Monday, June 8, 2026

Israel returns to near-normal activity after Iran attacks - Israel National News

 

by Israel National News

The Home Front Command eased restrictions nationwide, allowing schools, workplaces, and activities to resume in most areas of the country on Tuesday.

 

תלמידות בכיתה 

After guidelines were tightened a day earlier following attacks from Iran, the IDF Home Front Command announced on Monday evening that beginning at 6:00 a.m. on Tuesday and continuing until 8:00 p.m. on Wednesday, the defensive policy will be adjusted. In most areas of the country, except for the frontline area and several northern communities, full activity will be permitted with no restrictions, including in the education system.

The frontline area and the communities of Sifsufa, Meron, Or HaGanuz, Bar Yochai, Yesud HaMa’ala, Kisra-Sumei, Beit Jann, and Sde Eliezer will move to a Partial Activity level.

Educational activities may be held in structures or locations from which a standard protected space can be reached within the required protection time. Workplaces may operate in structures or locations from which a standard protected space can be reached within the required protection time.

Gatherings will be permitted with up to 100 people outdoors and up to 400 people indoors.

The Ministry of Education announced that studies will resume on Tuesday in all educational institutions across the country and will take place in full, in person, and according to the regular schedule.

The ministry stated: "Regarding matriculation examinations, there will be no change to decisions already made for the current week. In accordance with the minister's policy, Israeli students will not take external matriculation examinations this week. The Ministry of Education will publish an orderly announcement in the coming days detailing the updated examination dates and the examination framework for each subject."


Israel National News

Source: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/428325

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Netanyahu's Levi Eshkol moment: Why Israel defied Trump - analysis - Herb Keinon

 

by Herb Keinon

Had Netanyahu bowed to Trump's request on Sunday and refrained from responding after Iran fired 11 ballistic missiles, Israel would have signalled weakness and constraint.

 

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu walks outside his office at the Knesset, the Israeli parliament in Jerusalem, June 3, 2026.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu walks outside his office at the Knesset, the Israeli parliament in Jerusalem, June 3, 2026.
(photo credit: YONATAN SINDEL/FLASH90)


 

On Monday morning, 59 years after the Six-Day War, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had his Levi Eshkol moment.

On June 3, 1967, as tensions in the Middle East reached a fever pitch following Egyptian then-president Gamal Abdel Nasser’s closure of the Straits of Tiran, the expulsion of UN observers from Sinai, and repeated promises to drive Israel into the sea, then-prime minister Levi Eshkol received a letter from former US president Lyndon Johnson that essentially said: Don’t preempt.

“I must emphasize the necessity for Israel not to make itself responsible for the initiation of hostilities,” Johnson, a pro-Israel president, wrote. “Israel will not be alone unless it decides to go alone. We cannot imagine that it will make this decision.”

In other words, as the letter has been paraphrased over the years, Johnson told Eshkol, “If you go alone, you will stand alone.”

Eshkol read the letter and then, two days later, decided to go alone. Israel preempted.

 

THEN-PRIME MINISTER Levi Eshkol (C), minister Menachem Begin (L) and Gen. Yeshayahu Gavish (R) visit reserve units in Sinai, June 13, 1967.
THEN-PRIME MINISTER Levi Eshkol (C), minister Menachem Begin (L) and Gen. Yeshayahu Gavish (R) visit reserve units in Sinai, June 13, 1967. (credit: Moshe Milner/GPO)

Why? Because Eshkol believed Israel was facing an existential threat and that securing the country’s interests took precedence over the wishes of even its closest ally.

Netanyahu's version of the Eshkol dilemma

Netanyahu faced a version of that dilemma on Sunday night after Iran fired ballistic missiles at Israel and US President Donald Trump, speaking through a couple of Israeli journalists, publicly urged Israel not to respond. He later spoke directly with Netanyahu, though the contents of that conversation were not released.

But what Israelis heard, what the region heard, and what the world heard was the president of the United States telling Netanyahu not to strike back while leaving the consequences of disregarding that message to the imagination.

Netanyahu struck anyway.

In doing so, he followed a long line of Israeli prime ministers who, at pivotal moments, concluded that Israeli interests required defying Washington.

The list is familiar. David Ben-Gurion declared statehood in 1948 despite fierce opposition from the State Department. Eshkol launched the Six Day War despite Johnson’s warning.


Menachem Begin ordered the strike on Iraq’s Osirak reactor in 1981, even though he had to be aware that former US president Ronald Reagan would likely be furious. Reagan was indeed furious and temporarily halted deliveries of four F-16 fighter jets.

The same pattern appeared in 2002 when Ariel Sharon continued Operation Defensive Shield and the offensive in Jenin after the Park Hotel massacre despite pressure from former US president George W. Bush to pull back “without delay.”


It appeared again in 2007 when Ehud Olmert ordered the destruction of Syria’s nuclear reactor after Bush told him he preferred to handle the matter diplomatically.

In each case, the Israeli prime minister concluded that Israel’s interests outweighed Washington’s objections.

The question, however, is why Netanyahu viewed Sunday’s situation in similar terms. Unlike Eshkol in 1967, Israel was not confronting an immediate existential threat.

The answer is that a failure to respond would have allowed Iran to establish a new strategic equation, projected weakness throughout the region, and carried a significant domestic political cost.

What was the new equation Tehran was trying to create? The linking of Lebanon and Iran. Iran was effectively positioning itself as Hezbollah’s protector and signaling that future Israeli action against Hezbollah in Beirut would trigger a direct Iranian response.

Tehran's proxy doctrine inverted

As Iran expert Raz Zimmt noted in a post on X/Twitter, this reflects a complete inversion of Iran’s traditional proxy doctrine. The proxies were supposed to protect Iran.


The theory was that if Israel ever struck Iran’s nuclear facilities, Hezbollah and the other proxies would rain fire on Israel. Instead, the opposite appears to be happening: Iran is now compelled to protect the proxies.

Nor is this the first time one of Iran’s allies has attempted to dictate Israeli policy.


The effort recalls Hamas’s attempts in 2021 to establish red lines around Sheikh Jarrah and the Temple Mount.


Hamas warned that if Israel evicted residents from Sheikh Jarrah or carried out what it called provocations on the Temple Mount, rockets would follow. On Jerusalem Day in 2021, it even issued an ultimatum regarding the Flag March.

Israel proceeded with the march anyway. Hamas fired rockets. Israel responded by intensifying Operation Guardian of the Walls, which began two days earlier.

The message then was clear: no terror organization will dictate Israeli policy in its capital – don’t link Gaza with Jerusalem.

The message now being sent to Iran is the same: no terror state will dictate Israeli security policy within its borders – don’t link Iran with Lebanon.

Netanyahu felt he had to act to prevent that new equation from taking hold.

He also needed to project strength. Across the region, governments, organizations, and publics were watching Sunday night to see how Israel would respond.

As former strategic affairs minister Ron Dermer has argued for years, one of the reasons the Abraham Accords countries moved closer to Israel in the latter part of the last decade was their belief that Israel would act in its own interests even when doing so meant standing up to Washington.

Dermer, who was Israel’s ambassador to the United States at the time, has repeatedly pointed to Netanyahu’s 2015 speech to Congress, delivered against former US president Barack Obama’s wishes, as evidence of that independence.

In his telling, that willingness to act independently convinced many regional actors that Israel was serious, reliable, and prepared to defend its interests even if that meant going against the wishes of the US president.

Had Netanyahu bowed to Trump's request on Sunday and refrained from responding after Iran fired 11 ballistic missiles, the opposite message would have been sent: that Israel is constrained, hesitant, and ultimately unwilling to challenge American dictates.

That is not generally a quality admired in the Middle East.

And then there is the political dimension.

With Netanyahu’s political rivals – Naftali Bennett, Yair Lapid, Avigdor Liberman, and Gadi Eisenkot – frequently portraying him as Trump’s poodle, failing to respond to the Iranian attack would have carried a high political cost.

Responding will probably not win him many votes. Not responding, however, might have cost him some.

Particularly because his opponents would undoubtedly have resurrected a speech he delivered to the Knesset on June 12, 2021, in his farewell address after losing power.


Criticizing the incoming Bennett-Lapid government, Netanyahu argued that they would be incapable of standing up to American pressure as he had done repeatedly, especially regarding Obama’s Iran policy.


“An Israeli prime minister must be able to say no to the president of the United States on matters that endanger our existence,” he said.


On Sunday, Netanyahu did exactly that.


At least for now.
 

 

Herb Keinon

Source: https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/article-898739

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Lebanon Finally Says It Out Loud: Lebanon Does Not Belong to Iran, Iran Is the Problem - Khaled Abu Toameh

 

by Khaled Abu Toameh

Aoun's remarks amount to a public admission that Hezbollah has effectively created a state within a state, one that decides when Lebanon goes to war and when it agrees to a ceasefire, regardless of the wishes of the elected government of the Lebanese people.

 

  • "You are not trying to help us; the people of Lebanon are paying the price for your own interests.... Our interests do not align with yours.... This is not your country, it is our country." — Lebanese President Joseph Aoun, directly addressing Iran's regime; CNN, June 5, 2026

  • Aoun's remarks amount to a public admission that Hezbollah has effectively created a state within a state, one that decides when Lebanon goes to war and when it agrees to a ceasefire, regardless of the wishes of the elected government of the Lebanese people.

  • "Spare our South, and cease treating it and its people as mere bargaining chips to improve your negotiation terms.... this war is not ours, that it is not fought for us, but on our soil and at the expense of our people." —Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam, June 5, 2026.

  • The Lebanese leaders are finally saying publicly what many observers have argued for years: Hezbollah is not defending Lebanon. It is defending Iran's regional interests.

  • The tragedy of Lebanon closely resembles the tragedy of the Gaza Strip.

  • The Palestinians in Gaza are paying the price for decisions made by Hamas, another Islamist terrorist organization acting in accordance with Iran's broader regional agenda.

  • All terrorist roads lead first to Tehran.

  • Without Iran's interference in Lebanese and Palestinian affairs, both peoples would likely be focused on building their economies, strengthening their institutions, and improving the lives of their citizens instead of enduring endless cycles of war and destruction.

  • [Iran's] goal is always the same: expand Iranian influence while keeping the region in a permanent state of confrontation.

  • The ceasefire agreements brokered by the Trump Administration were also supposed to strengthen Lebanese sovereignty and curb Hezbollah's military power.

  • Why, then, is Hezbollah still armed? Why does it continue to decide matters of war and peace? Why is the Lebanese government still unable, or unwilling, to assert full authority over its territory?

  • The same questions apply to Hamas. Why is Hamas still in control of large parts of the Gaza Strip? Why is the Trump Administration's "Board of Peace" still talking about the disarmament of Hamas instead of insisting upon it? Why do mediators continue to negotiate with terrorist organizations that openly reject disarmament?

  • Washington needs to demand the immediate and unconditional disarmament of Hezbollah and Hamas -- terrorist organizations that seek Israel's destruction. The Trump Administration would greatly help its agenda if it insisted that the Lebanese government alone exercise control over decisions of war and peace. It would help to stress that no sovereign state can tolerate an armed militia operating outside government authority.

  • So long as Hezbollah and Hamas remain armed and in power, and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps remains ruling Iran, there will be no lasting peace or stability in the Middle East. All three remain deeply committed to their jihad (holy war) against Israel and are prepared to pursue it indefinitely.

  • Lebanon's leaders have finally identified the problem. The question is whether they have the courage, and the whole-hearted, committed support of the United States to back it up.

Perhaps for the first time in such direct and uncompromising language, Lebanon's President Joseph Aoun and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam are openly acknowledging that Iran, through its proxy Hezbollah, has hijacked Lebanon's sovereignty, transformed the country into a battlefield, and dragged its people into repeated wars with Israel. Pictured: Aoun (R) and Salam at a cabinet meeting in the presidential palace near Beirut, on February 11, 2025. (Photo by Anwar Amro/AFP via Getty Images)

For years, many Lebanese politicians avoided publicly confronting the obvious truth: Iran, through its proxy Hezbollah, has hijacked Lebanon's sovereignty, transformed the country into a battlefield, and dragged its people into repeated wars with Israel.

Now, perhaps for the first time in such direct and uncompromising language, Lebanon's President Joseph Aoun and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam are openly acknowledging what many Lebanese have known for decades.

Their statements are significant because they expose the central role played by the Iranian regime and Hezbollah in destroying what was once one of the most prosperous and stable countries in the Middle East.

Aoun accused Iran of using Lebanon as a "bargaining chip" in its conflict with the United States and demanded that Tehran stop interfering in Lebanese affairs. Addressing the Iranian regime directly, Aoun declared:

"You are not trying to help us; the people of Lebanon are paying the price for your own interests.... Our interests do not align with yours.... This is not your country, it is our country."

Aoun also rejected Hezbollah's claim to speak on behalf of Lebanon and said that Hezbollah Secretary-General Naim Qassem "does not represent the Lebanese people."

The Lebanese president emphasized that his people are exhausted by the endless conflict initiated by Hezbollah: "The Lebanese are fed up with the war between Israel and Hezbollah."

He revealed that Lebanese from various religious communities, including Shiites, had told him they were tired of Hezbollah's wars.

Aoun's remarks amount to a public admission that Hezbollah has effectively created a state within a state, one that decides when Lebanon goes to war and when it agrees to a ceasefire, regardless of the wishes of the elected government of the Lebanese people.

Salam was equally blunt.

Speaking at the launch of a United Nations humanitarian appeal, Salam called on Iran to stop exploiting Lebanon for its own regional ambitions:

"Spare our South, and cease treating it and its people as mere bargaining chips to improve your negotiation terms. We are a nation that refuses to become a mailbox for others' messages or an open arena for their wars. Lebanon is no one's pawn on a table, and the South is no one's reserve front."

Perhaps most remarkably, Salam openly acknowledged that Iran's rejection of a ceasefire agreement exposed the true nature of the conflict:

"[T]he Lebanese were stunned yesterday to find the Iranian Revolutionary Guard as the first to reject it, before any other party. This is yet another confirmation that this war is not ours, that it is not fought for us, but on our soil and at the expense of our people."

Those words represent a devastating indictment of Hezbollah and its Iranian sponsors.

For years, Hezbollah has justified its military activities by claiming to "defend Lebanon." Yet Lebanon's own prime minister is now effectively saying publicly that Hezbollah's war serves foreign interests, not Lebanese ones.

The Lebanese leaders are finally saying publicly what many observers have argued for years: Hezbollah is not defending Lebanon. It is defending Iran's regional interests.

The consequences have been catastrophic.

Once known as the "Switzerland of the Middle East," Lebanon has become a failed state plagued by economic collapse, political paralysis, corruption, and recurring warfare.

Hundreds of thousands of Lebanese civilians have paid a heavy price for Hezbollah's decisions. Entire communities have been displaced. Homes have been destroyed. Businesses have collapsed. Families have lost loved ones.

"The Lebanese people," Aoun noted, "have placed on me the task of ending the war, and they do not deserve to see their homes destroyed every five or ten years."

The tragedy of Lebanon closely resembles the tragedy of the Gaza Strip.

Just as Hezbollah serves as Iran's proxy in Lebanon, Hamas serves as Iran's proxy among the Palestinians. Like Hezbollah, Hamas receives funding, weapons, training, and political backing from Tehran. Like Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas launched a war that brought devastation upon its own people in the Gaza Strip.

After Hamas's October 7, 2023 massacre in Israel, the Gaza Strip suffered unimaginable destruction and humanitarian hardship. The Palestinians in Gaza are paying the price for decisions made by Hamas, another Islamist terrorist organization acting in accordance with Iran's broader regional agenda.

All terrorist roads lead first to Tehran.

Without Iran's interference in Lebanese and Palestinian affairs, both peoples would likely be focused on building their economies, strengthening their institutions, and improving the lives of their citizens instead of enduring endless cycles of war and destruction.

The Iranian regime has consistently used its proxies to spread instability throughout the Middle East: Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad in the Gaza Strip, the Houthis in Yemen, and Shiite militias in Iraq and Syria.

The goal is always the same: expand Iranian influence while keeping the region in a permanent state of confrontation.

The statements of Aoun and Salam, however, raise a serious question. If Lebanon's leaders recognize that Iran and Hezbollah are responsible for much of their country's suffering, why have they not acted decisively against Hezbollah?

United Nations Security Council resolutions have long called for the disarmament of all militias in Lebanon.

The ceasefire agreements brokered by the Trump Administration were also supposed to strengthen Lebanese sovereignty and curb Hezbollah's military power.

Why, then, is Hezbollah still armed? Why does it continue to decide matters of war and peace? Why is the Lebanese government still unable, or unwilling, to assert full authority over its territory?

The same questions apply to Hamas. Why is Hamas still in control of large parts of the Gaza Strip? Why is the Trump Administration's "Board of Peace" still talking about the disarmament of Hamas instead of insisting upon it? Why do mediators continue to negotiate with terrorist organizations that openly reject disarmament?

Complaining about Iranian interference alone will not restore Lebanon's sovereignty or bring stability to the Gaza Strip.

The Trump Administration would do itself a great service if it could recognize that the source of much of the region's instability remains the Iranian regime and its proxies. Washington needs to demand the immediate and unconditional disarmament of Hezbollah and Hamas -- terrorist organizations that seek Israel's destruction. The Trump Administration would greatly help its agenda if it insisted that the Lebanese government alone exercise control over decisions of war and peace. It would help to stress that no sovereign state can tolerate an armed militia operating outside government authority.

Aoun is right when he says that Lebanon does not belong to Iran. The challenge now is to translate these words into action.

So long as Hezbollah and Hamas remain armed and in power, and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps remains ruling Iran, there will be no lasting peace or stability in the Middle East. All three remain deeply committed to their jihad (holy war) against Israel and are prepared to pursue it indefinitely.

Lebanon's leaders have finally identified the problem. The question is whether they have the courage and the whole-hearted, committed support of the United States to back it up.


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

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22589/lebanon-does-not-belong-to-iran

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

US Ambassador: Lebanon-Israel talks reach 'point of no return' - Israel National News

 

by Israel National News

US Ambassador Michel Issa praised progress in Lebanon-Israel negotiations, saying the process has reached a "point of no return."

 

Michel Issa
Michel Issa                                                     ZUMA Press Wire via Reuters Connect

 

US Ambassador to Lebanon Michel Issa on Monday stressed the importance of the ongoing Lebanese-American-Israeli negotiations following a meeting with Lebanese President Joseph Aoun, saying the process is helping advance efforts to end Lebanon's prolonged crisis.

"We discussed the course of the Lebanese-American-Israeli negotiations and what they include regarding ending the current situation in Lebanon," Issa said after the meeting.

The ambassador noted that he conveyed Washington's appreciation for positions recently expressed by Aoun in a media interview.

"It is very important for a leader to choose what he wants and move forward with it, especially if it is the only option for ending a painful and harsh situation such as the one Lebanon is experiencing," he said.

Issa announced that the negotiations are scheduled to resume in Washington and praised the Lebanese negotiating team.

"I would like to commend the Lebanese negotiating team for its high level of professionalism and effectiveness. The members of the team speak clearly and frankly on the Lebanese file," he stated.

Referring to developments in the region, Issa said that "what happened yesterday was a political message," adding that "in the United States, we decided that the confrontation should not expand further."

The ambassador emphasized the importance Washington places on Lebanon, noting that President Donald Trump follows developments closely.

"We attach great importance to the Lebanese file, and President Donald Trump always talks about Lebanon," Issa said. "This is an important factor that the Lebanese should take into consideration because the American President follows the Lebanese file on a daily basis, particularly since President Aoun chose negotiations, a path that we support and one that helps us achieve progress toward ending the suffering of the Lebanese people."

Issa described his meeting with Aoun as positive.

"A good meeting is one that produces positive outcomes and achieves progress, and we believe we are on the right track," he said.

He added that the negotiations could require time and that it should not be expected that all issues would be resolved in a single meeting.

"The continuation of these negotiations has a positive impact on the overall course of events in Lebanon and the region," he said.

Issa also expressed confidence in the direction of the talks.

"We have reached a point of no return. The ice has been broken, and we will continue helping Lebanon emerge from its crisis," he said.

Separately, Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam met with Issa and stressed that "no one negotiates on behalf of Lebanon except the Lebanese state."

According to a statement from the Prime Minister's office, discussions focused on the dangers of regional escalation and its repercussions for Lebanon, as well as preparations for the next round of negotiations in Washington.

The Lebanese-Israeli talks, which began on April 14 at the US State Department, are scheduled to resume on July 22.

Following the fourth round of negotiations last week, a joint statement issued by Lebanon, the United States, and Israel announced an agreement to implement a ceasefire. The statement said the ceasefire would be based on a complete halt to Hezbollah fire and the withdrawal of all Hezbollah operatives from the area south of the Litani River.


Israel National News

Source: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/428316

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Trump demands Iran, Israel stop attacking each other after weekend violence threatens ceasefire - Nicholas Ballasy

 

by Nicholas Ballasy

President Trump said on Sunday that he would ask Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu not to respond to the Iran attack

 

President Donald Trump early Monday demanded that Iran and Israel stop firing missiles at each other after a weekend of violence between the two threatened a fragile Mideast ceasefire.

"Israel and Iran must immediately stop 'shooting,'" the president wrote on his Truth Social account. 

The admonition became hours after Israel on Sunday night launched airstrikes against Iran, retaliating for a volley of missiles that Tehran fired earlier in the day.

Israel's counterattack had come despite pleas from President Donald Trump for restraint as all sides tried to pursue a still-elusive peace deal.

The Israeli military said early Monday that the strikes hit military targets in Iran.

"A short while ago, the Israeli Air Force struck military targets belonging to the Iranian terror regime in western and central Iran," the Israeli military said in a statement.

Sunday proved to be one of the most difficult days in the Mideast in recent weeks, as Iran shot missiles at Israel after an Israeli airstrike on Beirut.

Israel said it was targeting the Iran-backed militants Hezbollah.

Hezbollah said it had attacked a group of Israeli state fighters with drones, according to reports.

Trump had said Sunday that he would ask Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu not to respond to the attack, according to Axios. 

Trump cited the progress toward a deal with Iran as the reason Israeli should not respond. 


Nicholas Ballasy

Source: https://justthenews.com/world/middle-east/iran-fires-missiles-israel-after-airstrike-beirut

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

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

 

by John Solomon

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

 

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

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

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

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

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

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

State was enabling federal funds to flow to fraudsters

The report had several major conclusions, including that:

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

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

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

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


John Solomon

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

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Azerbaijan and the emerging alliance reshaping the Middle East - Fiamma Nirenstein

 

by Fiamma Nirenstein

From the Caucasus to the Gulf and the Red Sea, a growing network of partners is challenging Iranian influence and redrawing the region’s strategic map.

 

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar meets with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in Baku on Jan. 26, 2026, during talks aimed at deepening bilateral cooperation in energy, defense, water, agriculture and tourism. Source: @gidonsaar/X.
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar meets with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in Baku on Jan. 26, 2026, during talks aimed at deepening bilateral cooperation in energy, defense, water, agriculture and tourism. Source: @gidonsaar/X.

Azerbaijan is a unique country. Though Muslim and Shi’ite, it is a secular state determined to modernize. Nationalist in outlook, it is led by President Ilham Aliyev, who maintains excellent relations with both the United States and Israel, while relations with Iran remain defined largely by mutual distrust.

International media have recently reported what many observers long suspected: Along Azerbaijan’s 700-kilometer border with Iran, clandestine Mossad sites reportedly operate as part of a broader regional intelligence network from which Israel can monitor and potentially launch operations against the Islamic Republic. Such facilities may have played a role in recent actions against senior Iranian figures, including Rahman Moqadam, head of foreign recruitment for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Relations between Azerbaijan and Israel have flourished since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Israel was among the first countries to recognize the newly independent state, and the two nations have since built a strategic partnership. Azerbaijan provides oil and energy; Israel contributes technology, intelligence, weapons systems and innovation.

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar met with Aliyev in Baku in January. During the Nagorno-Karabakh wars, much of Azerbaijan’s military capability was based on Israeli technology. The country was also among the first purchasers of Israel’s Iron Dome missile-defense system.

While Azerbaijan’s relationship with Washington cooled during the Biden administration because of growing U.S. ties with Armenia, the return of President Donald Trump has helped revive a strategic axis that could reshape the region’s geopolitical map—provided the Iranian threat is neutralized and Russian influence is contained.

The emerging alignment extends well beyond Azerbaijan. The United Arab Emirates has been a cornerstone of this process since signing the Abraham Accords in 2020. Bahrain shares concerns about Iranian aggression. Morocco has become a reliable Western partner in confronting jihadist extremism. Egypt and Jordan, despite periodic tensions, remain committed to peace. Saudi Arabia continues to pursue its own interests, but ultimately may find that its future lies within a broader Western-oriented alliance.

Trump’s belief that many Muslim countries are prepared to work with Israel against Iran and its violent proxies is not a fantasy. It reflects a strategic reality that has been developing for years.

For years, Iran’s grand strategy was to encircle Israel with a ring of armed proxies. Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas in Gaza, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the Shi’ite militias in Iraq, the Houthis in Yemen and the Assad regime in Syria were meant to form a tightening noose around the Jewish state. Tehran also hoped to draw the Arab world into a united anti-Israel front, isolating Israel diplomatically while threatening it militarily from every direction.

Instead, the opposite has happened.

Hamas has been devastated, Hezbollah has been severely weakened, Assad has fallen, and many Arab states now view Iran—not Israel—as the primary source of regional instability. The Abraham Accords opened a new strategic reality, and cooperation between Israel and key Sunni states has expanded despite the war. Rather than Israel finding itself encircled, it is Iran that increasingly faces strategic containment.

Today, Tehran sees a growing network of countries—from Azerbaijan in the north to the Gulf states and partners in the Red Sea region—that share an interest in limiting Iranian expansionism. Iran’s dream of regional hegemony has collided with a new geopolitical reality.

What remains most dangerous is Hezbollah. The organization no longer serves merely as a military threat to Israel; it has effectively kidnapped Lebanon itself, holding the country hostage to Iran’s interests. Hezbollah’s arsenal, political power and control over key institutions prevent Lebanon from reclaiming full sovereignty and pursuing the future that many Lebanese desire. As long as Hezbollah remains Tehran’s armed instrument on the Mediterranean, Lebanon will continue to pay the price for Iran’s regional ambitions.

Part of this evolving framework includes Israel’s growing relationship with Somaliland at the southern entrance to the Red Sea, one of the world’s most important maritime trade routes. Facing the threat posed by the Iranian-backed Houthis, Somaliland has emerged as a valuable partner in the Horn of Africa.

For Israel, strategic partnerships now extend far beyond its indispensable alliance with the United States. Perhaps the most significant is its growing cooperation with India under Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Together, they are advancing the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor, or IMEC, announced in 2023, which places Israel at the center of a major trade route linking Asia and Europe and offers a long-term alternative to China’s Belt and Road Initiative.

This is the future now taking shape in the Middle East—not the isolation of Israel through boycotts and diplomatic campaigns, but a widening network of strategic partnerships built on shared interests, economic development and resistance to Iranian hegemony.

That, ultimately, is what a durable peace will look like. 


Fiamma Nirenstein is an Italian-Israeli journalist, author and senior research fellow at the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs (JCFA). An adviser on antisemitism to Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, she served in the Italian Parliament (2008-2013) as vice president of the Foreign Affairs Committee. A founding member of the Friends of Israel Initiative, she has written 15 books, including October 7, Antisemitism and the War on the West, and is a leading voice on Israel, the Middle East, Europe and the fight against antisemitism.

Source: https://www.jns.org/opinion/column/fiamma-nirenstein/azerbaijan-and-the-emerging-alliance-reshaping-the-middle-east

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

How China Captured California - Peter W. Wood

 

by Peter W. Wood

California didn’t just embrace green energy; it embraced dependence on China, leaving consumers to pay the price at the pump and on their utility bills.

 

Why does California have the highest gasoline taxes in the U.S.? Don’t look to the Strait of Hormuz. Look at Beijing.

Of course, energy has been expensive in California for a long time. Some of this can be attributed to spacey Californians who have spent half a century dreaming up green disasters. The 1979 movie The China Syndrome depicted the evil power company that built its nuclear plant on a fault line. It had nothing to do with China, except that in a meltdown, the reactor’s core would, so to speak, drop all the way there.

The real China syndrome began later. In 2005, the mayor of San Francisco paid a visit to Shanghai, where he worked out some agreements that furthered city-to-city cooperation. Mayor Gavin Newsom was at the beginning of a career that married environmental alarmism to close cooperation with the Chinese state. The memorandum he signed with Shanghai Mayor Han Zheng brought Chinese police officers, attorneys, and judges to the Fog City. Newsom in turn brought bottles of PlumpJack from his Napa Valley winery.

The relationship burgeoned, and Newsom also met with Jia Qunlin, chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference. They brokered an agreement between the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) and Peking University to form a joint Center of Excellence in Quantitative Biomedical Research.

These may sound like small steps, but they were steps in a very specific direction. Newsom had political ambitions, and the Chinese Communist Party had a strong interest in steering California’s energy policy. In 2017, Newsom, then serving as lieutenant governor, wrote a piece for the journal Medium outlining his plans for green energy, environmentalism, and California’s role in advancing climate change policy.

How was this to be accomplished? The short answer is that he used the state’s regulatory power to make gasoline extremely expensive, to drive up energy prices overall, and to squeeze every industry that needed fuel. The key institution regulating these new environmentalist policies was, and remains, the California Air Resources Board (CARB). California became the first state to mandate the sale of electric vehicles.

One can think of this as simply Newsom’s pure commitment to green energy. Or one can consider that China was and still is the best supplier of the necessary green technology. The coincidence seems a lot less coincidental when one looks at the agreements Newsom reached with the Chinese, flooding the University of California with Chinese researchers assigned to help the state achieve its alternative-energy dreams. A major player in this is the California China Climate Institute (CCCI), which is a partnership between the University of California Berkeley and Tsinghua University (often described as China’s MIT).

It is not too much of a simplification to say that what CCCI proposes, CARB imposes.

My organization, the National Association of Scholars (NAS), has spent a year attempting to trace the connections, the political favors, and the interweaving of Chinese state interests with California’s political establishment. We don’t have subpoena power or deep connections to the regime. We are, instead, specialists in higher education, so we naturally learned more about that side of the picture than anything else. But the political side was unavoidable.

My assessment: California’s energy policy is made in China, and California is in many respects a vassal of China. Best of all, from China’s perspective, few Californians realize it. They live in a dream world where high-price energy is just the cost they pay for a really clean environment. NAS’s report, Behind the Climate Curtain: China’s Hidden Role in California’s Energy Mandates and University Partnerships, presents our evidence to back these audacious claims. I can’t say we have the kind of proof that will lead to future perp-walks of politicians by the FBI. But we have wind farms, solar plantations, and tankers full of the kinds of details that investigators might want to examine.

But for those who wonder whether the thesis is overstated, consider that China supplies 75 percent of solar panels used in the U.S. It also supplies more than 60 percent of global wind turbine components, including 67 percent of blades and hubs. The more America transitions away from fossil fuels, the more dominant China becomes in our energy sector. And California is more dependent on this market than any other state.

Chinese “experts” coach American regulators on what to do next to achieve “net zero emissions.” But China, of course, does not impose such policies on itself. About 85 percent of China’s energy production derives from fossil fuels, including about 58 percent from coal. China feints towards an “alternative energy” transition, but unlike California, that’s a far-off alliance in the People’s Republic.

Those of us who don’t live in the Golden State can count ourselves lucky, for now. But China’s political strategy and its energy interests don’t stop at the Sierra Nevada. Unless we stop China now, that climate curtain will descend on us all. 


Peter W. Wood is the president of the National Association of Scholars.

Source: https://amgreatness.com/2026/06/08/how-china-captured-california/

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Trump suffers rare court setbacks amid broader record of legal success - Just the News

 

by Just the News

The first recent loss came on May 29, when U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper ordered that Trump’s name be stripped from the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.

 

President Donald Trump has enjoyed considerable success in the courts during his second term. Federal judges and the Supreme Court have allowed key parts of his immigration agenda to proceed, upheld major personnel actions across the executive branch and endorsed an expansive view of presidential authority in several high-profile disputes.

But over the past two weeks, the administration suffered two notable legal setbacks: one involving the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and another concerning a controversial compensation fund created through a settlement with the Internal Revenue Service.

Kennedy Center Ruling Reverses Renaming Effort

The first loss came on May 29, when U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper ordered that Trump’s name be stripped from the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. D.C. Cooper, an Obama appointee, also temporarily blocked the administration’s plan to shut the landmark Washington, D.C. venue for two years of renovations, which had been scheduled to begin on July 6.

The backstory starts in December 2025, when a board stacked with Trump’s handpicked allies voted to rebrand the arts complex as the “Trump-Kennedy Center,” and signage bearing the new name went up on the building. Ticket sales declined sharply in the months that followed, and artists began canceling performances in protest. In February 2026, Trump announced the center would be closed for a sweeping overhaul.

Rep. Joyce Beatty, an Ohio Democrat who had been a member of the center’s board before her voting rights were stripped, filed suit to stop both moves. 

Judge Cooper’s ruling was sweeping and pointed. In a 94-page opinion issued on what happened to be President Kennedy’s birthday, he wrote that “the Kennedy Center's organic statute makes crystal clear that the Center is to be named for President Kennedy, and it cannot bear any other formal name or public memorial based on the Board’s unilateral say-so. Congress gave the Kennedy Center its name, and only Congress can change it.”

On the closure question, Cooper found that the board had not properly weighed its legal obligations to the institution before voting to shutter it, though he left open the possibility that a future board vote could still authorize renovations.

Trump reacted with characteristic directness. In a post on Truth Social, he blasted Cooper and suggested Congress should take the whole institution back: “We are going to be working with Congress to transfer this failing Institution back to them so they can make a determination as to what to do with it.”

A Justice Department spokesperson said in the statement that the agency “will continue to defend President Trump’s ability to restore the Center to its former glory as the finest performing arts center in the country – if not the world.”

For now, Trump’s name is coming off the building.

Court Halts Anti-Weaponization Fund

The second setback involved a program that drew criticism from an unusual source: members of Trump’s own party.

In mid-May, the Justice Department announced the creation of the “Anti-Weaponization Fund,” a nearly $1.8 billion pool of taxpayer money intended to compensate individuals who claimed they had been unfairly targeted or persecuted by previous administrations. 

The fund was established not by Congress, but through a settlement agreement in a lawsuit Trump himself had filed against the IRS over the leak of his tax returns. Under the settlement’s terms, Trump and his family received a formal apology but no cash. The money in the new fund, however, would be available to a broad universe of other claimants.

Critics immediately pointed out that this project was an extraordinary arrangement: a fund of public money, created without congressional authorization, through a lawsuit in which the president was simultaneously the plaintiff and the head of the executive branch overseeing the defendant agency. 

A group of 35 former federal judges—appointed by Democratic and Republican presidents—filed a motion arguing that the entire legal vehicle was, in their words, “a fraud on the court.”

On May 29, the same day as the Kennedy Center ruling, U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema, in the Eastern District of Virginia, issued a temporary order halting all operations of the fund while she considered its legality. 

Challengers had argued that money could flow out the door and become impossible to recover before the court could act, and the judge agreed that the risk was serious enough to require a pause.

The political fallout was fast. Democrats called the fund a giveaway to Trump allies. Crucially, even some Republicans in Congress balked, and reports emerged that the fund was throwing the president’s legislative agenda into turmoil. 

By June 1, acting Attorney General Todd Blanche made it official: the Anti-Weaponization Fund was dead. DOJ’s said in a statement on X that it “disagrees strongly” with Brinkema’s ruling but would comply.

Trump later told ABC News he accepted the outcome, saying: “We are subject to the courts. At this moment, that’s what it is.”

A Broader Pattern of Judicial Success

Despite the recent setbacks, Trump’s overall record in the courts remains favorable.

During the Supreme Court’s recent terms, the administration secured a series of significant victories on emergency applications and merits cases. The court permitted the administration to proceed with major personnel actions, enforce restrictions on transgender military service, revoke Temporary Protected Status for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans and resume certain deportation policies.

In Trump v. CASA, one of the most consequential institutional rulings of the last term, the court limited the ability of lower-court judges to issue nationwide injunctions, reducing a tool frequently used to block federal policies.

But the administration has not prevailed in every major dispute. Most notably, the Supreme Court struck down Trump’s tariff program in a 6–3 decision, concluding that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act does not authorize the president to impose tariffs.

The administration has also faced setbacks in immigration litigation, including challenges involving its use of the Alien Enemies Act.

What’s Still Coming

The Supreme Court’s term is not yet complete. Roughly three dozen cases remain pending, with decisions expected by late June or early July.

Among the most closely watched are West Virginia v. B.P.J. and Little v. Hecox, which concern state laws restricting participation by transgender athletes in girls’ and women’s sports. 

The court’s conservative majority has signaled sympathy for the laws, and a ruling in the states’ favor would validate policies Trump has championed aggressively. The cases carry implications for athletics and for how the 14th Amendment and Title IX apply to gender identity more broadly.

Another major case, Trump v. Slaughter, addresses the president’s authority to remove officials from independent regulatory agencies. The outcome could reshape the balance of power between the White House and agencies traditionally insulated from direct presidential control.

Trump’s legal record is already more favorable than his critics often acknowledge, and the decisions ahead could add substantially to the ledger. But as the past two weeks illustrate, having the courts on your side most of the time does not mean having them on your side all of the time. 


Just the News

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/courts-law/trump-suffers-rare-court-setbacks-amid-broader-record-legal-success

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Sunday, June 7, 2026

No Trust, No Illusions, No Nuclear Iran - Ahmed Charai

 

by Ahmed Charai

By generating several emergencies at once, Tehran hopes to divide America from its allies and distract from its nuclear ambitions. Washington must not allow that strategy to succeed.

 

  • Iran remains what it has long been: a state controlled by a narrow ruling clique that preserves its power through repression, intimidation, corruption, and support for armed groups.

  • Tehran's rulers operate according to the logic of a mafia state: Protecting the ruling network, intimidating opponents, threatening neighbors, exploiting disorder, and using negotiations to gain time or strategic advantage.

  • By generating several emergencies at once, Tehran hopes to divide America from its allies and distract from its nuclear ambitions.

  • Washington must not allow that strategy to succeed.

  • Restrictions cannot disappear through convenient expiration dates. Sanctions relief must be gradual, conditional, and reversible. There can be no secret facilities, delayed inspections, or endless arguments over obvious violations.

  • Enforcement is the agreement.

  • [Trump] prefers an agreement to another prolonged war, but he also understands that an agreement reached through weakness can produce an even greater conflict.

  • International law without enforcement is an appeal. International law backed by power is order.

  • American leadership is essential. Iran benefits whenever Washington's partners doubt American resolve or respond separately. The answer must be unity, credible deterrence, and a refusal to accept regional blackmail.

  • The Iranian people are not America's enemy.

  • Trust [for Iran's leaders] is unnecessary. Verification, deterrence, and the credible power to punish violations are indispensable.

Iran remains what it has long been: a state controlled by a narrow ruling clique that preserves its power through repression, intimidation, corruption, and support for armed groups. Pictured: A funeral procession featuring banners memorializing senior officers from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps who were killed in Israeli strikes, in Tehran's Enqelab Square on June 28, 2025. (Photo by Majid Saeedi/Getty Images)

Iran remains what it has long been: a state controlled by a narrow ruling clique that preserves its power through repression, intimidation, corruption, and support for armed groups.

My judgment of the regime has not changed.

Tehran's rulers operate according to the logic of a mafia state: Protecting the ruling network, intimidating opponents, threatening neighbors, exploiting disorder, and using negotiations to gain time or strategic advantage.

Nothing in Iran's conduct justifies trust, and no future agreement should be mistaken for evidence that the regime has changed.

That is why President Donald Trump's approach matters.

Trump is not asking the world to trust Tehran or have us believe that its rulers are reliable partners. His method is direct: apply overwhelming pressure, establish an unmistakable red line, leave the door open to an agreement, and make clear that deception or refusal will bring serious consequences.

That red line is simple: Iran must never possess a nuclear weapon.

Iran's rulers have repeatedly tried to multiply crises and overwhelm diplomacy with competing demands.

They use armed proxies, threaten regional stability, challenge freedom of navigation, and create uncertainty across the Middle East.

By generating several emergencies at once, Tehran hopes to divide America from its allies and distract from its nuclear ambitions.

Washington must not allow that strategy to succeed.

Iran's terrorism, missile program, regional aggression, and abuse of its citizens all require sustained pressure. But none is more urgent than preventing the regime from acquiring a nuclear weapon.

Why?

A nuclear-armed Iran would transform intimidation into nuclear blackmail.

It would place Israel and America's Arab partners under permanent threat, accelerate a regional arms race, and give Tehran greater freedom to destabilize the region.

President Trump has consistently placed this danger at the center of his policy.

Any agreement must ensure that Iran can never build or possess a nuclear bomb. That is not faith in Tehran. It is an exercise of power against a regime that has earned distrust.

Negotiating with Tehran does not legitimize it.

Agreements are not rewards for good behavior or declarations of friendship.

The United States has often negotiated with dangerous adversaries because American interests required enforceable limits on their conduct. An agreement with Iran should be understood in exactly those terms: not as reconciliation, but as constraint.

Its credibility cannot depend on signatures, ceremonies, or promises from Iranian officials. It must depend on what Iran is required to do, how compliance is verified, and what consequences follow any violation.

Iran must disclose its nuclear materials and relevant facilities. Inspectors must receive immediate access. Restrictions cannot disappear through convenient expiration dates. Sanctions relief must be gradual, conditional, and reversible. There can be no secret facilities, delayed inspections, or endless arguments over obvious violations.

When dealing with an untrustworthy regime, enforcement is not a secondary provision. Enforcement is the agreement.

For too long, Western policymakers have treated pressure and diplomacy as opposites. They are not. Pressure gives diplomacy credibility. Deterrence gives negotiations purpose. Power creates the conditions in which an adversary may decide that compromise is preferable to confrontation.

Iran's rulers understand the difference between words and consequences. They have learned to ignore condemnations, exploit divisions among democratic nations, and prolong diplomacy while advancing their objectives.

Trump's method seeks to reverse that calculation. He prefers an agreement to another prolonged war, but he also understands that an agreement reached through weakness can produce an even greater conflict.

Iran must therefore face a clear choice: permanently abandon every path toward a nuclear weapon or confront the full economic, diplomatic, and military consequences of refusing.

That is not warmongering. It is realism.

International law without enforcement is an appeal. International law backed by power is order.

Keeping the nuclear issue at the center does not mean ignoring Iran's broader conduct. The United States must strengthen cooperation with Israel and its Arab partners, reinforce regional defenses, protect maritime commerce, and confront Iran's networks.

Tehran must not be allowed to attack through proxies and then deny responsibility, or use their violence as leverage.

American leadership is essential. Iran benefits whenever Washington's partners doubt American resolve or respond separately. The answer must be unity, credible deterrence, and a refusal to accept regional blackmail.

The Iranian people are not America's enemy.

They have paid a terrible price for a system that chooses repression and regional expansion over prosperity.

President Trump is right to pursue an agreement that permanently prevents Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. Such an agreement would not erase the regime's crimes, transform Tehran into a trusted partner, or eliminate the need for pressure against its regional activities.

But it could achieve the most urgent strategic objective: ensuring that Iran's ruling clique never possesses the weapon capable of turning aggression into nuclear blackmail.

Any agreement must therefore begin with the nuclear issue and end with enforceable guarantees that Iran will never acquire the bomb.

Trust is unnecessary. Verification, deterrence, and the credible power to punish violations are indispensable.

This editorial originally appeared in Newsmax 



Ahmed Charai 
is the Chairman and CEO of World Herald Tribune, Inc., and the publisher of the Jerusalem Strategic Tribune, TV Abraham, and Radio Abraham. He serves on the boards of several prominent institutions, including the Atlantic Council, the Center for the National Interest, the Foreign Policy Research Institute, and the International Crisis Group. He is also an International Councilor and a member of the Advisory Board at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22586/no-trust-no-illusions-no-nuclear-iran

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter