Tuesday, June 9, 2026

What’s behind the campaign to demonize Israel inside Trumpworld? - Jonathan S. Tobin

 

by Jonathan S. Tobin

Dubious leaks about the Jewish state spying on America signify an effort to break up a valued alliance by those whose motives are rooted in antisemitic conspiracies.

 

Trump cabinet
U.S. President Donald Trump holds a cabinet meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House, May 27, 2026. Credit: Daniel Torok/White House.

 

In recent months, the world has witnessed some of the closest cooperation between the governments and armed forces of the United States and one of its allies. The war launched on Feb. 28 by the United States and Israel against Iran required intense coordination in the areas of intelligence and precision attacks. What followed was an exhibition of high-tech warfare that bespoke both the common purpose of the two nations and the trust that has been built over the years between their militaries. And it resulted in the destruction of much of the Islamist regime’s military forces, the decimation of its nuclear and missile programs, and the targeting of Tehran’s leadership.

It was made possible by the willingness of the two governments to act, at least for a time, in unison strategically, but also for their forces to be engaged tactically on a level that rivals the great alliances of military history, such as the one between the United States and Britain during the Second World War.

That collaboration upsets the political foes of the Trump administration and Israel within the Democratic Party, as well as the broader red-green global alliance of Marxists and Islamists that essentially despise both nations. It’s also galling to the small but vocal faction on the American right that is isolationist in its sensibilities and virulently anti-Israel in a way that often betrays the antisemitic attitudes of its advocates.

Unsubstantiated claims of spying
And that is the context for understanding the story that made headlines at NBC News and The New York Times over the weekend about alleged Israeli spying on the United States.

A deep dive into the details of the story reveals that the hyperbolic headlines that stated that the “Pentagon raised threat of Israeli spying on U.S. to highest level, sources say,” and “Pentagon Sees Growing Espionage Threat From Israel” were not based on any actual revelations about Israeli espionage that had been uncovered. Instead, the articles merely floated suspicions. The leaked reports claimed that “Israel’s ability to conduct human espionage and technical collection is at a ‘critical level” and that Jerusalem was trying to “eavesdrop on senior American officials, including Steve Witkoff, President Donald Trump’s top negotiator, Elbridge A. Colby, the Pentagon’s top policy official, and one of his main deputies, Michael P. DiMino IV.”

That sounds alarming. But it also falls far short of any actual evidence that such activity had taken place or that it means that a crisis of confidence exists between the two allies.

Moreover, it flies in the face of what credible sources about Israeli intelligence say, like left-wing journalist Yossi Melman, who currently writes for Haaretz. No fan of the government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, he has been covering this subject for decades. He confirms what most of those in the know say about the topic when he wrote that “Israel’s intelligence community stopped spying on U.S. soil and against American targets or individuals around the world following the Pollard affair in 1985. Period. Not Unit 8200. Not the Mossad and not the Shin Bet.”

Melman agrees with others who have noted that the real story here isn’t the unsubstantiated allegations about Israeli behavior, but rather why some figures in the Pentagon leaked these claims to liberal media outlets that remain notoriously hostile to the administration they serve.

They are clearly aiming at not only creating a wedge between the two countries but also to score points inside Trumpworld against the far larger faction of officials who are supportive of the alliance with Israel. More than that, they aim to blow it up by blaming Israel for a war that the isolationists didn’t support in the first place. In doing so, they hope to persuade the president to distance himself from a conflict that—like the left-wing publications to which they have fed these claims—they believe is a failure.

Obsessed with Israel
For those on the far right, it isn’t just that they lack enthusiasm about the alliance. They view Israel, and both its Jewish and non-Jewish supporters, as the source of all evil in the world and the root of America’s problems.

Their obsessive hatred for the Jewish state extends to believing without a shred of proof that Jerusalem was behind the Jeffrey Epstein scandal. Like the myths about “The Israel Lobby” that fuel resentments about AIPAC, the Jews and their state are not merely the scapegoats for scandals, but are believed to be manipulating Trump and the United States to work against American interests. In this way, antisemitic shorthand about “Zio-pedos” has become the way the far-right mimics the Marxist formulations about a “white oppressor” state in which Israel and Zionists are demonized as not just wrongheaded, but perverted criminals.

Unsupported allegations about Israeli spying are thus not merely overhyped concerns about security, but simply another layer of the same antisemitic paranoia that fuels some of the discourse about Epstein as well as the war on Iran.

The timing of the leaks is crucial because they came at a moment when the ultimate direction of U.S. policy toward Iran seems to be up in the air.

The president is under enormous political pressure to end the war due to the resulting hike in fuel prices and the way that seems to be impacting the chances of his party holding onto control of Congress in the 2026 midterm elections. Witkoff and Trump’s adviser and son-in-law, Jared Kushner, who have been pursuing some sort of agreement to end the war, seem, like their Democratic predecessors who sought appeasement of Iran in the Obama and Biden administrations, to believe in diplomacy for its own sake.

While Washington and Jerusalem have much in common with respect to Tehran, their positions are not identical. And if Trump is truly committed to getting a deal with Iran that would be on terms that resemble those of Obama’s disastrously weak 2015 nuclear accord with Tehran, it will turn those differences into a major problem. The Iranian regime’s purpose is Israel’s destruction and an endless generational war on the West. Diplomacy that is based on tolerating it or trusting its leaders to keep their word on nuclear or other issues is a trap that sensible policymakers should avoid.

Reversal of fortune
As far as those on the far right whose positions on Israel are little different from those on the far left, the notion that the Iran war is a failure, despite the enormous military success already achieved, is their chance for a reversal of fortune.

Trump agreed with some in the neo-isolationist wing of the GOP about the need to make Europe pay for its own defense and to focus on the threat from China. But they failed to reckon with the fact that, for all of his criticisms of the failed wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, Trump has always been a hawk about the Islamist regime in Iran, its role in international terrorism and the mortal threat its nuclear ambitions posed to the West.

As Eli Lake wrote in an insightful article published in March in The Free Press, this juxtaposition has led to someone like Colby, who is thought of as the leading “war skeptic” inside the administration, becoming a defender of the fight against Iran. Supporters of Israel viewed his appointment with trepidation because he had said that the United States could “live” with a nuclear Iran and appeared on political commentator Tucker Carlson’s podcast in 2024.

Colby’s willingness to go along with the war may well be due, as he said during his confirmation hearings, to Iran’s ballistic-missile program, which made it a threat to the United States. But it seems to indicate that the anti-war faction in the administration was not only powerless but, like its leading figure, Vice President JD Vance, had been forced by Trump to agree with him on the subject, or face isolation and potential eviction from their offices.

If Trump can be convinced to abandon his hopes of defeating Tehran, either by military strikes or a sensible strategy of strangling its economy, then the hopes of the isolationist Israel-haters can be revived.

Pollard’s tragic legacy
It is highly unlikely that Israel is conducting operations that could be characterized as a “critical threat” to American secrecy.

The disastrous Jonathan Pollard affair complicated U.S.-Israel relations for a generation. It also fostered unfair suspicions about the loyalty of American Jews that fueled several ensuing spy scares that proved to be more about the hatred for the Jewish state among some U.S. officials than anything else. Pollard was punished more harshly than he deserved and far more than anyone who had spied for a U.S. ally. But his betrayal, as well as that of his Israeli handlers and their high-ranking political masters (a list that included Prime Ministers Yitzhak Shamir, Shimon Peres and Yitzhak Rabin), stands as a cautionary tale for the Jewish state’s current policymakers and intelligence officers that can’t be ignored.

Those who consider Pollard, who was released from prison after 30 years in jail in 2015 and then allowed to immigrate to Israel in 2020, to be a hero are deeply misguided. The convicted spy’s delusions of grandeur about his misdeeds and terrible advice to American Jews to commit similar crimes should warrant treatment of him as a pariah rather than a role model.

That said, the motives of those who obsess about Israeli spying, whether by exploiting the legacy of the Pollard affair—much as they do about the attack on the USS Liberty by Israeli forces during the confusion of the 1967 Six-Day War—as a reason to distrust or hate the Jewish state, deserve to be questioned.

A mutually beneficial alliance
The feigned righteous indignation about Israeli espionage ignores the fact that all nations, including the closest of allies, constantly seek to find out all they can about each other, and their intentions and policies. Indeed, it is highly likely, if not almost certainly true, that the United States is currently engaged in spying on Israel. Still, as the junior partner in the alliance, Israel should be far more circumspect about its efforts to find out what the Americans intend to do than its partners.

Yet it is equally important to remember that among the main advantages of the alliance for the United States is that Jerusalem shares with Washington vast stores of information about the Middle East and the Islamic world that American agencies have proven unable to provide for themselves. The United States derives enormous benefits from this, coupled with Israeli contributions to joint projects to invent and improve various aspects of defense technology. And the billions in military aid that Israel gets—that its critics never stop complaining about—are almost all spent in the United States and are critical to bolstering American defense manufacturing.

Why then, attempt to blow up the relationship with a country that is not only Washington’s sole democratic ally in the Middle East, but one that has the capability and willingness to fight side by side with its American partners?

Far-right elements within the administration, likely behind the leaks about an Israeli spy scare, share the paranoid hatred of Jews regularly aired on the podcasts of antisemites like Carlson, the even crazier Candace Owens, neo-Nazi groyper Nick Fuentes, and even the supposedly more mainstream Megyn Kelly. They aren’t interested in promoting American interests so much as they are sowing distrust of Israel and its supporters simply to bolster their conspiratorial worldview.

Most of all, they are hoping to seize on what ought to be characterized as fear-mongering about Israel, rather than an actual threat to American security, to undermine the defense of the West against Iran’s Islamist terrorists.

Doubtless, they are encouraged by Trump’s erratic policy statements about Iran. The president’s efforts to restrain Jerusalem’s attacks on Iran and its Hezbollah terrorist auxiliaries in Lebanon have bolstered the belief that the two allies aren’t just having tactical disagreements about the next step in the conflict, but are pursuing mutually exclusive goals. Should Trump embrace an Obama-style deal with Iran, then those who are seeking to crack up the alliance will think they have gained the upper hand.

But what shouldn’t be forgotten is that the past few months of shared combat against Iran have proven that the U.S.-Israel relationship is not a plot imposed on Washington by a lobby. Those who strive to undermine it are making America weaker, not stronger. And their reasons for doing so are rooted in antisemitic conspiracy theories as opposed to rational strategic thought. The alliance is not a matter of American charity or mythical Israeli manipulation. It is a foundational element of U.S. national security against the ongoing threat of Islamist terror that deserves the support of all American patriots.


Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of the Jewish News Syndicate, a senior contributor for The Federalist, a columnist for Newsweek and a contributor to many other publications. He covers the American political scene, foreign policy, the U.S.-Israel relationship, Middle East diplomacy, the Jewish world and the arts. He hosts the JNS “Think Twice” podcast, both the weekly video program and the “Jonathan Tobin Daily” program, which are available on all major audio platforms and YouTube. Previously, he was executive editor, then senior online editor and chief political blogger, for Commentary magazine. Before that, he was editor-in-chief of The Jewish Exponent in Philadelphia and editor of the Connecticut Jewish Ledger. He has won more than 60 awards for commentary, art criticism and other writing. He appears regularly on television, commenting on politics and foreign policy. Born in New York City, he studied history at Columbia University.

Source: https://www.jns.org/opinion/column/jonathan-s-tobin/whats-behind-the-campaign-to-demonize-israel-inside-trumpworld

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JD Vance refers evidence of Minnesota fraud, Walz inaction to DOJ for criminal inquiry - John Solomon

 

by John Solomon

Vance announced criminal referral in a social media post in which he raised concerns that Walz's administration tried to retaliate against whistleblowers.

 

Vice President JD Vance has referred evidence gathered by Congress that Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison failed to act against mass welfare fraud in their state to the Justice Department for possible criminal investigate.

Vance announced the criminal referral in a social media post late Monday in which he raised concerns that Walz's administration also tried to retaliate against state workers who blew the whistle on the welfare fraud scams in Minnesota, estimated by the House Oversight Committee to have cost taxpayers more than $9 billion.

"I’ve referred these allegations to DOJ’s new Fraud Division for criminal investigation," Vance wrote on X. "Minnesota state officials are not above the law, and if they facilitated fraud, lied under oath about what they knew, or harassed and intimidated whistleblowers, they must face justice."

The vice president's action came hours after the Oversight Committee released a bombshell report concluding that Walz and Ellison knew about widespread taxpayer fraud in the state's welfare programs as early as spring 2019, but took no action and instead let the state retaliate against workers who tried to expose the abuses.

Committee Chairman James Comer told Just the News on Monday evening he believed lawmakers found evidence of criminality in the years-long cover-up of the fraud.

"I think that Governor Waltz and Attorney General Ellison should be held accountable. I think that they've violated the laws. I think they've, you know, violated the whistleblower protection laws," he said.

Walz and Ellison have denied wrongdoing even as the fraud allegations sunk Walz's re-election bid in 2026.

Comer said the DOJ could present the evidence his committee gathered to a grand jury. "I'm all for that," he said.

The House committee concluded that Democrats in the state turned a blind eye to the taxpayer losses because they feared "political retribution from the politically active Somali community," where much of the fraud was centered.

"Governor Walz and Attorney General Ellison knew about the fraud in federal programs administered by the State of Minnesota much earlier than they admitted," the committee wrote in its final report. 

"Instead of trying to stop this widespread fraud, Governor Walz’s Administration retaliated against employees who tried to raise concerns, going to great lengths to keep them quiet, including intimidation through regular check-ins with high-level agency officials and threats of military surveillance," it added.

The report said the federal government has determined that at least $300 million was stolen by Feeding Our Future and its affiliated vendors and providers from the USDA's federal child nutrition programs and an estimated $9 billion has been lost to fraud from the high-risk Medicaid programs in Minnesota since 2018.

"The Committee has found that Minnesota lacked adequate oversight controls and procedures to verify that federal taxpayer dollars were being used appropriately and the Minnesota government could have stopped the flow of money to fraudsters at any time but chose not to for fear of political retribution from the politically active Somali community, which also wields power within social services provider networks," the committee wrote.

The report had several major conclusions, including that:

  • Minnesota state agencies had clear authority to suspend or stop payments to providers suspected of fraud without requiring independent direction from courts, law enforcement agencies, or the federal government but failed to act.
  • State officials continued directing taxpayer dollars to Feeding our Future and other high-risk entities despite identifying serious program deficiencies, enabling federal funds to flow to fraudsters.
  • Testimony and documents show that concerns about litigation and accusations of discrimination—not legal barriers or directives from law enforcement—were cited as reasons for continuing payments to suspected fraudsters.
  • The Walz administration retaliated against state employees who raised concerns about fraud, while senior state officials prioritized managing political and media fallout over addressing known fraud vulnerabilities. 


John Solomon 

Source: https://justthenews.com/accountability/waste-fraud-and-abuse/jd-vance-refers-evidence-minnesota-fraud-walz-inaction-doj

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A difference of perception about the northern front - Amit Segal

 

by Amit Segal

While the Israeli public is despondent over the news from the north and the terrible drone toll, some in the military are talking about the possibility of years of quiet.

 

Smoke rises from Southern Lebanon during an Israeli military operation, on June 4, 2026. Photo by Ayal Margolin/Flash90.
Smoke rises from Southern Lebanon during an Israeli military operation, on June 4, 2026. Photo by Ayal Margolin/Flash90.

 

On the streets of Israel, it’s easy to spot the sourness and bitterness regarding events on the northern front—from children running to bomb shelters to the devastating drone attacks. The difficult conversation between U.S. President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu didn’t help the mood.

These feelings do not reach the upper levels of the Israel Defense Forces, which speak of an achievement unseen in years, and of an opportunity for peace and quiet for a long time to come. Reconciling these two pictures isn’t possible, but describing them is.

The IDF’s top brass is convinced that Hezbollah is a semi-dismantled organization that has absorbed the hardest blow in its history. It had 30,000 operatives on Oct. 6, 2023; since then, 8,000 have been killed and about the same number wounded. “Even a jihadist enemy is dying for a ceasefire.”

The chief of staff, for instance, said in closed discussions that he is in favor of an agreement, under the following conditions: One, Hezbollah’s withdrawal beyond the Litani River. Two, the destruction of all its infrastructure, this time not by the impotent Lebanese Army, but by an Israeli-American mechanism. Three, an IDF presence in Southern Lebanon, which includes, for example, the Beaufort Castle.

In retrospect, the IDF dislikes the phrase “Hezbollah fell into a strategic ambush,” which a senior military official used on the day the organization came to Iran’s aid at the start of “Roaring Lion” and opened fire.

“Even before the war, we saw that the organization was increasingly struggling to absorb the Israeli blows; they were on the verge of responding even without Khamenei’s assassination,” he said.

The army was furious with reserve generals who went on television panels to criticize what they saw as an overly harsh Israeli response to a symbolic barrage in memory of the supreme leader.

“They probably don’t understand what we saw in the first week of March,” they say. “Hundreds of Radwan terrorists crossing the Litani. Why did they come? If there had been even one raid on a single community, we all would have had to pack our bags and resign. What were we supposed to do if not meet them on their own turf and kill them?”

Since then, Hezbollah has focused on its only success: drones. The defense establishment suggests managing the expectations of the public, since there will not be a single comprehensive solution for drones, such as the Iron Dome format. There will be many solutions that together will create a partial response.

“No weapon introduced to the battlefield has ever disappeared, it only evolved. Tanks are here to stay, anti-tank missiles likewise, planes and now drones,” they note.

However, they emphasize that the agreement could be here within days to weeks. If they could, they would urge the residents of Kiryat Shmona and Nahariya to suffer for a few more weeks and receive an agreement that will bring peace for many years to come.

It’s been a long time since I’ve seen such a gap between harsh public sentiment and sweeping optimism at the top. How long? Twenty years minus two months, at the end of the Second Lebanon War. Back then, the public was right that the war was a dismal failure and Hezbollah had grown stronger; hopefully, this time the decision-makers are right.

Originally published by Israel Hayom.


Amit Segal is an Israeli journalist, radio and television personality. He serves as the political commentator of Israel’s Channel 12 news (N12 News company) and anchors Israel’s highly watched “Meet the Press” show on Channel 12.

Source: https://www.jns.org/opinion/amit-segal/a-difference-of-perception-about-the-northern-front

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Congressional report slams Minnesota's Walz, Ellison for turning ‘blind eye’ to mass welfare fraud - John Solomon

 

by John Solomon

House oversight committee alleges that Minnesota Democrats in the state turned a blind eye to mass fraud because they feared "political retribution from the politically active Somali community." James Comer, R-Ky, and the committee chairman said "Americans are fed up with fraud and expect action from the government entrusted with their hard-earned money."

 

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison knew about widespread taxpayer fraud in the state's welfare programs as early as spring 2019, but took no action and instead the state retaliated against workers who tried to expose the abuses, a bombshell congressional report released Monday concluded.

The House Oversight and Accountability Committee referred its findings from a months-long probe into $9 billion-plus in fraud schemes in Minnesota to Vice President JD Vance, raising serious concerns Democrats in the state turned a blind eye to the taxpayer losses because they feared "political retribution from the politically active Somali community,"

"Governor Walz and Attorney General Ellison knew about the fraud in federal programs administered by the State of Minnesota much earlier than they admitted," the committee wrote in its final report reviewed by Just the News. 

"Instead of trying to stop this widespread fraud, Governor Walz’s Administration retaliated against employees who tried to raise concerns, going to great lengths to keep them quiet, including intimidation through regular check-ins with high-level agency officials and threats of military surveillance," it added.

The report said the federal government has determined that at least $300 million was stolen by Feeding Our Future and its affiliated vendors and providers from the USDA's federal child nutrition programs and an estimated $9 billion has been lost to fraud from the high-risk Medicaid programs in Minnesota since 2018.

"The Committee has found that Minnesota lacked adequate oversight controls and procedures to verify that federal taxpayer dollars were being used appropriately and the Minnesota government could have stopped the flow of money to fraudsters at any time but chose not to for fear of political retribution from the politically active Somali community, which also wields power within social services provider networks," the committee wrote.

State was enabling federal funds to flow to fraudsters

The report had several major conclusions, including that:

  • Minnesota state agencies had clear authority to suspend or stop payments to providers suspected of fraud without requiring independent direction from courts, law enforcement agencies, or the federal government but failed to act.
  • State officials continued directing taxpayer dollars to Feeding our Future and other high-risk entities despite identifying serious program deficiencies, enabling federal funds to flow to fraudsters.
  • Testimony and documents show that concerns about litigation and accusations of discrimination—not legal barriers or directives from law enforcement—were cited as reasons for continuing payments to suspected fraudsters.
  • The Walz administration retaliated against state employees who raised concerns about fraud, while senior state officials prioritized managing political and media fallout over addressing known fraud vulnerabilities.
Comer: "Americans are fed up with fraud"

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison are responsible for one of the most stunning oversight failures this Committee has ever examined," committee chairman James Comer, R-Ky., said. "Today’s report is the culmination of months of investigative work and reveals hard evidence showing how the Walz Administration failed to stop widespread  fraud, allowing criminals to enrich themselves at the expense of American taxpayers. 

"Billions of dollars were stolen because Minnesota state leaders turned a blind eye to rampant fraud and retaliated against state
employees who dared to raise concerns. It is now clear the Walz Administration chose to protect the system
rather than protect the taxpayer," he added.  "Americans are fed up with fraud and expect action from the government
entrusted with their hard-earned money."

In addition to the Trump administration's new fraud task force securing large numbers of federal prosecutions, the House Oversight Committee has now passed more than a dozen bills aimed at protecting taxpayer funds and strengthening oversight of federal programs ripe for fraud. 


John Solomon

Source: https://justthenews.com/accountability/waste-fraud-and-abuse/mon4ablind-eye-house-report-slams-minnesotas-walz-ellison

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The Hierarchy of Acceptable Victims - Pierre Rehov

 

by Pierre Rehov

How do trained police officers, standing over a boy bleeding out onto the pavement, become incapable of seeing what lies in front of them?

 

  • The murder of Henry Nowak did not reinforce the reigning story. It contradicted it. This contradiction, more than any failure of policing, explains why one death summoned a global movement while the other is being swiftly filed away as an inconvenience.

  • How do trained police officers, standing over a boy bleeding out onto the pavement, become incapable of seeing what lies in front of them?

  • Sigmund Freud and Stanley Milgram, among others, have noted how readily ordinary people defer to an authority that relieves them of responsibility. The lesson was never that monsters walk among us. It was that the instinct to comply, to belong, to escape the punishment reserved for those who break ranks, can override even the evidence of one's own eyes.

  • When... fear of the word "racist," grows so large that it eclipses a dying man on the ground, morality itself has been hollowed out. No order need be issued; the response becomes a reflex. After years of training and disciplinary precedent, a career can be ended by a single allegation. It is safer to doubt a white victim than to risk the accusation that can destroy one's life.

  • This failure to adhere to fact-based reality should disturb anyone who values a free society more than any question about the private convictions of the officers involved. The danger is not that policemen harbor secret prejudice in either direction. It is that an entire culture has been trained to pass every event through an ideological filter before it consults the facts, so that reality becomes negotiable and a boy can plead that he has been stabbed while the men sworn to protect him decide, on the strength of his attacker's word, that he has not.

  • Nowak's murder tells the "wrong" story. It tells of a white victim, a non-white attacker who weaponized the accusation of racism, and a police force paralyzed by the very fear that this accusation was designed to exploit.

  • A civilization that is now calibrating its compassion to political utility and that makes decisions on whose suffering counts by whether it flatters the prevailing creed, has already begun to rot from within.

  • The scholars who studied conformity after 1945 left a warning: The gravest threat to human reason is not open hatred. It is the longing to remain inside the lines of permitted opinion, to be spared the cost of seeing clearly.

Henry Nowak's murder tells the "wrong" story. It tells of a white victim, a non-white attacker who weaponized the accusation of racism, and a police force paralyzed by the very fear that this accusation was designed to exploit. When fear of the word "racist," grows so large that it eclipses a dying man on the ground, morality itself has been hollowed out. Pictured: People gather at Guild Hall Square in Southampton, England on June 6, 2026 to protest the police's handling of Nowak's murder. (Photo by Finnbarr Webster/Getty Images).

When George Floyd died in Minneapolis on May 25, 2020, the Western world convulsed. Within days, European capitals were burning, corporations were confessing to sins they could not name, governments were rewriting their codes, and great institutions were lowering themselves to one knee before a doctrine that had arrived without debate.

Three words — "I can't breathe" — became the liturgy of an age that had at last identified its original transgression: whiteness, policing, the inherited architecture of the West. One could accept or reject every conclusion drawn from Floyd's death and still concede the plain fact that he became a planetary icon, his name stenciled on walls from Berlin to Sydney.

Five years later, a teenager spoke nearly the same words as he bled out on an English street. The murder of Henry Nowak did not reinforce the reigning story. It contradicted it. This contradiction, more than any failure of policing, explains why one death summoned a global movement while the other is being swiftly filed away as an inconvenience.

Henry Nowak was 18, a first-year accountancy student at the University of Southampton and the first in his family to reach university. Friends described a young man who lit up a room, who played football with two university clubs, and whose arrival was greeted, one teammate said, as though someone had just scored a goal. On the night of December 3, 2025, as Nowak was walking home in the suburb of Portswood, 23-year-old Vickrum Digwa stabbed him five times with a traditional Sikh dagger. One blow of the knife punctured Nowak's lung and severed a major vein. Another struck the back of his legs as he tried to run.

When officers arrived, Digwa told them he was the victim, that "he had been racially abused," and forced to defend himself. The police handcuffed Nowak as he was bleeding to death. Bodycam footage, released on June 1, the day Digwa was sentenced, shows Nowak on the ground saying repeatedly that he had been stabbed, to which a police officer replied, "I don't think you have, mate." Nowak said that he could not breathe and pleaded for help. He was handcuffed and died shortly after.

The racism allegation was a fabrication; Judge William Mousley said so with no ambiguity. The charge was wholly at odds with everything known of Nowak. The court heard that Digwa and his brother, conversing in Punjabi while officers listened, had agreed to invent a story of "racial abuse" and self-defense. Digwa drew a "life sentence" with a minimum prison term of 21 years. His mother was convicted of assisting an offender.

Nowak's father, Mark, described how his son was treated in those final moments as inhumane and degrading. He then said what no official statement has been able to answer: that his murderer had been believed by police. This single sentence holds the whole horror: How do trained police officers, standing over a boy bleeding out onto the pavement, become incapable of seeing what lies in front of them?

The 20th century supplied the vocabulary. Hannah Arendt gave us the banality of evil. Christopher Browning showed how the middle-aged reservists of Germany's Police Battalion 101, men of no particular conviction, became executioners through conformity, the dread of standing apart from their fellows. Sigmund Freud and Stanley Milgram, among others, have noted how readily ordinary people defer to an authority that relieves them of responsibility. The lesson was never that monsters walk among us. It was that the instinct to comply, to belong, to escape the punishment reserved for those who break ranks, can override even the evidence of one's own eyes.

Every society ranks its terrors. In contemporary Britain, the accusation of racism sits near the summit of that ranking — more ruinous to a career than incompetence, more frightening to an institution than the loss of a life. Racism, of course, is real and must be fought wherever it appears. When, however, fear of the word "racist," grows so large that it eclipses a dying man on the ground, morality itself has been hollowed out. No order need be issued; the response becomes a reflex. After years of training and disciplinary precedent, a career can be ended by a single allegation. It is safer to doubt a white victim than to risk the accusation that can destroy one's life. In Southampton, this reflex produced precisely the outcome one might have forecast — credibility extended to the non-white murderer, suspicion turned on the dying white person.

This failure to adhere to fact-based reality should disturb anyone who values a free society more than any question about the private convictions of the officers involved. The danger is not that policemen harbor secret prejudice in either direction. It is that an entire culture has been trained to pass every event through an ideological filter before it consults the facts, so that reality becomes negotiable and a boy can plead that he has been stabbed while the men sworn to protect him decide, on the strength of his attacker's word, that he has not.

The contrast with Floyd is the whole point. His death slotted seamlessly into a story the culture was already telling itself, so it was amplified beyond measure. Nowak's murder tells the "wrong" story. It tells of a white victim, a non-white attacker who weaponized the accusation of racism, and a police force paralyzed by the very fear that this accusation was designed to exploit. The episode therefore is granted a fraction of the attention and a fraction of the fury.

A civilization that is now calibrating its compassion to political utility and that makes decisions on whose suffering counts by whether it flatters the prevailing creed, has already begun to rot from within.

The reaction since has confirmed as much. Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer called the footage "harrowing" and said he "felt sick watching it." The Hampshire & Isle of Wight Constabulary has referred itself to the police watchdog agency, and senior officers have begun reviewing a mindset of anti-racism that is just as racist, only in reverse. It is a racist mindset that instructs them not to treat everyone the same. The very establishment that built these racist mindsets nevertheless professes shock at the result. Meanwhile, the call to revisit this doctrine of racist anti-racism is treated as the provocation rather than the question.

Protesting in the streets of Southampton, the crowds understood the symmetry before the commentators did, and chanted the three words: "I can't breathe." Some among them may have come looking for a different fight. The family itself begged not to have their grief exploited. Their views, however, do not erase the recognition that the only way to stop racism is to stop racism -- to stop seeing everyone and everything in terms of racism.

The scholars who studied conformity after 1945 left a warning: The gravest threat to human reason is not open hatred. It is the longing to remain inside the lines of permitted opinion, to be spared the cost of seeing clearly.

Henry Nowak's final minutes, preserved by a camera worn by one of the police officers who failed him, are evidence that the warning is unfolding now, and if it goes unheeded, there will be more like him, pleading on the ground while the eyes above them refuse to look.


Pierre Rehov, who holds a law degree from Paris-Assas, is a French reporter, novelist and documentary filmmaker. He is the author of six novels, including "Beyond Red Lines", "The Third Testament" and "Red Eden", translated from French. His latest essay on the aftermath of the October 7 massacre " 7 octobre - La riposte " became a bestseller in France. As a filmmaker, he has produced and directed 17 documentaries, many photographed at high risk in Middle Eastern war zones, and focusing on terrorism, media bias, and the persecution of Christians. His latest documentary, "Pogrom(s)" highlights the context of ancient Jew hatred within Muslim civilization as the main force behind the October 7 massacre.

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22590/hierarchy-of-acceptable-victims

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Trump's relationship with Erdogan a ‘constraining factor for the Turks,’ expert tells ‘Post’ - Danielle Greyman-Kennard

 

by Danielle Greyman-Kennard

While Turkish ministers make provocative claims about Jerusalem, Trump’s ties with Erdogan appear to be easing tensions with Israel, an expert says.

 

US President Donald Trump and Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan leave the stage after family photo during the annual NATO heads of government summit at the Grove Hotel in Watford, Britain December 4, 2019
US President Donald Trump and Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan leave the stage after family photo during the annual NATO heads of government summit at the Grove Hotel in Watford, Britain December 4, 2019
(photo credit: REUTERS/PETER NICHOLLS)

 

US President Donald Trump’s relationship with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is “somewhat” “calming down” the increasingly strained relationship between Jerusalem and Ankara, Dr. Gallia Lindenstrauss, a senior research fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies specializing in Turkish affairs, told The Jerusalem Post earlier this week.

Lindenstrauss spoke with the Post only days after Turkey’s Interior Minister, Mustafa Ciftci, told crowds at the AK Party Corum Provincial Advisory Council meeting he had aspirations to one day govern Jerusalem, and that he hoped “those lands will be ours once again.”

“God willing, they will come under our sovereignty and dominion once more. Because we have a global leader like Recep Tayyip Erdogan at our helm. A world leader,” Ciftci said.

The Ottoman Empire controlled Israel for more than 400 years, ending when it lost to the Allied forces in World War I. In 1918, its leadership signed the Armistice of Mudros, surrendering to Britain.

Ciftci’s comments, which were widely condemned by Israeli officials, add to an “existing tensions,” Lindenstrauss explained.

“While this can one could dismiss this rhetoric as only one of one minister, it has to be seen in the context of other worrying remarks,” she asserted.

Erdogan stance on Israel since October 7 attacks

Erdogan has made numerous inflammatory comments directed at Israel since Hamas launched its October 7, 2023 attacks, dragging Gaza into the war and resulting humanitarian crisis. His condemnation of Israel is particularly notable as Turkey was once the first Muslim country to recognize the Jewish state less than a year after Israel declared independence.

Though Ciftci’s remarks alluded to an Ottoman occupation of Israeli territory, which is considered Palestinian territory for those advocating for a one-state solution, Lindenstrauss said she very much doubted that much outrage would be stirred across the Arab world. However, she cautioned that such a statement could further embroil Ankara in the battle for the country to head the Muslim world. The competition is largely taking place in the Palestinian territories and found in issues relating to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

“Turkey’s involvement in east Jerusalem was more dominant in previous years and actually, because of the war, is a little bit less dramatic than it used to be. It’s definitely raised eyebrows both in Saudi Arabia and in Jordan,” she said. “Turkey has been involved both with [giving] support to the Palestinian Authority and also with, what Turkey claims to be only political support but Israel sees as more widespread, support to Hamas.”

Additionally, amid rumors of Qatari plans to expel Hamas leadership during the hostage negotiations between the Iran-backed terror group and Israel, Turkey was largely named as the terrorists’ future host nation, cementing Turkey’s growing position of influence in the region.

Through “balancing” relations with both the PA and Hamas, Ankara has cemented its position as “one of the guarantors to the Palestinian cause in the international arena.”

Holding Turkey back from further entrenching its position as a main Palestinian backer is its NATO membership, she continued, especially as the country is set to host a NATO summit in July. This, combined with Erdogan’s relationship with Trump, has meant that Turkey must delicately balance its Western relationships with its more extremist ones.

Ankara using US relationship to dissolve Kurdish groups

Ankara is also now utilizing those relationships as part of its wider aim to disarm and dissolve Kurdish groups, she continued, referencing reports that Erdogan had asked Trump to abandon his plans to utilize Kurdish militias on the Iraqi border in the war against Iran.

“One of the concerns of military confrontation between the US and Israel with Iran was that indeed the Kurds of Iran would strengthen, perhaps even gain some autonomous rule, and that would also endanger the process Turkey’s leading with the with the PKK on its dissolvement and disarmament,” she explained. “This again goes hand-in-hand with the assessment of what are the Turkish fears of this violent confrontation with Iran. How realistic the plan to involve the Kurds was in the first place, one can question, but we know that definitely Erdogan tried to block it.”

Hit significantly less than other regional countries during the March war, Ankara is also interested in avoiding becoming a target for Tehran. Earlier, it had prepared to absorb Iran’s missiles and an influx of refugees, but was largely spared except economically, she explained.

“Turkey will largely try to remain uninvolved militarily. It will support the diplomatic front. It supported the Pakistan mediation efforts, Qatar mediation efforts, Omani mediation efforts,” she concluded. “So it will remain in this mediation level. It also said it might assist in the crisis surrounding the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, but overall, I believe it will do its best to remain uninvolved militarily and only try to influence the diplomatic front.”


Danielle Greyman-Kennard

Source: https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/article-898888

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Hunter Biden defends laptop letter by ex-intel officials which falsely claimed Russian involvement - Jerry Dunleavy

 

by Jerry Dunleavy

Hunter Biden is building a large online following, and is using his new platform to defend the intel officials who defended his dad — and him.

 

Hunter Biden recently joined X and has gained hundreds of thousands of followers, using his new perch to defend the infamous October 2020 letter which was written by dozens of former intelligence officials and which baselessly claimed Russian involvement in the emergence of incriminating evidence on his laptop's hard drive.

The laptop letter — which was released just ahead of the 2020 contest between Donald Trump and Hunter Biden’s father and former Vice President Joe Biden — contributed to the baseless narrative that the Hunter Biden laptop stories were nothing but a product of Russian disinformation — a narrative happily seized upon by Joe Biden’s 2020 campaign and spread by some of the laptop letter signers.

Now, Joe Biden’s son is using his newfound social media presence to defend the laptop letter which was written to deflect from Hunter Biden’s shady foreign business dealings and to help his father win the presidency.

Hunter Biden — who joined X in May — was asked on Sunday why Joe Biden had claimed that the laptop was Russian disinformation, why the then-future president lied to the American public during a presidential debate, and how 50 ex-intelligence officers were convinced to lie.

“You're arguing about whether the laptop was ‘real’ because it's the only card you've got left. It was never the point. It was the bait -  and you bit,” Hunter Biden responded, claiming that “a laptop magically appears, through Rudy Giuliani, the guy taking material from a sanctioned Russian asset, to ‘prove’ the exact narrative every serious agency had already flagged as a Kremlin op. And you think the suspicious thing was the letter?”

Hunter Biden also claimed on X that “the whole case against the Bidens was a lie told by a Russian asset” which was “exactly what the 51 warned about.” He added, “The 51 didn't fall for it. You did. And you're STILL doing it. The laptop was never the story, you were.”

Tristan Leavitt, the president of Empower Oversight, which represented IRS agents who previously blew the whistle on the slow-walking of the Hunter Biden inquiry by the Biden Justice Department, responded to Joe Biden’s son on Sunday by pointing out that computer repair shop owner John Paul Mac Isaac had given the laptop — abandoned by a drug-addled Biden — to the bureau.

“The laptop didn’t ‘magically appear.’ @JPMacIsaac provided it to the FBI, which together with the IRS independently authenticated it,” Leavitt tweeted. “Your long con ability is impressive, but you can’t rewrite reality.”

IRS supervisory special agent Gary Shapley and IRS special agent Joseph Ziegler revealed that the FBI verified the authenticity of Hunter Biden’s laptop by late 2019 — in the middle of the Ukraine-related anti-Trump impeachment effort, and nearly a year before the laptop emerged publicly and the infamous Hunter Biden laptop letter was written.

The laptop contained a raft of evidence on Hunter Biden’s shady dealings in Ukraine — and Joe Biden’s apparent knowledge of some of it.

Laptop letter was explicitly written to give Joe Biden a “talking point” against Trump

Michael Morell, a former acting CIA director under Obama, injected into the American political bloodstream the idea that Trump was an “agent” of Putin and Russia, a refrain that would be repeated over and over again by the Clinton campaign in 2016. Morell went on to be the main author and organizer of the infamous October 2020 Hunter Biden laptop letter.

Morell previously told House investigators that then-future Secretary of State Antony Blinken “triggered” him to craft it. He told House investigators that prior to his mid-October 2020 phone call with Blinken, he had no intention of writing the Hunter Biden laptop letter, and testified “yes” and “absolutely” when asked if the call with Blinken, who was then a top advisor for Joe Biden’s 2020 campaign, was what “triggered that intent in you.”

Morell said it was his “guess” that Blinken called him to talk about the Hunter Biden laptop because the future Secretary of State wanted it “out” in public that “the Russians were somehow involved” in the saga.

The former CIA leader said he received a call from then-Biden campaign chairman Steve Ricchetti after the late October 2020 presidential debate to thank him for “putting the statement out.”

The phone call to Morell had come from Jeremy Bash, another Hunter Biden laptop letter signer, who then got Ricchetti on the line.

Morell also said one of the reasons he crafted the letter was to help Joe Biden since he “wanted him to win the election” against Trump.

When asked if he had any direct evidence that Russia was involved in the laptop saga, Morell admitted to congressional investigators that “I did not.”

"We want to give the Vice President a talking point”

The recruitment email that Morell had sent to prospective signatories made it clear that he and former CIA officer Marc Polymeropoulos “drafted the attached because we believed the Russians were involved in some way in the Hunter Biden email issue and because we think Trump will attack Biden on the issue at this week's debate, and we want to give the Vice President a talking point to use in response.”

Although the October 2020 letter hedged a bit at various times, it did repeatedly contend there was Russian involvement with the laptop stories, arguing that “if we are right, this is Russia trying to influence how Americans vote in this election” and expressing “our view that the Russians are involved in the Hunter Biden email issue.” The letter claimed that the laptop saga “has all the classic earmarks of a Russian information operation” and that “our experience makes us deeply suspicious that the Russian government played a significant role in this case.”

In their letter, the signatories also cited another article which claimed that “federal authorities are investigating whether the material … is part of a smoke bomb of disinformation pushed by Russia” — though the signers added that “we do not know whether these press reports are accurate.”

“There are 50 former national intelligence folks who said that what he’s accusing me of is a Russian plan,” Biden told Trump during the October 2020 debate when Hunter Biden’s business dealings were raised. “They have said this is, has all the — four, five former heads of the CIA. Both parties say what he’s saying is a bunch of garbage.”

Joe Biden was referring to the Politico report by Natasha Bertrand titled “Hunter Biden story is Russian disinfo, dozens of former intel officials say” which had first shared the letter.

The New York Post stories detailing the business dealings of Joe Biden’s son in China and Ukraine were blocked on social media and self-censored by legacy media who only admitted the authenticity of the laptop after Biden won the election.

The Technometrica Institute of Policy and Politics reportedly found that "79 percent of Americans suggest President Donald Trump likely would have won reelection if voters had known the truth about Hunter Bidenʼs laptop.”

Then-Director of National Intelligence and now-CIA Director John Ratcliffe had said in mid-October 2020 that “there is no intelligence that supports that, and we have shared no intelligence with Chairman Schiff or any other member of Congress that Hunter Biden’s laptop is part of some Russian disinformation campaign.”

A report released by Biden’s ODNI in March 2021 concluded that “Russian state media, trolls, and online proxies, including those directed by Russian intelligence” had pushed negative content about Joe and Hunter Biden, but it did not reference the Hunter Biden laptop story and reached zero public conclusions related to it.

A number of media figures, including MSNBC’s Chris Hayes and NPR, initially claimed in early 2021 that the ODNI report had dismissed the Biden laptop story, before they largely backtracked on their false assertions. Hunter Biden himself also wrongly made this claim.

Huge sums of foreign cash flowed to Hunter Biden

Ziegler himself filed the August 2019 search warrant application for Hunter Biden’s Apple accounts, the documents reveal. The application was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware and was approved by a judge.

Ziegler himself filed the August 2019 search warrant application for Hunter Biden’s Apple accounts, the documents reveal.

The search warrant application filed by IRS Special Agent Joseph Ziegler said that, in 2014, Hunter Biden began receiving roughly $83,333.33 per month from Burisma. The payments were sent to an account held by Rosemont Seneca Bohai (RSB) — a partnership in which Devon Archer held a 99% interest — and the RSB account at Morgan Stanley would receive the payments from a Burisma account and then send them to accounts held by Hunter Biden.

The IRS agent’s application said that, in 2014, $1,538,505 was sent from Burisma to the RSB account, and then the RSB account then sent $315,000 to Hunter Biden’s accounts.

Ziegler wrote that, in 2015, $83,333.33 per month was sent from Burisma to an RSB Stanley Morgan account and an RSB Bank of New York Mellon account, totaling $1,941,131 in payments. The memo line for payments was “consulting services” and “Monthly Director Fee” — with the RSB account then sending $386,979 to Hunter Biden’s accounts.

The IRS agent said that, in 2016, Burisma accounts began sending $83,333.33 in monthly payments to Hunter Biden’s company — Owasco — where the payments were received in a Wells Fargo account. That year, Hunter Biden received nine payments of $833,333.33 from Burisma and three additional payments of $83,731, $84,922, and $83,293 — for a total of $1,002,017.

Hunter Biden’s efforts to exploit his father’s position in Washington to help Burisma have been extensively documented by Just the News and other media outlets.

Joe Biden’s son’s American law firm drafted a 58-page plan in 2014 to extricate the controversial energy company from an ongoing criminal investigation in Ukraine that relied heavily on trying to influence Hunter Biden’s father and the Obama administration in Washington, Just the News previously reported.

Payments from Ukraine and China go to Hunter Biden

Unredacted IRS and FBI search warrants tied to the federal investigation into Hunter Biden provide details on the information that investigators had in their possession about President Joe Biden’s son’s business deals linked to Ukraine, China, and elsewhere.

The multiple search warrant applications were released, with only some redactions remaining, last year following an agreement between Hunter Biden’s legal team and the Justice Department. The search warrants detail the knowledge that federal investigators had years ago related to lucrative payments Hunter Biden had received from Ukrainian gas giant Burisma, since-defunct Chinese energy conglomerate CEFC, Romanian businessmen, and more — sometimes including when Joe Biden was still vice president.

Ziegler also wrote that, in 2016, $551,005 was also sent from a Bank of America account in the name of Robinson Walker LLC to Hunter Biden’s Owasco Wells Fargo account. Ziegler said the money appeared to originate as $2,213,546 from Bladon Enterprises Limited (owned by Romanian businessman Gabriel Popoviciu) with the money then divided up between Hunter Biden, his business associate Rob Walker, and an account held in Abu Dhabi in the name of European Energy and Infrastructure. The foreign company was associated with James Gilliar, who was also a Hunter Biden business partner and the author of the infamous “Big Guy” email.

The IRS agent said that, in 2017, Burisma sent Hunter Biden’s Owasco account $630,556. Ziegler wrote that the Owasco Wells Fargo account also received $2,761,959 in other payments, including $1,445,387 held in the name of Hudson West III at Cathay Bank. The IRS agent said that CEFC official Gongwen Dong originally owned Hudson West III, with Gongwen Dong also reportedly the director of the U.S.-based CEFC Infrastructure. Ziegler said that, in August 2017, DBS Bank Hong Kong Limited funded a $5 million loan into the Hudson West III account, and wrote that Cathay Bank said that at some point ownership of the Hudson West III account transferred from Gongwen Dong to companies belonging to Hunter Biden and his Chinese-American business associate Mervyn Yan.

Ziegler also wrote that Hunter Biden received $100,000 from CEFC Infrastructure. The Owasco Wells Fargo account also received $2,731,494 in other payments, Ziegler said, including $2,187,494 from the Hudson West III Cathay Bank account.

The IRS agent detailed another $544,000 bank transfer “made possible by” a $1 million wire received from Hudson West III on March 22, 2018. Ziegler said the memo line for the payment was “Dr. Patrick Ho Chi Ping Representation” and that Hunter Biden “never entered an appearance on behalf of Ho in the criminal action.”

Hunter Biden and his associated businesses are also believed to have received at least $5 million in payments from Chinese energy conglomerate CEFC in 2017 and 2018, and Ye deputy Patrick Ho also agreed to pay Hunter Biden a $1 million retainer. Hunter referred to Ho as “the f***ing spy chief of China” in a May 11, 2018, voice recording. Ho was sentenced to three years in prison in March 2019 for violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and was deported to Hong Kong in June 2021 after serving his sentence.

In seeking access to Hunter Biden’s Apple account, Ziegler said that records showed Hunter Biden had exchanged emails with Burisma adviser Vadym Pozharskyi and Burisma board of directors chairman Alan Apter, as well as with Gongwen Dong and Mervyn Yan.

During an October 2020 debate with Trump, then-candidate Biden incorrectly claimed that his son never made money from China, despite being aware of Hunter Biden’s dealings with CEFC. The House Oversight chairman, Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., revealed that “from 2015 through 2017, Biden family members and their companies received over $1.3 million in payments” from accounts tied to Walker.

Comer said more than $1 million was sent in incremental payments to Hunter Biden, his uncle and Joe’s brother James Biden, and Hallie Biden, the widow of the president’s deceased son, Beau Biden, with whom Hunter was having a romantic relationship in 2017 following his brother’s death, shortly after Walker received a $3 million wire from a Chinese company called State Energy HK.

State Energy HK was “affiliated” with CEFC “at the time of the transfers,” according to a report issued by Republican Sens. Chuck Grassley and Ron Johnson in 2020. State Energy HK detailed a 2017 transaction with CEFC in a business report.

Shortly before the March 2017 Chinese wires from State Energy HK occurred, Ye, the now-former CEFC leader, met with Hunter Biden on Feb. 14, 2017, in Miami, Florida. It was there that Ye reportedly gifted Hunter Biden with a 3.16-carat diamond allegedly valued at $80,000.

Comer wrote in 2023 that CEFC deputy Gongwen Dong formed CEFC Infrastructure in Delaware in May 2017 and that Hudson West V, a company directed by Dong that received a $24 million wire from Ye and formed a partnership with Hunter Biden, was the sole equity member of CEFC. A week later, the memo said Hudson West V “assigned 100 percent of its interest” to the Chinese company Shanghai Huaxin Group. Shanghai Huaxin “funded the CEFC Infrastructure bank account with a significant injection of $10 million from China” in June 2017, Comer said, and then CEFC Infrastructure wired $100,000 to Hunter Biden’s Owasco P.C. on Aug. 4, 2017.

The IRS agent said that investigators had unearthed thousands of WhatsApp messages, thousands of iMessage texts, and hundreds of WeChat messages from Hunter Biden, including a WeChat message found between Hunter Biden and Gongwen Dong and WeChat messages between Hunter Biden business associates Eric Schwerin and Katie Dodge about the Hunter Biden-linked Bohai Harvest RST Chinese investment firm.

Kevin Morris, a close Hunter Biden confidante who loaned him millions of dollars, appeared to be transferred ownership of Skaneateles sometime in 2023. Skaneateles was an LLC started by Hunter Biden through which he held his 10% share in Bohai Harvest RST (Shanghai) Equity Investment Fund Management Company, or BHR, according to the company’s business records.

Comer said in June 2023 that “the circumstances surrounding Hunter Biden’s transfer of his interest in a Chinese-backed investment fund are suspicious.” The Chinese firm BHR had invested in a number of controversial Chinese companies that have been sanctioned by the U.S., and it teamed up with a Chinese defense company that helped build up the Russian military and has been tied to the Russian war effort in Ukraine.

Another application for a search warrant released last year which sought access to Hunter Biden’s Apple iCloud account and its cloud backup was filed in December 2023 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware. It was filed by an FBI special agent whose name remains redacted and later signed off on by a federal magistrate judge.

Concerns about Hunter Biden's role with Burisma arose even inside Obama Admin

Obama Administration records also show internal concern about Hunter Biden’s role on the Ukrainian energy giant Burisma while Joe Biden was leading the Obama Administration’s Ukraine policy. Hunter Biden said in 2019 that he spoke with his father about his position on the Burisma board just once, saying his father told him, “I hope you know what you are doing.” Hunter Biden says he replied, “I do.”

Joe Biden’s son was asked if he would have been asked to be on the Burisma board if his last name was Biden. "Probably not, in retrospect," he said. "But that's — you know — I don't think that there's a lot of things that would have happened in my life if my last name wasn't Biden."

Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wisc., released a joint report in 2020, with much of its focus on then-Vice President Biden’s role in helping guide the Obama administration’s Ukraine policy while Hunter Biden held a lucrative position on the board of Burisma.

Much of the 2020 report’s focus was on Joe Biden’s role helping guide the Obama administration’s Ukraine policy while Hunter Biden received a lucrative position in 2014 on the board of Burisma, run by Ukrainian oligarch Mykola Zlochevsky.

“On April 16, 2014, Vice President Biden met with his son’s business partner, Devon Archer, at the White House. Five days later, Vice President Biden visited Ukraine, and he soon after was described in the press as the ‘public face of the administration’s handling of Ukraine.’ The day after his visit, on April 22, Archer joined the board of Burisma,” Grassley and Johnson wrote. 

“Six days later, on April 28, British officials seized $23 million from the London bank accounts of Burisma’s owner, Mykola Zlochevsky. Fourteen days later, on May 12, Hunter Biden joined the board of Burisma, and over the course of the next several years, Hunter Biden and Devon Archer were paid millions of dollars from a corrupt Ukrainian oligarch for their participation on the board.”

The report said George Kent, former acting deputy chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Ukraine, “raised concerns to officials in Vice President Joe Biden’s office about the perception of a conflict of interest with respect to Hunter Biden’s role on Burisma’s board” in early 2015. The report alleged that “Kent’s concerns went unaddressed” and that he wrote an email to his colleagues stating that “the presence of Hunter Biden on the Burisma board was very awkward for all U.S. officials pushing an anticorruption agenda in Ukraine” in September 2016.

The report also contended that senior Obama State Department official Amos Hochstein “raised concerns with Vice President Biden, as well as with Hunter Biden, that Hunter Biden’s position on Burisma’s board enabled Russian disinformation efforts and risked undermining U.S. policy in Ukraine” in October 2015.

The Deputy Economic Counselor at the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv also sent an email to Kent and others on November 22, 2016 warning about the Ukrainian oligarch who owned Burisma and about Hunter Biden’s role at the company, noting that "Zlochevsky is wanted in Ukraine for crimes related to corruption, but the case against him has been marred by even more corruption."

The counselor added: “I should note that there were two American members of the Burisma board: Hunter Biden and Devon Archer. Archer was recently indicted in a federal fraud case [...] More than one U.S. firm in the energy sector has told us the [sic] Burisma is still doing business ‘the old way’ and little has changed despite Zlochevsky’s departure from the scene.”

In his 2021 memoir, Hunter Biden defended Zlochevsky, claiming the Ukrainian “was concerned with protecting his company from Vladimir Putin’s advances” and “wanted to lure more U.S. and European investors” — claiming that was why he was hired. Hunter called the Burisma work “inspiring” and “consequential” while also admitting that “the pay was good” and that “there’s no question my last name was a coveted credential.”

IRS whistleblowers thought Biden pushing for Shokin firing was shady

Trump and his allies claimed Biden improperly used his position as vice president to pressure Ukraine to fire its top prosecutor, Viktor Shokin, to protect his Hunter Biden from an investigation into the corrupt Ukrainian energy giant Burisma, where Joe Biden’s son held a lucrative position. Democrats countered by saying the focus on Burisma was part of an effort to hurt Trump’s main rival in the 2020 contest.

Joe Biden boasted to The Atlantic in 2016 and to a Council of Foreign Relations panel in 2018 that he ordered Ukraine to fire Shokin or else the White House would renege on a commitment to provide $1 billion in U.S. loan guarantees. “I remember going over [...] and I was supposed to announce that there was another billion dollar loan guarantee. And I had gotten a commitment from [Ukrainian President Petro] Poroshenko and from [then-Prime Minister Arseniy] Yatsenyuk that they would take action against the state prosecutor [Viktor Shokin],” Biden said in January 2018. 

“And they didn’t […] They were walking out to a press conference. I said, ‘Nah, […] We’re not going to give you the billion dollars.’ They said, ‘You have no authority. You’re not the president.’ […] I said, ‘Call him.’ I said, ‘I’m telling you, you’re not getting the billion dollars.’ […] I looked at them and said, ‘I’m leaving in six hours. If the prosecutor is not fired, you’re not getting the money.’ Well, son of a bitch, he got fired.”

Ziegler spoke to the House in December 2023 about Hunter Biden’s machinations in Ukraine.

The IRS whistleblower pointed to an October 2015 proposal sent by the Democratic lobbying firm Blue Star to Burisma Holdings to provide “government relations support” — which was shared with Hunter Biden and Burisma adviser Vadym Pozharskyi. The IRS whistleblower pointed out that the agreement stated that part of the scope of work was the “closure of the file against Mr. Zlochevsky” — the CEO of Burisma.

“As an investigator, I would interpret these emails to mean that they did not want to put the true purpose of the agreement in writing, but that everyone involved knew that the unstated goal was to have the Ukrainian Prosecutor General (Shokin) removed, in an effort to close the criminal case against Nikolay Zlochevsky,” Ziegler told Congress. 

Ziegler assessed that “there was a clear involvement between Hunter Biden, Burisma officials, individuals with Bluestar, the Vice-President’s Office, and current and former individuals with the administration.”

“Going back to the video of Vice President Joe Biden in Ukraine saying, ‘if you don’t fire Viktor Shokin by the time I leave’ and he looks at his watch, he’s like, ‘you’re not getting the money’ — this is like a Biden family tradition almost, right? To shake down people to get exactly what you want,” Shapley said in a December 2025 podcast.

Hunter: "I’m the most transparent m'fer in the world"

“What were the intelligence officials wrong about or covering up?” Hunter Biden tweeted on Sunday in defense of the October 2020 laptop letter. “It’s 2026, I went through 6 years of investigations by every 3 letter agency, an impeachment inquiry, numerous Senate committees, and my entire digital footprint is online for the public to see. I’m the most transparent m'fer in the world. There was no Ukraine corruption, no bribe. The allegation was false, and the only thing proven was the Russian op behind the allegation proven by convictions and sanctions.”

Hunter Biden initially reached a plea agreement with then-special counsel Weiss on federal charges related to tax crimes and the illegal purchase of a handgun in what congressional Republicans dubbed a “sweetheart deal” in June 2023. The deal collapsed under scrutiny by a federal judge the next month, thanks in part to the revelations made by the IRS whistleblowers.

After his plea deal collapsed, Hunter Biden was convicted by a Delaware jury on gun charges in June, and then pled guilty to tax charges in California in September 2024. He was found guilty of making a false statement on his gun application and being in possession of a firearm while being an illegal drug user. Hunter Biden then pled guilty to what the DOJ described as “a four-year scheme in which he chose not to pay at least $1.4 million in self-assessed federal taxes he owed.”

Then-President Joe Biden pardoned his son in December of 2024, despite repeatedly saying that “I would not interfere with the Justice Department’s decision-making, and I kept my word even as I have watched my son being selectively, and unfairly, prosecuted."

As for the pardon, the IRS whistleblowers previously responded by saying that “no amount of lies or spin can hide the simple truth that the Justice Department nearly let the President's son off the hook for multiple felonies.” The whistleblowers wrote that “we produced mountains of evidence and testified under oath about the machinations his Justice Department, including Mr. Weiss, used to shield the Biden family from a thorough investigation of alleged corruption in Ukraine, Romania, and China.”

Hunter Biden did not respond to a request for comment sent to him through his X account. 


Jerry Dunleavy

Source: https://justthenews.com/accountability/russia-and-ukraine-scandals/hunter-biden-defends-laptop-letter-ex-intel-officials

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