A dark hour in American leadership

While critics of Israel in general and Prime Minister Netanyahu in particular, welcomed with glee excerpts from Bob Woodward’s book “War,” of President Biden cursing Mr. Netanyahu, the excerpts actually reveal the disturbing inability of Mr. Biden to concede that he and his team have been consistently wrong in their assessments and advice.

Since the tragic October 7, 2023 debacle, Israel has been constantly reassessing the situation and revising its planning and operations accordingly.

This while the Biden team remains stuck on the same messianic fantasy that creating a sovereign Palestinian state will magically put an end to the existential threat of those committed to a “no Jewish state” solution.

The New York Times report on the book relates that in April, for instance, the president questioned Mr. Netanyahu’s conduct in the war in a phone call, asking, according to the book, “What’s your strategy, man?”

When Mr. Netanyahu answered, insisting that the Israeli military needed to push deeper into southern Gaza and invade the southern city of Rafah, a key border crossing with Egypt, the president, using Mr. Netanyahu’s nickname, dismissed this response.

“Bibi, you’ve got no strategy,” Mr. Biden replied, according to Mr. Woodward.

In May, Mr. Biden halted a shipment of 3,500 bombs to Israel out of concern that they would be used in the Rafah operation and cause excessive civilian casualties. After Mr. Netanyahu proceeded with the invasion of Rafah anyway,Mr. Biden told advisers that Mr. Netanyahu was a liar, using an obscenity, and added that “18 out of 19 people who work for him” were also liars, the book says.

He questioned Mr. Netanyahu’s motivations, saying that “he doesn’t give” a damn about Hamas but gives a damn “only about himself,” although he used an earthier term than “damn.”

The outcome of the Rafah operation was completely at odds with the warnings of the Biden team.

It took a fraction of the projected time with a bare minimum of civilian losses.

But instead of adapting to this reality, Mr. Biden remains angry.

And his team remains doggedly driven to impose its two-state solution fantasy.

This while another self-serving fantasy regarding Iran drives American policy. It is that Iran, whose theology is committed to the destruction of the Jewish State, achieving world dominance and which sees an apocalypse that would also destroy Iran as a welcome path to Paradise, can also somehow be placated by the creation of a sovereign Palestinian state.

The Woodward book reveals a dark hour in American leadership as a desperate world seeks light.

Palestinian Authority education: No room for a two-state solution

The current war in the Middle East often leads policymakers to think of a two-state solution as a panacea for peace.

However, Palestinian Authority texts feature three fundamentals which belie any possibility of peace:

1. Delegitimization of Israel’s existence and the Jews’ very presence in the country, which includes denial of their history and of the existence of any Jewish holy places there.

2. Demonization of both Israel and Jews, also religiously—with implications regarding the Jews’ image in the eyes of children who hail from a traditional society.

3. The absence of a call for peace with Israel. Instead, there is a call for a violent struggle for the liberation of the whole country, including pre-1967 Israel. This struggle is given a religious color and terror is made an integral part thereof, encouraging the murder of Jews.

Delegitimization

1. Israel’s Jewish citizens are considered foreign colonialists:

“We will think and discuss: I will compare the tragedy of the Indians, America’s original inhabitants, to the tragedy of the Palestinian people.” (Social Studies, Grade 8, Part 2 (2020) p. 34)

2. The country’s Jewish history is denied, including the existence of archaeological items proving that “… [The conqueror has built for himself an artificial entity that derives its identity and the legitimacy of its existence from tales, legends and phantasies and has tried in various ways and means to create live material evidence for these legends, or archaeological architectural proofs that would determine their truth and authenticity, but in vain.”] (Arabic Language – Academic Path, Grade 10, Part 2 (2020) p. 68)

3. Existence of Jewish holy places in the country is denied, including the Western Wall in Jerusalem. Please note that the photograph has been cut in a way that would “hide” the Jews who pray there:

“Al-Buraq Wall”

“The Al-Buraq Wall has been named after Al-Buraq [the divine beast] that carried the Messenger [of God, i.e., Muhammad] during the Nocturnal Journey [from Mecca to Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem, according to Islamic belief] and the Ascension [to Heaven]. The Al-Buraq Wall is part of the western wall of Al-Aqsa mosque. Al-Aqsa mosque, including the wall, is Palestinian land and an exclusive right of the Muslims.” (Islamic Education, Grade 5, Part 1 (2020) p. 63)

4. Having been considered foreign settlers, Jews in the country are not counted as legitimate inhabitants and the cities they built there, including Tel Aviv, are absent from maps in the texts used in P.A. schools. The P.A. school map here, titled “Map of Palestine,” does not show any Jewish city, except the southern city of Eilat that appears under the Arabic name for the desolate place where it was later built—“Umm al-Rashrash.”

(Social Studies, Grade 6, Part 1 (2020) p. 6)

5. The Jews’ historical and religious ties to Jerusalem are ignored. According to the P.A. textbooks, Jerusalem was built by the Palestinians’ Arab ancestors (i.e., the “Arabized” Canaanites and Jebusites) and is holy to Muslims and Christians alone. Jews are not mentioned in this context: “Jerusalem is an Arab city built by our Arab ancestors thousands of years ago. Jerusalem is holy only to Muslims and Christians.” (National and Social Upbringing, Grade 3, Part 1 (2020) p. 29)

6. A short historical description of the city’s names features a huge gap of 1,000 years between the Jebusites and the Romans, that is, the Jewish historical period. The name “Jerusalem” with its various forms that is used in hundreds of languages around the world is completely absent:

“The city of Jerusalem was known as ‘Jebus’ after the Arab Jebusites who built it 5,000 years ago. When the Romans occupied it they named it ‘Aelia.’ Later on it came to be known as ‘Al-Quds’ or ‘Bayt al-Maqdis,’ after the Muslims had conquered it at the hands of Caliph Umar ibn al-Khattab in 637 CE…” (Geography and Modern and Contemporary History of Palestine, Grade 10, Part 1 (2020) p. 43)

Demonization

1. Jews, sometimes referred to as “Zionists” with no real differentiation between these two terms, are demonized and accused of harboring genocidal intentions towards the Palestinians: “The Zionists have established their entity upon terror, extermination and colonialism. We will explain that. (Arab Language—Academic Path, Grade 10, Part 2 (2020) p. 28)

2. Jews are demonized as infidels and as the Devil’s aides. A verse taken from a poem: “Where are the horsemen [who will ride] to Al-Aqsa [mosque] to liberate it from the grip of infidelity, from the Devil’s aides?”
(Arabic Language, Grade 7, Part 1 (2020) p. 67)

3. The Jews are also demonized outside the context of the war, as enemies of Prophet Muhammad and Islam in its early years. They are given negative traits such as treachery and hostility, which makes them eternal enemies of Muslims today:

“But the Jews [in the city of Medina] did not respect the treaty [they had concluded with Muhammad] and resorted to all types of treachery, betrayal and aggression which forced the Muslims to fight them.” (Islamic Education, Grade 7, Part 1 (2020) p. 52)

4. Moreover, Jews are presented as enemies of God’s prophets and, by implication, enemies of God himself, a portrayal that has an enormous impact on students who come from a traditional society: God’s enemies should be fought against until their utter destruction.

The following example features the first out of several lessons to be learned from a chapter about Jesus Christ, who is considered a prophet in Islam: “exposing the nature of the Children of Israel and their hostility to the prophets.” (Islamic Education, Grade 9, Part 2 (2020) p. 21)

Encouraging the Murder of Jews

The murder of Jews is featured as an integral part of the liberation struggle, and featured on the first page of a four-page lesson exalting the female commander of a terror attack against an Israeli civilian bus on Israel’s Coastal Highway in 1978 where over 30 Jews—men, women and children—were murdered:

“Dalal al-Mughrabi”: Glorifying a murderer in the classroom

“In front of the text: Our Palestinian history is replete with many names of martyrs who sacrificed their souls for the homeland, among whom is the martyr Dalal al-Mughrabi, who painted with her struggle a picture of challenge and bravery that has made her memory eternal within our hearts and minds. The text before us shows her struggle and journey.” (Arabic Language, Grade 5, Part 2 (2020) p. 51)

Dalal al-Mughrabi

In conclusion, the nascent Palestinian Authority textbooks delegitimize the existence of the State of Israel, and the very presence of its 7 million Jewish citizens in the country, whose history and holy places there are denied.

The P.A. books never advocate a peaceful solution. Instead, they call for a violent struggle for the liberation of all of Palestine, with strong religious characteristics, which is not limited by the pre-1967 lines and in which terror plays a central role.

In other words, P.A. education allows no room for a “two-state solution.”

Dr. Arnon Groiss performed the research for this report.

Originally published by the Nahum Bedein Center for Near East Policy Research.

How Israel has damaged Iran’s ring of fire | Gen. Brig. Yossi Kuperwasser

“All that we are experiencing is part of an Iranian plan that has established this ring of fire around us.” Yossi Kuperwasser, former chief of the IDF’s military intelligence research division, breaks down Iran’s “ring of fire” around Israel and explains what went wrong with Israel’s security on October 7th.

 

‘UNRWA is Out’: Knesset Committee Moves to Curb UNRWA Activities in Israel

The Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee unanimously approved two legislative proposals on Sunday aimed at curbing the activities of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) within Israel. The committee’s decision marks a significant step in the ongoing discourse surrounding UNRWA’s role and operations.

“UNRWA is out!” Committee Chairman MK Yuli Edelstein declared at the end of the vote. “The problem of UNRWA did not begin on October 7; it has long been a concern that has surfaced in all its malignancy. For many years, lawmakers from across the political spectrum have raised the issue and advanced legislative proposals.”

The first proposal approved by the Committee, introduced by MK Boaz Bismuth from Likud and merged with an initiative from MK Sharren Haskel from the Yamin Mamlakhti party, stipulates that UNRWA will not operate any representation, provide services, or conduct any activities—directly or indirectly—within the sovereign territory of Israel.

The second proposal consolidates three initiatives submitted by a group of other lawmakers and states that the invitation for UNRWA, based on correspondence exchanged between Israel and the agency dating back to June 14, 1967, concerning Israel’s facilitation of UNRWA’s operations, will expire on October 7, 2024, or upon final approval of the law in the Knesset. Furthermore, the proposal mandates that no state authority, including public officials and bodies, may engage with UNRWA or its representatives.

