Thursday, June 5, 2025

Federal money trail leads to Chinese scientists charged in shocking pathogen plot, memos show - Steven Richards and John Solomon

 

by Steven Richards and John Solomon

The pair indicted this week worked with a University of Michigan laboratory helmed and the FBI is calling the federal funding a possible bioterrorism security risk.

 

Two Chinese scientists charged in a shocking plot to smuggle a toxic pathogen into the United States worked at an American laboratory led by more senior Chinese scientists funded by the U.S. government, according to federal spending records and the researchers' own disclosures. 

Yunqing Jian, 33, and Zunyong Liu, 34, were charged Tuesday with smuggling a fungus called Fusarium graminearum into the United States in 2024. The fungus is classified in the scientific literature as a “potential agroterrorism weapon” because it affects wheat, barley, maize, and rice by causing “head blight,” according to the Justice Department

The incident is again raising concerns about the tendrils of Chinese Communist Party influence inside U.S. research institutions and broader society, just five years after the COVID-19 pandemic exposed federal funding to a lab in Wuhan, China where the virus is believed to have escaped and where dangerous gain of function research was being conducted.

The Justice Department noted Yunqing Jian’s electronics contained evidence describing “her membership in and loyalty” to the Chinese Communist Party. The Trump administration, especially the FBI, have doubled down on efforts to root out Chinese Communist Party influence, especially in higher education, by revoking visas for Chinese students at American schools. 

Funding from U.S. taxpayers

Records reviewed by Just the News show that both China-born scientists charged this week were affiliated with a University of Michigan research laboratory led by two senior researchers who are also Chinese citizens and are receiving funding from the National Institutes of Health for studying plant immunity. 

Ping He and Libo Shan, both of whom completed their undergraduate studies in China and doctoral and postdoctoral studies in the United States, are the senior faculty members at the Molecular Plant-Microbe Interaction Working Groups housed at the University of Michigan’s Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology. The laboratory conducts research on plant immunity, according to its website

According to NIH records, Libo Shan and Ping He received more than $7.6 million in total funding between two sponsored projects, awarded one to each scientist. Both NIH projects (R35GM144275 and R35GM149197) were cited in at least two research papers involving both Jian and Liu, the indicted Chinese nationals. 

Other research papers on which both Jian and Liu were authors cite awards from the National Science Foundation, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

The FBI told Just the News Wednesday night that it is aware of the federal funding trail and believes the entire case exposes a serious national security risk with U.S. scientific research relying on foreign scientists, particularly from commust China.

"The CCP’s quiet infiltration of our research ecosystem is a direct threat to our national security, biosecurity, and economic independence," Erica Knight, an adviser to FBI Director Kash Patel, told Just the News. "The Director understands these threats better than anyone, and under his leadership, we will aggressively root out every trace of corrupt foreign influence."

Sen. Ron Johnson, the chairman of the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, said the incident shows that the threat of Chinese involvement in dangerous research funded by the U.S. government, first exposed during investigations into COVID-19, is still ongoing. 

“It has been obvious for years that Anthony Fauci and Francis Collins not only funded dangerous research, but directed funding to scientists loyal to China, not America,” Johnson told Just the News. “My hope is that we can uncover and expose the extent to which their blatant actions harmed our nation and the world.”

Both Jian and Liu worked with the University of Michigan laboratory led by Shan and He, according to current and archived versions of the laboratory’s webpage. 

Niether Dr. Shan nor Dr. He immediately responded to requests for comment from Just the News

The provided biography shows Yunqing Jian joined the laboratory in August 2022 as a postdoctoral fellow. She is originally from Sichuan, China and completed her doctoral studies at Zhejiang University in China in 2020 where she “studied the mechanisms of how fungi combat with plant-derived stresses,” the web page reads. 

The indictment shows that Jian also received funding through China’s "Postdoctoral International Exchange Program and the Second Class of Grants from the 69th Batch of China Postdoctoral Science Foundation” from July 1, 2022, to June 30, 2024. 

Changed his story after questioning by CBP

Zunyong Liu, who is reportedly in a relationship with Jian, was also affiliated with the laboratory before he returned to China in July 2024 after trying and failing to enter the United States with a red plant material in his backpack, according to the Justice Department indictment. Liu changed his story under interrogation about the biological material, prompting authorities to turn him back. 

Liu was listed as a postdoctoral fellow at the Michigan laboratory until shortly before he was turned away at customs, according to an archived version of the website. He is also listed as an author on at least four scientific studies produced under the NIH grants associated with the University's laboratory, the records show. 

“When Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Officers questioned LIU, he made false statements to CBP Officers about the purpose of his visit to the United States, and his knowledge of the existence of the biological pathogen in his possession,” the indictment reads. “Ultimately, LIU admitted to smuggling the pathogen and stated that he brought the pathogen into the United States so that he could conduct research on it at a laboratory at the University of Michigan where his girlfriend, JIAN, worked.”

According to the criminal complaint, Zunyong Liu currently works at a university in China and conducts research on the same plant pathogens as his girlfriend, Yunqing Jian.

Liu and Jian were charged in a criminal complaint with conspiracy to commit offense or to defraud the United States, smuggling goods into the United States, false statements and visa fraud.

You can read the criminal complaint below:

The Justice Department laid out evidence that the two researchers collaborated on at least one prior occasion to smuggle an unknown seed into the United States, according to their communications on the Chinese messaging application WeChat, Just the News reported Wednesday. 

“Teacher Liang’s seeds must be placed well,” Liu wrote to Jian in August 2022, according to the indictment. 

“Where to put it? I only have one pair of shoes. The insole cannot be pulled off,” she replied.

