lodge in the mind – aside from the razzamatazz of the “feed the world” finale – are those of starving Ethiopian toddlers with distended bellies, stick-thin limbs and flies spotting their eyes and lips.

Up to a million dead. Two-and-a-half million displaced. Two hundred thousand orphans. Yet four decades later, we are cynically being asked to believe that a similar catastrophe is engulfing Gaza.

Get your children to open Snapchat and look at what ordinary people are posting in the Strip. This morning, I saw videos of a man baking bread, another cooking a stew, families eating together and footage of bustling markets.

They even have their own food influencers, like 11-year-old “Renad From Gaza”, who has 1.2 million followers on Instagram. Her recent videos show her cheerfully making lasagne, labneh, pitta and mezze, and home-made crisps from different shapes of pasta which she boils, dries in the sun, deep-fries and flavours. Astonishingly, from time to time she also posts that Gaza is “starving”.

We must not underplay the hardship in the Strip. Malnutrition? There have been some recorded cases. But in 2022, before the war broke out, when Qatari money was pouring in and Hamas was putting the finishing touches to its 400-mile tunnel network, there were over 2,700 such cases amongst impoverished children under the age of five. That’s what happens when your country is run by Islamist fanatics.

After almost three years of being driven to disaster by Hamas, everything is worse for the citizens of Gaza. They are reliant on aid and enduring relentless displacement, not to mention the appalling death and injury when civilians are caught in the crossfire as Israel battles to protect its people.

For many, daily life is an unglamorous grind of deprivation. On the phone, a contact told me he was at his wits’ end over showering, a tedious process of gathering water, warming a portion over a fire, mixing it to get the right temperature, and pouring it over your head in the dubious privacy of a tent. Food is expensive and limited. But there is no famine.

Before the war, 72 trucks of humanitarian aid entered the Strip every day. After the onset of fighting, that number climbed to a daily average of 170, an increase of more than 98 per cent in volume. Of this, food increased by 80 per cent, facilitated by the IDF’s Joint Coordination Board.

To put this in perspective, many hundreds of thousands of Sudanese children have suffered from malnutrition since the outbreak of war.

With a population of 50 million, Sudan has received fewer than 1,500 truckloads of aid in the last two years. Gaza, whose population is 25 times smaller, has received 92,000 truckloads in the last 18 months. Yet we are told that Israel is starving the Strip.

What is really going on? The Kerem Shalom crossing is the only route into Gaza designed for cargo; the other one, the Rafah crossing into Egypt, was sealed in May, after Cairo refused to cooperate with Israel when the town was taken from Hamas.

Much of the aid entering through Kerem Shalom has been looted. Six months ago, the humanitarian coordinator, Muhannad Hadi, said: “Just last week, one driver was shot in the head and hospitalised, along with another truck driver. This Saturday, no less than 98 trucks were looted in a single attack.

The result? First, Hamas can prioritise feeding its fighters (while truly starving the Israeli hostages underground, some of whom have been able to see stockpiles of food). Secondly, it can maintain its grip on the population, controlling prices and enforcing obedience.

The sorry truth is that all the aid agencies in Gaza, including the UN, have been compromised by Hamas. This is unsurprising given that they are staffed by Palestinians, who are under the totalitarian rule of the jihadis.

Several UN staff took part in the October 7 atrocities. Ten per cent of its employees – about 1,200 men – are card-carrying members of Hamas or Islamic Jihad according to Israeli intelligence. Weapons and hostages have been found in UN facilities. Terrorists have operated from UN schools.

In March, Israel cut off deliveries of aid, placing the jihadis under pressure and forcing the depletion of stockpiles. Moronic Israeli ministers made inflammatory remarks which were seized upon by foreign enemies. But as the bottom of the barrel approached, Jerusalem was working on a new plan.

Together with the United States, it has now established a new agency, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which offers aid to civilians directly, bypassing both the UN and Hamas. Speaking to Arabic television on his way to receive food this week, one Palestinian man declared: “We want to eat. Bravo Trump and the IDF!”

Hell hath no fury like a supranational institution scorned. Last week, a UN chief made the outrageous claim that 14,000 Palestinian babies would die within 48 hours. After these deaths failed to transpire, no apologies were offered, even from those MPs who parroted the figure in Parliament. It was propaganda and its job was done.

“If there’s a problem, you have to go out there and solve it,” Bob Geldof said. That is exactly what Israel is doing. Don’t let them tell you otherwise.

SHOCKING: Canadian Senator Sounds Alarm—“Jews Are No Longer Safe in Canada”

In a powerful and urgent statement, Conservative Senator Leo Housakos has declared that antisemitism in Canada has reached a crisis point. “Jews are no longer safe in Canada. That’s a fact, not a feeling. And we as politicians are in no small part to blame,” he stated, urging immediate action to protect Jewish communities across the country.

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Senator Housakos, born in Montreal in 1968 to Greek immigrant parents, has long been a vocal advocate for human rights and religious freedom. He was appointed to the Senate in 2008 and served as Speaker in 2015. In May 2025, he became Leader of the Opposition in the Senate.

His recent remarks come amid a disturbing rise in antisemitic incidents in Canada, including hate crimes, vandalism, and inflammatory rhetoric in public spaces. Jewish advocacy groups have reported a significant increase in threats and harassment, leading to heightened concerns about safety and security.

“We must all stand with Israel and Canada’s Jewish community, and always fight for their freedom and safety,” Housakos emphasized. He called on fellow lawmakers to take concrete steps to combat antisemitism and ensure that Jewish Canadians can live without fear.

Senator Housakos’s statement has resonated with many, highlighting the urgent need for political leaders to address the growing threat of antisemitism and reaffirm Canada’s commitment to protecting all its citizens.

Hyperbolic Hypocrisy

Israel has been targeted by an unprecedented barrage of hypocritical claims and denunciations.

Synonyms for hyperbolic include “distorted, excessive, extravagant, fabricated, false, farfetched, inflated, magnified, melodramatic, overblown, preposterous, pretentious and unrealistic.”

Take your pick because any one of these definitions more than adequately describes the outpouring of vicious venom streaming forth from a myriad of individuals and groups this past week.

First off, the starting block was the gang of twenty-three.

Led by Starmer of the UK, Carney of Canada and Macron of France, these so-called defenders of human rights were shamefully joined by Australia and New Zealand as well as eighteen other countries.

I watched a live televised debate from the UK House of Commons. Noticeably absent were the UK Prime Minister and the Conservative Leader of the Opposition. Leading the “bash Israel” charge was the Foreign Secretary, David Lammy. Frothing in apparent righteous wrath and abandoning any semblance of restraint, this senior member of the Government unleashed a stream of accusations.

The most potent libel hurled against Israel was an unsubstantiated claim made by a UN official that within forty-eight hours, 14,000 babies in Gaza would die unless aid was immediately forthcoming.

Like sheep, most of the assembled parliamentarians bleated “shame, shame, shame” as Lammy enumerated each and every dastardly deed being allegedly perpetrated by the perfidious Israelis. Following his virtuoso performance, it was the turn of MPs to ask him questions. These followed a predictable pattern, with each one more extreme anti-Israel than the other. Lammy bobbed up and down, answering them with a sense of increased viciousness.

No doubt, the UK Labour Government feels it must show Macron and company that when it comes to selective lessons of morality, the British are in the lead. Well and truly buried, of course, is the fact that the UK and France have nothing to be proud of when it comes to past and current colonial policies.

It came as no surprise when, a day or so later, both the UN and the BBC admitted that the original blood libel of the imminent death of Gaza babies was incorrect. Of course, by then, the damage had been done as the fake news had gone viral internationally. The denials sank without a trace, and no doubt millions of the public remain convinced that Israel is complicit in a “genocidal” campaign.

This is how the big lies germinate after being planted in the addled minds of ill-informed masses. It is an old technique made more virulent by the power of today’s social media and other purveyors of evil intent.

Did any of the members of parliament who shouted “shame” and condemned Israel for unspeakable atrocities apologise and withdraw their claim? Not a single one of them did so. Lammy clammed up, and his boss doubled down by pillorying Israel again.

The French do not need any lessons when it comes to hypocritical hype against Israel, which is why they are the leaders of the pack in efforts to recognise a fake Palestine.

Not to be left behind in this chorus of hypocrisy, the Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of Australia unleashed an unexpected tirade against Israel.

New Zealand’s Foreign Minister who has not bothered to visit Israel and see facts on the ground pontificated that “Israel has gone “far too far in its response to Hamas terrorism.”  Presumably he would have told Churchill the same nonsense as the allies pounded the hell out of Nazi Germany.

The end result of all these barrages of negative accusations and ill-informed advice is the implanting of hate against not only the Jewish State but also Jews in general.

The best proof that this gang of 23 Israel bashers has struck the jackpot was provided when Hamas spokespeople congratulated them for their support and cheered their collective condemnations of Israel. One would have imagined that this blatant endorsement by a proscribed terror group might have jolted their missing conscience. Not a chance of this happening, unfortunately, because they have already succumbed to a mass moral collapse.

Just as the mobs in pre-war Germany and Europe were incited to violence and delegitimised Jews, so are today’s same mindless masses poisoned to act accordingly. Chants of “globalize the intifada” and “free Palestine from the river to the sea” are the latest clarion calls to eliminate Israel, Jews and Zionists. Some, whose heads are still in the sand, might believe that these chants are harmless, but last week’s murder of two Israeli diplomatic staff in Washington proves otherwise. Attacks on Jewish communal buildings and individual Jews are now a common occurrence.

Following the murder of the couple in Washington, the outpouring of sanctimonious and hypocritical rhetoric from politicians who just a short while ago eviscerated Israel was sickening. These same people who have no hesitation in making Israel guilty of every imaginable crime against humanity refuse to see that it is their naked animosity that fuels the resultant mayhem.

The stable door is wide open and the horses have bolted.

Expressions of horror at the murder of Israeli diplomatic staff ring hollow coming from the same lips that blame Israel on a daily basis.

I watched a demonstration of solidarity with Israel which took place in front of the Israeli Embassy in London immediately after the Washington murders. The Jewish commentator remarked on the absence of any Member of Parliament and representatives of the BBC, SKY UK and other media outlets. Their obvious lack of interest in reporting a gathering of Jews and non Jews in support of Israel underscores the rampant hypocrisy now an embedded feature of daily life not only in the UK but elsewhere as well.

It has been reported that Hamas and their willing accomplices are now using artificial intelligence to generate fake photos and news.

Recycled photos of alleged victims of Israeli actions are circulated to demonstrate ongoing crimes. Hamas deliberately puts civilians in the midst of terror sites in the hope that collateral damage will enable them to tar Israel with inevitable criminality.

This is the same technique used in previous generations, whereby pictures of Jews poisoning wells and killing Christian babies to make unleavened bread for Passover circulated throughout Europe and precipitated pogroms. Today’s techniques may be more sophisticated but they have the identical desired results.

Daily depictions of doctored horror photos combined with tendentious reports of Israeli “atrocities” issued by the terror groups themselves are now a feature of what passes for informed news.

It is no wonder, therefore, that even hitherto sympathetic supporters of Israel find themselves wavering and doubting. The field is wide open for confusion and conflicted feelings, given the absence of a consistent and coherent Israeli counter-response to this intentional disinformation.

Certain clear facts need to be forcefully articulated.

The plight of the kidnapped hostages has been erased from the memory of those currently condemning Israel.

The refusal of Hamas and associated willing partners to free each and every hostage, alive and dead, is the sole reason for the ongoing war.

The terrorist groups know that all they have to do is parade more “atrocity” stories and the pressure from the international community against Israel will increase.

Embittered Israeli politicians who love nothing better than to besmirch and accuse are embraced by the leftist media and fuel increased enmity against Israel and Jews. They provide fuel to the anti Zionists and self-loathers whose righteous indignations are confined solely and exclusively to the “crimes” of the Jewish State.

Hamas feels it is on to a winning formula having sensed the morally bankrupt hypocrisy of the democracies and knowing that the likes of China, Russia, Iran and North Korea are supportive.

Hamas has as its central objective the complete destruction of Israel and the elimination of a Jewish sovereign presence. Fatah and the PA profess to be “moderate” but in actual fact they give a wink and a nod to this plan of action.

Creating a country called Palestine will not usher in an era of peace. It is merely a recipe for increased terror and incitement against Jews.

All those participating in demonstrations at universities and on the streets of cities who scream “from the river to the sea Palestine will be free” are endorsing the genocide of Jews.

Nowhere in the annals of armed conflict against an enemy dedicated to one’s destruction has it been mandated for the intended victims to feed, sustain or succour the enemy. That is why the current fetish compelling Israel to do so is the height of hypocrisy.

Aid which continues to flow into Gaza is hijacked. Widespread famine narratives are promoted to whip up hate frenzy which in turn is fanned by vested groups.

As one of the released hostages told the French Government recently, “it is either them or us.”

Beating about the bush and refraining from articulating the raw truth may be diplomatically correct, but it is a losing strategy when battling rampant ignorance and prejudice.

DAVID BEDEIN: October 7 & Beyond: UNWRA War Against the Jews

Discussion between the head of Machon Shilo, Rabbi David Bar-Hayim and David Bedein

Explosive new intelligence report reveals Iran’s nuclear weapons program still active

A new intelligence report claims Iran is continuing with its active nuclear weapons program, which it says can be used to launch missiles over long distances.

The startling intelligence gathering of Austrian officials contradicts the assessment of the U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI).  Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard told a Senate Intelligence Committee in March that the American intelligence community “continues to assess that Iran is not building a nuclear weapon and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has not authorized the nuclear weapons program he suspended in 2003.”

Austria’s version of the FBI — the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution — wrote Monday in an intelligence report, “In order to assert and enforce its regional political power ambitions, the Islamic Republic of Iran is striving for comprehensive rearmament, with nuclear weapons to make the regime immune to attack and to expand and consolidate its dominance in the Middle East and beyond.”

The Austrian domestic intelligence agency report added, “The Iranian nuclear weapons development program is well advanced, and Iran possesses a growing arsenal of ballistic missiles capable of delivering nuclear warheads over long distances.”

According to an intelligence document obtained and reviewed by Fox News Digital, “Iran has developed sophisticated sanctions-evasion networks, which has benefited Russia.”

The Austrian intelligence findings could be an unwanted wrench in President Trump’s negotiation process to resolve the atomic crisis with Iran’s rulers because the data outlined in the report suggests the regime will not abandon its drive to secure a nuclear weapon.

In response to the Austrian intelligence, a White House official told Fox News Digital, “President Trump is committed to Iran never obtaining a nuclear weapon or the capacity to build one.”

The danger of the Islamic Republic of Iran as a state sponsor of terrorism (and its illegal atomic weapons program) was cited 99 times in the 211-page report that covers pressing threats to Austria’s democracy.

“Vienna is home to one of the largest embassies of the Islamic Republic of Iran in Europe, which disguises intelligence officers with diplomatic,” the Austrian intelligence report noted.

“Iranian intelligence services are familiar with developing and implementing circumvention strategies for the procurement of military equipment, proliferation-sensitive technologies, and materials for weapons of mass destruction,” the Austrian intelligence agency said.

In 2021, a Belgium court convicted Asadollah Asadi, a former Iranian diplomat based in Vienna, for planning to blow up a 2018 opposition meeting of tens of thousands of Iranian dissidents held outside Paris. Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who served as President Trump’s personal lawyer at the time, attended the event in France.

When asked about the differences in conclusions between the U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligence and the Austrian intelligence report, David Albright, a physicist and founder and president of the Institute for Science and International Security in Washington, D.C., told Fox News Digital, “The ODNI report is stuck in the past, a remnant of the fallacious unclassified 2007 NIE [National Intelligence Estimate].

“The Austrian report in general is similar to German and British assessments. Both governments, by the way, made clear to (the) U.S. IC [intelligence community] in 2007 that they thought the U.S. assessment was wrong that the Iranian nuclear weapons program ended in 2003.

“The German assessment is from BND [Germany’s Federal Intelligence Service] station chief in D.C. at that time. The British info is from a senior British non-proliferation official I was having dinner with the day the 2007 NIE was made public. The German said the U.S. was misinterpreting data they all possessed.”

The Austrian intelligence findings that Tehran is working on an active atomic weapons program “seems clear enough,” said Albright.

In 2023, Fox News Digital revealed a fresh batch of European intelligence reports showed that Iran sought to bypass U.S. and EU sanctions to secure technology for its nuclear weapons program with a view toward testing an atomic bomb.

European intelligence agencies have documented prior to 2015 and after the Iran nuclear deal( JCPOA) was agreed upon that Tehran continued efforts to illegally secure technology for its atomic, biological and chemical weapons of mass destruction programs.

The Austrian intelligence report noted that Iran provides weapons to the U.S.-designated terrorist movements Hamas and Hezbollah, as well as to Syrian militias.

A spokesperson for ODNI declined to comment. The U.S. State Department and U.S. National Security Council did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital press queries.

Proposed bill taxing foreign political NGOs is a legitimate tool

There’s plenty of blame to go around for October 7 and there is no question many in Israel have many questions to answer.

But since October 8th in the Diaspora, there are legacy Jewish organizations who had long pushed programs which aren’t good for the Jews and who continued to push radical extremist liberal ideas on Israel from the Diaspora. And those who have endangered or at the very least, failed to protect, the Jewish people in the Diaspora have no business importing their ideas to the Jewish state.

Against that backdrop comes news that “Dozens of Jewish donors sign letter denouncing the new NGO bill, a proposed law which would impose an 80% tax on donations received from foreign political entities.” These donors say that it’s a “‘dangerous, undemocratic’ Israeli bill targeting foreign-funded nonprofits.”

Who are they to come to Israel and make demands of the Jewish state after they failed miserably at countering the many nonprofits in the Diaspora tormenting Jews worldwide?

Sir Mick Davis – of the UK, now a dangerous country for Jews – said about the NGO bill, “It’s a piece of legislation itself, which I think is not the sort of legislation that you want to see in a democratic country because it grants powers of exclusion to politicians in power, which can be used in very negative ways.”

Davis, however, has long attacked the Netanyahu government, saying that “15 years of almost uninterrupted Netanyahu governments have represented an increasingly unbridled assault on all the essential elements” of Israel’s Declaration of Independence. It has been “a deeply painful and destructive period that has tarnished Zionism, with the current government being the most distressing and damaging to-date. The government of Benjamin Netanyahu, which includes outspoken and proudly racist, expansionist, messianic, homophobic and misogynistic elements – elements he has legitimised at the heart of Israeli politics – has not revised its ambitions.”

At least the Israeli government, whether he agrees with those elected democratically by a majority of Israeli voters or excoriates them, protects Jews.

Davis and his colleagues have left Jews unprotected in the Diaspora with their failed policies, and now expect Israel to listen to them. Why don’t they focus on the many terrorist non profits in the Diaspora which are harming Israel and the Jews? Why do they feel the need to interfere in the running of the Jewish state?

Among the other signatures to this letter are Sally Gottesman, a major donor to the radical extremist New Israel Fund.

These Diaspora Jewish leaders intervened in Israeli politics by asking Foreign Minister Gideon Saar to “do what you can to scrap this cynical, dangerous and undemocratic bill.”

Davis said that “he decided to address the letter to the foreign minister — and to the Israeli ambassadors to the signers’ home countries — as opposed to MK Kallner, the bill’s sponsor, or any other legislator, from a belief that the NGO bill would damage Israel’s standing abroad. “Because we think this impacts Israel standing internationally, the most appropriate minister to send it to was the minister of foreign affairs,” he said.

Mr. Davis and fellow Jewish leaders, read this carefully: What harms Israel worldwide is all those on the left who refuse to recognize Israel’s voters and respect their opinions. The people of Ariel, and Netivot, and Lod and Ashkelon, Jerusalem and Efrat, are those who elected Netanyahu, Smotrich and this government. Their voices matter more than Jews in the Diaspora who should be fighting to keep their children safe on college campuses, instead of opposing Trump’s efforts to cleanse those campuses of genocidal antisemites.

The Jews of the UK and the rest of the Diaspora haven’t succeeded even minimally in stopping the funding of jihadi nonprofits in the Diaspora – and those nonprofits’ antisemitic activities as well as Qatari takeovers of college campuses – why do they feel the need to do so in the Jewish state?

As Likud MK Ariel Kallner the sponsor of the bill said, “NGOs that do not engage in lobbying, public campaigns, or influencing policy will be excluded from the law. The bill is intended to prevent foreign states from meddling in Israeli politics by funding NGOs that defend terrorists, slander IDF soldiers, assist illegal infiltration, and harm the Jewish identity of the State of Israel.”

In other words, those foreigners who seek to harm the nationalist government and harm the Jewish identify of the State of Israel will no longer be able to do so with impunity. What fault can one find with that?

Ronn Torossianis Vice Chairman of Betar Worldwide.

How Israeli Intelligence Misunderstood Gender-Based Violence as a Strategic Tool on October 7

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: The Israeli intelligence system failed to understand the significance of the gender-based violence committed by Hamas on Israeli citizens during the October 7 attack. Raw information was not converted into meaningful insights that could have aided in strategic and operational decision-making. The failure stemmed in part from a lack of information, but also from an inability to analyze the information that was available, identify patterns, and prevent errors arising from cognitive bias and methodological obstacles. Hamas used gender-based violence as a deliberate strategy intended to cause severe harm to Israeli civilians, undermine Israelis’ sense of social security, and sow terror within Israeli society. Israeli intelligence failed to identify Hamas’s intentions prior to the attack and subsequently failed to deal effectively with the denials of Hamas and its supporters in the international system.

Effective intelligence requires the conversion of raw information into meaningful insights that aid in strategic and operational decision-making. The failure of Israeli intelligence regarding Hamas’s strategy of deliberately inflicting sexual violence on Israeli civilians was the product not only of insufficient information but also an inability to analyze the information available, identify patterns, and prevent errors arising from cognitive bias and methodological flaws. Today’s intelligence systems operate in a “post-truth” environment in which it is more difficult than ever to determine what information is reliable. Intelligence decision-making is not just a matter of accessing data but also of understanding its meaning and implications.

In the run-up to October 7, the Israeli intelligence system failed to identify gender-based violence as a strategic component of Hamas’s war plan. Information about Hamas’s worldview, which includes the oppression of women and the use of violence against women as a tool of psychological warfare, was available before the attack. There is ample evidence that other Islamist terrorist groups as well, such as ISIS, use rape as a tool to break resilience. Yet there was insufficient analysis by Israeli intelligence to conclude that this pattern might materialize in an attack on Israel. This failure indicates an inability to identify similar historical patterns and connect them to predictive models.

On October 7, 2023, Hamas deliberately and systematically used gender-based violence, including rape, sexual abuse, sexual torture, sexual mutilation, and murder in the course of sexual assault as a tool of psychological and strategic warfare against Israelis. These acts were not a random result of battlefield chaos but a conscious strategy specifically employed to harm the Israeli civilian population, undermine their sense of social security, and inflict terror on Israeli society. Despite documentation of similar patterns in previous conflicts, the Israeli intelligence system did not anticipate the possibility that Hamas would employ such tactics and did not prepare appropriate scenarios for prevention, deterrence, or real-time response.

For years, Israeli intelligence has relied on the assumption that direct and tangible threats, such as rocket attacks and suicide bombings, are the main dangers on which to focus. This approach has led to an underestimation of more indirect but equally destructive tactics, such as sexual violence aimed at spreading terror and weakening communities. Gender-based crimes used as a means of warfare are not only attacks on specific victims but strategic weapons aimed at undermining national security.

The Israeli intelligence system suffered from a fixed mindset that assumed sexual violence to be a side effect of battlefield chaos and not a pre-planned tool of warfare. In addition, the anchoring effect – the tendency to rely on previous assessments and ignore new information that contradicted them – led to a persistent perception that Hamas’s approach to warfare would not include gender terrorism. Despite clear evidence that similar terrorist organizations use such tactics, intelligence continued to assume that Hamas would focus primarily on kinetic attacks rather than psychological warfare based on sexual violence.

Another misunderstanding was about Hamas’s ideology, which is based on an extreme interpretation of Islam that promotes male domination and the oppression of women. While Israeli intelligence recognized these concepts in the context of Hamas as a ruling force in the Gaza Strip, it did not link them to the military-strategic dimension of Hamas’s fight against Israel. Hamas was perceived as a political entity, and the radicalization of its methods of operation was not identified. This is despite the fact that Hamas’s official statements over the years, as well as publications in its propaganda channels, have pointed to the humiliation of Jewish women as an approved act of “revenge” and symbolic conquest.

The Israeli intelligence system misinterpreted this evidence, as it was perceived as part of Hamas’s general religious discourse rather than as a tactical threat. Unlike intelligence models developed to identify conventional terrorist attacks, there was no analytical category that addressed gender-based violence as a strategic weapon of war. As a result, targeted attacks on Israeli women prior to October 7 were not identified as a unique risk but assimilated into broad categories of “Palestinian terrorism“ or viewed strictly through the lens of criminal justice.

This evidence could have been an early indication that Hamas might use rape and sexual violence as a tool to inflict terror. However, the Israeli intelligence system analyzed these elements primarily in the context of internal control of the Gaza Strip and not as an external strategic threat.

In addition, the understanding that the distribution of crime documentation can be used as a tool of intimidation in the digital space was not internalized by Israeli intelligence. In other words, Hamas’s willingness to use images and videos of its members’ rape and murder of Israeli women as a terrorist tool in the age of social media was not sufficiently analyzed or assessed.

Nor did the Israeli intelligence system integrate gender and criminology experts into its analysis of the Hamas threat. Such experts could have identified early patterns in the organization’s behavior, identified internal processes that legitimized gender-based crimes, and provided more in-depth warnings. Instead, intelligence analyses were conducted using traditional approaches to security threat assessment that did not take deep-seated trends in gender-based terrorism into account.

After the attack, Israel was met with widespread denial by Hamas, international organizations, and hostile media outlets of the incidents of gender-based violence committed by Hamas on Israeli citizens. Disinformation campaigns were instantly and effectively spread around the world and information from Israeli sources was met with increased skepticism, making it difficult to create an effective narrative. Israeli intelligence was not sufficiently prepared to fight in the perceptual arena, and that failure exacerbated the international community’s anti-Israeli response to Hamas’s crimes. The failure was not only in proving that the crimes had been committed but also in failing to quickly identify and call out Hamas’s deliberate efforts to sow distrust in the Israeli version of events. In the face of disinformation, the Israeli intelligence system failed to respond quickly enough, which allowed pro-Palestinian organizations to dominate the global discourse and undermine the credibility of Israeli reports.

This phenomenon, it should be noted, is not unique to the current conflict. In the Balkan and Rwandan wars, victims of sexual violence were also faced with denial and downplay campaigns by political actors.

Israeli intelligence operated on the assumption that the presentation of solid facts would be sufficient to establish reality in public discourse. It failed to understand that in the “post-truth” era, truth itself is subject to manipulation. Another failure was in understanding how Hamas’s disinformation fit into the preexisting narrative of anti-Israel groups. The intelligence services did not properly anticipate how international actors would exploit the attack to produce campaigns to deny the violence, even though this is a well-known tactic from past conflicts.

A paradigm shift in threat analysis is needed to recognize sexual violence and gender-based terrorism as an integral part of intelligence assessments. This expansion will allow for a deeper understanding of the long-term psychological mechanisms of a form of terrorism that aims to undermine social resilience. In addition, data collection and analysis mechanisms need to be strengthened by creating frameworks that map global patterns of gender-based violence so they can be applied to future threat assessments and identify risks in advance.

In an era of post-truth and disinformation, advanced strategies must be developed to deal with information manipulation and false narratives, moving from an approach that focuses solely on the presentation of facts to a proactive approach that confronts the effects of biased narratives and establishes a rapid intelligence and awareness response in the international arena.

The Israeli security concept must recognize that gender-based violence is not just a side effect of war but a strategic warfare tool in its own right. Changing the concept is essential for a better understanding of the fighting patterns of terrorist organizations and for more appropriate preparation for the future.

 Lee Shpilrain Nahari is researching the international responses to gender-based violence on the seventh of October as part of her master’s degree at Bar-Ilan University. She is a risk management consultant at EBA & Co.

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