Following extensive discussions, some of which were open to the public and others classified, the proposals were passed unanimously by the committee. The open sessions included testimonies from social organizations, researchers, and families of victims, some of whom were reportedly harmed by individuals associated with UNRWA in Gaza.

During confidential sessions, the committee, alongside the Foreign, Defense, Justice, and Treasury ministries, examined the far-reaching implications of the proposals across diplomatic, legal, security, and economic domains. Numerous meetings took place between professional bodies and the legal advisory team to ensure the drafts addressed a wide array of concerns raised during the discussions.

Chairman Edelstein emphasized the urgency of the legislation, criticizing UNRWA’s actions during the recent war and highlighting that, “We know that some of the hostages were held by individuals working for the organization.”

The scrutiny of UNRWA intensified following revelations that members of its staff allegedly participated in the October 7 attacks, which resulted in the deaths of at least 1,200 people and the abduction of 252 Israelis and foreigners. The Israeli government has increasingly demanded that UNRWA be stripped of its authority in Gaza, further asserting that humanitarian aid should bypass the agency.

Recently, the UN announced the firing of nine UNRWA staff members for their involvement in the October 7 assaults, but this has been met with outrage in Israel, where officials claim the UN’s internal investigations failed to address the involvement of approximately 100 other personnel. “The UN investigation, which focused exclusively on 19 UNRWA workers, is a disgrace! Too little and too late,” tweeted former Israeli Ambassador to the UN Gilad Erdan, emphasizing that Israel had provided the UN with detailed information about over a hundred UNRWA employees with ties to Hamas.

UNRWA has faced scrutiny not only for its alleged role in the October 7 attacks but also for ongoing accusations of facilitating Hamas operations within its facilities. For instance, Israeli forces discovered a Hamas complex beneath UNRWA’s Gaza City headquarters earlier this year. Furthermore, more than 100 survivors of the October 7 attacks have filed a $1 billion lawsuit against UNRWA, alleging the agency “aided and abetted” Hamas.

With the proposals set to take effect 90 days after their final approval, the committee has mandated regular reporting from the National Security Headquarters to oversee the implementation of the law.

With the Knesset poised to finalize the legislation, the implications for UNRWA’s future operations and funding remain uncertain. Israeli officials are advocating for a restructuring of refugee aid, calling for Palestinian refugees to fall under the mandate of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, as they assert that the current setup is unsustainable and detrimental to Israeli security.

Oct. 7 forever altered the global Jewish existence

For nearly a century, Jews in places like America, Canada, Great Britain and Australia took for granted their connection to and comfort within their homes and nations. Even if antisemitism still dwelt at the fringes of society, Jews in these places felt as though they had finally been woven into the very fabric of society and shared history.

There was comfort and confidence in being Jewish as well as a part of daily American, British, Canadian and Australian life. Finally, after wandering for thousands of years, we found homes and places where we could let our collective guard down.

It took a single day last year for that comfort and confidence to shatter. In the wake of Hamas’s gruesome attack in Israel, our homes, businesses and places of worship suddenly became targets of hateful acts, slurs, screams of “go home,” graffiti, assaults, gunshots and murder.

At no point since World War II have so many Jews in so many places across the world felt so insecure and untethered from the Western democracies in which they live. At no point in nearly a century have so many felt as though the citizenship and connection they had with their homes had suddenly and shockingly been ripped away. We have lost our basic sense of normalcy.

This latest watershed moment epitomized the existential threats facing the State of Israel. On Oct. 7, Hamas was responsible for the greatest number of deaths in a single day in the country’s history, leading to the most rapid, pervasive and tectonic transformation of global Jewish existence since the Holocaust. The Jewish sense of security, safety, acceptance and integration into our broader communities has been permanently altered across the world.

On this first anniversary of that dark day, it is incumbent upon us as Americans — as well as upon citizens of all democratic countries — to take stock of that transformation, to understand what it means to our greater society and to the future into which it is heading us.

This assessment cannot simply be limited to documenting the percentage increases in the number of antisemitic incidents or diagnosing the trends and types of threats now facing Jewish communities. It is imperative for us to recognize the truly global nature of the altered state of Jewish existence simply in a matter of one year.

Within one year, British Jews went from freely and safely using public transit in London to now taking separately designated buses as a way of keeping them safe.

Within one year, Jewish kindergartens in Perth, Australia, went from being openly integrated into their neighborhoods to now being protested by anti-Israel activists and needing 24-hour security protection.

Within one year, Jews in France went from having the choice of political parties across the spectrum to becoming politically homeless, as Marine Le Pen emboldened far-right nativist extremism, and far-left party leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon, accused of antisemitism multiple times, downplayed antisemitism in French society.

To be clear, many of the trends negatively impacting Jewish life did not begin with Oct. 7. The Anti-Defamation League has been documenting the normalization of anti-Jewish hate globally for the past decade.

I joined ADL as the senior vice president of international affairs in 2017. Even then, my number one task was to ring the alarm bells through data quantifying the year-over-year increase in antisemitism and highlighting incidents that impacted the lives of Jewish communities across the globe.

For the first five years of my tenure, I witnessed a consistent pattern of normalization of anti-Jewish hatred both in national and local settings impacting Jewish life in big and small ways. In Europe, we documented the “perfect storm” of the rise of far-right populist parties such as in Italy and Germany. In the United Kingdom, we watched far-left extremists such as Jeremy Corbyn hijack the Labour Party.

We witnessed the proliferation of radical Islam in both perpetrating acts of terror — such as the beheading of French teacher Samuel Paty in 2020 — and in daily life in Brussels, Paris, Madrid, and other cities where Jewish citizens have been harassed, accosted and even murdered.

In just one gruesome example in 2018, Yacine Mihoub murdered 85-year-old French Holocaust survivor Mireille Knoll and set her apartment on fire. After convicting Mihoub in 2021, a French court associated the brutal attack with a “broader context of antisemitism.”

In the Middle East, as we witnessed the miraculous opening brought about by the Abraham Accords, we also documented the expansion of the Iranian regime’s fundamentalist Islamist ideology in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen and Gaza Strip and the West Bank, as well as European and Latin American cities.

As the top state sponsor of antisemitism, Holocaust denial and terrorism, the Iranian regime’s direct support of the Oct. 7 atrocities is what brought all that we had witnessed in the past decade to a devastating new climax.

What Oct. 7 and its aftermath demonstrated to Jews around the world is that the lessons of the Holocaust have not been taught or learned effectively enough to prevent the replay of those very horrors.

We learned that “Never Again” is not real. Nor can we trust the world when it proclaims those words. We learned that the semblance of safety and security can be completely destroyed within a year; that blacklists of Jewish authors, musicians and artists can sprout up again; that Jewish businesses can again be targeted, vandalized and destroyed; that Jewish schools and institutions must yet again rely on their own security to keep their children and community safe while Jewish university students fear walking across campus alone.

So, if Oct. 7 communicated to global Jewry that we cannot trust the commitment to Never Again, then it should also convey to all people of the world that our democracies are in danger. If our Jewish citizens are so fearful, so isolated and so unsafe, then our very democratic values and institutions are on the brink of shattering.

What 4,000 years of Jewish history have taught us is that if it starts with the Jews, it never ends with the Jews. And what we have witnessed across our cities is not a Jewish problem for Jews to solve.

It is an American, Canadian, French, British, Australian, Argentinian and South African problem. It is a problem of democracy, telling us that our society is headed in the wrong direction. And we need to find an offramp from this dreadful highway we’ve been down before.

Sharon Nazarian is the president of the Y&S Nazarian Family Foundation, with a regional office in Israel named the Ima Foundation and founder of the Younes & Soraya Nazarian Center for Israel Studies at the University of California Los Angeles. She previously served as the Anti-Defamation League’s senior vice president in international affairs.

The real lessons of Oct. 7 must not be ignored

A public bomb shelter where Israelis were murdered at the Oct. 7 massacre one year ago, on a road near the Israeli-Gaza border in southern Israel, Sept. 19, 2024. Photo by Chaim Goldberg/Flash90.

The first anniversary of the Oct. 7 Hamas massacres in southern Israel adds yet another sacred date to a calendar already filled with those devoted to mourning tragedies in Jewish history. But the fresh pain from this most recent instance of Jewish suffering is due to more than the fact that it happened only 12 months ago. The war against Islamist terrorists that began that date is ongoing with hostilities against Hamas in the Gaza Strip and Hezbollah in Lebanon. And more than 100 of the hostages taken on Oct. 7 are still unaccounted for or continue to be held captive by Palestinian terrorists.

The main purpose of the memorial ceremonies and commemorations will be to mourn those lost amid that orgy of mass murder, rape, torture, kidnapping and wanton destruction by Hamas operatives and ordinary Palestinians who joined in the mayhem. Still, there’s little doubt that a lot of what will be said and written about the anniversary will be about the lessons that should be learned from what happened that day and the war that followed it.

In Israel, much of the commentary will focus, as it has in the previous 365 days, on pinning responsibility for the massive failure on the part of Israel’s military, intelligence and political establishments that allowed the catastrophe to unfold. At the top of the list of those who will be held responsible will be Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on whose watch the disaster happened.

Others deserve to be in the dock with him, including the entire leadership of the Israel Defense Force as well as that of the intelligence agencies. Their complacency and blind belief in the “conzeptzia” that Hamas couldn’t and wouldn’t successfully attack Israel in force explained why the vaunted IDF was asleep on that Simchat Torah morning.

A widely shared complacency

Sadly, the complacency about Hamas was shared by most of Israel’s leading politicians, including those opposed to Netanyahu like former IDF Chief of Staff Benny Gantz, and former prime ministers Yair Lapid and Naftali Bennett, all of whom hope to replace Netanyahu at the next election. The truth is that no one except those considered on the “far right” rejected the notion that Hamas could be contained in Gaza and, if necessary, paid off in funds from terror- and Iran-supporting Qatar in order to keep the border quiet.

This is an issue that deserves not just discussion but a full-blown governmental investigation, although, like everything else that happens in Israel, the politicization of any such effort is more than likely. The debate about Oct. 7 should not be just another version of the one Israelis have been having for the last decade about Netanyahu’s seemingly endless tenure in office. Whether that is the way it plays out or not, other more important questions should be addressed.

The post-mortems about the Oct. 7 disaster shouldn’t be limited to how and why Hamas was able to breach the border so easily, setting in motion a day of horror that was the worst instance of mass slaughter of Jews since the Holocaust.

Both in Israel and in the Diaspora, the discussion about what happened must also include broader misconceptions that not only helped bring about this epic disaster but that might conceivably allow it to be repeated in the future. That’s especially true in the United States, where public discussion of the war on Hamas continues to center on myths that should have been rejected long ago.

The ‘solution’ was tried and failed

Belief in the idea of a two-state solution to the conflict evaporated in Israel in the wake of the collapse of the 1993 Oslo Accords with the outbreak of the Second Intifada in 2000, which brought nearly five years of suicide bombings into every realm of Israeli civilian life. The two-state concept was once embraced by a majority of Israelis amid the euphoria that ensued when those accords were signed on the White House Lawn in September 1993. But the once-dominant Israeli parties on the left were destroyed when the Palestinians—then led by the arch-terrorist Yasser Arafat, head of the PLO—proved they regarded them as merely a stepping stone to the destruction of the Jewish state.

That point was made even clearer after 2005 when then-Prime Minister Ariel Sharon withdrew every Israeli settlement, settler and soldier from Gaza in a vain effort to “disengage” from the Palestinians. Some on the left, especially in the United States and Europe, cling to the lie that Gaza was nevertheless still “occupied” by Israel or an “open-air prison.” The Strip might have been transformed—with the help of the billions in Western foreign aid—into a Palestinian Singapore; instead, it was taken over by Hamas in 2007, which turned it into a terrorist fortress.

More to the point, it was, for those 16 years until Oct. 7, an independent Palestinian state in all but name. As such, it was an experiment that demonstrated what a two-state solution that encompassed the far larger and more strategic Judea and Samaria (the “West Bank”) would mean.

Among those most resistant to this basic fact were those who wound up failing on Oct. 7. In the years following the Hamas takeover, I took part in dozens of public debates with a liberal colleague, former Forward editor J.J. Goldberg, about the two-state solution and related issues. When I would point out that most Israelis regarded the idea of repeating Sharon’s Gaza experiment in Judea and Samaria as not so much ill-advised but madness, he would invariably respond that his sources in Israel’s intelligence community disagreed. They were sure, he said, that the various efforts at “mowing the grass”—a term that referred to Israel’s periodic efforts to degrade Hamas’s military capabilities with offensive operations in 2009, 2012, 2014, 2019 and 2021, demonstrated that even a terrorist-controlled Palestinian state was no real threat to Israel.

The events of Oct. 7 proved just how wrong they were.

Yet none of this seems to have penetrated the consciousness of the American foreign-policy establishment and, in particular, those like Vice President Kamala Harris, who tout advocacy for a two-state solution as part of what she thinks ought to be the world’s response to Oct. 7.

While there are individual Palestinians who may believe in the idea of peace with Israel, they are isolated and overwhelmingly outnumbered by supporters of Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and the so-called “moderates” of the Fatah party (whose nearly 89-year-old leader Mahmoud Abbas serves as the head of the Palestinian Authority). They have all made it clear over and over again in their organizational charters, statements and rejection of every effort at a compromise peace plan over the decades that they deny the legitimacy of a Jewish state, no matter where its borders might be drawn.

The only relevant debate

To Israelis and those elsewhere who have been paying attention to Palestinian rejectionism, this is nothing new. Post-Oct. 7, belief in the myth that the conflict can be solved by partitioning the country beggars the imagination. The point of the mass terror attack wasn’t to end the “occupation” of a coastal enclave that had been evacuated by Israelis 18 years earlier or to push for a withdrawal from Judea and Samaria. It represented a Palestinian desire to turn back the clock to 1947 or even 1917 and destroy the State of Israel, even within the borders that existed before 1967.

The widespread support among Palestinians for this effort (and for the atrocities that ensued) lays bare the futility and the insanity of any attempt to force Israel to make territorial retreats to accommodate yet another attempt at a Palestinian state. Palestinian political culture is solely predicated on the premise that Zionism and a Jewish state are incompatible with the minimum demands of their national identity.

This is something that ought to be clear to all Americans by now. Oct. 7 should have ended the debate about two states and the peace process for the foreseeable future. That is frustrating and hard to grasp for Americans who believe compromise is always possible or for Jews who are hard-wired to believe in millenarian solutions even when the facts on the ground argue otherwise. At the moment, the only debate about Israel that is relevant is the one that the pro-Hamas mobs that took over America’s streets and college campuses since Oct. 7 have been wanting to have: whether one Jewish state on the planet is one too many.

Calling out the antisemites

That is a position many on the American left have increasingly adopted. Indeed, it is the reason why anti-Israel protesters chant “from the river to the sea” and “globalize the intifada.” The whole point of woke ideology, such as critical race theory and intersectionality, as it applies to the Middle East, is to delegitimize Israel as a “settler/colonial” state. Seen from that perspective, nothing it does in its defense—even against the most barbarous opponents, like Hamas and Hezbollah—can be falsely characterized as “genocide” since there is virtually nothing Israel could do to defend itself that could be justified in their eyes. And it’s why the same people dismiss the atrocities of Oct. 7 (which, like Holocaust deniers, they simultaneously justify and minimize).

And so, it is incumbent on Israelis and friends of Israel elsewhere to stop bickering over peace plans or pretending that Israel should be “saved from itself,” as former President Barack Obama believed it should.

In the absence of a complete transformation of Palestinian society that is nowhere in sight, any advocacy for a Palestinian state in the post-Oct. 7 world from those who claim to support Israel is a unique form of delusionary thinking.

The only logical way to defend Israel going forward must begin by recognizing this truth and stop treating those who wish to deny Israel the same rights granted to every other nation in the world as if their opinions were reasonable and well-intentioned. We must not hesitate to label those who seek to “flood” cities like New York with protests glorifying the Oct. 7 massacres as justified “resistance” and call them out for being antisemites and proponents of foreign terror groups.

After Oct. 7, we must no longer treat those who oppose Israel’s existence as if there was some distinction between their position and that of classic Jew-hatred. The brutal truth is that whether or not they root their stand in what they call “anti-racism” or even if they claim to be Jewish, those who wish to eradicate the only Jewish state on the planet are, at best, the “useful idiots” of the Oct. 7 murderers, rapists and kidnappers. At worst, they are their active supporters.

As much as Israelis can and must sort out the crucial questions about who bears the lion’s share of the blame for the success of Hamas’s brutal surprise attack, there are more important lessons to be learned from this episode than just another repeat of the same questions that were asked after the 1973 Yom Kippur War, which began with a similar failure. Doing so will be extremely hard for liberal Americans who believe in the two-state myth as if it were a religious doctrine handed down from Mount Sinai. But if we fail to learn them, then they will set the stage for more such tragedies, just as much as if the IDF chose to repeat its pre-Oct. 7 complacency.

Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of JNS (Jewish News Syndicate). Follow him @jonathans_tobin.

Britain’s response to October 7 has been shameful

What do you say?

What do you say to a bereaved father who waits, broken- hearted, for the head of his murdered son to be returned by his killers? What do you say to a mother who prays for her daughter’s return, and who is tortured by thinking the unthinkable: is she dead, or alive in the tunnels? Has she been raped, or was she spared?

What do you say to the grieving mother of a young soldier kidnapped and later murdered? What do you say when she affirms, through her tears, that she couldn’t be prouder to see her two other children fight for their homeland? What do you say to a young woman who survived the Nova festival, by playing dead as her friends lay murdered around her? What do you say to a family displaced by rocket-fire: homeless, uprooted, and uncertain about their future?

Sometimes there are no words. Only humility, pain, and tears. One year on from the largest pogrom against Jews since the Holocaust, what does our country’s response say about us?

I wish I could say that our Government stood proudly with Israel: on the side of justice, self-defence, and freedom. I wish I could say that anti-Semitism has been stamped out, like other forms of racism. Sadly, I can’t.

For me, the most grotesque revelation of the last twelve months has been the lengths some will go to deny or defend terrorism. For some, even the evidence of murdered babies, sexually abused men and women, and other acts of heinous violence isn’t enough to loudly condemn the atrocities of Hamas or Hezbollah.

You don’t need to be Jewish to do so. But October 7 has exposed an ugly anti-Semitism that overshadows some of our institutions and communities. I’m not talking about isolated pockets of bigotry. This has the stench of a more ingrained and cultural prejudice.

Since the atrocities of October 7, we have seen commentators, activists, and even Left-wing politicians struggle to condemn Hamas. Consider the marches around the country on October 8, weeks before any Israeli military action in Gaza, not in solidarity with the victims and the hostages, but to celebrate the ‘resistance’.

We have seen chants of “Jihad”, the firing of flares, and the defiling of our monuments too often go uninterrupted by our police. Thousands have protested our railways stations, our cities, or Parliament, with their mantra of “From the river to the sea”- Israel erasure – echoing throughout.

Placards have been waved bearing ‘Victory to the Intifada’. Hateful slogans have been projected onto Big Ben. Armistice Day has been spoiled by protestors and counter-protestors fighting at the Cenotaph, to the background drum of apology after apology from the leaders of the Metropolitan Police.

What about the posters of Kfir Bibas, the baby taken hostage, ripped down by keffiyeh-clad activists? Or the hundreds of Palestinian flags that adorn whole roads in parts of our capital? What of the exponential rise in anti-Semitic incidents this year? Or the many Jews who have left the UK because they feel safer in Israel? It says something when a war zone seems more welcoming than North London.

How about the Islamist thugs who intimidate MPs, injecting their own sectarian politics into our democratic system? Or the death threats that forced a Conservative MP to leave public life? Or the hi-jacking of the Rochdale by-election and the silencing of Parliament? Labour MPs have been scared to speak, and terrified to vote.

And then our media. The BBC’s early refusal to describe Hamas as terrorists was but the tip of the iceberg. They have been accused of breaching their own impartiality guidelines 1500 times following October 7. It doesn’t stop at the BBC. Remember a Sky News presenter comparing Gaza with the Holocaust? After the apologies, how much changed?

Or what about our universities? Surely they would encourage tolerance, inclusion, and respect? Too often that spirit does not seem to extend to Jewish students. A five-fold increase in anti-Semitic incidents at our universities has been reported. The portrait of Arthur Balfour at Trinity College has been vandalised. Jewish students have been harassed.

Theatres, shops, and local councils have boycotted Israel since the atrocities. From the swastikas daubed in the toilets at an exclusive girls’ school to 600 top lawyers accusing Israel of genocide, a hatred for the Jewish state has almost become fashionable. Those pushing this creed have become so liberal that they are now illiberal, so pious that they are now dishonest.

But in the face of adversity, I’ve also witnessed awesome heroism. The Jewish people have been under siege for millennia and have always prevailed because of their ingenuity, resilience, and strength. Even as thousands of rockets rain down on them, when acts of unspeakable inhumanity have broken their hearts, and the world vilifies them, they don’t give up.

I am certain that, with or without her allies, as Israel battles for Western values and civilisation itself, she will succeed once again. As the country wins this battle for humanity, many of us will be honoured to say : “Israel, we are your friends”.

The Abraham Accords are not about Palestinians

Many pundits blame the Abraham Accords for throwing Palestinians under the bus, arguing that peace between Arabs and Israel enraged Palestinians and set the stage for Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel.

But these peace accords – signed four years ago this month between Israel, on the one hand, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Bahrain and Morocco, on the other – have nothing to do with Palestinians.

The Abraham Accords prioritized national interests and ended 60 years of divisive pan-Arab nationalism, which birthed Palestine.

Abraham Accords governments understood that peace with Israel was not incumbent on whatever happens between the Jewish state and Palestinians.

Hence, 11 months after the outbreak of the Gaza War, the Abraham Accords are proving their robustness, even after Abraham Accords governments repeatedly voted against Israel at the UN.

In May, Reuters reported that the Gaza war had cooled “Israel’s once red-hot business ties with UAE.” Quoting “10 Israeli officials, executives and entrepreneurs,” the news agency argued that Israel’s “business ties with the influential Gulf state remain intact but, in a sign of how the conflict has dented enthusiasm, the [two sides] declined to discuss any recent deals.”

Blaming the Abraham Accords for not bringing peace to Palestinians continues. Palestinians and their supporters still expect the 21 member states of the Arab League to withhold peace with Israel until Palestinians get a state.

But if Palestinians expect the Arabs to lend them a hand, Palestinians should also expect the Arabs to have a say on how and when the conflict with Israel should end.

Unconditional Arab support for an open-ended conflict undermines the national interests of the different Arab states. Furthermore, Palestinians demand support but seldom reciprocate. The Abraham Accords upended this unequal relationship: If Palestinians wanted to fight forever, the Arabs had different plans.

Nobel Peace Prize 2024: PRIO Director’s Updated List Announced

Henrik Urdal 2021 2.jpg

The Director of the Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO), Henrik Urdal, announced his updated list today for the 2024 Nobel Peace Prize, with election observers topping the list.

The 2024 list comprises of:

  1. OSCE’s Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights
  2. Sudan’s Emergency Response Rooms
  3. UNRWA and Philippe Lazzarini
  4. International Court of Justice
  5. UNESCO and the Council of Europe

“Democracy is on the ballot this year as more than half the world’s population live in a country heading to the polls, albeit not exclusively in democracies,” said Henrik Urdal. “Research shows that democratic states are more peaceful and stable. As elections are a cornerstone of democracy, election observers play a pivotal role in shaping perceptions about the legitimacy of electoral processes. A Nobel Peace Prize awarded to election observers sends a strong message about the importance of free and fair elections, and their role in peace and stability.”

Each year, PRIO’s Director presents his own list for the Nobel Peace Prize. He offers his opinion on the most worthy potential laureates, based on his independent assessment. The PRIO Director’s view on potential and worthy Nobel Peace Prize laureates is widely recognized and has been offered since 2002. Henrik Urdal presents his eighth list here since taking up the position of director. Urdal has no association with the Nobel Institute or the Norwegian Nobel Committee.

The OSCE’s Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights

2024 is set to be a historical election year. Record numbers of people across the world are heading to the ballot box. Against this backdrop, democracy is under pressure in Europe and globally, due to the rise of illiberal movements and authoritarian regimes. More of the world’s people are living in autocracies today than only a decade ago, and the number of countries democratizing is falling, according to democracy research from V-Dem. Upholding the pillars of democracy is more important than ever before.

The Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) within the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) observes elections throughout its 57 participating states. It also provides technical assistance to improve the legislative and administrative framework for elections in specific countries. ODIHR’s work to ensure that elections are free and fair would make it a timely recipient of this year’s Nobel Peace Prize.

Other notable candidates worthy of the prize based on their contribution to strengthening democracy through elections include The Carter Centre who has observed 115 elections in over 40 countries, and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) who fights voter suppression in the United States.

Sudan’s Emergency Response Rooms

The armed conflict that erupted in Sudan in April 2023 has plunged the country into one of the world’s most severe humanitarian crises. Over 10 million people are displaced within the country, and another 2 million have fled to neighbouring states. The international system has struggled to meet overwhelming humanitarian needs, prompting community-led, volunteer aid networks in Sudan to step in and provide lifesaving services to millions of women, men and children. One notable initiative is the Emergency Response Rooms, which offer medical care and other services to those affected by the conflict.

Operating in a decentralized manner, these groups deliver essential humanitarian assistance in a highly complex conflict environment, with limited access to communities, resources and infrastructure. Volunteers often operate in insecure areas, facing threats of harassment and violence.

As 2024 marks the 75th anniversary of the revised Geneva Conventions, which were developed to protect civilians during war, awarding this year’s Peace Prize to a deserving humanitarian initiative such as the Emergency Response Rooms would highlight the critical importance of access to lifesaving aid in times of conflict.

UNRWA and Philippe Lazzarini

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) was established in 1949 to provide aid, education and protection for Palestine refugees until a political solution was found. Today, its staff of over 30,000 people serve nearly 6 million Palestinians in the West Bank, Gaza and neighbouring countries. Nearly the entire Gazan population depends on UNRWA for basic assistance, including food and water.

The UN agency has faced a massive funding crisis for years, which has been exasperated by the war itself, and increasingly by the impact of US withdrawing funding following allegations by Israel that 12 participants of the 7 October attacks were Hamas militants, employed by UNRWA. The UN agency took the allegations seriously, by launching both an internal investigation and an external review of its procedures. UNRWA has extensive control mechanisms in place, with a zero tolerance, but not zero risk policy. They therefore terminated the employment of individuals where there was any indication that they might have had ties to militant groups. Throughout the war UNRWA itself has been heavily targeted by Israeli attacks, and by the end of September, 224 of its staff had been killed in Gaza, and 190 UNRWA installations had been damaged.

UNRWA’s operation is absolutely fundamental to avoid a humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza. A Nobel Peace Prize to the agency and its Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini would send a strong message about its role in supporting the lives of millions of Palestinian women, men and children.

International Court of Justice

Mechanisms for peaceful resolution of conflicts between states are particularly important to maintain and support peace in an increasingly polarized world. The International Court of Justice (ICJ) promotes peace through international law, akin to promoting peace congresses, another achievement highlighted in Alfred Nobel’s will. The ICJ would be a worthy recipient of the 2024 Peace Prize should the Nobel Committee wish to recognize the importance of multilateral collaboration for peaceful relations. The ICJ was established in 1945 by the Charter of the United Nations to settle legal disputes between states and advise on legal questions within the UN. With all 193 UN Member States party to the ICJ Statute, the Court has become a globally accepted multilateral mechanism for dispute resolution. While a Nobel Peace Prize to the ICJ would largely be seen as uncontroversial, the Court acted boldly in January this year ordering Israel to take action to prevent acts of genocide in the Gaza Strip. In addition, it acted early in March 2022 by ordering Russia to ‘immediately suspend the military operations’ in Ukraine.

Other deserving candidates for a prize focused on peace through international law are the International Criminal Court, or regional bodies such as the European Court for Human Rights or the Inter-American Court of Human Rights.

UNESCO and the Council of Europe

Educational institutions are integral to the development of tolerant, inclusive and democratic societies. One particularly important area is the way that history is being taught. Emphasizing multiple and diverse perspectives in history teaching is crucial for developing an understanding and acceptance of other groups and societies than our own, and contributing to counter false and chauvinist narratives.

The UN’s Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) has been a pioneer in developing and promoting ‘multiperspectivity’ in history teaching. UNESCO emphasizes the importance of understanding history in a global context as well as developing regional, complimentary perspectives. By providing guidance and support to history textbook authors, and working to establish universal norms for history teaching, UNESCO promotes education as a tool for peaceful development.

Similarly, the Council of Europe works to support history teaching as a way to support critical thinking and strengthen democratic participation and practice. Emphasizing the importance of building historical knowledge through well-established scientific norms, the Council of Europe supports a number of scientific initiatives as well as political processes. A Nobel Peace Prize for the promotion of peace through history education would resonate well with Alfred Nobel’s call for ‘fraternity between nations’.

More information

  • To arrange an interview with PRIO’s Director, Henrik Urdal, please contact Senior Communication Advisor, Arnaud Siad. Mobile: +47 413 52 500; email: arnaud@prio.org.
  • A list of previous lists for the Nobel Peace Prize are available at the PRIO website.
  • More information about PRIO’s Director, Henrik Urdal, is available at his profile on the PRIO website.

Stop US intimidation of sovereign citizens of Israel

US sanctions against Israeli citizens and civil society organizations involve  unprecedented use of draconian measures usually applied against terrorist masterminds and drug lords- and they pose an unprecedented danger to freedom of speech in general, to the independence of Israel’s judicial system, and to the sovereignty of Israel, a democratic ally of the US.
 
The time has come to ask members of the US Congress to question this policy,