“Where did the seeds get put? In the tube?” Liu asked later. 

“I put them in my Martin boots… in a small bag. The ziplock bag. Very small,” Jian said. “I stuffed them in the shoes," she later added. 

Customs and Border Patrol records show Jian entered the country via a flight from Seoul, South Korea to San Francisco International Airport. Those records show that Jian did not declare any biological materials at Customs, according to the indictment.

A pattern of crimes in Chinese/Univ. of Michigan nexus

“We strongly condemn any actions that seek to cause harm, threaten national security or undermine the university’s critical public mission,” the University of Michigan said in a statement. 

“It is important to note that the university has received no funding from the Chinese government in relation to research conducted by the accused individuals. We have and will continue to cooperate with federal law enforcement in its ongoing investigation and prosecution,” the statement continued.

Rep. Greg Murphy, R-N.C., a surgeon-turned congressman, said the smuggling incident is part of a larger, multipronged Chinese effort to “attack” the United States. 

“[For]…Chinese nationals to think they could sneak something in and bring something into this country to do harm to the country really, you know, if you want to be very blunt—blunt about it—almost is an act of war, but it's done by a private citizen,” Murphy told the John Solomon Reports podcast. 

“So we have to be hyper-vigilant, especially in these days where, you know, China is attacking us every day by bringing in fentanyl. China's attacking us every day with cyberattacks. We have to be hyper-vigilant of these types of pathogens coming into the country,” he added.

This is far from the first incident involving Chinese nationals associated with the University of Michigan. In some ways, the school has been a hub for China-related activities in the United States, including repeat incidents of Chinese students from the school photographing military bases in different corners of the country. 

In the summer of 2023, National Guard soldiers discovered five Chinese University of Michigan students near Camp Grayling, about 200 miles from the school. The students were later charged by the Justice Department for covering up their real reason for traveling to the area, to take photographs of military vehicles at the base for one of the largest National Guard exercises in the country, Just the News previously reported. The University of Michigan boasts a joint study program with Shanghai Jiao Tong University, which brings students to the United States for a two-year program.

In a similar case in 2020, two University of Michigan students were arrested in Key West, Florida after driving on to the Sigsbee Annex Naval Air Station and photographing the property, including military structures.

Robert Charles, a former State Department official and naval intelligence officer, warned that Chinese researchers at the Michigan lab could be a “canary in the coal mine” of Chinese efforts to target the U.S. food supply, especially considering this latest incident involved a fungus that could target crops. 

"Okay, the Chinese are adept at infiltration, at espionage, and at doing it in a way that is, if not inscrutable, intended to be very quiet,” Charles told the John Solomon Reports podcast. 

“And so I look at this and I say…is this going to be the beginning…of a discovery,” he continued. 

“The Chinese did a study about five years ago of what the biggest national security issue would be for them going ahead, and what it would be for us… [and] It said that food was the number one item that would trigger national security concerns for both countries,” Charles explained. 


Steven Richards and John Solomon

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/security/chinese-researchers-caught-smuggling-toxic-fungus-worked-scientists-receiving

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Rubio slams UN Gaza vote: 'We stand with Israel, not performative resolutions' - Israel National News

 

by Israel National News

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio defends America's veto of a UN Security Council resolution aimed at Israel, blasting it as 'counterproductive,' and warning it emboldens Hamas. 'We will not support any measure that fails to condemn Hamas.

 

Marco Rubio
Marco Rubio                                                                            REUTERS/Craig Hudson

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Wednesday responded to the US' veto of a UN Security Council resolution targeting Israel.

"Today, the United States sent a strong message by vetoing a counterproductive UN Security Council resolution on Gaza targeting Israel," Rubio stated. "We will not support any measure that fails to condemn Hamas, does not call for Hamas to disarm and leave Gaza, draws a false equivalence between Israel and Hamas, or disregards Israel’s right to defend itself."

"Hamas could end this brutal conflict immediately by laying down its arms and releasing all remaining hostages, including the remains of the four Americans they murdered. Many members of the Security Council still refuse to acknowledge this reality and performative efforts like this resolution undermine diplomatic efforts to reach a ceasefire. This resolution would have only empowered Hamas to continue stealing aid and threatening civilians."

The statement promised, "The United States will never stop working to free all the hostages. We will continue supporting the delivery of aid to Gaza, without Hamas’ interference, and ensure that Hamas and other terrorists have no future in Gaza. The United States will continue to stand with Israel at the UN. The United Nations must return to its original purpose — promoting peace and security — and stop these performative actions."

The US Mission to the United Nations echoed these remarks, stating on X, "Today, the United States vetoed a performative resolution at the UN Security Council."

"We have been clear: The United States will not support any measure that fails to condemn Hamas and does not call for it to disarm and leave Gaza.

"Any effort in the Council must ensure Hamas can never again be a threat to Israel and should be supportive of our diplomatic efforts on the ground."

Earlier on Wednesday, the United Nations Security Council convened to vote on a resolution calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza - without conditioning it on the return of the 58 hostages still held by Hamas in inhumane conditions.

The proposal received the support of 14 member states. The United States vetoed the resolution, preventing its adoption.

“The United States has been clear we would not support any measure that fails to condemn Hamas and does not call for Hamas to disarm and leave Gaza,” Acting US Ambassador to the UN Dorothy Shea told the Council before the vote.

She added, “This resolution would undermine diplomatic efforts to reach a ceasefire that reflects the realities on the ground, and embolden Hamas.” 


Israel National News

Source: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/409486

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Israeli gov't pushing through dismissal of A-G Gali Baharav-Miara - Avraham Bloch

 

by Avraham Bloch

The move comes amid what Levin described as an "unprecedented crisis of trust" between the attorney-general and the government.

 

Attorney-General Gali Baharav Miara attends the swearing-in ceremony of Justice Isaac Amit as president of the Supreme Court, at the President’s Residence in Jerusalem in February 2025. (photo credit: FLASH90)
Attorney-General Gali Baharav Miara attends the swearing-in ceremony of Justice Isaac Amit as president of the Supreme Court, at the President’s Residence in Jerusalem in February 2025.
(photo credit: FLASH90)

 

The coalition is advancing the dismissal of Attorney-General Gali Baharav-Miara, Israeli media reported on Wednesday.

According to Israeli media reports, the move comes amid what Levin described as an "unprecedented crisis of trust" between the attorney-general and the government.

The draft proposes that a ministerial committee be authorized to hold a hearing and, if grounds for dismissal are found, to recommend termination of Baharav-Miara's tenure. A 75% majority in the government would then be sufficient to approve her dismissal.

The attorney-general's office declined to comment on the proposed legislation.

The draft argues that the legal consultation process, traditionally required with the attorney-general's selection committee, has become obsolete due to teh scale of distrust and functional paralysis it claims has gripped the government amid wartime. The existing committee - currently incomplete - was the body that originally selected Baharav-Miara and would typically be involved in dismissal deliberations. 

 Gali Baharav-Miara. (credit: YONATAN SINDEL/FLASH90)Enlrage image
Gali Baharav-Miara. (credit: YONATAN SINDEL/FLASH90)

"Since the government unanimously expressed no confidence in the attorney-general, cooperation has deteriorated tot he point of dysfunction," the proposal reads. "Given the urgent need for unity during wartime, the government must be free to act decisively and remove officials who obstruct its functioning."

Legal experts anticipate the change will face legal challenges

The new process would replace the independent selection committee with a political ministerial body, a move critics say undermines legal oversight. Legal experts anticipate that the change, if implemented, will face legal challenges in the High Court of Justice due to questions over its constitutionality.

Former Knesset Constitution Committee Chair MK Gilad Kariv strongly condemned the plan, calling it "a betrayal of the IDF and the public."

"Levin weakened Israel before October 7, and she hasn't changed course," Kariv said. "This is not about governance - it's about caving to political pressure, especially from the ultra-Orthodox over the draft exemption issue."

Opposition leader Yair Lapid also responded sharply: "Every time the coalition fails to pass a law exempting the Haredim from military service, they try to fire the attorney-general. It's all connected."

Communications Minister Shlomo Karh, however, praised the move as a long-overdue reform. "The attorney-general was never elected and cannot continue to paralyze an elected government," Karhi said. "This is a necessary correction of the Shamgar Committee's excesses."

National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir echoed Karhi's sentiment, calling the dismissal proceedings a step toward "defeating the deep state."

"For two and a half years, the attorney-general has blocked every initiative I've tried to promote," Ben Gvir said. "Now the government can act as it was elected to do."

The tension between Baharav-Miara and the government reached a new high in March, when the cabinet approved an 83-page no-confidence proposal prepared by Levin, outlining extensive grievances regarding her conduct. The move formally initiated the process for her potential dismissal.

In response, Baharav-Miara sent a defiant letter to the cabinet, asserting the rule of law: “We will not be deterred. The government is not above the law.”

If passed, Levin’s resolution would mark the first time in Israel’s history that an attorney-general has been removed mid-term—a move likely to reshape the balance between the judiciary and the executive branch for years to come.


Avraham Bloch

Source: https://www.jpost.com/breaking-news/article-856568

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

German FM: Berlin to continue support for Israel, including arms sales - JNS Staff

 

by JNS Staff

"Germany will continue to support the State of Israel, including with arms deliveries," Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said in an apparent reversal.

 

German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul speaks during a joint press conference with Polish Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski in Berlin, June 4, 2025. Photo by Ralf Hirschberger/AFP via Getty Images.
German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul speaks during a joint press conference with Polish Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski in Berlin, June 4, 2025. Photo by Ralf Hirschberger/AFP via Getty Images.

The Federal Republic will continue to the Jewish state, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said on Wednesday, in an apparent reversal of recent comments on the issue.

“Germany will continue to support the State of Israel, including with arms deliveries,” the top diplomat told lawmakers in parliament on Wednesday, the German news agency DPA reported.

Wadephul, a member of the ruling center-right Christian Democratic Union, warned last week that Germany may be forced to take “further steps” if Jerusalem continues to pursue its goal of destroying Hamas in Gaza.

“Our full support for the right to exist and the security of the State of Israel must not be instrumentalized for the conflict and the warfare currently being waged in the Gaza Strip,” Wadephul told reporters.

“We are now at a point where we have to think very carefully about what further steps to take,” Berlin’s top diplomat declared in his May 27 remarks.

Three days later, Wadephul said Germany would be “examining whether what is happening in the Gaza Strip is compatible with international humanitarian law.” He added, “Further arms deliveries will be authorized based on the outcome of that review.”

Asked by the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper whether this could lead to a partial suspension of exports, he replied: “That’s what the wording implies.”

Wadephul was scheduled to receive Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar in Berlin on Thursday, with the two counterparts set to visit the Holocaust memorial in the German capital.

On Wednesday, Sa’ar met with Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt and Bundestag Vice President Omid Nouripour, Sa’ar’s office stated.

In a post on social media, Sa’ar thanked Nouripour, a member of the Greens, for “his clear moral call against an arms embargo of Israel.”

On Sept. 19, Germany denied reports it had frozen all new exports of offensive weapons to the Jewish state in response to legal challenges regarding its support for the war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

“There is no ban on arms exports to Israel, and there will be no ban,” a spokesman for Germany’s Economic Ministry told DPA.

On Oct. 24, the German Foreign Ministry revealed that Berlin had approved $102 million in arms sales to Jerusalem since August. 


JNS Staff

Source: https://www.jns.org/german-fm-berlin-to-continue-support-for-jewish-state-including-through-weapons-sales/

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

‘Hamas can no longer operate as an organized military framework’ - Yaakov Lappin

 

by Yaakov Lappin

Former Israeli defense officials tell JNS that the terror group is losing its grip on Gaza’s civilians.

 

Two Hamas terrorists surrendering to Israeli forces in Rafah during an operation in the Shaboura neighborhood  in an image published on May 6, 2025. Credit: IDF.
Two Hamas terrorists surrendering to Israeli forces in Rafah during an operation in the Shaboura neighborhood in an image published on May 6, 2025. Credit: IDF.

 

As the Israel Defense Forces’ Operation Gideon’s Chariots continued to exert relentless pressure against Hamas across the Gaza Strip, multiple Israeli security observers and former defense officials assessed that the terrorist organization is facing unprecedented strategic distress, with its command structure decimated, its military capabilities severely degraded, and its iron grip on the civilian population showing significant signs of erosion. 

While the path to a full dismantling of Hamas appears to remain long, recent developments, including an initiative by Israel to create a new humanitarian aid system that bypasses the terror group, suggest a significant shift in the Strip’s internal dynamics, potentially heralding the beginning of the end of Hamas’s rule.

The IDF’s ongoing operations have taken a heavy toll on Hamas. On June 3rd, the IDF announced that its Givati Brigade Combat Team continued its intensive operations in the Jabalia area of the northern Gaza Strip, eliminating numerous terrorists and destroying extensive terror infrastructure both above and below ground in recent weeks.

Simultaneously, IDF operations continued in southern Gaza, with evacuation orders issued for parts of Khan Younis and engineering work reported near the European Hospital, where former Hamas chief Mohammed Sinwar was eliminated on May 13. The intensity of the fighting was reflected by the painful loss of four IDF soldiers in recent days. 

Professor Kobi Michael, a senior researcher at the Misgav Institute for National Security and Zionist Strategy and at the Institute for National Security Studies, who served as head of the Palestinian desk at Israel’s Ministry for Strategic Affairs, told JNS in recent days that “Hamas is definitely in real strategic distress. Its entire command and control mechanism has been destroyed. Other than the Gaza Brigade commander, Ezzidin al-Haddad, there is no senior figure left capable of managing the organization as an organized military framework.” 

Michael elaborated on the degradation of Hamas’s military strength, stating, “The organization’s military capabilities have been severely damaged. In fact, Hamas today has no ability to operate as an organized military framework. What remains is entirely residual.”

As a hybrid organization, which prepared for this in advance, he said, Hamas has “switched to sporadic terror and guerrilla warfare, making efforts to place mines, and place IEDs on [military] traffic routes and quickly emerge from tunnels to fire anti-tank missiles and then swiftly escape back into the tunnels.”

Beyond its military capabilities, Hamas’s control over the civilian population is also faltering, according to Michael. “Hamas is losing its grip on governing civilians. The civilians’ fear barrier of Hamas is eroding, and the humanitarian aid distribution centers are operating in a way that draws many civilians there, despite Hamas’s attempts at disruption,” he stated. 

Michael noted that Hamas, in its desperation, is resorting to disseminating propaganda. “Hamas is so lost that it tries through fabricated videos and reports to create a narrative of operational failure of the distribution centers and to claim mass harm by the IDF of civilians,” he said. “Their lies are being exposed and it’s clear to them that the continuation and establishment of this trend spells functional doom for the organization.”

Michael added that the heavy IDF military pressure, civilian departures from northern Gaza, and strikes on multi-story buildings and civilian facilities used by Hamas for terror are further destabilizing the Iranian-backed terror group, suggesting that even mediators such Qatar and Egypt are tiring of Hamas, increasing pressure on it to accept the American proposal for a hostage deal presented by U.S. Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff.

The assessment of Hamas’s weakening civilian control was echoed by Oded Ailam, a former head of the counterterrorism division in the Mossad and currently a researcher at the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs.

Speaking on a Jerusalem Press Club call on May 29, Ailam described the situation as “quite phenomenal because it’s for the first time that Hamas is losing its grip on the population. They were asserting and they were threatening and they did everything in their power in order to discourage the population from reaching those points and receiving the food, because controlling the food and controlling the supply is controlling the population, and they are losing it.”

He added, “Right now what we are seeing is the first step for the collapse of the Hamas regime in Gaza, and it’s extremely important that it will continue, and we should encourage those steps that not just Israel but all the Western world that wants to get rid of these jihadists, extremists, and let the people of Gaza for the first time in I think in their history to live a decent life.”

The hostage negotiations reflect Hamas’s difficult position, Israeli observers said. While Hamas political bureau official Bassem Naim told Al Jazeera on June 3 that Hamas was ready for new talks, though not based on the so-called “Witkoff document” without a guaranteed end to the war, reports from the Egyptian newspaper Al-Ghad suggested Hamas had retreated from many disputed points and was closer to agreeing to the American proposal, subject to conditions.

Lt. Col. (res.) Shaul Bartal, a senior research fellow at the Begin Sadat Center for Strategic Studies, who served extensively in various security capacities in Judea and Samaria, told JNS that “Hamas is under pressure. A significant portion of its prominent field commanders are dead. And the fighting right now is guerrilla warfare made up of IEDs and RPG fire from individual operatives.” 

Bartal noted a marked change in Hamas’s public posture, stating, “At the beginning of the conflict, we would see Hamas operatives launching Qassam [rockets] from all sorts of places, videos showing the explosion of tanks or IDF vehicles. Today, there are almost none of these things. There is tough guerrilla warfare of planting IEDs in booby-trapped houses or booby-trapped shafts, and sniper fire”.

Bartal emphasized the strategic importance of aid distribution. “Hamas understands that whoever distributes aid at distribution points effectively controls the population.”

Hence, he said, Hamas is under increased pressure, “which is expressed by firing at refugees trying to reach aid centers, as an IDF drone recently documented, the agitation of international aid organizations like UNRWA, which accuse the American company [Gaza Humanitarian Foundation] of being unprofessional and not meeting its mission. And an unprecedented propaganda campaign by Hamas in all its media outlets, trying to portray hunger in the Strip.”

Bartal cited a recent Hamas website article from June 3 as an example of this propaganda, which claimed the U.S.-led Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) system is inefficient and amounts to using hunger as a “war crime.”

The GHF, however, reported on June 3 that it had successfully supplied over seven million meals in eight days of operation, even with a one-day pause for logistical and security improvements. 

“Hamas looted the aid that entered the Strip in coordination and cooperation with recognized international organizations like UNRWA and distributed it to the population, thereby creating the population’s dependence on it. The moment the food is distributed by an external American company, Hamas loses its power,” Bartal assessed.

Despite these signs of Hamas’s decline, the path to its fuller removal remains complex. 

Michael warned of Hamas’s possible desperate responses: “Alongside reactions of despair in the form of guerrilla warfare that uses new, unskilled, and untrained young recruits as cannon fodder sent on suicide missions, we should assume their efforts to launch rockets from their remaining accessible stockpile,” he said.

“In their desperation, they will continue to kill their own people in an attempt to prevent them from leaving northern Gaza and reaching aid centers. They have mostly lost the ability to protect their depots, and in an attempt to still do something, they will not hesitate to slaughter their own people and then blame Israel,” he cautioned.

The ‘day after’ Hamas remains a critical question.  Bartal outlined several scenarios, from population emigration, which he views as best from Israel’s perspective but difficult, to a temporary Israeli military administration focusing on clearing territory and facilitating aid, potentially followed by a gradual transfer of control to the Palestinian Authority or an international force, he said.

However, he cautioned that if the war does not end with Hamas’s complete surrender or the exile of its leadership—and Hamas currently signals its intent to fight to the end—Israel faces a protracted guerrilla war. 

Michael suggested that a “Somaliazation” of Gaza is theoretically possible but unlikely if Israel implements an effective military administration to prepare for a governing alternative and completes the military dismantling of Hamas.

The Israeli observers all agreed that any Gaza solution leaving Hamas in power would signify a dangerous victory for the terror group.


Yaakov Lappin is an Israel-based military affairs correspondent and analyst. He is the in-house analyst at the Miryam Institute; a research associate at the Alma Research and Education Center; and a research associate at the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies at Bar-Ilan University. He is a frequent guest commentator on international television news networks, including Sky News and i24 News. Lappin is the author of Virtual Caliphate: Exposing the Islamist State on the Internet. Follow him at: www.patreon.com/yaakovlappin.

Source: https://www.jns.org/hamas-can-no-longer-operate-as-an-organized-military-framework/

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Red Sea marine traffic jumps by 60% in wake of Houthi, US ceasefire - Reuters

 

by Reuters

The number of merchant ships using the narrow Bab al-Mandab strait increased after missile and drone attacks by the Houthis slowed.

 

Houthi protesters hold weapons during a demonstration in Sanaa, Yemen, May 30, 2025 (photo credit: REUTERS/Adel Al Khader)
Houthi protesters hold weapons during a demonstration in Sanaa, Yemen, May 30, 2025
(photo credit: REUTERS/Adel Al Khader)

 

Red Sea marine traffic has increased by 60% to 36-37 ships a day since August 2024, but is still short of volumes seen before Yemen's Houthis began attacking ships in the region, according to the commander of the EU's Aspides naval mission.

The number of merchant ships using the narrow Bab al-Mandab strait increased after missile and drone attacks by the Houthis slowed and the US and the rebel group signed a ceasefire deal, Rear Admiral Vasileios Gryparis said in an interview in Madrid.

But shipping traffic, which reached a low of 20-23 ships daily in August last year, is still short of an average of 72-75 ships a day seen before the Houthis began attacks in the Red Sea in November in 2023 in support of Palestinians over Israel's war in Gaza, said Gryparis.

The mission, which was established to safeguard navigation in the strategic trade route linking the Mediterranean with the Gulf of Asia through the Suez Canal, was extended in February when it was also tasked with tracking illegal arms shipments and monitoring vessels carrying sanctioned Russian oil.

The last attack on a merchant ship took place in November 2024 and the Houthis have also narrowed their objectives, saying their targets are Israeli ships and ships that have a connection with Israel or have docked at an Israeli port, Gryparis said.

 Explosions take place on the deck of the Greek-flagged oil tanker Sounion on the Red Sea, August 29, 2024 (credit: Houthi Military Media/Handout via REUTERS)Enlrage image
Explosions take place on the deck of the Greek-flagged oil tanker Sounion on the Red Sea, August 29, 2024 (credit: Houthi Military Media/Handout via REUTERS)

"If you have a vessel that does not correspond to this criteria... there is a huge possibility - more than 99% - that you're not going to be targeted by the Houthis," Gryparis said.

Still, Gryparis said he could not guarantee that merchant ships won't be attacked.

Companies deterred from using Red Sea routes

Some companies have been deterred from using the route because of the mission's lack of ships, which can cause delays of as much as a week for those seeking to be escorted through the area, he said.

He said the mission has between two and three ships operating at one time and has requested the EU provide it with 10 ships to increase its capacity for protection.

The mission has provided close protection to 476 ships, shot down 18 drones, destroyed two remote-controlled boats used to attack ships and intercepted four ballistic missiles, he said.


Reuters

Source: https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/article-856715

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Biden’s Border Nihilism Will Live Long After He Is Gone - Victor Davis Hanson

 

by Victor Davis Hanson

Biden’s border legacy isn’t just policy—it’s a demographic earthquake that will rattle America’s foundation long after he’s gone.

 

 

The spiteful open-borders legacy of Joe Biden will plague America for generations to come, long after the former president is a fading bad memory.

Somewhere between 10-12 million foreign nationals are believed to have entered the U.S. illegally under his watch, to add to the existing 12-20 million illegal aliens.

Almost all were unaudited.

They stormed the border for four years without background checks of the sort that American citizens must undergo to purchase a firearm or take out a loan.

At a time when citizens were expelled from the military for not submitting to the experimental mRNA COVID inoculations, millions of foreign nationals, with the Biden administration’s encouragement, crossed the southern border, exempt from any vaccination requirement or medical examination.

When Americans were required to present multiple forms of identification to apply for a mandatory “real ID” to fly in 2025, millions of illegal entrants were flown across the country, often stealthily and under the cover of night, without any valid ID at all.

On some days, the Trump administration has managed to deport 800 of Biden’s illegal aliens.

But ten times that many entered illegally each day under Biden.

Trump’s border patrol would have to deport over 8,000 people every day of his four-year tenure just to undo what Biden wrought by his dismantling of federal immigration law.

Some 500,000 illegal entrants are believed to have criminal records—a number greater than the population of Oakland, California.

Indeed, new reports relate almost every day that another illegal alien has murdered, raped, or assaulted an American citizen.

The culpable left often champions violent illegal alien criminals facing deportation. Their apparent assumption is that hurting Trump politically justifies hurting Americans even more by protecting violent illegal alien criminals instead of sending them home.

Thousands of these unknown criminals are deadly land mines waiting to explode.

Yet the Biden effort to destroy or subvert immigration law transcends just demolishing the southern border.

There are nearly 300,000 Chinese nationals in American universities, the vast majority admitted without serious background checks.

They are welcomed by elite campuses because they pay the full cost and at a premium, with few questions asked about why exactly they came or what they are doing.

No wonder, then, that in the last decade, Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government is reported to have trained and graduated hundreds of Chinese nationals who were either Communist Party members or the children of prominent Chinese communist apparatchiks.

In other words, at a time when the U.S. is locked in an escalating Cold War with the People’s Republic of China, our universities find great profit in enrolling and educating the communist elite who threaten Taiwan, imprison and oppress the Uyghurs, jail Hong Kong dissidents, and send both bio- and agro-terrorists into the U.S.

Not a day went by during the last two years without Middle Eastern, pro-Hamas visa students on some campus swarming students in libraries, assaulting and bullying Jews, trashing iconic buildings, illegally camping out in student quads, and screaming to bring the intifada home to the U.S.

Neither the Biden administration nor spineless college presidents took any action, despite such flagrant violations of both the terms and spirit of student visas.

Most recently, Yunqing Jian, a 33-year-old Chinese national with ties to the University of Michigan, was arrested as an “agro-terrorist.”

The mission of Jian, along with his girlfriend, was to seed toxic fungus into midwestern farmland as a way of destroying the American food supply and thereby starve his hosts.

Sometimes the baleful Biden immigration inheritance was simply a matter of allowing “tourists” and “visitors” to stay far after their visas had expired—without consequences.

So, for example, Egyptian national and terrorist, Mohamed Soliman, along with his entire family, deliberately overstayed their visas. They were all residing here illegally when Mohamed firebombed Jews, crying out “Free Palestine” as he tried to burn them up.

Americans overwhelmingly polled against this Biden border nihilism. Indeed, the House impeached his henchman, Alejandro Mayorkas, the Secretary of Homeland Security.

Yet Biden, or his handlers in the shadows, would not stop destroying the borders and immigration law.

So why would a president deliberately cause such mayhem that will cost hundreds of lives and billions of dollars in the years to come?

Was the reason Biden’s characteristic incompetence or dementia?

Or did Biden simply want to alter the demography to find a constituency for his otherwise unpopular agendas?

Did he wish to grow the welfare state?

Was Biden hoping to expand the DEI agenda by bringing in the poor and supposedly oppressed as new fodder in the Left’s Marxist binary of victimized versus victimizer?

No one knows why Biden did it, only that he did—and we will suffer his nihilist legacy for years to come.

 

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

Source: https://amgreatness.com/2025/06/05/bidens-border-nihilism-will-live-long-after-he-is-gone/

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Greta Thunberg and the Freedom Flotilla Coalition are sailing to Gaza, but will they make it? - Seth J. Frantzman

 

by Seth J. Frantzman

There are a number of things that could cause the ship to turn around, like lack of food and water or problems with the engine.

 

An activist walks on the Freedom Flotilla Coalition ship 'Handala' as they prepare to sail for Gaza in an attempt to break a long-standing Israeli blockade and deliver humanitarian aid amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, in Marsa, Malta August 16, 2024. (photo credit: DARRIN ZAMMIT LUPI/REUTERS)
An activist walks on the Freedom Flotilla Coalition ship 'Handala' as they prepare to sail for Gaza in an attempt to break a long-standing Israeli blockade and deliver humanitarian aid amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, in Marsa, Malta August 16, 2024.
(photo credit: DARRIN ZAMMIT LUPI/REUTERS)

 

Well-known Swedish activist Greta Thunberg was sailing to Gaza on Thursday. According to reports, she was aboard the Madleen, a sailboat operated by the Freedom Flotilla Coalition.

When the ship sailed from Catania in Sicily, it had 12 people on board, including “actor Liam Cunningham, known for his role in the series Game of Thrones,” New York-based new program Democracy Now! reported.

The ship is named for “Gaza’s first fisherwoman,” the report said. According to Marine Executive, a maritime industry news site, the boat “corresponds to a UK-registered 18-meter sailing vessel named Barcarole.”

The vessel left port on Sunday on what is thought to be an estimated 2,000-kilometer trip. There is a website dedicated to tracking its progress.

“In partnership with Forensic Architecture, the Freedom Flotilla Coalition has equipped the Madleen with an advanced tracking system,” the Freedom Flotilla said. “This technology plays a crucial role in ensuring the safety of those on board, maintaining transparency about the vessel’s location, and holding potential aggressors accountable for their actions.”

Enlrage image

As of Thursday, the tracker had stopped working

Israel has said the sailboat will not be allowed to dock in the Gaza Strip. This is not the first time a group of activists has tried to sail to Gaza.

In 2010, hundreds of activists boarded six ships off Turkey, trying to reach the enclave. The IDF carried out a raid on their lead ship, the Mavi Marmara. Nine people were killed in the mêlée with the IDF, and the vessel was towed to Ashdod.

In 2015, another attempt to sail to Gaza was frustrated when a ship was damaged at a Greek port. The 2025 flotilla group already experienced issues off the coast of Malta.

In May, the Conscience ship claimed to have suffered damage and loss of power off Malta before heading to Gaza. Activists claimed drones had hit the boat.

This explains why the crew of the Madleen, while sailing off the coast of Crete, were afraid on the evening between Tuesday and Wednesday. They thought a drone was circling the ship.

Activists posted videos and claimed to be in distress. According to reports, it turned out that the drone was from Greece’s Hellenic Coast Guard. The Madleen was around 68 km. outside of Greece’s territorial waters.

This is not Thunberg’s first long voyage at sea. She also took a transatlantic journey in 2019 to attend a climate conference in New York. That means she is experienced at sailing for long distances. It is unclear whether the other crew members have the same experience.

A LONG journey of 2,000 km. can take many days. A sailing vessel could reach six to twelve knots an hour, meaning it might sail between 100 and 250 nautical miles a day. Ergo, it can take more than four days to make this journey.

When one is sailing at sea in the open ocean, a boat does not usually stop. This is because there is wind, and even when the wind drops, the ship can continue on its journey on a diesel engine.

Using only an engine, it could also travel around 200 km. a day or more. A sailboat will not usually use its diesel engine for an extended period of time, because it does not want to waste fuel. On a long journey like this boat is embarking on, it will not want to go to port; it will want to conserve fuel.

The reason the Madleen will not want to dock in Greece or Cyprus is likely because the people on board fear that the vessel might be sabotaged or that authorities will prevent them from continuing on their journey.

Greece and Cyprus are both close friends of Israel. The ship will not want to stop in Egypt either, because it is an authoritarian state, although Egypt is an option. Turkey could also be an option, because Ankara tends to back Hamas. The vessel could also divert to Lebanon or Syria.

Sailing at sea over numerous days is challenging. A vessel may have a GPS system and satellite phones, but navigating at night is a complex task. This is because a small sailboat has to cross shipping lanes, and it will be near large ships.

It is hard to see a sailboat at night. A sailboat will usually have red and green lights, one on each side at the front, indicating port and starboard. It will have a white light on the stern and may also place lights on the mast. A white light on the mast will indicate the vessel is under engine power.

According to Marine Traffic, a vessel-tracking site, a vessel called Barcarole appeared to be just south of Crete as of Thursday afternoon. It also seemed to be heading slowly west at 1.5 knots.

This means that the boat was adrift or had stopped moving. It is unclear why. A photo of the Barcarole shows a vessel that resembles the Madleen, featuring a Palestinian flag. The ship appears to be a ketch, a type of two-masted sailboat with a mainmast that is taller than the smaller mizzenmast toward the rear.

If this sailboat is indeed off Cyprus, it will still need several more days of sailing before it reaches Israel’s coast.

Since the ship has been at sea for five days now, the crew will need to make sure they have enough food and water for everyone. They will also need to continue making contingency plans in case issues arise with their engine or other equipment.

The vessel appeared to be on a sea route near several large container ships. Horae, a crude oil tanker, was to the west, and a barge carrier and a cargo ship were to the east.

The crew may be suffering from boredom, seasickness, or crowding on a ship like this. Being at sea for so long with so many people can become a challenging experience, even for seasoned and veteran sailors.

It remains to be seen what other challenges they may face.


Seth J. Frantzman

Source: https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-856711

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Rising Hamas drone activity sparks concern among IDF reservists - Amir Bohbot

 

by Amir Bohbot

"We were told they managed to smuggle drones during the ceasefire, when 600 trucks a day were coming in," a reservist in Gaza said.

 

Illustration of drones circling Hamas terrorists. (photo credit: Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90, Yuri Coretz /AFP, pixelfit from Getty Images Signature)
Illustration of drones circling Hamas terrorists.
(photo credit: Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90, Yuri Coretz /AFP, pixelfit from Getty Images Signature)

There has been a recent uptick in drone usage by Hamas within the Gaza Strip, the IDF said Thursday. Earlier in the day, a soldier was moderately wounded and another was lightly wounded in northern Gaza in a drone attack.

A Hamas terrorist cell operated a drone over Israeli forces in the area and dropped a grenade on a unit positioned near buildings, the IDF said. The soldiers were hospitalized, and their families were notified.

Reservist soldiers reported the rise in drone threats in recent weeks, with Hamas using drones to gather intelligence on IDF movements and to carry out attacks.

“The working assumption is that they are gathering intelligence on us 24/7, using remote observation posts, binoculars, and drones,” a reservist soldier in Gaza said. “We report whenever we see drones in the area. We try to determine whether they are ours or belong to Hamas.

“This is a scenario that happened at the beginning of the war, disappeared for a while, and has now returned. There are ways to deal with it, but it’s concerning.

“We were told they managed to smuggle drones during the ceasefire, when 600 trucks a day were coming in. It might also have happened via aerial smuggling. If they can smuggle cellphones, drugs, and cigarettes, why not drones?”

Drone (illustrative) (credit: REUTERS)Enlrage image
Drone (illustrative) (credit: REUTERS)

A reservist officer in Gaza said: “Hamas is back to using drones. That means they feel comfortable enough to do so amid operations. They’re not under constant military pressure.

IDF drone use also under scrutiny

“That’s not a positive sign. We were brought in to achieve a decisive outcome. Right now, it doesn’t feel like that. We’re waiting for the big mission.”

Reservist soldiers also criticized the IDF’s drone operations, saying they sometimes rely on independent solutions to operate drones, with some drones funded through donations.

The Defense Ministry and Ground Forces Command had launched an accelerated procurement program to acquire various types of drones for different missions, IDF sources said, adding that the process takes time.

They cited an international competition for drone procurement and production lines, especially amid the global arms race


Amir Bohbot

Source: https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-856621

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Jewish women’s fertility rate outpaces Muslims in Israel - Hili Yacobi-Handelsman

 

by Hili Yacobi-Handelsman

A dramatic decline sees Muslim fertility down to 2.75 children per woman, while Jewish women reach 3.06.

 

Mothers and their babies at Habima Square in Tel Aviv, March 25, 2025. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90.
Mothers and their babies at Habima Square in Tel Aviv, March 25, 2025. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90.

 

A groundbreaking demographic shift has emerged in Israel since 2001, with 2024 data from the Central Bureau of Statistics revealing that Jewish women’s fertility rate, at 3.06 children per woman, now exceeds that of Muslim women, at 2.75 children per woman.

The Muslim population, totaling around 1.809 million, or 18.0% of Israel’s residents, increased by 2.0% in 2024, gaining approximately 35,100 people since the end of 2023. While this growth outpaces the Jewish population’s 1.1% rise, it reflects a major slowing down compared to the 3.8% growth rate in 2000.

Meanwhile, the Christian population shrank by 0.2%, and the Druze population dropped by 0.9%.

Nearly half of Muslims live in northern Israel, with 33.8% in the Northern District and 13.1% in the Haifa District. Another 22.1% reside in the Jerusalem District, 18.7% in the Southern District, 10.9% in the Central District, and 1.4% in the Tel Aviv District.

Roughly 43% of Muslim Israelis live in the 10 localities with the largest Muslim populations. Jerusalem has the most, with 386,300 Muslims, or 21.4% of the national Muslim population and 36.9% of the city’s residents. The Negev Bedouin city of Rahat follows, with 77,900 Muslims comprising 99.5% of its population. Other notable Muslim communities include Umm al-Fahm (60,100 residents) and Nazareth (57,000 residents).

The Muslim population remains young, with 31.2% aged 0–14 and only 5.1% aged 65 and older. Among those aged 45–49, 9.2% of Muslim women are unmarried, compared to 4.7% of men. About 27% of Muslim-headed households include six or more members, compared to 10% of Jewish-headed households. Life expectancy in 2024 stood at 77.2 years for Muslim men and 82.9 years for Muslim women.

During the 2023/24 school year, 403,800 Muslim students attended primary and post-primary schools, with 6,900 in Hebrew-language schools and the rest in Arabic-language schools.

In 2022/23, 74.0% of Muslim students who took matriculation exams qualified for a high school graduation diploma, and 48.3% met university admission standards, nearly matching the 46.8% from the previous year. Muslim women were far more likely to pursue bachelor’s degrees (41.8%) than Muslim men (20.2%).

In the 2022/23 school year, 3,100 Muslims enrolled in pre-academic programs, representing 27.0% of such students. In 2023/24, 49,800 Muslims studied in higher education, comprising 16.4% of all students. That year, 11,800 Muslims received academic degrees, accounting for 13.0% of all degree recipients.

In 2024, labor force participation among Israeli Muslims aged 15 and older was 48.2%; 62.1% for men and 34.4% for women. In 2023, approximately 307,600 Muslims were registered with the Ministry of Welfare and Social Security, out of 1.18 million individuals. The disability registry included 179,100 Muslims, out of 1.163 million people.

In 2022, Muslims faced a criminal conviction rate 2.9 times higher than non-Muslims, at 579 per 100,000 people compared to 200 per 100,000. Common offenses included public order violations (28.2%), crimes against persons (22.4%) and property crimes (19.7%).

In 2024, 881,277 Israeli Muslims held driver’s licenses, making up 16.8% of all drivers, with 41.5% being women. That year, 3,315 Muslims were injured in road accidents, representing 22.9% of all casualties, exceeding their 16.9% population share. Of these, 140 were killed, 690 were seriously injured and 2,485 sustained minor injuries.

Originally published by Israel Hayom.


Hili Yacobi-Handelsman

Source: https://www.jns.org/jewish-womens-fertility-rate-outpaces-muslims-in-israel/

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter