Thursday, July 9, 2026

Anti-Israel protests organized by global NGO network tied to IRGC, Islamists, NGO Monitor reveals - Mathilda Heller

 

by Mathilda Heller

NGO Monitor aimed to lift the veil on the notion that the protests are grassroots, revealing them instead to be part of a well-coordinated effort by NGOs, special interests, and foreign agents.

 

 Demonstrators protest in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza, in London, in January.
Demonstrators protest in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza, in London, in January.
(photo credit: HOLLIE ADAMS/REUTERS)

 

The anti-Israel protests that exploded across the UK after October 7 have been organized by a globally connected and financed network of NGOs aimed at promoting IRGC propaganda, Islamist and anti-Western narratives, and Israel eliminationism, NGO Monitor revealed in a new 129-page report, presented in UK’s House of Lords on Wednesday.

NGO Monitor aimed to lift the veil on the notion that the protests are grassroots, revealing them instead to be part of a well-coordinated effort by NGOs, special interests, and foreign agents to create false perceptions of anti-Israel attitudes and therefore sway global policy.

The report revealed that 80% of the UK’s protests were orchestrated by NGOs, with many circumventing UK transparency laws by raising funding via US-based charitable vehicles.

The report also found that at least 11 of the 40 major post-October 7th protests and mobilization campaigns in the UK have links to extremist organizations and/or have officials who have met with or cooperated with extremist actors, including the Iranian regime, the IRGC, Hamas, Hezbollah, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) and the Muslim Brotherhood.

Examples of NGOs with terror links are Friends of Al Aqsa, Palestine Solidarity Campaign, and the Muslim Association of Britain.

A man holds a mock-up of a key during a march, held by Palestine Solidarity Campaign, to mark the 78th anniversary of the Nakba in London on May 16, 2026.
A man holds a mock-up of a key during a march, held by Palestine Solidarity Campaign, to mark the 78th anniversary of the Nakba in London on May 16, 2026. (credit: REUTERS/CHRIS J RATCLIFFE/POOL)

Terror-linked organizations funded by UK government

Nineteen of these organizations get UK government funding either via the FCDO or by Gift Aid. At least 11 are receiving taxpayer funding from countries such as the United States, Belgium, European Commission, Ireland, Norway, Scotland, Sweden, and Switzerland.

According to the report, at least two organizations, CAGE and Palestine Action, are raising funding via cryptocurrency.

A lot of the mobilization efforts of NGOs are directed at youth. For example, Amnesty International UK runs a training course (called Rise Up) for 16-24-year-olds on how to engage in disruptive protests, specifically focused on Israel. The fully funded training course “helps young people develop their campaigning skills …. [regarding] the Occupied Palestinian Territory [the programme.]”

Amnesty International UK has a total income of about £24.1 million, and receives funding from local entities.

House of Lords hears evidence protests are not grassroots

NGO Monitor’s legal advisor Anne Herzberg presented the findings at the UK’s House of Lords, at the invitation of Lord Walney, who moderated a conversation between Herzberg and barrister Jonathan Hall KC. Lord Michael Gove contributed the report’s afterword.

“The anti-Israel protests that exploded across the Western world on October 7 are presented as grassroots appeals for Palestinian human rights,” said Herzberg.

“In reality, and as our new report documents, they are organized by a globally connected and financed network of NGOs aimed at promoting IRGC propaganda, Islamist and anti-Western narratives, and Israel eliminationism.”

“Many of these groups are overtly linked to Hamas and other terrorist actors. It is time to see these demonstrations as a significant destabilizing threat and for governments to investigate these networks.”

“I have argued before that it cannot be right for organizations to enjoy the full privileges of charity while under serious investigation for links to extremism, and that our regulators are too often too slow and too weak to act,” said Walney. “The evidence assembled here only sharpens that case.”


Mathilda Heller

Source: https://www.jpost.com/diaspora/antisemitism/article-902004

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Trump envoy warns China's power move at sea is threat 'we cannot afford to ignore' - Eric Mack

 

by Eric Mack

US Ambassador to the UK Warren Stephens says China's desire to dominate global waterways is a threat to sovereign nations

 

China is seeking to turn ports, ships and supply chains into instruments of geopolitical leverage, U.S. Ambassador to the U.K. Warren Stephens warned in a statement to the International Maritime Organization Council (IMO).

"I spoke about a challenge that we cannot afford to ignore: China's systematic effort to use maritime power as an instrument of political coercion," Stephens wrote in a Truth Social post after the speech. 

SEN TODD YOUNG: THE HIDDEN DANGER CHINA’S SHIPS COULD BRING TO OUR SHORES

"Beijing has pursued an aggressive strategy of acquiring port concessions and infrastructure around the world — not simply for commercial gain, but to extend its strategic reach and weaponize that access against sovereign nations."

The U.S. is "not a passive observer of maritime affairs," Stephens told the IMO, calling America a "cornerstone of the global maritime economy." 

He said the U.S. Maritime Transportation System supports $5.4 trillion in economic activity each year and nearly 30 million jobs.

Chinese servicemembers welcome a ship into port

China's designs on global sea power have U.S. Ambassador to the U.K. Warren Stephens sounding alarms. (Zha Chunming/Xinhua)

The warning comes as Trump continued peacemaking efforts in the Strait of Hormuz and pressing Demark and NATO for U.S. control over Greenland due to Chinese and Russian threats to free navigation in the Arctic.

"Denmark doesn't spend money to really help Greenland, but it's an important part for the United States. And it's surrounded by China ships and Russian ships," Trump said at the NATO summit in Ankara, Turkey.

For global security, Greenland "should be controlled by the United States, not by Denmark," Trump added.

"They wouldn't go along with it," Trump said of Denmark. "And with all the money we spend to help them with Russia. And we don't have to spend any money. We could remove all of our soldiers out of Europe because, as you probably noticed, Europe is a very different place than it was 20 years ago. A lot different."

DENMARK VOWS TO DEFEND GREENLAND AFTER TRUMP REITERATES US SHOULD CONTROL TERRITORY

U.S. Ambassador to the U.K. Warren Stephens

U.S. Ambassador to the U.K. Warren Stephens issued an urgent warning that China is using global dominance over waterways as a political coercion tool. (Lucy North/PA Images via Getty Images)

Greenland’s position between the Arctic and North Atlantic has made it a key piece of U.S. security planning.

"President Trump has made restoring American maritime leadership a national priority," Stephens said in his IMO remarks warning on China’s broader maritime footprint.

"The evidence is clear and growing," Stephens said. "China currently builds more than half of the world’s ships. It dominates the production of ship-to-shore cranes and shipping containers."

Stephens cited Panama as a recent example, pointing to a ruling by Panama’s Supreme Court that found CK Hutchison’s port concessions at the Balboa and Cristóbal terminals unconstitutional. The terminals sit at opposite ends of the Panama Canal, one of the world’s most strategically important trade corridors.

TRUMP MAKES FRESH GREENLAND PLAY AFTER XI TALKS AS CHINA’S ARCTIC AMBITIONS LOOM

 

 

 

Stephens said China’s response to the Panama ruling was "swift and punishing," accusing Beijing of taking action against Panama-flagged vessels in a move the U.S. characterized as an attempt to undermine Panama’s sovereignty and disrupt global supply chains.

"What happened to Panama is a warning to every nation in this room," Stephens said.

"When a country allows a foreign power or its proxies to control its ports, it does not simply accept a commercial arrangement," he added. "It accepts a vulnerability."

Stephens urged IMO member states to closely scrutinize deals allowing foreign entities, especially state-linked enterprises, to operate critical port infrastructure.

"Transparency, the rule of law and genuine sovereignty are not obstacles to commerce," Stephens said. "They are its foundation."

The ambassador also said the U.S. would press for maritime security, sanctions enforcement, protection of flag state rights, freedom of navigation and updated standards on polar operations, autonomous vessels and cyber risk management.

"The pattern is consistent: China uses its maritime and economic power to coerce, to intimidate and to punish those who assert their sovereign rights," Stephens said.

The Chinese government has routinely rejected U.S. accusations that its overseas infrastructure investments are coercive, portraying its port, shipping and Belt and Road projects as commercial partnerships that support global trade and development.

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Stephens said the U.S. will continue contributing expertise, resources and leadership at the IMO but warned that the rules-based maritime order cannot be taken for granted.

"A free and open ocean is not guaranteed," he said. "It must be defended." 


Eric Mack

Source: https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-envoy-warns-chinas-power-move-sea-threat-cannot-afford-ignore

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US resumes Iran war with air, sea, ground-ready troops in place, confident about munitions supply - Ben Whedon

 

by Ben Whedon

The resumed attacks have raised immediate concerns from economic to military including: Does the U.S. have enough air, sea and ground-ready assets in place and enough munitions, after months of rocket attacks that started Feb. 28.

 

President Donald Trump vowing Wednesday to intensify air strikes against Iran – after the sides traded attacks the day before and him declaring the countries' roughly three-week ceasefire "over" – has the U.S. appearing to be returning to war footing.

"We're gonna hit 'em hard tonight," Trump said at the NATO summit in Ankara, Turkey, after conceding to reporters hours earlier about the ceasefire, "To me, I think it's over. I don't want to deal with them."  

The return, as expected, has raised immediate concerns from economic – like will gas prices skyrocket again? – to military ones such as: Does the U.S. have enough air, sea and ground-ready assets in place and enough munitions, after months of rocket attacks that started Feb. 28?  

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth testified to Congress in May that the U.S. has enough munitions, amid such military concerns.

"The munitions issue has been foolishly and unhelpfully overstated," he said. "We have all the munitions needed to execute what we need to execute."

The concern appears to be more about the next battles. 

A Center for Strategic and International Studies published in June found the U.S. has enough missiles to continue fighting Operation Epic Fury "under any plausible scenario." However, the report also stated "the risk – which will persist for many years – lies in future wars," according to CBC News.

The U.S. began moving assets into the Middle East in late winter – including the over 2,000 Marines and sailors aboard the USS Tripoli, amid attacks on ships going through the region's Strait of Hormuza key, international shipping channel for oil and natural gas. Along with the Tripoli, a Navy assault ship, came aviation assets and equipment for troops to launch amphibious landings and rapid-response combat missions, according to Military.com.

Elements of the 82nd Airborne Division also have reportedly been deployed to the region including a unit trained for emergency-response operations and early-stage combat deployments.  

Despite intermittent skirmishes since the start of the war. Iran and the U.S. signed a Memorandum of Understanding in mid-June that was meant to extend the ceasefire by 60-days while the combatants negotiated a longer-term agreement.

The deal collapsed, however, amid continued fighting in Lebanon, which Iran insisted was a red line. Continued skirmishes across the Gulf also contributed to the eventual breakdown in talks and Trump ordered strikes on Iran on Tuesday evening.

Analysts have warned for years that the sustained military support to Ukraine since 2022 and Israel since 2023 have depleted U.S. stockpiles, and some analysts have indicated that the U.S. expended years worth of production itself in the earlier stages of the Iran war.

Trump also seemed to indicate Wednesday that the U.S. was unable to render specific forms of aid to Ukraine against Russian aircraft, the two-countries' most recent conflict that began in early 2022. Instead, he floated granting Ukraine a license to produce its own Patriot missiles, a key air defense system that has faced high attrition in that conflict.

Additionally, the administration’s prior invocation of the Defense Production Act during the Iran war seemed to signal industrial shortcomings in the U.S. defense base for a sustained conflict. A Washington Post analysis found that the U.S. had used as much as 40% of its air defense munitions already and 30% of its ground strike munitions.

That analysis specifically addressed U.S. stocks available at the start of the Iran war and attributed the depletion to the roughly six-weeks of active conflict that preceded the ceasefire. 

In June, the Trump administration sought an additional $350 billion in defense spending to supplement the military amid the Iran war. The White House has also quietly acknowledged the shortcomings in the existing defense industrial base that may complicate efforts to resupply and refill American stockpiles.

In a June memorandum to Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, the White House warned that "limited production capacity, fragile supply chains, long-lead dependencies" were hindering the production of adequate munitions.

Trump said at the start of the war that the U.S. had a “virtually unlimited supply” of munitions and would be able to fight the war “forever.”

But he has also acknowledged the U.S. gave much of its stockpiles to Ukraine during the Biden administration.

"At the highest end, we have a good supply but are not where we want to be," he said. "Much additional high-grade weaponry is stored for us in outlying countries.”

On the other hand, the munitions picture for Iran may be equally ugly. Part of the U.S.’s strategic objective has been to deplete the country’s ballistic missile and drone arsenals. 

American forces have repeatedly targeted launchers and production facilities throughout the conflict and U.S. leaders have touted their success in reducing Iran’s conventional military capabilities, though the exact scope of those efforts remains unclear.


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

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/security/thuus-returns-war-shaky-footing-amid-munitions-shortages

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Rahm Emanuel and the persistent delusion of failed policies - Jonathan S. Tobin

 

by Jonathan S. Tobin

The veteran politician foolishly thinks that he can carve out a middle ground for 2028 between antisemitism and “blind” support for Israel by recycling the two-state solution.

 

Former White House Chief of Staff and Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel speaks during a conference at Tel Aviv University on July 8, 2026. Photo by Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90.
Former White House Chief of Staff and Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel speaks during a conference at Tel Aviv University on July 8, 2026. Photo by Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90.

Say this for Rahm Emanuel. He may have about as much chance of being nominated for the presidency in 2028 by the Democratic Party as he does of being elected pope. But he knows how to retain the attention of the national media by manipulating contacts inside the Beltway.

That’s the only way to explain why someone who is not even being included in way-too-early polls about presidential preferences could get the kind of massive coverage he got for a speech given this week in Israel, when those far ahead of him in the contest struggle to be noticed.

On July 7, The Washington Post devoted three full articles to previewing Emanuel’s July 8 talk at Tel Aviv University. The Post, The New York Times, CNN and the rest of the corporate press then followed up with even more coverage of the speech after the fact. Those articles not only depicted it as deeply relevant to the current debate about the U.S.-Israel relationship going on in his party, but also to the reality on the ground in the Middle East.

A rerun of failed ideas

But what made this public relations coup even more remarkable is the fact that the much-ballyhooed address consisted of little more than a recycling of the conventional wisdom of his long-past political heyday. Emanuel’s speech was more or less a rerun of what passed for foreign-policy establishment canon in 1995 and 2015, put forward as a formula for peace in the second quarter of the 21st century.

Once you strip away Emanuel’s attempts to claim both the credibility and credentials to demand that Israelis discard everything their lying eyes and ears have been telling them about their nation’s struggle to survive a multifront war launched by Iran and its terrorist auxiliaries, all you’ve got is what we might term a piece of political nostalgia.

Emanuel calls his big idea the “23-state solution” because it is based on the notion that the Arab and Muslim world can cajole the Palestinian Arabs to make peace. But that’s just window dressing for what is the same two-state solution that his former bosses, Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, foolishly expended so much political capital trying to force into being. Contrary to liberal myth, that formula was thwarted not by Israeli intransigence but by the stubborn refusal of the Palestinians—enabled by much of the Muslim and Arab worlds, in addition to Western leftists—to countenance any future but one in which Israel is erased.

The context here is the fact that the former U.S. ambassador to Japan (2022-2025), mayor of Chicago (2011-2019), White House chief of staff to President Barack Obama (2009-2010), U.S. congressman from Illinois (2003-2009), investment banker (1999-2002) and senior adviser to Clinton (1993-1998) believes that his already impressive résumé ought to be rounded out by a stint as commander-in-chief. The man renowned as a serious policy wonk, albeit one with a predilection for profanity and a notorious temper, may have much to say about a lot of different topics. Yet when it comes to Israel—a subject he claims intimate knowledge of—Rahm is nothing but a blast from the discredited past.

That’s why the truly significant aspect of the speech and the massive coverage it generated isn’t what it says about the 2028 race, efforts to prevent the Democratic Party from becoming the anti-Israel party or even the one that is comfortable with antisemitism. Rather, it points toward the fact that while Israelis have absorbed the lessons of the last 33 years of history, including the Oslo Accords disaster, the Second Intifada, the fruits of the withdrawal from Gaza and the horrors of Oct. 7, 2023, supposedly smart people, including those like Emanuel who know a thing or two about Israel, have learned nothing.

Emanuel claims to represent a rational compromise between two factions.

On the one hand, he disdains the rabid antisemites chanting for Jewish genocide (“From the river to the sea”), terrorism against Jews everywhere (“Globalize the intifada”) and their political frontmen, like New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who speaks for his party’s base, if not the overwhelming majority of its rank-and-file. But he has equal contempt for those politicians who, he says, give “blind” support to Israel and its democratically elected government. Few Democrats these days, other than an outlier like Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.), come even close to basic support of the Jewish state, and not even the most hard-core backers like the senator and the many Republicans who share his views do so blindly.

His supposed compromise involves smearing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his government, and placing the lion’s share of the blame for the current state of the Middle East on them. He points a finger at the supposed unconditional support that Israel has gotten from the United States. And while he also says that Palestinian Arabs bear some responsibility for their problems, this is secondary to his belief that the United States can help impose a solution on the region.

The architect of ‘daylight’

If that sounds familiar, it ought to. The same condescending tone with which Emanuel blasted Netanyahu and Israeli voters this week was the one he helped orchestrate a campaign of pressure on the Jewish state during the opening months of the Obama administration in 2009. At that time, Emanuel’s big idea wasn’t some nonsense about 23 states, but rather a belief in the value of creating more “daylight” between Washington and Jerusalem.

It’s been more than 17 years since Emanuel stage-managed the launch of that initiative. Obama snubbed Israel on his first trip to the Middle East and then gave a speech in Cairo in which he not only apologized for America’s alleged past sins committed against Muslims, but compared Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians to the Holocaust.

In the years that have followed, the world has seen that such “daylight” didn’t encourage Israel’s enemies to give up their quest for its destruction. To the contrary, it only encouraged the Palestinians and their supporters to double down on their belief that if they are only patient and brutal enough in their assaults on the Jewish state, the West will someday abandon it and acquiesce in its eradication.

Obama’s appeasement of Iran, which, instead of preventing them from achieving their nuclear ambitions, actually guaranteed that it would someday get a bomb with Western permission, illustrated the same principle.

And yet, Emanuel thinks this record of failure that dates back to his support for the folly of Oslo entitles him not merely to pose as an expert on the situation. He believes that it gives him the right to scold and dictate to Israelis.

The veteran politician has closer ties with Israel than most American Jews. His father fought with the Irgun Zvai Leumi during Israel’s War of Independence, and his mother is buried in Israel. But unlike the Israeli people whom he now lectures, he not only doesn’t share their dangers but played a not-insignificant role in increasing their peril. So, his “tough love” approach is not only unhelpful but deeply offensive.

In his Tel Aviv speech, Emanuel gave a potted recent history of the Middle East that acknowledged Palestinian intransigence, but then demanded that Israelis ignore it. With his quotes of the late Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and lauding Obama’s “achievements,” he showed just how rooted he is in the patent nostrums of the past.

The truth is, Israel has repeatedly attempted to trade land for peace, and as a result, received only more terror. Withdrawing from the Gaza Strip in the summer of 2005 brought into being what is now, for all intents and purposes, an independent Palestinian state in all but name.

Israel tried to live with that state. Netanyahu is ceaselessly chided by his critics, including Emanuel, for having allowed funds from Qatar to flow into Gaza in the hope that doing so, along with allowing Palestinians to work inside Israel, would cause the Strip’s Islamist rulers to think it was in their interest to keep the peace. The prime minister deserves the criticisms he gets for that, but the truth is that few of his political opponents inside Israel or his American critics thought it was wrong while that was happening. None of them would have supported an effort to push Hamas out of Gaza if Israel had sought to do so before the events of Oct. 7, 2023.

If this bribery failed to achieve its purpose, it’s not because of Netanyahu’s bad judgment. It’s because the Palestinian people and the terror groups they support, like Hamas, had no interest in peace, including merely the maintenance of the status quo. The Hamas-led massacre of 1,200 people in southern Israel on Oct. 7 bears witness to the folly of those who preached for “two states.” They also exposed the cluelessness of those who failed to understand that, unfortunately, the conflict with the Palestinians has been and remains a zero-sum game.

If Israel were to withdraw from the larger and more strategically important Judea and Samaria, as it did from Gaza, that would not only be an unconscionable abrogation of Jewish rights and the ethnic cleansing of Jews from the heart of their ancient homeland. It would also set Israel up for more Oct. 7 horrors on an even greater and more dangerous scale.

Still smearing Israel

For 100 years, the Palestinian Arabs have refused any such compromise that would involve them living in peace with a Jewish state, no matter where its borders might be drawn. The war they launched on Oct. 7 with the largest mass slaughter since the Holocaust wasn’t a response to Israel’s policies. It was, like the decades of terrorist attacks that preceded it, an expression of anger at the existence of a Jewish state in their midst, coupled with a desire to see it destroyed and its people annihilated. Emanuel claims that harping on such history is to ignore opportunities for change; however, this insight applies as much to the present situation as it does to the past.

But, as was the case back in the 1990s when Clinton was pushing the same ideas, and in the 2010s when it was Obama falsely claiming that Israelis were not brave enough to take “risks for peace,” none of that matters to Emanuel.

For him, the problem is that Netanyahu has transformed Israel into a militarized “Sparta” and international “pariah” state. But whatever you might think about Netanyahu, an observer who was less determined to double down on past failures would understand that the prime minister’s political success and the policies he has pursued were merely a response to the reality of Palestinian intransigence that a generation of Democratic policymakers like Emanuel has either downplayed or tried to wish away.

His peace formula involves America punishing Israel by cutting off aid and political pressure, matched by the Arab world doing the same to the Palestinians. This is nonsense. The Palestinians have made it clear that they cannot be bribed or persuaded to accept peace with Israel. And as long as that is true, no amount of pressure on Jerusalem will end the conflict. That is why, though Israelis disagree on much, including whether Netanyahu should remain in office, there is a broad consensus within Israel that there is no Palestinian peace partner and that withdrawal from territory, let alone the uprooting of Jews, is a non-starter.

A futile candidacy

Does Emanuel think that Israelis will listen to his stale prescriptions for policies that have already been tried and proven failures? Probably not. But his insatiable ambition and his ego have placed him under the misapprehension that his position on Israel is critical enough to satisfy Democratic primary voters. The vast majority seem to have accepted blood libels about Israel committing “genocide” and swallow toxic leftist ideas like critical race theory, intersectionality and settler-colonialism that led them to think it has no right to exist.

Emanuel epitomized the sort of establishment Democrat who ran the party under Clinton and Obama, but who is now reviled by the progressives who dominate it today. There is also the problem that during his time as mayor of Chicago, Emanuel alienated the African-American community because of various controversies over police brutality. It is a long shot for someone like Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, who is nominally pro-Israel but critical of Netanyahu, to win the nomination of a party where hatred for the Jewish state has become normative. But the chances of someone at odds with both African-Americans and the Israel-haters in the party are about as close to zero as one can get.

Still, we should not dismiss the damage that speeches such as his do to the U.S.-Israel alliance and the dwindling chances of reviving support for Israel inside the Democratic Party.

Israelis know that it is in their long-term interests to phase out the military aid they get from Washington. That’s despite the fact that almost all of it is spent in the United States, and is part of a mutually beneficial relationship that enhances American security. Still, the idea that America can bludgeon Israelis into endangering their security to conform to outdated notions about the formula for peace that were discredited long ago is a dangerous myth. The effort to revive interest in a two-state solution that Palestinians don’t want will, as it did in the past, only encourage them to continue their century-old war on Zionism.

Bashing Israel or claiming that “bad” Israelis like Netanyahu have been the obstacles to peace isn’t just wrong. It will make it that much harder to fend off the antisemitic push to anathematic Israel that has been the hallmark of discussion about the Middle East on the left since Oct. 7. Democrats like Emanuel, who engage in such discourse, may claim that they love Israel. However, all they’re doing is making it easier for their fellow party members to demonize the Jewish state and ignore the ongoing Palestinian quest for Jewish genocide.

 


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

Source: https://www.jns.org/opinion/column/jonathan-s-tobin/rahm-emanuel-and-the-persistent-delusion-of-failed-policies

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Not waiting for Hamas | The new migration plan for southern Gaza - Israel National News

 

by Israel National News

The Board of Peace is planning to move Gazans to areas not under Hamas control before next winter as forces on the ground have begun practical preparations.

 

Engineering vehicles in Gaza
Engineering vehicles in Gaza                                                                                              TPS

The Board of Peace is advancing an initial plan to transfer Gaza residents to an area near the Yellow Line that is not under Hamas control, as the joint goal of the board and Israel remains the disarmament of the terrorist organization.

Channel 12, citing sources with knowledge of the details, reported that the move depends on receiving the internal and security approvals. At the same time, on the ground, the IDF has begun working to clear the area of unexploded munitions, preparing the ground around the Emirati neighborhood in southern Gaza, and establishing a dedicated base in the area.

The Board of Peace is advancing the planning of a pilot program that would enable the Gaza population to move to territories in the enclave not under Hamas control.

While Israel and the Board of Peace define the disarmament of Hamas as an asset and the main objective, the goal is not to wait for the terrorist organization, but to work so that some of the residents move to the proximity of the Yellow Line, outside of areas under its control, before next winter.

A source with knowledge of the details stated: "The Board of Police is preparing to begin this; it's waiting for final approvals from Israel and more internal work by the Board of Peace."

That being said, the same source reported that practical actions are already being implemented on the ground. 


Israel National News

Source: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/429905

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Iran retaliates with strikes on US Gulf assets - Reuters

 

by Reuters

Kuwait said its armed forces had engaged with a cruise missile, three ballistic missiles and 10 drones in its airspace, and that one person had been injured from falling shrapnel.

 

US Airforce (USAF) personnel work by a USAF B-1B bomber, at RAF Fairford airbase, which is used by USAF personnel, amid the US–Israeli conflict with Iran.
US Airforce (USAF) personnel work by a USAF B-1B bomber, at RAF Fairford airbase, which is used by USAF personnel, amid the US–Israeli conflict with Iran.
(photo credit: REUTERS/PHIL NOBLE)

 

Sirens sounded across the Middle East as Iran launched retaliatory strikes on US assets in the Gulf Region on Thursday. 

Iran's air force scrambled fighter jets to "secure the skies over the funeral procession" of the former supreme leader Ali Khamenei in Mashhad, the regime-affiliated Fars news agency said.

The retaliatory strikes come after the US struck around 90 sites overnight from Wednesday to Thursday in Iran.

The most recent round of US strikes was completed early Thursday morning in Iran. The US military struck various sites throughout southern Iran "to further degrade Iran's ability to attack commercial shipping and innocent civil mariners in the Strait of Hormuz," the US Central Command (CENTCOM) said in a statement on X/Twitter.

Iranian officials said the US attacks had killed 14 people and injured 78 across five provinces on Wednesday and Thursday, state media reported.

Smoke rises from a port, near Strait of Hormuz, following a U.S. strike in Kuhestak, Hormozgan Province, Iran, July 8, 2026. (credit: Social Media/via REUTERS)

Fars said one US strike had hit a rail bridge used for trade with Russia and China, while Mehr news agency reported several explosions in the Bushehr province, which is home to a Russian-built nuclear power plant.

Sirens sound through Middle East: Strikes, interceptions in Kuwait, Jordan, Bahrain

Iran's army said in a statement released by state media that it had launched attacks at US Patriot systems with drones in Kuwait, an early warning site in Qatar (satellite antenna) and a fuel storage facility of the US army in Bahrain.

Kuwait said its armed forces had engaged with a cruise missile, three ballistic missiles and 10 drones in its airspace, and that one person had been injured from falling shrapnel.

Sirens also sounded in Jordan on Thursday after missiles launched from Iran were detected in Jordanian airspace, the state news agency reported. Eight of ten missiles, which were fired at Jordan's Azraq military base, were intercepted.

No injuries or damage were reported, the news agency said.

A government spokesperson said the Jordanian Armed Forces are on high alert and ready to deal with any threat targeting the kingdom's security.

Sirens were sounded in Bahrain on Thursday morning, the Interior Ministry confirmed on X. Sirens were also sounded overnight as Iran launched missile and drone attacks on the Gulf State.

The ministry called on citizens and residents to seek shelter.

A drone attack hit a camp belonging to an Iranian Kurdish opposition group northeast of Iraq's Erbil, security sources told Reuters on Thursday.

No casualties were immediately reported in the attack.

Qatar calls for calm, Iran demands full control of Strait

Qatar, which hosts the largest US military base in the region and has often mediated between Washington and its adversaries including Tehran, called for a return to diplomacy.

In a phone call with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi, Qatar's Prime Minister Sheik Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani also condemned attacks against commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.

While Iran has not claimed responsibility for the ship attacks, analysts say Tehran uses such actions to gain leverage in negotiations.

The Strait of Hormuz handled about a fifth of global oil supplies before the war erupted on February 28 with US and Israeli strikes against Iran.

Tehran has since taken effective control of the strait, allowing it to force a stalemate in its confrontation with the world's most powerful military.

"The US has yet to learn that bullying and breaking its commitments no longer come without a cost. Let me be clear: If you strike, you will be struck back," Iran's top negotiator, Mohammad ​Baqer Qalibaf, wrote on X.

"The Strait of Hormuz will be reopened only under Iranian arrangements, not through US threats."

US-Iran diplomacy falling through, Trump says MoU 'over'

However, the US leader, who was attending a NATO summit in Turkey, also said he did not think the latest military strikes would escalate into a full-fledged conflict with Iran.

"Anything that happens is going to be over very quickly... and will only make it safer, including for oil," he told reporters in Ankara.

Asked before the NATO summit on Wednesday whether the memorandum of understanding with Iran was over, Trump said: "It's a very interesting question. To me, I think it's ​over. I don't want to deal with them."

Jonah Davidov and Shoshana Baker contributed to this report. 


Reuters

Source: https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/iran-news/article-902037

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Hamas's Latest Trick: Leaving Government, Keeping Weapons - Khaled Abu Toameh

 

by Khaled Abu Toameh

Hamas is not dismantling its military wing. It is not surrendering its weapons. It is not disbanding its security apparatus. It is not ending its command structure.

 

  • The key question is not who sits in ministerial offices in the Gaza Strip. The key question is who holds the guns.

  • Nothing essential has changed.

  • Hamas is not dismantling its military wing. It is not surrendering its weapons. It is not disbanding its security apparatus. It is not ending its command structure. Thousands of Hamas employees and loyalists will also remain embedded in the Gaza Strip's institutions.

  • "Hamas's apparent willingness to make room for a technocratic government is designed to prevent its own disarmament.... [A]s long as Hamas retains its weapons, any civilian government will of course operate as Hamas dictates." — Israel's Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar,

  • Sa'ar warned that Hamas seeks to replicate the Hezbollah model in the Gaza Strip: a civilian administration would be responsible for garbage collection, public services, reconstruction, and salaries, while Hamas would remain the dominant military force.

  • This is not peace and stability. It is simply outsourcing civilian responsibilities while preserving the machinery of jihad (holy war).

  • "The ceaseless headlines about Hamas 'ending its government' in Gaza and 'preparing to give up control' are yet another ruse and a nothing‑burger dressed up as a concession by the terror group, which has zero intention of relinquishing real power or disarming.... None of this resembles disarmament. Hamas's al‑Qassam Brigades are working nonstop to repair tunnel networks and rebuild munitions stockpiles... Yet the media coverage of this non‑event has already reframed Hamas as cooperative, reasonable, even constructive; a narrative shift that obscures Hamas's role as the primary obstacle to Gaza's recovery. And this is landing successfully and working well for Hamas.... Ultimately, Hamas 'dissolving its government' will be judged by simple metrics like whether Gazans can share posts on Facebook without being tortured, beaten, or dragged into hospital interrogation rooms, abuses that continued from October 7 until just last week. Until that changes, the headlines are theater, and Hamas's grip in Gaza remains intact." — Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib, Palestinian political analyst, x.com, June 6, 2026.

  • A technocratic government financed by foreign donors would relieve Hamas of the financial burden of governing while allowing the terrorist group to concentrate on rebuilding its military machine.

  • The full implementation of the Trump peace plan requires the dismantling of Hamas's military capabilities and the complete demilitarization of the Gaza Strip. Allowing Hamas to establish a Hezbollah-style state within a state would guarantee continued instability and ensure that any future Palestinian administration remained hostage to an armed terrorist organization.

  • The only meaningful solution is for Hamas to dissolve itself, and not merely one of its governing committees. This means dismantling both its political and military structures, surrendering all of its weapons, disbanding its security apparatus, relinquishing every instrument of coercion, and disappearing as an armed political force.

  • Until Hamas disappears as both a political movement and a terrorist organization, declarations about dissolving committees amount to little more than political make-believe designed to secure international legitimacy, unlock billions of dollars in aid, and buy time for the next war.

The key question is not who sits in ministerial offices in the Gaza Strip. The key question is who holds the guns. Hamas is not dismantling its military wing. It is not surrendering its weapons. Pictured: Hamas terrorists take part in a military parade in the Gaza Strip on July 19, 2023. (Photo by Mahmud Hams/AFP via Getty Images)

Nearly three years after the October 7, 2023 massacre and more than six months after President Donald J. Trump's 20-point peace plan called for the complete demilitarization of the Gaza Strip, Hamas has announced that it is dissolving its de facto governing body and is prepared to hand authority to a committee of Palestinian technocrats.

At first glance, the announcement appears to represent an important concession. It is not. It is merely Hamas's latest attempt to deceive the international community into believing that it is complying with the requirements of the Trump peace initiative while preserving what matters most to the terrorist organization: its military power.

The key question is not who sits in ministerial offices in the Gaza Strip. The key question is who holds the guns.

By Hamas's own admission, its ministries and thousands of employees will remain in place. Even more importantly, Hamas says it will continue overseeing security and policing in the areas still under its control.

In other words, Hamas is leaving government, not power. Nothing essential has changed.

Hamas is not dismantling its military wing. It is not surrendering its weapons. It is not disbanding its security apparatus. It is not ending its command structure. Thousands of Hamas employees and loyalists will also remain embedded in the Gaza Strip's institutions.

Without these steps, dissolving a governing committee is little more than a cosmetic gesture.

So long as Hamas retains its military forces, every future civilian administration in the Gaza Strip will operate under the shadow of Hamas's guns.

No technocratic government can function independently while an armed terrorist organization remains the strongest force on the ground.

Israel's Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar immediately recognized the danger. Hamas's trick is simple," he wrote. "Hamas's apparent willingness to make room for a technocratic government is designed to prevent its own disarmament."

Sa'ar warned that Hamas seeks to replicate the Hezbollah model in the Gaza Strip: a civilian administration would be responsible for garbage collection, public services, reconstruction, and salaries, while Hamas would remain the dominant military force. He noted that "as long as Hamas retains its weapons, any civilian government will of course operate as Hamas dictates."

That assessment goes to the heart of Hamas's strategy.

The terrorist group is trying to replicate Hezbollah's "state within a state" model in Lebanon. Under that model, a civilian government manages the country's daily affairs while the terrorist organization retains its independent army, intelligence apparatus, and the power to decide questions of war and peace.

The consequences for Lebanon have been catastrophic. Although successive Lebanese governments formally governed the country, Hezbollah remained the real power, using its vast arsenal and Iranian backing to dominate political life and repeatedly drag Lebanon into destructive wars with Israel.

Hamas now appears to be pursuing precisely the same formula in the Gaza Strip. It wants someone else to rebuild hospitals, schools, roads and homes, restore basic services, and pay the salaries of civil servants, while Hamas quietly rebuilds its military capabilities, recruits fighters, restores its tunnel network, manufactures rockets, and prepares for another October 7-style massacre against Israel.

This is not peace and stability. It is simply outsourcing civilian responsibilities while preserving the machinery of jihad (holy war).

It is also not the first time Hamas has employed such tactics.

In 2014, after signing another reconciliation agreement with Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah faction, Hamas similarly agreed to hand over the administration of the Gaza Strip to a Palestinian unity government composed of technocrats. The belief back then was that the arrangement would reduce Hamas's grip on Gaza. Instead, Hamas maintained complete control over its military forces and security agencies.

The unity government never exercised genuine authority. The result was predictable. Hamas remained the main ruler of the Gaza Strip while others (the Palestinian Authority and the international community) carried responsibility for administration and public services.

Twelve years later, Hamas is attempting to repeat precisely the same formula. History should serve as a warning. The international community has repeatedly accepted Hamas's promises at face value. It has repeatedly convinced itself that Hamas was becoming more pragmatic, more responsible, and more interested in governing than fighting. Many Israeli and Western policymakers and political analysts believed Hamas primarily wanted economic stability, reconstruction, and periods of calm.

Those assumptions collapsed on October 7, 2023, when Hamas carried out the deadliest massacre of Jews since the Holocaust.

The lesson should have been obvious. Hamas has repeatedly used ceasefires, reconstruction efforts, and diplomatic initiatives to strengthen its military capabilities.

The latest Hamas announcement deserves to be examined through the same lens.

If Hamas genuinely wished to relinquish power, why wait until now? Why not dissolve itself before the Gaza Strip suffered catastrophic destruction? Why not step aside years ago to spare Palestinians the enormous human and economic costs of another war?

The answer is straightforward.

Hamas is acting because it faces mounting international pressure to comply with Trump's peace plan, whose central requirement is the complete demilitarization of the Gaza Strip.

By announcing the dissolution of its governing committee, Hamas hopes to create the impression that it is fulfilling its obligations while shifting diplomatic pressure onto Israel.

The message Hamas wants the world to hear is simple: "We have done our part. Now Israel must do its part."

It is a clever public relations strategy. However, it does not satisfy the fundamental requirement of the Trump plan. The issue has never been who occupies government offices. The issue is whether Hamas continues to exist as an armed terrorist organization.

So long as Hamas remains armed, no civilian government can function independently. So long as Hamas retains thousands of loyal employees embedded throughout Gaza's institutions, any new administration risks becoming little more than a façade behind which Hamas continues ruling from the shadows.

Palestinian political analyst Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib wrote on July 6:

"The ceaseless headlines about Hamas 'ending its government' in Gaza and 'preparing to give up control' are yet another ruse and a nothing‑burger dressed up as a concession by the terror group, which has zero intention of relinquishing real power or disarming. Similar announcements like this have happened frequently in the past.

"The resignation of the head of the so‑called 'Emergency Committee,' or Hamas's post–October 7 governing façade, is simply the removal of a figurehead. His duties have already been quietly assumed by another 'temporary' Hamas administrator while everyone pretends to wait for NCAG, the incoming Technocratic Committee, to take over. Hamas has already announced that its administrative and technical staff will continue working until NCAG arrives, fully aware that the new transitional governing body will lack the capacity, personnel, or infrastructure to run Gaza. This is Hamas's plan: recycle its current/existing apparatus into the new administration expected to emerge from the Trump Administration's transitional process overseen by the Board of Peace.

"What we're seeing is the sloppy rollout of a long‑predicted strategy: Hamas shifting from direct control to indirectly reigning, Hezbollah‑style. It's cheaper, it shields the group from accountability, and it allows new civilian faces to absorb public anger while Hamas retains decisive control over every meaningful lever of power in the Gaza Strip.

"None of this resembles disarmament. Hamas's al‑Qassam Brigades are working nonstop to repair tunnel networks and rebuild munitions stockpiles using unexploded ordnance and Israeli bombs from two years of war. Yet the media coverage of this non‑event has already reframed Hamas as cooperative, reasonable, even constructive; a narrative shift that obscures Hamas's role as the primary obstacle to Gaza's recovery. And this is landing successfully and working well for Hamas; not only with outlets, voices, and platforms who are typically softer on the terror group, but even in some mainstream political discourse, where some are treating this as tantamount to the initiation of disarmament or the start of Phase II of the ceasefire.

"The timing is no coincidence: this move by Hamas comes one week after the Board of Peace met in Cyprus and agreed to pursue 'Plan B,' the approach I've long advocated: moving Gaza's civilian population across the 'Yellow Line' and draining Hamas of access to resources and human shields it relies on.

"Ultimately, Hamas 'dissolving its government' will be judged by simple metrics like whether Gazans can share posts on Facebook without being tortured, beaten, or dragged into hospital interrogation rooms, abuses that continued from October 7 until just last week. Until that changes, the headlines are theater, and Hamas's grip in Gaza remains intact."

Hamas's primary objective is survival. It understands that billions of dollars in international reconstruction aid could soon flow into the Gaza Strip.

A technocratic government financed by foreign donors would relieve Hamas of the financial burden of governing while allowing the terrorist group to concentrate on rebuilding its military machine.

The full implementation of the Trump peace plan requires the dismantling of Hamas's military capabilities and the complete demilitarization of the Gaza Strip. Allowing Hamas to establish a Hezbollah-style state within a state would guarantee continued instability and ensure that any future Palestinian administration remained hostage to an armed terrorist organization.

The only meaningful solution is for Hamas to dissolve itself, and not merely one of its governing committees. This means dismantling both its political and military structures, surrendering all of its weapons, disbanding its security apparatus, relinquishing every instrument of coercion, and disappearing as an armed political force.

Anything short of that preserves the conditions that produced the October 7 massacre.

Both Israelis and Palestinians have already paid an unbearable price for repeatedly believing Hamas's promises. They cannot afford to make the same mistake again. The international community should not be fooled by another carefully staged Hamas performance.

Until Hamas disappears as both a political movement and a terrorist organization, declarations about dissolving committees amount to little more than political make-believe designed to secure Hamas's international legitimacy, unlock billions of dollars in aid for it, and buy time for it to prepare its next war.

 

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

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22683/hamas-trick-keeping-weapons

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Nearly two-thirds of Jewish Americans say prejudice 'extremely' or 'very' serious problem: poll - Kevin Killough

 

by Kevin Killough

One-third say the Democratic Party supports them fairly well, while 41% say the party's support is "not very well" or "not well at all."

 

A new poll from the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found that nearly two thirds of Jewish Americans say prejudice against Jewish people is an "extremely" or "very" serious problem in the U.S. 

The poll also found that most Jewish adults don't feel well represented by political leaders. Of those surveyed, 15% said that the Democratic Party supports Jewish people in the U.S. "extremely" or "very well." One-third say the party supports them fairly well, while 41% say the party's support is "not very well" or "not well at all." 

Half of Jewish adults, according to the poll, say that Trump and the Republicans don't support Jewish people well in the U.S., while 40% say the Republican Party supports Jewish people "somewhat," "extremely" or "very well." The poll also found that 42% say the same of Trump. 

The new survey of 1,022 Jewish adults — including people who identify as Jewish by religion and religiously unaffiliated people who identify as Jewish through culture, ethnicity or family background. The margin of sampling error for Jewish adults is plus or minus 5.0 percentage points 


Kevin Killough

Source: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/polling/nearly-two-thirds-jewish-americans-say-prejudice-extremely-or-very-serious

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DOJ warns state officials they can be prosecuted if they let noncitizens vote: ‘Want them to stop’ - Christina Park

 

by Christina Park

U.S. government has conducted reviews that found tens of thousands of non-citizens have made it onto state voter rolls

 

The Justice Department's top election enforcement official has sent a pointed warning to all 50 states that election administrators can be criminally prosecuted if they knowingly allow noncitizens to vote in the upcoming 2026 election.

Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon sent the letters Tuesday after the U.S. government conducted reviews that found tens of thousands of noncitizens have made it onto state voter rolls, and DOJ prosecuted a handful of foreigners who voted in federal elections illegally, including an Australian citizen earlier this week.

“Every person who votes illegally that cancels your or my vote is one too many for me, and I think it should be for every citizen, because it’s a sacred right,” Dhillon told the Just the News, No Noise television show Wednesday night.

Dhillon's letters give states five days to explain how they will comply with federal voter eligibility laws and identify what steps they will take to maintain “clean voter lists" that remove noncitizens before Election Day.

“Any election officer, including the chief election officer of the state, who knowingly retains noncitizens on the state’s SVRL or facilitates noncitizens in receiving and casting ballots could be subject to criminal liability,” reads the letter sent to Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson.

The warning comes as the Trump administration makes a renewed push to get the Senate to pass the SAVE America Act, which requires proof of citizenship and photo ID to vote.

Dhillon said her office had listed criminal punishments written into federal election laws such as the Voting Rights Act, the Help America Vote Act, and the National Voter Registration Act. 

“Look, I don't want to scare anybody, but if that's having the impact of fear, that means that some people are worried that they're actually violating the law, and we want them to stop,” Dhillon said.

“I hope no prosecutions are necessary," she added.

Moreover, Dhillon said that in states cooperating with the DOJ "cleanup of the voter rolls,” the DOJ had discovered “hundreds of thousands of dead people on the voter rolls,” as well as “tens of thousands of non-citizens on the voter rolls.”

Recent data from individual states offers a closer look. The North Carolina State Board of Elections has identified around 34,000 dead people on the state’s voter rolls, while an ongoing audit in Ohio recently flagged 62 potential noncitizen registrations.

Meanwhile, Michigan has removed over 1.4 million registrations since 2019 to clear deceased voters.

Verifying the DOJ's national figures remains difficult as the department is currently suing more than 20 states, including California, for refusing to turn over their unredacted voter files.

Dhillon said she was concerned that in large states like California, there could be “hundreds of thousands of people” on voter rolls who did not have citizenship records in the systems.

The DOJ also announced this week that it is dispatching election monitors to six states: Arizona, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, and Virginia.

Dhillon said the monitors are being sent to counties and jurisdictions that have previously had problems during federal elections. 

Dhillon noted Arizona experienced “glitches in their vote centers,” where roughly 20% of Maricopa County had problems with ballot on-demand printers, Apache County had “pretty much the whole voting system went down” and Detroit, suffered "extremely long lines around universities for students to have to wait to vote." 

Local officials have pushed back against DOJ election monitoring letters. Detroit City Clerk Janice Winfrey recently called the department’s rationale “thin gruel” and “false assertions that form a baseless conclusion.”

Dhillon pushed back against such criticisms, saying election crimes victimize lawful voters.

“There isn't a culture of law enforcement caring about it. It's viewed as a victimless crime. It is not a victimless crime,” she said. “We are trying to empty the ocean with a teaspoon, because there isn't a culture of US attorneys' offices going after this." 


Christina Park

Source: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/elections/doj-warns-state-officials-they-can-be-prosecuted-if-they-let-noncitizens

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Jihadists Look to Kashmir, Kashmiris Look Away - Anna Mahjar-Barducci

 

by Anna Mahjar-Barducci

For nearly eight decades, the "two-nation theory" has provided the moral and political framework through which Pakistan has justified its authority over Kashmir. The Muslim crowds in Kashmir chanting "Pak Forces Out," however, have delivered their verdict on that claim.

 

  • Many jihadists, building on the Palestinian model, increasingly see Kashmir as prime land to conquer: the next great cause for global jihad.

  • Pakistan has actively enabled and amplified this jihadist narrative by positioning itself as the foremost protector of Muslims, effectively asserting ownership over Kashmir.

  • In June 2026, Pakistani paramilitary forces opened fire on protesters in... Kashmir. The protesters were not armed rebels. They were ordinary Muslim residents — traders, students, lawyers, transport workers and women — demanding cheaper electricity, affordable wheat flour and fairer treatment from the authorities that rule them.

  • Sit-ins drew more than 70,000 people chanting "Pak Forces Out."

  • What began as an economic protest gradually became a broader challenge to Pakistan's administration of the territory.

  • For nearly eight decades, the "two-nation theory" has provided the moral and political framework through which Pakistan has justified its authority over Kashmir. The Muslim crowds in Kashmir chanting "Pak Forces Out," however, have delivered their verdict on that claim. What made the protests politically significant was not their scale, but their target: Muslim Kashmiris rising against Pakistan itself.

  • [T]he Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC)... has an established mechanism for addressing the Kashmir dispute.... The OIC's selective outrage — loud on India, silent on Pakistan's abuses — exposes its hypocrisy.

  • Despite Pakistan's persistent claim that it is the rightful protector of Kashmiri Muslims and that the Indian-administered portion also belongs to it, Muslims in Pakistan-administered Kashmir are openly rejecting this narrative, telling Pakistan that it is not their protector -- that they are better off without its rule. This is particularly striking given that Muslims in Indian-administered Kashmir enjoy greater political rights, economic opportunities, and development compared to those living under Pakistani administration.

  • By bravely confronting the very state that claims to embody Muslim "purity" and protection, the Kashmiri Muslim protesters have dismantled the moral foundation of Pakistan's narrative from within.

  • While jihadists, with Pakistan's active encouragement, have been attempting to turn Kashmir into the next major jihadist stronghold and battlefield against non-Muslims after Gaza, the voices of Kashmiri Muslims chanting against Pakistani forces have been rejecting the idea. The founding myth of Pakistan as the "pure" Islamic homeland and true representative and protector of Kashmiri Muslims has visibly collapsed.

Many jihadists, building on the Palestinian model, increasingly see Kashmir as prime land to conquer: the next great cause for global jihad. Pictured: Indian security forces in Kashmir inspect the site of a jihadist terrorist attack carried out by Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), in which 40 Indian troops were killed, on February 14, 2019. (Photo by AFP via Getty Images)

Many jihadists, building on the Palestinian model, increasingly see Kashmir as prime land to conquer: the next great cause for global jihad.

Hamas leaders themselves have explicitly framed the Palestinian and Kashmiri causes as one struggle. High-ranking Hamas envoys who traveled to Kashmir in 2025 to headline the "Kashmir Solidarity and Hamas Operation 'Al-Aqsa Flood' Conference." The message stressed at the conference was "The mujahideen of Kashmir and Palestine have become united."

Soon after October 7, 2023, on November 6, during a meeting with Pakistani politician Fazal-ur-Rehman in Qatar, Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal framed the "Palestine and Kashmir issues" as a shared "litmus test" for "human rights" advocates. In international forums, Pakistan-based jihadi groups and Pakistani political parties have long treated "Palestine and Kashmir" as aligned.

Pakistan has actively enabled and amplified this jihadist narrative by positioning itself as the foremost protector of Muslims, effectively asserting ownership over Kashmir. Their claim is rooted in the "two-nation theory," articulated by the founding fathers of Pakistan — Syed Ahmad Khan, Muhammad Iqbal, and Muhammad Ali Jinnah. This ideology framed Hindus and Muslims as two incompatible nations, with Pakistan ("the Land of the Pure") ordained as a superior homeland to safeguard Muslim identity against Hindu-majority India.

It was Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan, however, who translated this into a concrete political demand. He argued that Hindus and Muslims were two separate nations and that Muslims required a sovereign homeland to safeguard their identity. This framed the "two-nation theory" not just as a partition plan but as a claim about the nature of cultures that are incompatible. Jinnah's view has served as Pakistan's founding principle and permanent foreign policy.

This ideology does not belong to the past. Pakistan's army chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir, declared last year:

"Our forefathers believed that we were different from Hindus in every possible aspect of life. Our religion is different. Our customs are different. Our traditions are different. Our thoughts are different. Our ambitions are different... That was the foundation of the Two-Nation Theory. It was laid on the belief that we are two nations, not one."

On another occasion, Munir said that Kashmir "was our jugular vein, it will remain our jugular vein, and that Pakistan was prepared to fight additional wars over the territory.

80 years after partition, however, the claim is collapsing in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir —a region that is almost entirely Muslim. At partition, Pakistan argued that the Muslim-majority Kashmir should all be part of Pakistan. However, after the 1947-48 war, also known as the first Kashmir war, the territory was divided between Indian- and Pakistan-administered regions. Pakistan has continued to insist that the Indian-administered part rightfully belongs to it. Today, it is Muslim Kashmiris themselves who are clearly expressing their rejection of Pakistani rule.

In June 2026, Pakistani paramilitary forces opened fire on protesters in Muzaffarabad and Rawalakot, the principal towns of Pakistani-administered Kashmir. The protesters were not armed rebels. They were ordinary Muslim residents — traders, students, lawyers, transport workers and women — demanding cheaper electricity, affordable wheat flour and fairer treatment from the authorities that rule them.

The International Human Rights Foundation accused authorities of carrying out a "violent crackdown on peaceful protesters in Pakistan-administered Jammu and Kashmir, which has resulted in over 32 civilian deaths, including at least one woman, between June 8 and 16, 2026."

Protest groups and local media claim the total number of wounded ranged between 200 and 300. Amnesty International documented internet shutdowns, arbitrary mass arrests, and the application of anti-terrorism law against a grassroots civic coalition. Sit-ins drew more than 70,000 people chanting "Pak Forces Out."

These were the very people Pakistan claims to represent internationally when it speaks on behalf of Kashmiris.

The events in Kashmir since 2023 challenge the "two-nation theory." The unrest began with protests over electricity tariffs and flour shortages in May 2023, organized through the Awami Action Committee, a coalition of traders, lawyers, transporters, students and civil society groups, which formulated a 38-point charter of demands, including subsidized essentials and local electoral reforms.

Years of economic frustration boiled over when residents complained that although their territory generates substantial hydroelectric power, they were being charged electricity rates they considered unfair while also struggling with rising food prices and shortages. What began as an economic protest gradually became a broader challenge to Pakistan's administration of the territory.

Pakistan's response has been harsh. The Awami Action Committee was banned on June 5 under anti-terror provisions. Its leaders face sedition charges. Internet and mobile communications were suspended. Federal paramilitary forces were deployed. Reuters reported a 10-million-rupee ($36,000) bounty for the arrest of the committee's leaders.

Pakistan has built its international position on Kashmir on the premise that it speaks for Kashmiri Muslims. This premise is now contradicted by the conditions in the territory that Pakistan itself administers.

For nearly eight decades, the "two-nation theory" has provided the moral and political framework through which Pakistan has justified its authority over Kashmir. The Muslim crowds in Kashmir chanting "Pak Forces Out," however, have delivered their verdict on that claim. What made the protests politically significant was not their scale, but their target: Muslim Kashmiris rising against Pakistan itself.

The contrast between international responses to the areas of Kashmir under Indian administration and those under Pakistani administration is further underscored by the role of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), which has an established mechanism for addressing the Kashmir dispute. Its Contact Group on Kashmir meets periodically and issues statements on the situation in Indian-administered Kashmir. It did not convene specifically to address the unrest in Pakistan-administered areas, or to issue a separate condemnation of the massacre there. The OIC's Kashmir position has historically been shaped by consensus language influenced heavily by Pakistan, aligning the organization's public messaging with Islamabad's diplomatic priorities. The OIC's selective outrage — loud on India, silent on Pakistan's abuses — exposes its hypocrisy.

In the end, the courageous demonstrations by ordinary Muslim Kashmiris represent a powerful popular rejection of the "two-nation theory," exposing the failure and unsustainability of Pakistan's founding ideology. That ideology underpins Pakistan's claim that it should control the whole Muslim-majority region of Kashmir. Yet India today is home to almost the same number of Muslims as Pakistan and continues to administer part of Kashmir. Despite Pakistan's persistent claim that it is the rightful protector of Kashmiri Muslims and that the Indian-administered portion also belongs to it, Muslims in Pakistan-administered Kashmir are openly rejecting this narrative, telling Pakistan that it is not their protector -- that they are better off without its rule. This is particularly striking given that Muslims in Indian-administered Kashmir enjoy greater political rights, economic opportunities, and development compared to those living under Pakistani administration.

By bravely confronting the very state that claims to embody Muslim "purity" and protection, the Kashmiri Muslim protesters have dismantled the moral foundation of Pakistan's narrative from within.

While jihadists, with Pakistan's active encouragement, have been attempting to turn Kashmir into the next major jihadist stronghold and battlefield against non-Muslims after Gaza, the voices of Kashmiri Muslims chanting against Pakistani forces have been rejecting the idea. The founding myth of Pakistan as the "pure" Islamic homeland and true representative and protector of Kashmiri Muslims has visibly collapsed. 


Anna Mahjar-Barducci

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22681/kashmir-jihadists

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