Monday, November 25, 2024

US believes Israel, Lebanon have agreed on terms for Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire - report - Joanie Margulies

 

by Joanie Margulies

The war cabinet is expected to convene on Tuesday to finalize.

 

A war between Israel and Lebanon (illustrative) (photo credit: ING IMAGE, REUTERS)
A war between Israel and Lebanon (illustrative)
(photo credit: ING IMAGE, REUTERS)

US President Joe Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron are expected to announce a 60 day ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah on Tuesday, Saudi news outlet Al-Sharq Al-Awast reported Monday evening.

The war cabinet is set to convene the same day to approve the pending ceasefire that would bring an end to hostilities on Israel's northern border with Lebanon. An Israeli official told Reuters that the cabinet would convene to discuss a deal that could be cemented in the coming days.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reportedly had approved a ceasefire with Lebanon "in principle" while meeting with Israeli officials on Sunday evening, citing outstanding issues before approval. 

The source said that Israel still has reservations about certain details, which will reportedly be transferred to the Lebanese government on Monday. 

Lebanon's deputy speaker of parliament, Elias Bou Saab, told Reuters on Monday that there were "no serious obstacles" left to beginning the implementation of a US-proposed 60-day truce to end fighting between Israel and Lebanon-based terror organization Hezbollah.

Enlrage image

"There appear to be no serious obstacles in the way of starting to implement the US proposed ceasefire agreement," Bou Saab said.

Bou Saab said the proposal included a 60-day timeline for Israeli forces to withdraw from Lebanese territory, giving time for the Lebanese army to deploy to southern Lebanon.

According to the spokesman, one focal point being negotiated is who would monitor the ceasefire, and that a five-country committee would be set up to monitor, including France and chaired by the United States.

A Lebanese official and Western diplomat told Reuters that the US had informed Lebanese officials a ceasefire could be announced "within hours."

France, which Lebanon sought the involvement of in negotiations, was met with restraint in negotiations after announcing that the European nation would enforce the ICC warrants. Netanyahu was displeased with one of the key parties overseeing agreement implementation.

According to Axios, US President Joe Biden spoke with French President Emmanuel Macron to try to come to a solution. The report claims that Biden told Macron that Netanyahu was within his rights to be angry and that mediation would not be possible between parties when one is pledging to arrest the head of state of one of the negotiating parties.

On both sides of the Israel-Lebanon border, thousands of people have been displaced from their communities, leading to copious fatality counts of both Israeli and Lebanese civilians.

Israel's motivation to finalize ceasefire

Overnight, reports from international media suggested significant American guarantees were on the table. Other sources pointed to Israel's motivation to finalize the ceasefire at this specific time. 

Israeli state broadcaster KAN cited Israeli sources saying that an agreement with Lebanon may already be reached this week.

Israeli public officials have responded to reports of a pending ceasefire.

Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said that a ceasefire agreement with Lebanon would hinge on enforcement that would keep Hezbollah disarmed and away from the border.

"The test for any agreement will be one, not in words or phrasing, but in enforcement only of the two main points. The first is preventing Hezbollah from moving southward beyond the Litani (River), and the second, preventing Hezbollah from rebuilding its force and rearming in all of Lebanon," Saar said in Knesset, in broadcast remarks.

National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir called an agreement with Lebanon "a big mistake. A historic missed opportunity to eradicate Hezbollah. I understand all the constraints and reasons, and it is still a grave mistake," he wrote on social media platform X.

Danny Danon, Israel's Ambassador to the United Nations, said that talks were moving forward, but denied that Israel should halt all strikes on southern Lebanon.

This is a developing story. 

Maya Gur Arieh and Reuters contributed to this report. 


Joanie Margulies

Source: https://www.jpost.com/breaking-news/article-830653

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'Rule of law disgraced by ICC': Alan Dershowitz to assemble team to defend Israel in The Hague - Jerusalem Post Staff

 

by Jerusalem Post Staff

"I am assembling a team of world-class lawyers from around the globe to help defend Israeli leaders against the false charges," Dershowitz said.

 

American jurist Alan Dershowitz sits for a photo during a visit to Israel, whose leaders he met to discuss proposed reforms to the country?s Supreme Court, in Tel Aviv, Israel December 8, 2022.  (photo credit: REUTERS/AMIR COHEN)
American jurist Alan Dershowitz sits for a photo during a visit to Israel, whose leaders he met to discuss proposed reforms to the country?s Supreme Court, in Tel Aviv, Israel December 8, 2022.
(photo credit: REUTERS/AMIR COHEN)

US defense lawyer and former Harvard professor Alan Dershowitz is assembling a team to defend Israeli leaders in The Hague, he announced in a Sunday Wall Street Journal op-ed.

Dershowitz noted that the case would be tried in the court of public opinion as well as in The Hague.

"For that reason, I am assembling a team of world-class lawyers from around the globe to help defend Israeli leaders against the false charges," Dershowitz wrote.

Last Thursday, the International Criminal Court issued international arrest warrants for war crimes allegedly committed by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former defense minister Yoav Gallant.

Various countries, such as the Netherlands, France, and Ireland, have announced they would uphold the ICC decision and arrest Netanyanhy and Gallant if they chose to land in those countries. 

 Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and defense minister Yoav Gallant during a press conference in the Kirya military base in Tel Aviv , Israel , 28 October 2023. (credit: ABIR SULTAN POOL/Pool via REUTERS)Enlrage image
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and defense minister Yoav Gallant during a press conference in the Kirya military base in Tel Aviv , Israel , 28 October 2023. (credit: ABIR SULTAN POOL/Pool via REUTERS)

However, the United States rejected the ICC decision.

"The United States fundamentally rejects the Court’s decision to issue arrest warrants for senior Israeli officials. We remain deeply concerned by the Prosecutor’s rush to seek arrest warrants and the troubling process errors that led to this decision," a government spokesperson said.

In the WSJ op-ed, Dershowitz added that several prominent lawyers have already promised to join the legal battle, including multiple former US attorneys and a former FBI director. 

No jurisdiction against Israel

“We will argue that the ICC has no jurisdiction against Israel, not only because it isn’t a member, but also because the treaty that established that court precludes it from considering cases against any country with a valid judicial system that is willing and able to investigate the alleged crimes,” he wrote.

“We will also demonstrate that Israel’s actions in Gaza don’t violate any international law or laws of war over which the ICC has jurisdiction.”

Germany, which supplies 30% of Israel’s military equipment, expressed criticism of the petition for arrest warrants, saying that the court had no jurisdiction since Israel has not signed the Rome Statute. Nevertheless, Germany has made clear in the past that it will respect the ICC’s decisions.

Dershowitz continued, “By issuing arrest warrants… the court is seeking to equate the terrorism of Hamas, which murdered, raped, and kidnapped approximately 1,450 Israelis, mostly civilians, with the self-defense efforts of Israel to prevent a promised recurrence of Oct. 7.”

Netanyahu responded publicly on Thursday evening, condemning the decision that ruled for his arrest. "This is a moral bankruptcy that undermines the natural right of democracies to defend themselves against murderous terrorism," he said.

Israel's President Isaac Herzog similarly noted that the decision reflects the choice to side with "terror and evil over democracy and freedom" and that it turned the justice system into a human shield for Hamas's crimes against humanity.

Dershowitz concluded, “Our group of lawyers hopes to bring justice to Israel and its leaders, as well as the rule of international law, which is being disgraced and destroyed by the ICC. We welcome others to join in this endeavor.”


Jerusalem Post Staff

Source: https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-830595

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Why Palestinians Will Not Have New Leaders - Bassam Tawil

 

by Bassam Tawil

Those who are hoping that a new (and pragmatic) Palestinian leadership will take over one day are in for a disappointment. Even after 89-year-old PA President Mahmoud Abbas is gone, his cronies and inner circle will continue to run the show. They will not, under any circumstances, share the cake with other Palestinians.

 

  • For the past three decades, leaders of the Palestinian Authority (PA) and Hamas have systematically targeted political activists, journalists, social media users, students, professors and human rights activists as part of an ongoing campaign to silence critics and deter others from speaking out against the lack of democracy and freedom of speech.

  • Torture included beatings, solitary confinement, feet-whipping, threats and taunts, and forcing detainees into various painful positions for extended periods. [Human Rights Watch] commented that "the habitual, deliberate, widely known use of torture, using similar tactics over years with no action taken by senior officials in either authority to stop these abuses, make these practices systematic."

  • This abuse has transformed the PA-controlled areas in the West Bank and the Hamas-run Gaza Strip into Palestinian dictatorships similar to those that have long existed in most Arab countries. In addition, it has resulted in the suppression of the emergence of new leaders capable of leading the Palestinians towards security, stability and prosperity.

  • Palestinians still remember how political activist and human rights defender Nizar Banat, an outspoken critic of corruption in the Palestinian Authority, was beaten to death by PA security officers in Hebron in 2021. Until today, no one has been punished for the killing of Banat.

  • The family of the slain political activist was naïve enough to believe that the ICC or any other international agency would serve them justice.

  • The ICC does not care about crimes committed by Palestinians against their own people. Instead, the court's antisemitic prosecutor is busy searching for ways to punish Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for daring to fight back in a war that was launched by Hamas on October 7, 2023.

  • Palestinians have not only been deprived of a large portion of the international financial aid -- stolen by corrupt Palestinian leaders -- but also of the right to elect new leaders and representatives through free elections.

  • Those who are hoping that a new (and pragmatic) Palestinian leadership will take over one day are in for a disappointment. Even after 89-year-old PA President Mahmoud Abbas is gone, his cronies and inner circle will continue to run the show. They will not, under any circumstances, share the cake with other Palestinians.

  • The same applies to the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. No Palestinian will agree to play any role in the administration of the Gaza Strip after the current Israel-Hamas war, as long as the Iran-backed terrorist group and its friends are still around. That is why it is necessary to eliminate Hamas completely and make sure that it loses its military, political and civilian capabilities in the Gaza Strip. This could take a few more months or years, but it is far better than ending the war in a way that keeps Hamas in power.

Palestinians still remember how political activist and human rights defender Nizar Banat, an outspoken critic of corruption in the Palestinian Authority (PA), was beaten to death by PA security officers in Hebron in 2021. Until today, no one has been punished for the killing of Banat. Pictured: Plain-clothed PA security officers beat a man in Ramallah on June 26, 2021, during a demonstration to protest Banat's killing. (Photo by Ahmad Gharabli/AFP via Getty Images)

Palestinian leaders have a long history of cracking down on their political rivals and opponents. For the past three decades, leaders of the Palestinian Authority (PA) and Hamas have systematically targeted political activists, journalists, social media users, students, professors and human rights activists as part of an ongoing campaign to silence critics and deter others from speaking out against the lack of democracy and freedom of speech.

In 2017, Magdalena Mughrabi, Deputy Middle East and North Africa Director at Amnesty International, warned that "the last few months have seen a sharp escalation in attacks on journalists and the media by the Palestinian authorities in the West Bank and Hamas in Gaza in a bid to silence dissent." She added: "This is a chilling setback for freedom of expression in Palestine."

Since then, the situation has only worsened, as a growing number of Palestinians have found themselves targeted by both the PA and Hamas.

In 2018, Human Rights Watch (HRW) published a report exposing 86 cases of arbitrary arrests and torture of peaceful dissenters by both the Palestinian Authority and Hamas, based on personal interviews with the victims and their families. Torture included beatings, solitary confinement, feet-whipping, threats and taunts, and forcing detainees into various painful positions for extended periods. HRW commented that "the habitual, deliberate, widely known use of torture, using similar tactics over years with no action taken by senior officials in either authority to stop these abuses, make these practices systematic."

Another Amnesty International report published in 2019 found that "Palestinian security forces in the West Bank and Gaza routinely used torture and other ill-treatment with impunity" and noted that during that year (2019) there were 143 allegations of torture in the West Bank and 156 in Gaza.

This abuse has transformed the PA-controlled areas in the West Bank and the Hamas-run Gaza Strip into Palestinian dictatorships similar to those that have long existed in most Arab countries. In addition, it has resulted in the suppression of the emergence of new leaders capable of leading the Palestinians towards security, stability and prosperity.

That is the main reason the Palestinians' only choice today continues to be the current Palestinian Authority and Hamas leaders. It is hard to find Palestinian political activists in the West Bank and Gaza who would agree to speak out publicly against the PA or Hamas, or even demand reform and democracy. These activists are afraid to express their opinion in public because they do not want to end up in a PA or Hamas prison. Others are afraid of being killed or fired from their jobs in the Palestinian public sector.

Palestinians still remember how political activist and human rights defender Nizar Banat, an outspoken critic of corruption in the Palestinian Authority, was beaten to death by PA security officers in Hebron in 2021. Until today, no one has been punished for the killing of Banat.

Banat's family has urged the International Criminal Court (ICC) to prosecute those responsible, saying they had lost confidence in the PA's judiciary. "For those of us who live in corrupt countries where genuine justice is out of reach, the ICC remains our hope for an unpoliticised investigation and prosecution of criminals," Banat's brother, Ghassan, said outside the court in The Hague. "The way they [PA security officers] killed him and are trying to get away with it reflects the level of impunity and of moral corruption that plagues this [PA] regime."

The family of the slain political activist was naïve enough to believe that the ICC or any other international agency would serve them justice.

The ICC does not care about crimes committed by Palestinians against their own people. Instead, the court's antisemitic prosecutor is busy searching for ways to punish Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for daring to fight back in a war that was launched by Hamas on October 7, 2023. Then, thousands of Hamas terrorists and "ordinary" Palestinians invaded Israel from the Gaza Strip, murdering 1,200 Israelis and wounding thousands. Many of the victims were raped, beheaded, tortured or burned alive, while 240 others were kidnapped to the Gaza Strip, where 101 remain in captivity.

The PA and Hamas crackdown does not bode well for the future of the Palestinians living in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. These Palestinians have not only been deprived of a large portion of the international financial aid -- stolen by corrupt Palestinian leaders (here, here and here) -- but also of the right to elect new leaders and representatives through free elections.

Those who are hoping that a new (and pragmatic) Palestinian leadership will take over one day are in for a disappointment. Even after 89-year-old PA President Mahmoud Abbas is gone, his cronies and inner circle will continue to run the show. They will not, under any circumstances, share the cake with other Palestinians.

If the international community wants to see new faces in the Palestinian leadership, it must exert pressure on Abbas and the "old guard" leadership to stop targeting young political activists, journalists, and human rights defenders. This can be done, for example, by threatening to suspend or cut off financial aid.

The same applies to the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. No Palestinian will agree to play any role in the administration of the Gaza Strip after the current Israel-Hamas war, as long as the Iran-backed terrorist group and its friends are still around. That is why it is necessary to eliminate Hamas completely and make sure that it loses its military, political and civilian capabilities in the Gaza Strip. This could take a few more months or years, but it is far better than ending the war in a way that keeps Hamas in power.


Bassam Tawil is a Muslim Arab based in the Middle East. His work is made possible through the generous donation of a couple of donors who wished to remain anonymous. Gatestone is most grateful.

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/21152/palestinians-new-leaders

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Russia: The Big Enchilada for Trump - Amir Taheri

 

by Amir Taheri

In The Art of the Deal, Donald Trump writes, "I like thinking big. I always have. To me it's very simple: If you're going to be thinking anyway, you might as well think big."

 

  • American columnist Anne Applebaum believes that the war will end when Putin's career ends.

  • British-American historian Niall Ferguson suggests that to end the war, Putin must be roundly defeated on the battleground. Others speculate that Putin will end the war after invading Moldova and annexing Transnistria which, when added to his annexation of Crimea, South Ossetia and Abkhazia, would secure him a place in the gallery of Russian military heroes from Peter the Great to Josef Stalin.

  • Anti-American figures cynically advise Europeans to learn to fight their own wars, forgetting about "Big Brother America", thus encouraging Putin's dream of decoupling Europe and the United States.

  • In The Art of the Deal, Donald Trump writes, "I like thinking big. I always have. To me it's very simple: If you're going to be thinking anyway, you might as well think big."

Can Donald Trump bring peace to Ukraine in a day, as he asserted during the presidential campaign, even before he enters the White House? Pictured: Trump meets with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on September 27, 2024 in New York City. (Photo by Alex Kent/Getty Images)

Can Donald Trump bring peace to Ukraine in a day, as he asserted during the presidential campaign, even before he enters the White House?

The short answer is: no.

To be sure, his election has helped change the tone of the protagonists. Ukrainian President Volodymir Zelensky says he is ready to work for peace in 2025.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, too, has readmitted the word "peace" into his vocabulary. The trouble is that both leaders have also attached modifiers that cast a long shadow of doubt in the noble word. Zelensky's modifier is "just" when in reality there has never been and will never be a peace that is accepted as just by both sides of a war. Peace will be possible only if it is considered or imposed on its own, naked and free of adjectival ornaments.

There are, as yet, no signs that either Zelensky or Putin is prepared to drop the conditions they attach to any movement towards peace.

Next question: Can Trump end the war without a formal peace? Again, the short answer must be: no. Both sides still have enough weapons, money, hate-fueled energy and foreign support to keep the killing machine in motion. Neither can afford to emerge as the loser because in Zelensky's case, that could cost him his life, while in the case of Putin, the end of a political career to say the least.

Attempts to end this war and move towards peace started from the first day of the Russian invasion on February 24, 2022. Two days after the invasion, French President Emmanuel Macron phoned Putin to present himself as peacemaker. He continued his peacemaking by phone for several months until he realized that there are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in the Élysée Palace.

However, Macron wasn't alone to succumb to the temptation of casting oneself as peacemaker. Polish Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski says only Putin can end this war in 15 minutes, presumably by ordering a ceasefire and declaring victory. American columnist Anne Applebaum believes that the war will end when Putin's career ends.

British-American historian Niall Ferguson suggests that to end the war, Putin must be roundly defeated on the battleground. Others speculate that Putin will end the war after invading Moldova and annexing Transnistria which, when added to his annexation of Crimea, South Ossetia and Abkhazia, would secure him a place in the gallery of Russian military heroes from Peter the Great to Josef Stalin.

Anti-American figures cynically advise Europeans to learn to fight their own wars, forgetting about "Big Brother America", thus encouraging Putin's dream of decoupling Europe and the United States.

Ever since the war started, no one expected it to last so long.

After a few months, however, it was absorbed into the organized chaos of human existence as "one of those things".

NATO powers, led by the United States, have found the cost affordable, with the added advantage of giving their arm industries a fantastic boost while, in the case of Europeans, almost doubling expenditure on defense without their bleeding-heart constituencies murmuring a complaint.

China may also be happy to see the war go on a bit longer.

It has punctured Russia's superpower balloon and made it dependent on China for political support and as a market for Russian oil and gas. That in turn forces Iran to offer even larger discounts for oil sold to China. Europe has a long history of long wars, such as the 100 Years' War and the 30 Years' War, a history forgotten with the two short world wars of the 20th century.

So, what can Trump do? He can't bring peace if neither side is ready for it. He can't end the war as long as it has not crossed the threshold of pain, not only in Ukraine and Russia but globally.

What he can do is to pause the war and a suggested timeframe to consider other options, including an interim status quo. In his bestselling book The Art of the Deal, Trump insists on never regarding a deal as impossible. He then suggests not to try for a deal without having leverage.

Whether anyone likes it or not, the United States, under a serious administration that knows what it wants, has that leverage. That, in the case of Ukraine, needs no elaboration. In the case of Russia, that leverage is the promise to help the former superpower a pathway to inclusion in the global system with a status commensurate with its history, geopolitical importance and legitimate ambitions.

The challenge that Trump faces is much bigger than ending the war in Ukraine, which can be ended through tested diplomatic methods used in a number of similar cases after World War II.

The big enchilada is to bring Russia in from the cold, something that successive US administrations took seriously enough.

Can Trump do it? When in his first presidential term he launched the Abraham Accords, I was among those who doubted his success. So this time I keep my fingers crossed.

In The Art of the Deal, Trump writes, "I like thinking big. I always have. To me it's very simple: If you're going to be thinking anyway, you might as well think big."

This article originally appeared in Asharq Al-Awsat


Amir Taheri was the executive editor-in-chief of the daily Kayhan in Iran from 1972 to 1979. He has worked at or written for innumerable publications, published eleven books, and has been a columnist for Asharq Al-Awsat since 1987. He is the Chairman of Gatestone Europe.

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/21138/russia-ukraine-war-trump

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RFK Jr. Must Address the Missing Migrant Children Crisis at HHS - Jason Piccolo

 

by Jason Piccolo

A whistleblower's warning.

 


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As the federal agent who exposed the systematic failure in protecting migrant children in 2015, I’ve witnessed firsthand how our government’s broken processes have enabled thousands of vulnerable children to vanish into the hands of unvetted sponsors, some with criminal backgrounds. The potential appointment of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to head the Department of Health and Human Services presents a crucial opportunity to finally address this ongoing humanitarian crisis that has plagued our nation for over a decade.

While public attention frequently focuses on HHS’s healthcare responsibilities, few Americans realize that this department, through its Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), bears ultimate responsibility for the safety of unaccompanied migrant children. This dual mandate creates a unique challenge that requires immediate attention and reform, particularly given the current administration’s dangerous dismantling of critical child protection measures.

The scope of this crisis cannot be overstated. In 2015, I decided to blow the whistle on a system that literally handed children over to criminals. As a federal agent with years of experience in immigration enforcement, I had witnessed numerous systemic failures, but none as egregious as watching our government knowingly place children in harm’s way. My revelations, combined with Senator Chuck Grassley’s subsequent investigation, led to the implementation of essential vetting procedures in 2016, including mandatory fingerprinting and background checks for potential sponsors.

The path these children take through our system illustrates the complexity of the problem. It begins with Customs and Border Protection (CBP), where children are initially processed after crossing the border. They are then transferred to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody before being handed over to HHS’s Office of Refugee Resettlement. Finally, they reach HHS-contracted facilities, which are responsible for placing them with sponsors. At each transition point, there should be robust protections in place. Instead, the current administration has created a pipeline where children are rapidly released to sponsors without proper vetting.

The 2016 reforms we achieved weren’t just bureaucratic changes – they were vital safeguards protecting children from trafficking and exploitation. These measures included comprehensive background checks, fingerprint requirements, and verification of sponsor relationships. Most importantly, they worked. The enhanced vetting procedures successfully identified numerous potential sponsors with criminal histories, preventing children from being placed in dangerous situations.

However, the Biden administration’s decision to dismantle these protections almost immediately upon taking office has returned us to the dangerous status quo that prompted my whistleblowing in the first place. This regression in policy has had predictable and tragic consequences: thousands of children have again disappeared into the shadows, potentially falling victim to labor trafficking, sexual exploitation, or worse.

The current situation bears striking similarities to what I witnessed in 2015. Back then, I discovered that HHS was not properly vetting sponsors, leading to children being placed with individuals who had criminal histories, including violent crimes and sexual offenses. The system was so broken that there were cases where sponsors had submitted multiple applications to receive children, raising red flags about potential trafficking operations. Yet, these applications were still being approved.

RFK Jr.’s priority at HHS must be to reinstate and strengthen these vital protections. This isn’t just about border security or immigration policy – it’s about preventing children from disappearing into a system that fails to protect them. The solution requires immediate action on multiple fronts:

1.   Reinstate mandatory fingerprinting for all potential sponsors, not just those deemed “high risk”

2.    Implement comprehensive background checks that include state and local criminal databases

3.    Establish cross-referencing protocols with criminal databases to identify repeat sponsorship applications

4.    Require verification of sponsor relationships through documentary evidence

5.    Institute mandatory post-placement wellness checks

6.    Create a tracking system to monitor children’s whereabouts and well-being after placement

7.    Establish accountability measures for facilities that fail to follow proper vetting procedures

8.    Implement regular audits of sponsor applications and placement decisions

9.    Develop coordination protocols between CBP, ICE, and HHS to ensure no children fall through the cracks

The thousands of children who have disappeared under the current system aren’t just statistics – they represent real lives at risk of exploitation, trafficking, and abuse. As someone who has dedicated my career to law enforcement and child protection, I can attest that the current situation represents a catastrophic failure of our government’s most basic duty: protecting the vulnerable in our care.

Kennedy’s appointment to HHS would represent an opportunity to correct this tragic course. While his healthcare reforms will undoubtedly receive significant attention, his most urgent task must address this ongoing humanitarian crisis. The infrastructure for proper vetting exists – it merely requires the political will to implement it.

The American people deserve to know that their government is not complicit in enabling child trafficking through negligent oversight. As the whistleblower who exposed these dangers years ago, I can say with authority that the current situation is untenable. RFK Jr. has the opportunity to demonstrate that America can maintain its humanitarian obligations and its commitment to child safety.

The time for action is now. These children cannot afford to wait for bureaucratic deliberations or political calculations. Every day without proper vetting procedures puts more children at risk. Kennedy must make this a day-one priority at HHS. Restoring these protective measures isn’t just good policy—it’s a moral imperative that will define his leadership of this crucial department.

The stakes couldn’t be higher. Every child who disappears into this broken system represents a failure of our government’s most fundamental responsibilities. As someone who has seen both the successes of proper vetting and the tragic consequences of its absence, I can attest that these reforms are not just necessary—they’re urgent. RFK Jr.’s leadership at HHS must begin by addressing this crisis, or we risk continuing a pattern of governmental negligence that has already cost too many children their safety and potentially their lives.


Jason Piccolo

Source: https://www.frontpagemag.com/rfk-jr-must-address-the-missing-migrant-children-crisis-at-hhs/

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The Immorality of Illegal Immigration - Victor Davis Hanson

 

by Victor Davis Hanson

Democratic leaders are facing backlash over the Biden administration's handling of illegal immigration, leading to a surge in crime, strained services, and a Trump victory focused on border security.

 

Donald Trump will not be president for almost another two months.

Yet Democrat politicians, both federal and local, vie to be the most strident in denouncing his plans to begin deporting millions of foreign nationals who, over the last four years, have entered the U.S. illegally. Trump pledges to focus initially only on the 400,000 to 500,000 current felons and some 1.4 million additional aliens who have ignored legal summons for their deportation.

Weekly we read of thousands of illegal immigrants arriving from areas controlled by violent Mexican cartel gangs or failed, strife-torn South American countries that have emptied their jails to send their felons northwards. Hundreds of thousands of them have been committing violent crimes while demanding still more free housing and support from strapped American taxpayers.

Big-city left-wing mayors and city councils boast that they will do all their best to nullify federal immigration laws, even as their cities face near insolvency housing, feeding, and monitoring the influx. More specifically, they brag they will continue to order local and state authorities to resist all efforts of federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers. They scream about possible “massive deportations” to come under Trump, callously ignoring that their own advocacy has fueled rising crime waves of unaudited illegal aliens. And they appear absolutely indifferent to the social costs imposed by illegal immigration upon their own poor and middle-class constituents.


Victor Davis Hanson

Source: https://amgreatness.com/2024/11/25/the-immorality-of-illegal-immigration/

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Trump security maven Gorka: ‘No such thing as Palestine’ - Canaan Lidor

 

by Canaan Lidor

The counter-terrorism expert also said IDF generals have a "mind virus" that makes it harder to understand jihadists.

 

Sebastian Gorka speaks at a Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Maryland, on Feb. 22, 2018. Photo by Gage Skidmore/Flickr.
Sebastian Gorka speaks at a Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Maryland, on Feb. 22, 2018. Photo by Gage Skidmore/Flickr.

Sebastian Gorka, Donald Trump’s pick as his senior director for counter-terrorism, has made several statements in favor of Israel recently, including that “Palestine” doesn’t exist and that IDF generals should forget about diplomacy and focus on defeating terrorists militarily.

Gorka, who had served as deputy assistant to the president-elect from January to August 2017, during his first term in office, broached the issue of Palestine in an interview on Nov. 16 with a host for RT,  a Russian state-controlled international news television network.

“Why can’t you talk about genocide in Gaza? And is that the same with all of the Trump team?” the host of an RT talk show asked Gorka. He responded: “Because there isn’t any genocide in Gaza. There is no such thing as Palestine.”

Gorka added that the “etymology of the word Palestinian” is a “name invented by the Roman Empire to insult Jews.” The host informed Gorka that “the rest of the world disagrees with you.” Gorka sarcastically replied, “I’m glad you talk for the rest of the world.”

The host, Afshin Rattansi, cited the United Nation’s support for Palestinians, launching Gorka on a monologue about the international body.

“The United Nations that sends people in blue helmets to rape little girls in Africa. Why did I not listen to the United Nations? What a clown show, really. As far as I’m concerned, the United Nations could be pushed into the Hudson, okay? What have they done to solve anything of late except create child prostitution rackets in Africa.”

U.N. troops and officials in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan, Sri Lanka and Haiti have been accused of hundreds of cases of sexual abuse, including against minors, over the past 20 years.

‘Destroy every jihadi’

Asked about Trump’s position on Israel, Gorka said, “President Trump stands shoulder to shoulder with [Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu and our brethren, our brothers, our friends in Israel, whose job it is right now to destroy every stinking jihadi.

“I’ve seen the video, the unedited 47-minute video of what they did to those men, women and children,” Gorka added, referencing Hamas footage of the Oct. 7, 2023, massacre that its terrorists perpetrated in Israel, plunging the region into an ongoing war.

Gorka also said he does not believe death statistics published by Hamas, which speak of 44,000 slain in Gaza. “You know what? It’s really weird. I don’t believe the Hamas Department of Health statistics,” he said.

In a separate interview aired on Nov. 21 by Perspectives TV Toronto, an Israeli online television channel, Gorka criticized the Israeli military leadership’s approach to Hamas. Asked about retrieving the dozens of Israeli hostages held in Gaza, he said, “The biggest obstacle is the IDF generals misunderstanding the threat.”

Quoting Jonathan Schanzer of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies think tank, Gorka added: “The generals in the IDF fell victim to the mental virus that began here in America under [President Barack] Obama.

“The clever people in the government under Obama convinced themselves that Al-Qaeda, ISIS, Hamas, Hezbollah, Al-Nusra … are political problems, that can be solved with economic aid and political negotiations.”

In reality, Gorka argued, “This is an existential threat, and as a result, they bring the wrong tools to the table. … When more than 70% of Gaza or the West Bank think the murdering of children, the rape and the slaughter of young women is good, then there is no financial reward, there is no political negotiation that will bring victory. There is only the utter destruction of those who lead these organizations, which has been done incredibly successfully recently with the pager operation.”

On Sept. 17, thousands of pagers belonging to Hezbollah commanders in Lebanon began exploding, in a devastating operation prepared by Israel.  

During Gorka’s first stretch in the White House, detractors accused him of espousing antisemitic views because he allegedly was a member of a historical society named for the Order of Vitéza, a long-defunct order of merit that had existed until 1944 under the rule of Miklos Horthy, Hungary’s Nazi-allied leader.

Gorka has denied these allegations.

In February 2017, then-Israel Allies Caucus co-chair Rep. Trent Franks (R-Ariz.) called Gorka “the staunchest friend of Israel and the Jewish people.”


Canaan Lidor

Source: https://www.jns.org/trump-security-maven-gorka-no-such-thing-as-palestine/

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Russia recruits hundreds of Yemeni mercenaries to fight in Ukraine, many under duress - report - Jerusalem Post Staff

 

by Jerusalem Post Staff

Previous reports emerged that Russia has sought after foreign mercenaries from countries with "difficult economic situations" to fight in Ukraine.

 

Russian soldiers line up during an opening ceremony of the memorial to Russian service members killed during Russia-Ukraine conflict, in Yevpatoriya, Crimea February 22, 2024.  (photo credit: REUTERS/ALEXEY PAVLISHAK)
Russian soldiers line up during an opening ceremony of the memorial to Russian service members killed during Russia-Ukraine conflict, in Yevpatoriya, Crimea February 22, 2024.
(photo credit: REUTERS/ALEXEY PAVLISHAK)

Russia has reportedly recruited hundreds of Yemeni men, many of them under duress, to fight in the war against Ukraine, the Financial Times reported on Sunday. 

Many Yemenis who were involved in combat shared their testimonies with the Times, saying that those who were recruited were promised high salaries and even Russian citizenship. 

These recruits arrived in Russia with the help of a company linked to Houthi politician Abdulwali Abdo Hassan al-Jabri, the Times noted. 

According to the report, Yemeni soldiers were recruited as early as July. Many did not have military training and were reportedly coerced or manipulated into fighting for Russia as they signed documents they were unable to read. Some said they were forcibly taken to a facility from the airport, where a man speaking in simple Arabic fired a pistol over their heads if they refused to sign the enlistment contract, which was written solely in Russian. 

Eleven Yemenis were allowed to leave Russia for Yemen through Oman earlier in November, with the assistance of the International Federation of Yemeni Migrants, who pressured the Yemeni government after public outcry. 

 Houthi supporters rally to show to Lebanon's Hezbollah, in Sanaa, Yemen September 27, 2024 (credit: REUTERS/KHALED ABDULLAH)Enlrage image
Houthi supporters rally to show to Lebanon's Hezbollah, in Sanaa, Yemen September 27, 2024 (credit: REUTERS/KHALED ABDULLAH)

US officials believe that the growing alliance between Russia and the Houthis in Yemen shows how far Russia will go to extend the conflict even into the Middle East, the Times noted. 

The Times quoted US special envoy for Yemen, Tim Lenderking, as saying, "We know that there are Russian personnel in Sana'a helping to deepen this dialogue. The kinds of weapons that are being discussed are very alarming and would allow the Houthis to better target ships in the Red Sea and possibly beyond."

Russia seeks foreign mercenaries from countries with 'difficult economic situations'

The Kyiv Independent previously reported in March of this year that Russia has sought after foreign mercenaries from countries with "difficult economic situations" to fight in Ukraine, which include India, Nepal, Somalia, and Cuba. 

In January, Nepal halted granting foreign work permits for citizens to work in Russia until further notice due to the number of Nepalese mercenaries that were killed fighting for Russia in Ukraine, the Kyiv Independent noted. At least 10 Nepalis were confirmed killed, and up to 200 were estimated to be fighting in Ukraine for Russia as of January of this year. 

These reports also follow the recent development of North Korean troops collaborating with Russia in the battle in Ukraine. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed that confrontations had occurred between North Korean and Ukrainian soldiers in Russia's Kursk region. 

North Korean troops were engaged in combat in Russia's Kursk in recent days for the first time, two US officials told Reuters in early November. 

Joanie Margulies contributed to this report. 


Jerusalem Post Staff

Source: https://www.jpost.com/international/article-830638

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Powerhouse progressive watchdog Media Matters hunkers down amid legal, financial challenges - Paul Bond

 

by Paul Bond

Media Matters for America was founded in 2004 by progressive former journalist David Brock. Time magazine in 2015 called him “One of the most influential operatives in the Democrat Party.”

 

This story is the third in a four-part series this month by Just the News on watchdogs who promote censorship.

On Sunday, a meeting of something called Democracy Alliance kicked off with attendees and presentations from powerful Democrats including Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren and the party’s wealthiest donors, including George Soros. 

On the agenda, according to The New York Times, is a discussion about Democrats, who this election lost the White House and Senate, needing to “go on offense in a splintered media environment where conservatives have amassed more influence.”

Hence the existence of the "Two Plus Two Coalition" which is seeking a minimum investment from each donor of $1 million in order to “target the hidden sources of disinformation and expose them for what they are,” the newspaper also reports.

Its senior adviser is Rick Wilson, a former Republican who founded the Lincoln Project, which endorsed Joe Biden in 2020 and whose motto posted on X is, “Never Trump means Never Trump.”

“A lot of people in the center and on the left have for a long time sort of bemoaned Fox, but they haven’t done anything about it,” Wilson told the Times. Others would strongly disagree, and at the top of the list of well-funded groups attacking Fox News and other is Media Matters for America, the topic of our third in a four-part series about watchdogs who censor: Big Censorship, if you will.

Media Matters for America

The group is best known for creating studies, reports, and directives, that it sends to thousands of journalists nationwide. For example, after Olympian boxer Imane Khelif of Algeria beat Angela Carini of Italy, the group told reporters that “the U.S. right quickly seized on the match and plugged it into their obsessive anti-trans hysteria, falsely declaring Khelif a man who had beaten up a woman.” 

The group strategically instructs journalists on how to frame stories – often in a far-left narrative – and what not to report on, in this case asking them to report that “weirdo right-wingers” whipped themselves into “a hateful frenzy” over the match.

Three months later, some outlets reported on a leaked medical report from 2023 concluded Khelif had the male XY chromosome, no uterus and a condition that affects the sexual development of males. Khelif is reportedly preparing a lawsuit to refute the claims.

None of these latest developments are available through MMFA, which instead has focused on accusing conservative media personalities such as Jesse Watters, Laura Ingraham and Megyn Kelly of misgendering Khelif.

Unlike the others in this series, MMFA doesn’t even pretend it’s neutral, hence, its myriad missives about Trump’s allegedly dangerous rhetoric and rebukes against media for downplay it. 

But when Wilson, the Lincoln Project founder, said on MSNBC in 2015 that “they’re still going to have to go out and put a bullet in Donald Trump,” he earned no rebuke from MMFA, nor did the media for “downplaying” it.

The group appears to always advance the progressive narrative, even when it’s wrong, as was the case when Nicholas Sandmann stared at native American drummer Nathan Phillips near the Lincoln Memorial in Washington in 2019.

MMFA, as did some news outlets and journalists, ignored the full video showing that Phillips approached Sandmann, who initially moved out of his way before simply standing in place, and portrayed the then-Covington Catholic High School student as the aggressor. (This reporter was at a legacy media outlet at the time and was told not to write about what the full video revealed).

In 2020, CNN settled for an undisclosed amount with Sandmann who sued the network for defamation over its coverage of the encounter. MMFA never apologized for, or retracted, its initial assertions, though the only mention of Sandmann on its website nowadays is one that criticizes Fox News for discussing his incident with Phillips on more than 100 episodes of its shows. 

That same year, MMFA repeatedly slammed Fox News and Trump as "conspiracy theorists" over assertions that COVID-19 emanated from a lab in Wuhan, China.

“Right-wing media push conspiracy theories about coronavirus, including that it was created in a lab,” read one headline in March, 2020. Two months later, another headline read: “Right-wing media still pushing conspiracy theories about the origins of coronavirus.”

MMFA was founded in 2004 by conservative-turned-progressive former journalist David Brock, and his work was so impactful that Time magazine in 2015 called him, “One of the most influential operatives in the Democrat Party.”

Buoyed by funding from left-wing donors such as Soros and the Tides Foundation, MMFA has attacked the late-Rush Limbaugh, conservative media such as Breitbart News and especially Fox News, labeling the latter effort its “War on Fox” or “Drop Fox” campaign.  A hallmark of its campaigns are to call out companies that dare advertise on such outlets.

Fox News declined to comment for this report, but media critic and contributor Joe Concha on air in October called MMFA “a patently dishonest, activist organization whose No. 1 mission, outside of taking out this network, is to squash any and all free speech through astroturf campaigns, online, against anyone or anything that they consider to be conservative.”

One thread among the left-leaning media watchdogs are attacks on X, the social-media firm that was known as Twitter before Elon Musk rebranded his acquisition with the intention of turning it into a haven for free speech.

"guerilla warfare and sabotage"

Thus, when MMFA produced a study that claimed ads from major companies were appearing alongside pro-Nazi and other hateful content on X, Musk sued, claiming that MMFA manipulated the pairings. 

Among the alleged damages are that Apple, Comcast, NBC Universal, IBM and others featured in the MMFA ad-pairings yanked their ads from X. Also, a slew of entertainment companies not included in MMFA’s report said they’d no longer advertise on X, including Lionsgate, Warner Bros. Discovery, Paramount and Sony. According to the lawsuit, paid posts cited by MMFA appeared for just one viewer out of more than 500 million on all of X, and only through MMFA’s manipulation.

The lawsuit describes MMFA as “a self-proclaimed media watchdog that decided it would not let the truth get in the way of a story it wanted to publish about X Corp.” The lawsuit, filed 12 months ago, also states “this November alone Media Matters released over 20 articles (and counting) disparaging both X Corp. and Elon Musk – a blatant smear campaign.”

Since launching, MMFA “has engaged in an all-out campaign of guerrilla warfare and sabotage,” says the lawsuit, borrowing verbiage used in a Politico article. 

X and Musk are a critical target of Media Matters because “X is the most prominent online platform that permits users to share all viewpoints, whether liberal or conservative,” Musk’s attorneys wrote. A trial is set for April 7, 2025.

MMFA did not respond to a request for comment from Just the News. Among the questions asked by this reporter were: 

  • How much funding has MMFA received from George Soros? 
  • From the Tides Foundation?
  • What other individuals or entities have supported MMFA? 
  • Did MMFA manipulate pairings to show that ads routinely show up next to hateful, even pro-Nazi, content on X?

As Constitutional Law professor Jonathan Turley noted in The Hill newspaper in August, Musk’s lawsuit comes at a time when “media organizations and journalism schools have expressly abandoned objectivity in favor of advocacy journalism.” 

Examples he lists are former New York Times writer and now Howard University journalism professor Nikole Hannah-Jones being lionized for declaring that “all journalism is activism” and Emilio Garcia-Ruiz, editor-in-chief at the San Francisco Chronicle, announcing that, “Objectivity has got to go.”

No surprise, then, that trust in legacy media is at a low, with Gallup reporting that 72% had a “fair amount” or “great deal” of trust in 1976 though it has fallen to 31% ,while zero trust in media rose from 4% then to 36% now.

After X sued MMFA, Texas GOP Attorney General Ken Paxton opened an investigation into the group for potential fraudulent activity. Paxton’s office said he “was extremely troubled by the allegations that Media Matters, a radical anti-free speech organization, fraudulently manipulated data on X.com.”

Paxton said his goal was “to ensure that the public has not been deceived by the schemes of radical left-wing organizations who would like nothing more than to limit freedom by reducing participation in the public square.”

In December, MMFA responded by suing Paxton. And in April, a judge, citing MMFA’s right of free speech, granted a preliminary injunction, thus pausing Paxton’s investigation until settled by an appellate court. A similar investigation into MMFA by Missouri GOP Attorney General Andrew Bailey was shut down by a judge in August.

Unlike many media watchdogs on the left, MMFA calls itself “progressive,” though many journalists appear to treat it as an unbiased source of information. 

In October, a New York Times reporter appeared to reveal in text messages that they were using MMFA data for a yet-to-publish story about alleged disinformation spread by conservative podcasters. “I wanted to give you an opportunity to comment for an upcoming article that takes a look at how political commentators have discussed the upcoming election on YouTube,” the reporter sent in a text to Daily Wire star Ben Shapiro.

“We rely on an analysis conducted by researchers at Media Matters for America,” the reporter continued in the text, which Shapiro posted on X for all to see. The text asserts Shapiro spread information that has been “debunked,” evidence being that he said that Democrats in 2020 “rigged many of the voting rules in advance of the election in order to ensure an extraordinary number of mail-in ballots, ballot harvesting …”

The reporter sent a similar text to Tucker Carlson and he, too, posted the image to X.

Carlson and Shapiro are regular targets of MMFA, and so are their advertisers. 

“Right-wing YouTubers and Daily Wire personalities with millions of subscribers regularly misgender and deadname trans people in content with ads,” screamed a sub-headline on one of its studies in March.

Some defenders of MMFA argue the group is at least somewhat fair-minded in that it occasionally criticizes left-wing outlets, though it does so from the prospective that they’ve veered to near the center. 

Such was the case when MSNBC allowed Trump to appear a few times eight years ago on “Morning Joe,” the cable news outlet's show hosted by Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski. And, more recently, when the left was pushing the narrative that Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris lost to Trump due to misogyny, MMFA attacked Scarborough for suggesting that some of the alleged misogyny came by way of Black and Hispanic voters. 

He also occasionally runs afoul of MMFA by suggesting Democrats are overly focused on transgender issues. “You never know why people are going to vote,” he said last year, earning him a rebuke from MMFA.

“It may be the swimmer at Penn, the trans swimmer at Penn, which Democrats don't talk about, but Republicans are littering mailboxes across America with fliers on it. You never know why people are going to vote.”

In May, the organization laid off about a dozen staffers with President Angelo Carusone saying: “We’re confronting a legal assault on multiple fronts and, given how rapidly the media landscape is shifting, we need to be extremely intentional about how we allocate resources to stay effective.”

Carusone is also an occasional guest on left-wing media outlets. On Nov. 16, for example, he appeared on MSNBC to disparage Pete Hegseth, President-elect Trump’s nominee for Defense secretary.

Hegseth, said Carusone, “is poisoned by this grand narrative that presents the military as an instrument, not just for sort of Trump's authoritarianism, which is extremely scary and he is fully obedient, but also for this broader sort of, you know, Christian worldview.”

MMFA also is occasionally called in by lawmakers to represent the progressive side of the censorship debate, arguing that there’s no evidence that conservatives are targeted by the likes of Facebook and YouTube.

“We anticipate GOP members will invoke this false and repeatedly debunked narrative, claiming that social media platforms have an anti-conservative bias,” MMFA said in written testimony last year at a Congressional hearing “on preserving free speech and reining in big tech censorship.”

Just as MMFA relied on its own internal study to claim X manipulated ad pairings, its written statement to Congress last year relied on several studies its own employees generated.

In an analysis typical of MMFA, it told members of Congress that “the most glaring evidence disproving the idea that Facebook has an anti-conservative bias was the decision by Meta – the company that now owns Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp – to allow former President Donald Trump to return to its platforms, ignoring his continued ‘risk to public safety,’ which was the bar the company purportedly set for his return.”

While Trump hasn’t mentioned MMFA recently, in 2017 he wrote on Twitter: “Media Matters is a radical left group that promotes lies and fake news against me.” 

Such sentiments suggest when Trump said earlier this month that, “We need to break up the entire toxic censorship industry that has arisen under the false guise of tackling myths and disinformation,” he may have had MMFA in mind.

(In the fourth and final part of this series on watchdogs who censor, Just the News explores the Center for Countering Digital Hate.)

 
Paul Bond

Source: https://justthenews.com/accountability/cancel-culture/bond-part-4

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Toronto Police Arrest Journalist Ezra Levant For Covering Pro-Hamas Rally - Frontpagemag.com

 

by Frontpagemag.com

Is Canada no longer a free country?

 


Below is the video of Toronto Police arresting Rebel News Founder and CEO Ezra Levant for covering a Pro-Hamas rally. The arrest begs the question: Is Canada no longer a free country? Help Ezra: HERE.

 

 
Frontpagemag.com

Source: https://www.frontpagemag.com/toronto-police-arrest-journalist-ezra-levant-covering-pro-hamas-rally/

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As the U.S. electricity supply comes up short, power-hungry industries are looking to go off-grid - Kevin Killough

 

by Kevin Killough

When Tesla CEO Elon Musk was building a data center in Tennessee to handle operations for his artificial intelligence platform Grok, he powered it with 18 portable gas-powered turbines, allowing him to get it operational in four months.

 

data center
Various data centers are shown situated near a neighborhood on July 17, 2024 in Ashburn, Virginia. Northern Virginia is the largest data center market in the world, but is facing headwinds from availability of land and electric power.
(Getty Images)

Earlier this month, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission rejected an agreement between a nuclear power plant owner and Amazon to locate a data center next to the plant and satisfy its power needs. 

The decision raises the prospect that energy-hungry data centers, as well as other industrial power consumers, may not be able to meet their power demands with the grid. If the grid can’t supply the power, companies might be forced to create their own power plants. Those plants will likely tap natural gas as a fuel source, or eventually employ advanced nuclear reactors in the next decade. 

Access denied

In March, Talen Energy, the majority owner of the Susquehanna Steam Electric Station in Pennsylvania, sold a data center campus to Amazon Web Services, the world's largest cloud service provider, for $650 million, according to Utility Dive. Talen intended to sell power to Amazon from Talen’s 2.2 gigawatt stake in the Susquehanna power plant. 

The regional grid operator, PJM, filed an amended interconnection service agreement (ISA) for the two companies in order to facilitate selling more power directly to Amazon. Opponents of the plan, according to Nuclear Newswire, raised concerns the deal would threaten grid reliability and increase customer electricity rates. In a 2-1 vote on Nov. 1, FERC commissioners rejected the agreement. Talen argues that FERC erred in its decisions and that the agreement was “just and reasonable.” The company is asking FERC to review the agreement again.

According to the Energy Policy Research Foundation (EPRINC), the number of data centers are growing to facilitate demand for streaming services, smartphones and tablets, security systems such as doorbell cameras, and data-gathering services. The use of artificial intelligence is another driver of the growth in the number of data centers. 

Data centers are not, however, distributed across the country. According to EPRINC, they’re gravitating to states that have at least some of the most attractive features for these facilities — affordable commercial real estate, robust network connectivity, infrequent natural disaster occurrences, or low-cost electricity. Virginia, Texas, California and Ohio are at the top of the list. 

The EPRINC estimates that 2,602 data centers are operating in the U.S., with another 407 planned or under construction, numbers that will grow over time. The energy demand of these facilities is garnering greater scrutiny on how that could impact a grid that was never designed to handle these rapid increases in loads. 

Regular brownouts and blackouts

new study by the Jack Kemp Foundation, a D.C.-based think tank, estimates that without intervention from policymakers, the energy demands of data centers, electrification and advanced manufacturing could increase the average American household’s electricity bill by 20% to 70% over the next decade. The increased demand could also destabilize the grid.

“The consequences of such a failure could be the appearance of regular brownouts and blackouts in Northern Virginia and across the country,” the study warns. 

If regulators make it harder for these operations to tap the grid for their energy needs, they may be forced in increasing numbers to build their own power plants. That’s exactly what Tesla CEO Elon Musk did in Memphis, Tennessee. As reported in The Information, Musk built a supercomputer using 100,000 Nvidia H100 graphics processing units in a little more than four months. Its central focus is Musk’s AI operation, Grok.  

The local grid presented too many constraints for Musk’s facility to connect to it, so he built an non-permitted natural gas plant on site. While he wanted for the Tennessee Valley Authority to approve a request for 100 megawatts of power at the site, according to The Information, Musk brought in mobile, natural-gas powered turbines to provide supplemental power in the meantime. 

Local environmental groups raised alarm about the facility's power plants, which according to NPR, consists of at least 18 portable gas-powered turbines. Because the county health department regulatates gas generators if they’re in the same location for more than 364 days, the local health department had no jurisdiction over Musk’s power plant. The Environmental Protection Agency told NPR in September it’s “looking into the matter.” 

A group of analysts who publish their writings on Substack under the name “Doomberg,” speculate that other data centers may look into Musk’s approach to address their own power needs. “An immediate consequence of such developments would be a surge in demand for gas turbines and associated power equipment, products already in short supply. According to an industry insider we spoke to while researching this piece, the backlog of new turbine orders is ‘already several years, perhaps three to four,’” Doomberg wrote. 

Nuclear future: Micro reactors

While natural gas turbines are at the moment the go-to energy source for data centers and other large electricity consumers, advanced nuclear reactors may become competitive and practical in the next 10 or 20 years. Many companies are developing small modular reactors (SMR), which have power outputs of around 20 megawatts to 300 megawatts, and micro reactors which are below that. 

Nano Nuclear Energy Inc. is among the companies developing micro reactors. James Walker, CEO of Nano told Just the News that the company saw there were a lot of established players in the SMR space, and they saw a larger market in micro reactors, which catered to energy demands where diesel generators were the primary solution at the moment. This includes military bases, island communities, remote mining projects, oil and gas operations, and disaster relief. 

“We actually began with mining projects in mind, because we'd spoken to some of the majors in mining, and you know, they were very transparent that a lot of their projects are not economic based on fuel costs,” Walker said. 

The micro reactors are about the size of a shipping container. Unlike diesel generators, they wouldn’t require truckloads of fuel to be shipped in or pipelines to be built, and as an aside, do not produce the same greenhouse gasses as diesel. With a mining project that will last 10 or 15 years, it doesn’t make much sense to build infrastructure that will be stranded after the project is complete, Walker explained. 

Breaking point

One of the major business risks of the advanced nuclear reactor industry, Walker said, is the sourcing of fuel. These reactors use high-assay, low-enriched uranium (HALEU). Currently, only Russia and China have the infrastructure to produce HALEU at scale, and the lack of a domestic supply has delayed advanced nuclear reactor projects. Parallel with its development of micro reactors, Nano is developing the manufacturing of HALEU. 

Besides the burgeoning data centers, the future return of manufacturing in the U.S. is also creating power demands that the grid might not be equipped to handle. In New York, one semiconductor facility is looking to expand its facility, and chief among its concerns is that its power demands would stretch the grid’s “reliability margins” to the breaking point. 

As industries grow, they may find that connecting to the grid is no longer the obvious solution for their power needs. New nuclear technologies could replace natural-gas powered systems for carbon-free energy in the future, something Big Tech in which is very interested. They could become a big part of micro-grid applications where electricity is delivered without dependence on the grid. 


Kevin Killough

Source: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/energy/us-electricity-supply-comes-short-power-hungry-industries-are-looking-go

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