Monday, August 18, 2025

Netanyahu on hostage deal reports: Hamas is under immense pressure - Jerusalem Post Staff

 

by Jerusalem Post Staff

"Like you, I hear the reports in the media, from which you can gather one thing – Hamas is under immense pressure," the prime minister said while visiting the Gaza Division.

 

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in an interview with The Jerusalem Post.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in an interview with The Jerusalem Post.
(photo credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST)

 

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressed the reports that Hamas had accepted a ceasefire-hostage deal, stating that "Hamas is under immense pressure" after visiting the Gaza Division on Monday. 

"Like you, I hear the reports in the media, from which you can gather one thing – Hamas is under immense pressure."

Netanyahu detailed three key points in the ongoing war. He addressed IDF achievements, stating, "First, I expressed on your behalf, on behalf of the Israeli government, and my own behalf, immense appreciation for the tremendous achievements of the IDF in the War of Rebirth, the war on seven fronts."

"Second, I was impressed by the fighting spirit and determination to complete the defeat of Hamas and the release of all our hostages. Third, I spoke with the defense minister and the chief of staff about our plans regarding Gaza City and the completion of our missions."

Netanyahu's statement came after he visited the Gaza Division alongside Defense Minister Israel Katz, IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Eyal Zamir and the senior IDF command staff.

IDF chief Eyal Zamir, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and Defense Minister Israel Katz seen during a military briefing, in Tel Aviv, Israel, June 30, 2025 (credit: MAAYAN TOAF/GPO)
IDF chief Eyal Zamir, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and Defense Minister Israel Katz seen during a military briefing, in Tel Aviv, Israel, June 30, 2025 (credit: MAAYAN TOAF/GPO)

The deal: opposition from the government and support from the opposition

National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir was one of the first to speak about the reports that Hamas had accepted a ceasefire-hostage deal, saying that "if Netanyahu gives in to Hamas and halts the war, it will be a crying shame and a missed opportunity.”

He also added, “Last time, the prime minister missed President [Donald] Trump's ultimatum, which demanded the release of all hostages or open the gates of hell, despite my warning that it would be a historic mistake.”

"We now have the opportunity to defeat Hamas, and I tell the prime minister: You do not have the mandate to go for a partial deal and not defeat Hamas."

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, leader of the Religious Zionism Party, said the deal proposed by Hamas was like "abandoning half of the hostages and could lead to ending the war in defeat."

He posted on X, "Hamas is under great pressure from the occupation of Gaza because it understands that this eliminates it and ends the story. Therefore, it is trying to stop it by returning to a partial deal."

Precisely for this reason, we must not give in and grant the enemy a lifeline. Continue to the end, win, and bring back all the hostages in one fell swoop."

MK Zvi Sukkot, a member of Smotrich’s Religious Zionism Party, shared Ben-Gvir’s view on the need to reject a ceasefire deal.

“A partial deal will lead to the abandonment of half of the hostages, an enormous risk to IDF soldiers in the continuation of the fighting, a boost of oxygen to Hamas, and the loss of the little international legitimacy we still have,” he posted on X/Twitter.

Blue and White chairman MK Benny Gantz offered his backing to Netanyahu and his coalition should a deal be accepted.

 

“The government has a clear majority and a wide safety net to bring back the hostages,” Gantz posted on X and said, “Netanyahu, this is not a time to hesitate - this is a time for making the right decisions for the people of Israel and Israel's security.” 

 

Jerusalem Post Staff

Source: https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/defense-news/article-864595

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The Palestinian Authority's Human 'Slaughterhouse' - Khaled Abu Toameh

 

by Khaled Abu Toameh

None of these countries... [France, Canada, Australia, the UK] has demanded that the Palestinian Authority halt its human rights violations against its own people.

 

  • None of these countries... [France, Canada, Australia, the UK] has demanded that the Palestinian Authority halt its human rights violations against its own people. Ending financial and administrative corruption and excluding Hamas from governance is pointless as long as the PA continues to crack down on its political rivals and impose severe restrictions on freedom of speech.

  • Last month, Palestinian Authority security officer Ammar Saeed Abu Thahri reportedly died while in PA custody. It remains unclear why Abu Thahri was arrested by PA security forces in the first place.

  • "Most of the arrests were related to freedom of expression or participation in demonstrations in solidarity with the Gaza Strip." — Palestinian human rights group Lawyers for Justice, safa.pa, July 30, 2025.

  • The Palestinian Authority security officers who beat political activist Nizar Banat to death in 2021 have still not been punished. Banat, an outspoken critic of the PA leadership, was beaten to death by PA security officers in Hebron.

  • "We have documented hundreds of cases of arrest, torture, and ill-treatment of activists and political opponents since Nizar's killing.... Those involved in most of these crimes have not been held accountable." — Lawyers for Justice, June 24, 2025.

  • If France, Australia, the UK and Canada really cared about the Palestinians, they should be demanding that the PA respect public freedoms and stop its crackdown on political and human rights activists.

  • The last thing the Middle East needs is another Arab dictatorship run by corrupt leaders whose main goal is to batter their own people while siphoning off still more European and international aid money into their own bank accounts.

The Palestinian Authority (PA) security officers who beat political activist Nizar Banat to death in 2021 have still not been punished. Banat, an outspoken critic of the PA leadership, was beaten to death by PA security officers in Hebron. Pictured: Plain-clothed PA security officers beat a man in Ramallah on June 26, 2021, during a demonstration to protest the death of Banat while in PA custody. (Photo by Ahmad Gharabli/AFP via Getty Images)

France, Canada, Australia, the UK and other Western countries that recently pledged to recognize a Palestinian state have said that their decision is "predicated" on commitments from the Palestinian Authority (PA) to undergo critical governance reforms, as well as excluding the Iran-backed Hamas terrorist group from a future Palestinian government.

None of these countries, however, has demanded that the PA halt its human rights violations against its own people. Ending financial and administrative corruption and excluding Hamas from governance is pointless as long as the PA continues to crack down on its political rivals and impose severe restrictions on freedom of speech.

The Western countries continue to ignore statements by Palestinian human rights organizations regarding the PA's violations. These countries, obsessed with Israel, turn a blind eye to Palestinians' complaints against the PA, which controls large parts of the West Bank.

According to the Arab Organization for Human Rights in Britain, the PA's torture of its own people includes beatings with cables, pulling out nails, suspension from the ceiling, flogging, kicking, electric shocks, sexual harassment and the threat of rape.

The international media also ignore the situation. Their representatives prefer stories that implicate only Israel. It is hard to remember the last time a respected newspaper or media outlet in the West reported about human rights violations committed by the Palestinian Authority against its citizens. The failure of the international community even to notice such violations plays into the hands of the PA, and allows it to continue its crackdown on public freedoms and political activists in areas under its jurisdiction.

Recently, a committee representing families of Palestinians detained by the PA complained that their sons were being subjected to "severe torture" in prisons and interrogation centers.

The committee noted in a statement that the PA security forces are using "harsh and systematic methods against detainees that threaten their lives."

This universal indifference has led to a deterioration in the health of a number of detainees, requiring their transfer to hospitals for treatment, the committee said. "Among them is political prisoner Mohammed al-Hashlamoun, who was transferred to hospital less than 48 hours after his arrest in Jericho prison."

As long ago as 2022, Human Rights Watch reported that the security forces of both Hamas (in Gaza) and the Palestinian Authority routinely taunt and threaten detainees, and use solitary confinement and beatings. These include whipping their feet, and forcing detainees into agonizing stress positions for prolonged periods, such as hoisting their arms behind their backs with cables or rope, as well as inflicting excruciating pain on critics and political opponents to elicit confessions.

The PA's notorious Jericho Prison, dubbed "The Slaughterhouse," is known as a center for extreme abuse. Suha Jbara, a mother of three, who was held in the prison on charges of "collaboration" with Israel, recounted her experience:

"They [PA security forces] took me to an unknown place.... When we entered an office, the person asked me: 'Do you know where you are?' I told him: 'I'm in the General Investigation [Department].' He replied: 'No, you are in the Jericho Slaughterhouse.' Then they took me to the Jericho Hospital for a pregnancy test, although I was undergoing menstruation."

Jbara said she was then taken back to prison, where she was blindfolded and handcuffed.

"The interrogator started threatening me. He told me that from my face he could tell that I'm a collaborator [with Israel]. He threatened to take away my custody over my children. He said he knows how to beat me without leaving signs on my body. The interrogation and beating lasted all night."

Ahmed Harish, another Palestinian who was held in Jericho's "Slaughterhouse," testified:

"For the past week, I have been beaten all over my body, my hands tied in all kinds of positions that leave my back bent or my hands hung above me, and they leave heavy objects made of iron and bricks on my legs."

Last week, the Palestinian Committee of Detainees' Families said that "the continued policy of political detention and torture constitutes a crime and a flagrant violation of Palestinian law and international human rights conventions."

In June, Palestinian human rights groups reported that Ahmed al-Safouri, a Palestinian from the West Bank's Jenin Refugee Camp, died as a result of "horrific torture," in a PA detention center. According to the groups, the death of al-Safouri "was not an isolated incident, but rather represents a stark illustration of the suffering of hundreds of political detainees [in PA prisons] who are subjected to grave violations during their arrest and interrogation."

Amnesty International quoted former Palestinian detainees in 2022 as saying that they had been whipped on their feet and repeatedly beaten with clubs.

Last month, Palestinian Authority security officer Ammar Saeed Abu Thahri reportedly died while in PA custody. It remains unclear why Abu Thahri was arrested by PA security forces in the first place. His family accused the PA security forces of torturing their son:

"We mourn our son who was betrayed by the [PA] oppressors and passed away. We hold the [PA] Military Intelligence responsible for his arrest and torture and call for the formation of a serious and impartial investigation committee to uncover the circumstances of the incident and hold all those involved accountable. This crime must not go unpunished."

The Palestinian human rights group Lawyers for Justice said that the PA security forces have stepped up their crackdown on political opponents. "We are currently monitoring the cases of 17 detainees held by the Palestinian Authority," the group revealed. "Most of the arrests were related to freedom of expression or participation in demonstrations in solidarity with the Gaza Strip."

Lawyers for Justice pointed out that Palestinian Authority security officers who beat political activist Nizar Banat to death in 2021 have still not been punished. Banat, an outspoken critic of the PA leadership, was beaten to death by PA security officers in Hebron. Although a number of officers have been formally charged, they have been released from prison, while their trial has been repeatedly delayed.

The group stated:

"The trial proceedings have remained at a standstill since the start of the court sessions in September 2021 amid unjustified procrastination and suspicions of a lack of seriousness, particularly after the defendants were released within a year of the crime. We have documented hundreds of cases of arrest, torture, and ill-treatment of activists and political opponents since Nizar's killing. Since October 2023, 22 Palestinians have been killed [by PA security forces]. Those involved in most of these crimes have not been held accountable."

If France, Australia, the UK and Canada really cared about the Palestinians, they should be demanding that the PA respect public freedoms and stop its crackdown on political and human rights activists.

The last thing the Middle East needs is another Arab dictatorship run by corrupt leaders whose main goal is to batter their own people while siphoning off still more European and international aid money into their own bank accounts.


Khaled Abu Toameh is an award-winning journalist based in Jerusalem.

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/21846/palestinian-authority-slaughterhouse

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Zelensky signals openness to trilateral talks with U.S., Russia - Ben Whedon

 

by Ben Whedon

He previously met with Russian President Vladimir Putin last week in Anchorage, Alaska.

 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on  Monday signaled a willingness to participate in trilateral talks with the U.S. and Russia to end the ongoing Ukraine War.

"We will do our best for this so and I think we show that we are strong people, and we supported the idea of the United States, of personnel President Trump to stop this war, to make diplomatic way of finishing this war," Zelensky said during a visit to the White House. "And we are ready for trilateral. As president said, This is good signal about trilateral. I think this is very good."

President Donald Trump hosted Zelensky and a number of key European leaders at the White House on Monday in a bid to build support for a permanent peace agreement with Russia.

He previously met with Russian President Vladimir Putin last week in Anchorage, Alaska.


Ben Whedon is the Chief Political Correspondent at Just the News. Follow him on X.

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/security/zelensky-signals-openness-trilateral-talks-us-russia

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Huckabee to 'Post': 'European leaders gave Hamas cover - that's when negotiations were over' - Amichai Stein, Alex Winston

 

by Amichai Stein, Alex Winston

US ambassador to Israel says European recognition of Palestinian state 'emboldened' Hamas while Arab nations call for its disarmament.

 

US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee in conversation with The Jerusalem Post.
US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee in conversation with The Jerusalem Post.
(photo credit: Chen Schimmel/The Jerusalem Post)

 

As rumors gathered pace on Monday night of a possible Israel-Hamas deal to see the release of 10 Israeli hostages, US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee strongly endorsed US President Donald Trump’s declaration that hostages will only be freed when Hamas is “confronted and destroyed,” while sharply criticizing European leaders for providing what he called “cover” to the terror organization.

Speaking in an exclusive sit-down with The Jerusalem Post, Huckabee described Trump’s position as “spot on and as concise and firm as it could possibly be,” emphasizing that the president’s view becomes his own as a representative of the administration.

“We will only see the return of the remaining hostages when Hamas is confronted and destroyed!!!” the president posted on his Truth Social media platform on Monday. “The sooner this takes place, the better the chances of success will be. Remember, I was the one who negotiated and got hundreds of hostages freed and released into Israel (and America!).”

The ambassador painted a grim picture of the hostages’ condition, referencing recently released videos showing emaciated captives.

“The last video that we saw was just gut-wrenching to see. Not only the emaciated condition of the hostage, but being forced to dig his own grave,” Huckabee said, adding that after 22 months in captivity, “it’s a long, long time.”

US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee in coversation with The Jerusalem Post. (credit: Chen Schimmel/The Jerusalem Post)
US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee in coversation with The Jerusalem Post. (credit: Chen Schimmel/The Jerusalem Post)

Huckabee blasts European leaders for recognizing Palestinian state

Huckabee, however, reserved his harshest criticism for European leaders, whom he accused of undermining negotiations by threatening unilateral recognition of a Palestinian state, which, in essence, rewards Hamas for October 7.

“When you have all these European nations saying, ‘Israel’s not going to have a ceasefire, we’re going to go ahead and unilaterally recognize a Palestinian state,’ what do you think that did with Hamas? It emboldened them. It empowered them. And that’s when negotiations were over right then,” Huckabee told the Post.

The ambassador also noted the distinct contrast in recent months between European and Arab positions, praising the Arab League for unanimously calling on Hamas to “completely disarm and let all the hostages go at once” during the same week European leaders were pressuring Israel and announcing declarations to recognize a Palestinian state.

While acknowledging pressure from various parties, including Qatar’s recent re-engagement in Cairo negotiations, Huckabee expressed skepticism about Hamas’s willingness to compromise.

“Hamas is not a nation-state. They’re a terror organization,” he said. “Any expectation that they’re going to behave like civilized people other than savages is quite optimistic.”

When asked about the role Egypt and Qatar have played in negotiations, the ambassador was forthcoming.

“I think there’s been a lot more pressure than maybe people realize. I’m not sure why Qatar hasn’t been more involved, although they would probably claim to have been very involved. They just went to Cairo to re-engage in negotiations,” he said.

“Egypt has been very engaged. Egypt has been, I think, very instrumental in moving things as much as anyone can.”

And it was to Qatari and Egyptian mediators that Hamas turned to Monday, reportedly agreeing to the latest Gaza hostage-ceasefire proposal, a source familiar with the details told the Post on Monday.

The proposal would see the release of 10 living Israeli hostages in return for a 60-day ceasefire, and the release of 150 Palestinian terrorists serving life sentences.

Huckabee admitted he would be “thrilled to death” if Hamas agreed to release hostages and disarm, but emphasized the organization’s continued torture of captives since October 7.

Huckabee acknowledged that while it was Hamas who was refusing to agree to a deal, he was effusive simply on the fact that protests can take place in the Jewish state.

“We respect that people in a free country can express themselves,” he said, referring to Sunday’s protests. “The rest of the world ought to see that, whether they agree with the protesters or not, and recognize that, in Israel, you have a right to protest, and nobody comes to your home and shoots you for having protested the government.

“There’s something to be said for that. How many places in this region of the world could you be that adamantly opposed to your own government and live to see a sunrise tomorrow? That’s what I think people are missing.”

The full interview with Ambassador Huckabee will be published in Friday’s Jerusalem Post.


Amichai Stein, Alex Winston

Source: https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-864600

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Putin, Trump, and the Elusive “Peace” - Victor Davis Hanson

 

by Victor Davis Hanson

Trump’s Alaska summit with Putin yielded no ceasefire, but it revealed the contours of a possible peace—where diplomacy, exhaustion, and hard limits define the battlefield’s end.

 

 

At the August 15 Alaska summit, Vladimir Putin performed as expected. He desperately wants an end to Western sanctions, détente with the U.S., and assurances that the U.S. will not impose a disastrous anti-Russian secondary boycott—and, apparently, some additional Ukrainian territory.

Consequently, Putin, in his media synopsis, talked more about restored friendship with a “neighborly” United States under Trump. He scarcely mentioned Ukraine directly—other than to imply to Westerners that he seeks not merely to annex a foreign country, but to reclaim what he views as a former Soviet province with ancient ties to the Russian people.

Trump did not get his ceasefire with Putin. But he quickly pivoted to remind us that the table is set for a supposedly comprehensive peace without first requiring a temporary cessation of arms.

Trump addressed the media more succinctly and with greater discretion than Putin, appearing more optimistic that the Russian-American hostility was thawing. And he views normalization as a necessary step toward comprehensive peace in the weeks to come.

The left lambasted Trump for speaking politely of Putin and vice versa. There was additional criticism of a Fox interview in which Trump mentioned “land swaps” and for his supposed prior naïveté in believing he could obtain a ceasefire with Putin.

Yet for all the posturing, we have known for some time the general outlines of a peace, how it could come about, and why it has not yet happened.

Ukraine will not join NATO, but will likely be fully armed by the West. Ukraine lacks the power to retake Crimea or the Donbass, but with Western aid, it can preserve most of its territory.

Russia is worn out, but it is not yet ready to give up and may not be even after the envisioned destructive secondary sanctions. Putin will only make peace when his dictatorship feels it has advanced far enough westward (perhaps 100 miles west of the border) to justify to the oligarchy and military his foolhardy invasion and the needless toll of one million Russians dead, wounded, missing, or captured.

No one knows where a hypothetical DMZ line might eventually be drawn. But for now, it depends on which army has the greater wherewithal and momentum to push its enemy backward before there is a general consensus to stop the madness.

These contours of peace can be shaped by promises of trade deals and normalization between Russia and the West. Or, contrarily, they can be realized by threats of tougher sanctions and boycotts, as well as by security guarantees to Ukraine, by near-permanent aid to Ukraine to maintain its quite formidable army and deterrence, or by internal erosion from the war either in Ukraine or Russia.

Yet few critics of the administration address the unmentionables that likely account for the above general outlines of a settlement. There are some realities that serve as subtexts to any possible agreement that cannot be simply thought away.

1. Ukraine could only regain Crimea and the Donbass and return to its pre-2022 borders by a historic transference of U.S. and European arms, intelligence, logistical support, and financial aid that would be little short of actively fighting nuclear Russia.

Europe talks grandly of unlimited support. But some Europeans still buy Russian energy, slow-walk aid, seem exhausted by the war, and are likely in time to peel away as they once did from the endless “no-fly zones” over Saddam’s Iraq after the first Gulf War. Europe sounds as if it fields vast armies, but in truth, Putin believes European support will erode more quickly than Ukrainian resistance or American help.

So, for all the talk of an “exhausted” Russia, there is a silent consensus that a depopulated and broken Ukraine cannot sustain its current levels of resistance without a much greater Western profile. And that is unlikely to happen.

2. Notably, the left never really dwells on the likely 1.5 million dead, wounded, missing, and captured from three and a half years of war. It is a humanitarian nightmare, a modern Stalingrad that makes Gaza look like child’s play.

Yet Westerners are far more likely to posture on the human costs of the “genocide” in the distant Mideast wars than on Europe’s doorstep. Perhaps Germany or France feels it can influence Netanyahu by performance-art declarations of statehood for the Palestinians (on the quiet assumption that Israel is Western, friendly, and more likely to listen to Euro-moralizing than is a proximate, hostile, and dangerous Putin’s Russia).

Strangely, Trump alone seems to be lamenting the needless loss of thousands of lives each month, with no end in sight. It is fine to demand zero concessions to Putin or to accuse any who seek negotiations through land swaps as appeasers. But it is quite another to lay out a strategic plan for victory and complete recovery of pre-2014 Ukrainian territory, the likely costs necessary for such an ambitious strategy, and who, and for how long, will pay the tab.

3. There is a long history, both peaceful and hostile, between Russia and Ukraine that Westerners often ignore due to the current naked aggression of Putin and the murderous nature of his regime. Nonetheless, most recently, since 1939, the borders of present-day Ukraine have been fluid and changeable between Poland, Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia. There still remains strong Russian influence and even support in Eastern Ukraine. And there has been a Western naivete since the end of the Cold War about pre-Putin Russia’s trip-wire sensitivity to the eastward trajectory of Western military alliances toward Russia and the more insidious Westernization of former and still mostly Russian-speaking areas of the old Soviet Union.

The current tensions with Canada and the U.S. would certainly boil over if China were to begin overtly championing the Canadian cause. Americans remember the 1962 U.S. response to Castro’s Cuba when Nikita Khrushchev broke Cold War conventions by strategically arming a third-nation proxy on America’s doorstep.

4. Talking to a monstrous Putin is not treasonous, foolhardy, or unnecessary. FDR openly courted, joked with, and even praised (“Uncle Joe”) an even greater monster in Joseph Stalin, who by 1941 had the blood of nearly 20 million Russians on his hands. Stalin had already invaded pro-Western Finland and Poland. And between September 1, 1939, and June 22, 1941, he had enabled Adolf Hitler to overrun much of Western Europe, hoping Germany would destroy both the West and itself in the process.

Nixon did not just “go to China” but sought to change the geostrategic nuclear landscape by courting Mao Zedong, the greatest mass murderer of the 20th century.

Not calling Putin a “killer” and “murderer” at the summit is hardly appeasement but more like art-of-the-deal, speaking softly while carrying a big stick, rather than Biden-style loud rhetoric while carrying a twig. Who is the greater humanitarian—the inert and anemic blowhard who resorts to name-calling a “murderous thug,” or the president willing to meet face-to-face with a monster to explore costly ways of halting the mass slaughter?

5. Finally, few seem to remember that Trump is a latecomer to the Ukrainian-Russian mess.

In the end, we should remember it was not Trump who once talked grandly of a soon-to-be NATO Ukraine or who for years welched on the promise to spend a meager 2 percent of GDP on defense.

It was not Trump who pushed a plastic red button to embark on a “Russian reset” with a voracious Putin. It was not Trump who invited Russia back into the Middle East after a nearly 40-year hiatus.

It was not Trump who, after the reset’s failure, moved on to concoct “Russian collusion” and “Russian disinformation” to use Russia to destroy a political rival. It was not Trump who went to Ukraine, threatened to hold up aid, and fired a prosecutor looking into his son’s selling to Ukrainians the influence of his father’s vice presidency.

It was not Trump on whose watch Putin invaded Georgia, the Donbass, and Crimea, and sought to absorb Kyiv.

It was not Trump who dreamed up the Nord Stream 2 pipeline to subsidize green energy fantasies—while still buying Russian energy.

And it was not Trump who conditioned his possible reaction to Putin’s invasion based on whether it might be “minor.”


Victor Davis Hanson is a distinguished fellow of the Center for American Greatness and the Martin and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution. He is an American military historian, columnist, a former classics professor, and scholar of ancient warfare. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004, and is the 2023 Giles O'Malley Distinguished Visiting Professor at the School of Public Policy, Pepperdine University. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush, and the Bradley Prize in 2008. Hanson is also a farmer (growing almonds on a family farm in Selma, California) and a critic of social trends related to farming and agrarianism. He is the author of the just released New York Times best seller, The End of Everything: How Wars Descend into Annihilation, published by Basic Books on May 7, 2024, as well as the recent  The Second World Wars: How the First Global Conflict Was Fought and Won, The Case for Trump, and The Dying Citizen.

Source: https://amgreatness.com/2025/08/18/putin-trump-and-the-elusive-peace/

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‘Viciously antisemitic’: Australia bans Israeli MK Rothman - Joshua Marks, Amelie Botbol

 

by Joshua Marks, Amelie Botbol

The Australian Jewish Association slammed the move ahead of a speaking tour, which bars the lawmaker from entering the country for three years.

 

Committee chairman MK Simcha Rothman leads a Constitution, Law and Justice Committee meeting at the Knesset, in the Israeli parliament on June 9, 2025. Photo by Chaim Goldberg/Flash90.
Committee chairman MK Simcha Rothman leads a Constitution, Law and Justice Committee meeting at the Knesset, in the Israeli parliament on June 9, 2025. Photo by Chaim Goldberg/Flash90.

Australia has denied entry to Israeli parliamentarian Simcha Rothman (Religious Zionism) ahead of a planned solidarity visit with the country’s Jewish community, which faces escalating antisemitic attacks, the Australian Jewish Association announced on Monday.

Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke justified the move by claiming Rothman was coming “to spread a message of hate and division,” Australia’s ABC News reported. However, the AJA confirmed on Monday that one of the written reasons provided by the government for the ban was that Rothman’s statements calling for “the elimination of Hamas … have been received by members of the Australian community as inflammatory and concerning.”

Australia has listed Hamas in its entirety as a terrorist organization for financial sanctions since 2001.

 

In addition to the visa cancellation, Rothman received a three-year ban from traveling to Australia. It is reportedly the first major action taken by Canberra since last week’s announcement that Australia intends to recognize a Palestinian state at next month’s United Nations meeting.

“This decision by the Australian government is essentially caving to terror. There is no other way to see it. The messages they accused me of spreading are simply that Hamas is bad and Israel is good—positions that enjoy broad consensus in Israel and in any freedom-loving country,” Rothman told JNS on Monday.

Rothman argued that views such as condemning Hamas, urging the world to side with Israel, holding Hamas responsible for Palestinian suffering and warning that a Palestinian state threatens Israel’s survival are not just his personal positions but reflect a resolution supported by two-thirds of the Knesset. He maintained that Australia’s decision was, therefore, directed not at him individually but at the State of Israel.

“Australia is afraid of Islamic terrorists threatening its government. That is the real reason for banning my entry. And I am not alone—eventually, Australia will learn that appeasing terror never works. It always leads to more terror. Israel learned this at a heavy price on Oct. 7,” said Rothman, referring to the Hamas-led invasion of southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

Rothman said he was ready to appeal the decision if asked, but would follow the lead of Australia’s Jewish community on the matter.

Israeli Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism Minister Amichai Chikli harshly criticized the decision in an X post, calling it “an extension of the Albanese government’s disgraceful choice to honor the rapists and murderers of Hamas.” The ban “reflects a broken moral compass, discrimination and a grave assault on free speech,” he added.

Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, the leader of the Religious Zionism Party, in a message addressed to Rothman on X wrote: “In the face of all the antisemites in the world, the people of Israel stand behind you and support you.” He urged Rothman to continue “proudly voicing Israel’s stance,” adding: “We won’t stop until complete victory.”

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar announced retaliatory measures, including revoking the visas of Australian representatives to the Palestinian Authority, and instructing Israel’s embassy in Canberra to closely scrutinize any future visa requests.

“While antisemitism is raging in Australia, including manifestations of violence against Jews and Jewish institutions, the Australian government is choosing to fuel it by false accusations, as if the visit of Israeli figures will disrupt public order and harm Australia’s Muslim population. It is shameful and unacceptable!” Sa’ar wrote on X.

AJA CEO Robert Gregory called the last-minute visa cancellation “a viciously antisemitic move from a government that is obsessed with targeting the Jewish community and Israel.”

In a statement posted to X, Gregory said that Rothman, chair of the Knesset’s Constitution, Law and Justice Committee, had been scheduled to meet with victims of antisemitism, visit Jewish institutions and address Jewish schools and synagogues.

“I have just returned from Israel and can attest that there is growing alarm there about the situation for Jews in Australia under the Albanese government,” Gregory wrote, emphasizing that Rothman’s trip was in no way connected to current events in the Middle East.

The cancellation was “spiteful and intended to cause maximum harm to the Australian Jewish community,” Gregory asserted, saying that the paperwork was filled out correctly and on time and the visa was approved, only to then be canceled on the day that Rothman was to have headed to the airport.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been highly critical of the anti-Israel policies put forth by the left-wing Labor government led by Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, linking them to recent antisemitic incidents.

Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese speaks during a press conference in the capital of Canberra on Aug. 11, 2025. Photo by Hilary Wardhaugh/AFP via Getty Images.

The Australian government in June canceled the visa of Hillel Fuld, a dual U.S.-Israeli citizen and prominent pro-Israel social media personality. In November last year, Canberra declined to grant an entry visa to former Israeli justice minister Ayelet Shaked, who had planned to travel there to attend a pro-Israel event.

Australia joined four other countries in June imposing sanctions on Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir for allegedly “inciting violence” against Palestinians in Judea and Samaria.

“The message from the Albanese government to Jews is clear and we urge all Jews to seriously consider whether it is safe for them to visit Australia under this government,” Gregory wrote.

“AJA is hearing from increasing numbers of Australian Jews who feel unwelcome under this government and are planning to leave. It seems the government is happy to replace them by importing thousands of Gazans,” he continued.

While Rothman was banned for three years, the Australian government, in the months leading up to January 2025, granted nearly 1,000 three-year humanitarian visas—mostly to Palestinian nationals (though some were also offered to Israelis)—fleeing the Israel-Hamas conflict. Many recipients were already in Australia on visitor visas, thereby gaining the right to work, study and access social benefits.

“Israel is fully justified in taking strong measures in response to this and we have briefed contacts in the Trump Administration, who are also concerned about events in Australia,” Gregory concluded.


Joshua Marks, Amelie Botbol

Source: https://www.jns.org/viciously-antisemitic-australia-bans-israeli-mk-rothman/

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UK museum doubles down on disputed claim Nazis targeted observant Jews - JNS Staff

 

by JNS Staff

The Imperial War Museum's information board on the Nuremberg Laws falsely implied the Germans had targeted observant Jews in particular, critics argue.

 

Visitor exit the Imperial War Museum in London, the U.K. Photo courtesy of the Imperial War Museum.
Visitor exit the Imperial War Museum in London, the U.K. Photo courtesy of the Imperial War Museum.

The Imperial War Museum, a British national institution tasked with recording all the United Kingdom’s military conflicts since 1914, has doubled down on an information board that according to critics falsely suggested that the Nazis targeted observant Jews and their descendants in particular, The Guardian reported last week.

The information board refers to the Nuremberg race laws passed by the Nazi regime in Germany in 1935, which included a definition of who was Jewish. Under these laws, anyone with three or four Jewish grandparents was a Jew, and anyone with one or two Jewish grandparents was Mischlinge, or mixed race.

The information board stated that, under the law, “a person was defined as Jewish based on how many observant Jewish grandparents they had.”

Whereas the law did not mention observance as such, it did say that a grandparent was considered Jewish if they belonged to the Jewish religious community, according to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum website. “Thus, the Nazis defined Jews by their religion (Judaism), and not by the supposed racial traits that Nazism attributed to Jews,” according to the Washington D.C.-based museum.

But by noting “observance,” the Imperial War Museum implied an inaccurate description of the reality of the Nuremberg Laws, a former academic told The Guardian for an article the paper published on Aug. 14. The “wording referring to observant Jewish grandparents with its lack of historical accuracy must be changed,” she wrote to the museum, according to the paper. She asked not to be named, according to the report.

“I know that ‘observant’ Jewish grandparents just made no sense. It disregards the vast majority of the Jewish population who are not observant,” she told The Guardian. “This is such a misleading impression of the Nazi outlook that for me it’s reprehensible that it stays in the public domain.”

Yet Caro Howell, the Imperial War Museum’s director general, told the former academic that “full and sincere consideration” had been given to the points she had raised, “but we stand by the curatorial choices that we have made and that our expert advisers have reviewed,” he said.

In an email seen by The Guardian, Howell said the integrity of his museum would be undermined if it made changes every time “questions of interpretative nuance” were raised.

The Guardian quoted Christopher Browning, who has written numerous books on the Holocaust and was an expert witness in the David Irving libel trial in 2000, as saying on the matter: “The issue was not whether the grandparent was observant but whether his or her birth had been registered with the Jewish community. The grandparent could later even have converted to Christianity but if the grandparent had been registered as Jewish at birth, that for the Nazis was the deciding factor.”

The newspaper also presented an opinion on the issue by Timothy Snyder, who has also written extensively about the Nazis. “It did not matter whether the grandparents were observant … No one was saved from persecution, as the wording incorrectly implies, by having grandparents who were not observant,” he was quoted as saying.

He added: “As worded, the suggestion is that ‘bad Jews’, i.e. those with a secular (or even Reform) background, might have been spared from the persecutions that preceded the Holocaust, whereas ‘good Jews’, those with religious (or Orthodox) backgrounds, were the victims. This is nonsense.” 


JNS Staff

Source: https://www.jns.org/uk-museum-doubles-down-on-disputed-claim-nazis-targeted-observant-jews/

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Apply sovereignty in Judea & Samaria, lawmakers tell Netanyahu - Amelie Botbol

 

by Amelie Botbol

"Every delay comes at a price—in security, legitimacy and our national future. This is the time to decide," the Likud lawmakers wrote to the Israeli premier.

 

MK Dan Illouz heads the Knesset's Public Diplomacy Caucus. Credit: MK Illouz Team.
MK Dan Illouz heads the Knesset's Public Diplomacy Caucus. Credit: MK Illouz Team.

 

Eight lawmakers from Israel’s ruling Likud Party on Monday published an open letter to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, calling on him to apply the country’s civilian law to parts of Judea and Samaria.

The move “is both a national imperative and a necessary response to growing international momentum for the recognition of a Palestinian state,” wrote signatories Dan Illouz, Ariel Kallner, Galit Distel-Atbaryan, Keti Shitrit, Avichay Boaron, Afif Abed, Moshe Passal and Hanoch Milwidsky.

Ilouz, who initiated the letter, told JNS: “The moment to apply sovereignty is now. We have a stable right-wing government, a sympathetic American administration, and we are faced with a dangerous move by countries that are pushing for the establishment of a Palestinian terrorist state in the heart of the Land of Israel. Every delay comes at a price—in security, legitimacy and our national future. This is the time to decide.”

The United Kingdom, France, Canada and Australia have announced their intention to recognize a Palestinian state in September.

The signatories noted the passing on July 23 of a non-binding resolution in favor of applying Israeli sovereignty to Judea, Samaria and the Jordan Valley. The resolution received the vote of a majority of 71 out of 120 Knesset members.

Netanyahu’s government has reportedly considered applying sovereignty over Judea and Samaria, or at least the Jordan Valley, on several occasions, as had Israel’s previous government. Anticipation for such a move peaked in 2020, shortly before U.S. President Donald Trump and Netanyahu unveiled the Abraham Accords.

“Now is the time—out of responsibility for Israel’s security, for historical justice, and for the future of coming generations—to pass a government decision applying Israeli sovereignty in Judea and Samaria,” the letter to Netanyahu states.

Shitrit told JNS on Monday that the proper response to Hamas’s “false starvation campaign” and the recent moves to recognize a Palestinian state is “the application of sovereignty.” The “empty control” of these areas, without extending Israeli law to them, “is not enough.”

“The time has come to write a new and decisive chapter in the Jewish people’s renewal in their land and to extinguish the enemy’s hopes by establishing facts on the ground,” she added.

Kallner told JNS on Monday that “it’s the best time” to apply Israeli sovereignty, pointing to Western countries such as France, which he said “had lost the ability to distinguish between good and evil, between justice and injustice, and want to recognize a Palestinian state.”

“Applying sovereignty over our homeland, the biblical land of Judea and Samaria, is our right,” he said. “It will bring security and peace. The Palestinian ideology does not bring peace or coexistence; it brings instability. When they lose hope of destroying the Jewish state, it will bring stability—and applying sovereignty is a very big step in that direction.”

Kallner stressed that “we have an opportunity today, and we should not lose it,” adding that it would be “very disappointing” if Israel failed to act. He suggested that Trump supports sovereignty, and that Israel’s current government is committed to the policy and “to our right to the land of Israel.” He expressed hope that results would be seen in the coming months, “maybe even weeks.”


Amelie Botbol

Source: https://www.jns.org/apply-sovereignty-in-judea-samaria-lawmakers-tell-netanyahu/

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State Department revokes over 6,000 student visas over assault, DUI, terrorism support: report - Natalie Mittelstadt

 

by Natalie Mittelstadt

About 800 students reportedly had their visas revoked due to being arrested for or charged with assault

 

The State Department in roughly the past seven months has revoked more than 6,000 student visas over assault, DUIs, burglary, terrorism support, and overstays, according to a newsreport Monday.

"Every single student visa revoked under the Trump Administration has happened because the individual has either broken the law or expressed support for terrorism while in the United States," a senior State Department official told Fox News. "About 4,000 visas alone have been revoked because these visitors broke the law while visiting our country, including records of assault and DUIs." 

About 800 students had their visas revoked due to being arrested for or charged with assault, according to the official. Meanwhile, the 200-300 students whose visas were pulled for their support of terrorism had raised funds for the terrorist group Hamas, or committed similar actions.

In total, about 40,000 visas have been revoked this year by the State Department, compared to 16,000 during the same timeframe under the Biden administration.

"Even if the previous administration was doing less, they were still revoking visas," the State Department official said. "It's not something that just started on January 20 … . So this has happened for years."

 

Natalie Mittelstadt

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/federal-agencies/trump-state-dept-revokes-more-6000-student-visas-over-assault-dui

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No sunset for UN force in Lebanon in draft of its renewal - Mike Wagenheim

 

by Mike Wagenheim

Washington pulled funding for the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon over its “abject failure” to contain Hezbollah.

 

U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon vehicles patrol in the Marjayoun district, near the border with Israel, Nov. 29, 2024. Photo by AFP via Getty Images.
U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon vehicles patrol in the Marjayoun district, near the border with Israel, Nov. 29, 2024. Photo by AFP via Getty Images.

Washington has said it wants to see the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon, which the White House said is “fraught with waste and abuse” and has failed to contain Hezbollah, wind down as Lebanon’s military disarms the terror group. 

But a France-drafted U.N. Security Council resolution, which JNS viewed, proposes to extend UNIFIL’s mandate by a year, with no definitive end in sight.

The UNIFIL mandate is set to expire on Aug. 31. As a permanent member of the council, Washington holds veto power over its mandate extension.

The Associated Press reported that U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio approved earlier this month “a plan that would wind down and end UNIFIL in the next six months, according to Trump administration officials and congressional aides familiar with the discussions.”

The French draft contains no mention of a planned end to UNIFIL’s operations, even as the Associated Press reported that the United States is willing to support a one-year extension, so long as it’s “followed by a time-certain wind-down period of six months.”

The draft also contains no mention of a potential force reduction, despite the United Nations facing a financial crisis, which multiple officials have stated will impact its peacekeeping operations.

The draft mandate renewal, which would carry through Aug. 31, 2026, notes that the Security Council “indicates its intention to work on a withdrawal for UNIFIL with the aim of making the Lebanese government the sole provider of security in southern Lebanon.”

That would happen if the Lebanese government controls all its territory completely and “the parties agree on a comprehensive political arrangement,” according to the draft resolution.

However, UNIFIL’s mandate since the end of the 2006 Lebanon War has largely revolved around the implementation of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1701, which already calls for a permanent ceasefire and a long-term solution, and demands the disarmament of Hezbollah and all non-state actors, along with the restoration of Lebanese sovereignty throughout the country.

In June, the White House requested that Congress take back funds appropriated to UNIFIL and other U.N. peacekeeping missions that hadn’t been spent, to which both houses agreed. The White House described UNIFIL as an “abject failure” in its rescission request.

Lebanon attacked Israel on a nearly daily basis between Oct. 8, 2023, and Nov. 27, 2024, along the Jewish state’s northern border, which is an area in which UNIFIL operates.

Israel is also required to withdraw troops from five positions it holds in Lebanese territory and cede them to the Lebanese military, per the draft proposal. (The Israeli mission to the global body declined to comment.)

Established nearly 50 years ago, UNIFIL has an annual budget of approximately $538 million and approximately 10,000 troops deployed in southern Lebanon.  


Mike Wagenheim

Source: https://www.jns.org/no-sunset-for-un-force-in-lebanon-in-draft-of-its-renewal/

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