Thursday, April 23, 2026

Trump to US Navy: 'Shoot and kill any boat laying mines in Strait of Hormuz' - Israel National News

 

by Israel National News

Trump orders US Navy to eliminate any vessel laying mines in the vital waterway while upping efforts to remove existing mines.

 

President Donald Trump
President Donald Trump                              White House Photo by Daniel Torok

US President Donald Trump announced on Thursday that he has ordered the US Navy to eliminate any boat caught laying mines in the Strait of Hormuz.

"I have ordered the United States Navy to shoot and kill any boat, small boats though they may be, that is putting mines in the waters of the Strait of Hormuz. There is to be no hesitation." The President wrote on Truth Social.

In parenthisis, Trump mockingly explained why the boats laying mines are small: "Their naval ships are ALL, 159 of them, at the bottom of the sea!"

He also noted that US minesweepers "are clearing the Strait right now. and that he is "hereby ordering that activity to continue, but at a tripled-up level!" 


Israel National News

Source: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/425979

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How Iran Committed Suicide - Victor Davis Hanson

 

by Victor Davis Hanson

Iran’s decades-long bluff—built on terror proxies, nuclear brinkmanship, and Western appeasement—collapsed the moment it faced direct force and a changed geopolitical landscape.

 

 

How does the supposedly most fearsome regime in the violent Middle East now find itself on the verge of an utter economic and military collapse?

Iran’s half-century-long deadly terrorist reputation peaked with the October 7, 2023, massacre in Israel that it helped fund and coordinate.

Iran’s terrorist ambitions of running the Middle East had accelerated after witnessing Joe Biden’s cognitive decline and his administration’s distancing itself from Israel. Biden’s humiliation by a series of Chinese slights and the Russian invasion of Ukraine further eroded American deterrence. European appeasement was another force multiplier of Iranian hubris.

The theocracy apparently assumed that its supposed “ring of fire” terrorist proxies—in Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Gaza, and Yemen—could lethally squeeze Israel, now reeling from the greatest single-day loss of Jewish life since the Holocaust.

The theocrats further conjectured that, like most incumbent presidents, Biden would be reelected and continue to revive the disastrous Obama-era appeasement.

Once Biden had begged Iran to reenter the Iran deal, lifted sanctions, sent cash, and removed terrorist designations from some of its proxies, the Khamenei regime, now flush with new oil revenues, logically stepped up its nuclear enrichment.

Tehran was assured that not even Israel would dare strike its nuclear labyrinth, given its reputedly state-of-the-art Chinese and Russian air defenses—and its own retaliatory armada of thousands of ballistic missiles and drones, augmented by perhaps 200,000 short-range rockets of its Arab terrorist clients.

But Iran sorely miscalculated.

The cognitively challenged Biden reelection candidacy imploded, replaced by the anemic Kamala Harris nomination—and with it, the Democrats lost power.

Worse, the supposedly politically dead and buried Trump pulled off the most amazing political return in modern American history.

Benjamin Netanyahu survived the political implosions following October 7 and now had a supportive American presidency.

A cleverer Iran would have stopped the bombast, downplayed its terrorist connections, and returned to its trademark delay-delay-delay style of negotiations—in hopes that the Europeans, the terrified Gulf monarchies, the anti-Israel Democrats, and the paleo-Right would combine to prevent Trump from doing what seven prior presidents had claimed was essential but had never dared to do.

But instead, Iran kept bragging about its air defenses and its vast missile fleet and egged on its expendable Arab surrogates.

It had no inkling that October 7 had reminded Israel that it could never trust its Islamic enemies and that its extinction, not mere defeat, was the aim of the Iranian nexus.

In truth, Iran’s ferocious reputation was never based on any actual success on the battlefield.

Its forte had always been enlisting Arabs and other Middle Easterners to kill Israelis, Americans, and other Westerners in Europe, Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, and Afghanistan.

When Israel preempted this and destroyed the Iranian air defenses during the 12-Day War in 2025, and the Americans pounded its multi-billion-dollar nuclear facility, the world saw for the first time how hollow the theocracy had always been.

Even its patrons, Russia and China, privately despised Iran and considered it only a useful anti-American and anti-Western tool.

But once Russia got mired in Ukraine and lost Syria, it was forced to cut Iran loose.

The Chinese—who have turned a million Muslim Uyghurs into indentured serfs—saw Iran merely as a cut-rate gas station.

As long as it was free to buy sanctioned Iranian oil on the sly, China sold Iran almost every weapons system Tehran wanted.

But again, the Chinese connection was predicated only on Iranian utility—which has now mostly evaporated.

The Gulf sheikdoms loathed and feared Iran but were too close to the monster to dare poke it. And so they appeased and bribed Iran and hoped their money, oil, and the US military would deter the mullahs.

That strategy, too, has imploded, Iran having blasted the Gulf with more missiles (5,000) than it had sent (500) even against the hated Zionist entity.

Europe for decades appeased Iran to buy its oil, to keep the Strait of Hormuz open, and to protect itself from Iranian-funded terrorists. Now that the US has defanged Iran, Europe is likely to pile on.

Iran has no government. Freelancing apparatchiks from the military, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the government, and the theocracy fear being dubbed soft by their competitors, but all of these fear a popular uprising and an overdue noose strung over the collective neck of the regime even more.

They have no idea what Trump will do. Their signature methods of delaying and bartering won’t work with him, especially when time is no longer on Iran’s side, and they have no military left.

The bankrupt regime is bleeding over $400 million a day in revenue. It faces a loss of half a trillion dollars from its half-century-long investment in a vast and now obliterated military-nuclear-industrial complex and arsenal.

In sum, Iran can no longer credibly bluff, threaten, or delay. Not even the American Left and the European appeasers can save it.

Its 47-year façade is in ruins. 


Victor Davis Hanson

Source: https://amgreatness.com/2026/04/23/how-iran-committed-suicide/

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U.S. forces seize another oil tanker shipping illicit oil from Iran in Indian Ocean - Kevin Killough

 

by Kevin Killough

"We will continue global maritime enforcement to disrupt illicit networks and interdict vessels providing material support to Iran, wherever they operate," the Department of War said.

 

U.S. forces continued interdiction efforts against illicit oil from Iran in the Indian Ocean. 

The Department of War shared a video on X on Thursday showing U.S. forces boarding a tanker associated with the smuggling of Iranian oil.

"We will continue global maritime enforcement to disrupt illicit networks and interdict vessels providing material support to Iran, wherever they operate," the department said in the statement. 

Photos released by the department show U.S. forces boarding the Majestic X, a Guyana-flagged oil tanker. The U.S. Treasury Department had sanctioned the vessel in 2024 — at the time it was named Phonix — for smuggling Iranian crude oil to avoid U.S. sanctions against Iran, the Associated Press reported

The seizure follows another that happened on Tuesday.  


Kevin Killough

Source: https://justthenews.com/world/asia/us-forces-seize-oil-tanker-indian-ocean-was-shipping-illicit-oil-iran

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US hosts talks as Lebanon seeks ceasefire extension with Israel - Reuters

 

by Reuters

The US-mediated ceasefire, which is set to expire on Sunday, has yielded a significant reduction in violence, but attacks have continued in southern Lebanon.

 

Israeli soldiers are seen along the Israeli border with Lebanon amid the ongoing war, April 10, 2026.
Israeli soldiers are seen along the Israeli border with Lebanon amid the ongoing war, April 10, 2026.
(photo credit: AYAL MARGOLIN/FLASH90)

The US will host a second meeting between Lebanese and Israeli envoys on Thursday, with Beirut seeking the extension of a ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, a day after Israeli strikes killed at least five people, including a journalist.

The US-mediated ceasefire, which is set to expire on Sunday, has yielded a significant reduction in violence, but attacks have continued in southern Lebanon, where Israeli troops have seized a self-declared buffer zone.

Iran-backed Hezbollah says it has "the right to resist" occupying forces.

Wednesday marked Lebanon's deadliest day since the ceasefire took effect on April 16.

Those killed by Israeli strikes included Lebanese journalist Amal Khalil, according to a senior Lebanese military official and her employer, the Al-Akhbar newspaper.

Mourners attend a mass funeral procession for Hezbollah fighters, killed before a 10-day ceasefire was agreed between the Iran-backed militant group and Israel, in the southern village of Kfar Sir on April 21, 2026.
Mourners attend a mass funeral procession for Hezbollah fighters, killed before a 10-day ceasefire was agreed between the Iran-backed militant group and Israel, in the southern village of Kfar Sir on April 21, 2026. (credit: Anwar AMRO / AFP via Getty Images)

Hostilities between Hezbollah and Israel reignited on March 2, when the group opened fire in support of Tehran in the regional war. The ceasefire in Lebanon emerged separately from Washington’s efforts to resolve its conflict with Tehran, though Iran had called for Lebanon to be included in any broader truce.

Hezbollah said it carried out four operations in south Lebanon on Wednesday, saying they were a response to Israeli strikes.

Nearly 2,500 people have been killed in Lebanon since Israel went on the offensive in response to Hezbollah's March 2 attack, according to Lebanese authorities.

Israel is occupying a belt of the south that extends 5 to 10 km (3 to 6 miles) into Lebanon, saying it aims to shield northern Israel from attacks by Hezbollah, which has fired hundreds of rockets during the war.

Lebanon to seek end to Israeli demolitions

The Lebanese government has opened direct contacts with Israel despite strong objections from Hezbollah, which was established by Iran's Revolutionary Guards in 1982.

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun has said Beirut's envoy to Thursday's talks in Washington, Lebanese ambassador to the US Nada Moawad, would seek a ceasefire extension and a halt to demolitions being carried out by Israel in villages in the south.

A Lebanese official said Beirut wants a ceasefire extension as a prerequisite for talks to expand beyond the ambassadorial level to the next phase, in which Lebanon would push for an Israeli withdrawal, the return of Lebanese detained in Israel and a delineation of the land border.

Israel says its objectives in the talks with Lebanon include securing the dismantlement of Hezbollah and creating conditions for a peace deal. Israel has sought to make common cause with the Lebanese government over Hezbollah, which Beirut has been seeking to disarm peacefully for the past year.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio is set to attend Thursday's meeting. Israel will be represented by its ambassador to Washington, Yechiel Leiter.

Rubio hosted the first meeting between Leiter and Moawad on April 14 - the highest-level contact between Lebanon and Israel in decades.

Washington has denied any link between its Lebanon mediation and diplomacy over the Iran war.

Hezbollah says the Lebanon ceasefire was the result of Iranian pressure rather than US mediation.

Aoun has cited goals including halting Israeli attacks on Lebanon and securing the withdrawal of Israeli troops. 


Reuters

Source: https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/article-893938

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Europe's Two-State Delusion: Repeating Failure, Ignoring Facts - Bassam Tawil

 

by Bassam Tawil

The deeper issue is the Palestinian blanket rejection: the persistent refusal by large segments of Palestinian society, as well as much of the Arab and Muslim world, to recognize Israel's right to exist, period -- within any borders. For many, Israel is not a neighbor but a temporary, illegitimate entity that must be dismantled.

 

  • Let us begin with the most basic question EU policymakers refuse to answer: to whom exactly do they intend to hand this Palestinian state?

  • To the Palestinian Authority, widely viewed, even by its own people, as "irredeemably corrupt," terrorist, repressive, and illegitimate, and committed to displacing Israel? Or to Hamas, an internationally designated terrorist organization openly committed to Israel's destruction?

  • Had Arafat or Abbas accepted either of these proposals [by Prime Minister Ehud Barak or Prime Minister Ehud Olmert], the Palestinians would have had a recognized independent state many years ago.

  • The core flaw in Europe's thinking is the assumption that the conflict is about land. It is not. If it were, it would have been resolved long ago.

  • The deeper issue is the Palestinian blanket rejection: the persistent refusal by large segments of Palestinian society, as well as much of the Arab and Muslim world, to recognize Israel's right to exist, period -- within any borders. For many, Israel is not a neighbor but a temporary, illegitimate entity that must be dismantled.

  • European leaders speak vaguely about "security guarantees," but offer no credible way to enforce them.

  • Can anyone guarantee that a Palestinian state will not become another Gaza Strip, a base for Iranian-backed terror militias, and another launching pad for attacks against Israel?

  • Even more troubling is the EU's misplaced focus. Instead of confronting the real drivers of instability and terrorism, Iran and its proxies, European leaders are directing pressure at Israel.... This response sends a dangerous message: terrorism is tolerated, and even rewarded, while self-defense is condemned and punished.

  • The "two-state solution," as currently envisioned by EU leaders, is not a path to peace. It is a recipe for more violence. Creating a Palestinian state would not resolve the conflict. On the contrary, it would intensify it, embolden terrorists, and increase the likelihood of future wars.

  • Why, though, should the Europeans give that a thought? They are not even near the region, so would not suffer any of the disastrous consequences -- not just to the Israelis but also to the abysmally governed Palestinians. The Europeans, it seems, just like telling everyone else what to do.

The recent assertion of EU foreign policy representative Kaja Kallas that a "two-state solution" is "the only way for both Palestinians and Israelis to live in safety, dignity, and peace," would be laughable were it not so dangerously detached from reality. Pictured: Kallas speaks during a press conference in Brussels, Belgium on April 20, 2026. (Photo by Nicolas Tucat/AFP via Getty Images)

While Israel, nearly three years later, is still reeling from the aftermath of the October 7, 2023 Hamas-led invasion as well as defending itself from the Iranian regime and its terror proxies, European leaders are once again indulging in their dangerous fantasy of resurrecting the so-called two-state solution.

At a recent gathering in Brussels attended by more than 60 countries and several international organizations under the banner of the "Global Alliance for the Implementation of the Two-State Solution," the European Union reaffirmed its support for the "two-state solution" -- a formula that means establishing a Palestinian state -- which has not the slightest intention of cohabiting with Israel -- right at Israel's doorstep.

According to one report, Belgian Foreign Minister Maxime Prévot said during the meeting that participants "cannot abandon the compass," referring to maintaining a "political track" despite escalating crises. Prévot said developments in the Middle East are affecting the stability of the region and beyond, and called for continued international efforts to revive "the political process" – and an aspirant genocidal state.

The report continues:

"EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said the bloc 'can and must do more' to bring the two-state solution back to negotiations more effectively."

According to another report:

"[Kallas] reiterated that the two-state solution remains 'the only way for both Palestinians and Israelis to live in safety, dignity, and peace.'"

Her assertion would be laughable were it not so dangerously detached from reality.

The most accurate response would be a quote attributed to the late US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger: "The lion shall lie down with the lamb so long as there is a fresh lamb every morning."

Let us begin with the most basic question EU policymakers refuse to answer: to whom exactly do they intend to hand this Palestinian state?

To the Palestinian Authority, widely viewed, even by its own people, as "irredeemably corrupt," terrorist, repressive, and illegitimate, and committed to displacing Israel? Or to Hamas, an internationally designated terrorist organization openly committed to Israel's destruction?

With the Palestinians, there is no third option.

European leaders speak as if the "two-state solution" has never been tried. In fact, a version of it already existed in the Gaza Strip.

In 2005, Israel withdrew every soldier and expelled every Jewish civilian from the Gaza Strip. The Palestinians were handed full control over the territory. They were given a historic opportunity to build the foundations of a peaceful, prosperous state. The Gaza Strip could have become the "Singapore of the Middle East."

Instead, the Palestinians chose a different path; they voted Hamas to power.

What followed was not state-building, but the systematic transformation of the Gaza Strip into a base for jihad (holy war): millions invested in tunnels, rockets, and terror infrastructure; constant incitement in the media and mosques against Israel and Jews, and on the ground, repeated wars and terrorist attacks.

The result was a de facto independent and sovereign Palestinian state -- one committed to Israel's destruction. That experiment culminated in the October 7, 2023 massacre, the worst slaughter of Jews since the Holocaust.

The Gaza Strip did become a "Palestinian state" of sorts: a jihadist mini-state dedicated to murdering Jews and eliminating Israel.

Nevertheless, Europe's answer to this catastrophe is to repeat the same failed experiment. What seems really to be in play is that many European leaders, by continuing to promote the establishment of a Palestinian terrorist state, want to bring about another Holocaust and the elimination of Jews.

EU leaders also ignore that Palestinian leaders have repeatedly rejected many opportunities to establish their own state. This is not speculation. It is a crucial, historical, well-documented fact.

At the 2000 Camp David summit. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak offered the creation of a Palestinian state in all of the Gaza Strip and more than 90% of the West Bank, with eastern Jerusalem as its capital and land swaps to compensate for the remainder. Then Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat said no and walked away, without so much as a counter-offer, from one of the most far-reaching peace offers ever presented to the Palestinians.

The pattern repeated itself less than a decade later.

In 2008, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert presented an even more generous proposal to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. The offer included a Palestinian state on approximately 94-97% of the West Bank, the entire Gaza Strip, land swaps to make up for the remaining territory, a capital in eastern Jerusalem, and international custodianship over the holy sites in Jerusalem. Abbas refused to sign the deal – again, with no counter-offer.

Had Arafat or Abbas accepted either of these proposals, the Palestinians would have had a recognized independent state many years ago. Instead, they chose rejection, boycott, and, in many instances, terrorism.

The Palestinians' refusal to accept the existence of a Jewish state in the Middle East is precisely what European leaders continue to ignore.

It is easier to pressure Israel than to confront the uncomfortable truth: Palestinian leaders themselves bear a significant responsibility for the absence of a Palestinian state.

The core flaw in Europe's thinking is the assumption that the conflict is about land. It is not. If it were, it would have been resolved long ago.

The deeper issue is the Palestinian blanket rejection: the persistent refusal by large segments of Palestinian society, as well as much of the Arab and Muslim world, to recognize Israel's right to exist, period -- within any borders. For many, Israel is not a neighbor but a temporary, illegitimate entity that must be dismantled.

European leaders speak vaguely about "security guarantees," but offer no credible way to enforce them.

Can anyone guarantee that a Palestinian state will not become another Gaza Strip, a base for Iranian-backed terror militias, and another launching pad for attacks against Israel?

Creating such a state under the current conditions would place a hostile entity at Israel's doorstep. That is a risk no sovereign nation would accept.

Even more troubling is the EU's misplaced focus. Instead of confronting the real drivers of instability and terrorism, Iran and its proxies, European leaders are directing pressure at Israel. Some are proposing sanctions against Israelis and the suspension of the EU Association Agreement with Israel, the region's only democracy. This response sends a dangerous message: terrorism is tolerated, and even rewarded, while self-defense is condemned and punished.

The "two-state solution," as currently envisioned by EU leaders, is not a path to peace. It is a recipe for more violence. Creating a Palestinian state would not resolve the conflict. On the contrary, it would intensify it, embolden terrorists, and increase the likelihood of future wars. It would be asking Israel to take existential risks for the sake of a diplomatic illusion.

EU leaders speak of "solutions" while refusing to confront reality. Until Europe acknowledges the fundamental obstacles -- Palestinian rejectionism and the dominance of jihadist ideology -- its policies will remain not only misguided, but dangerous for international security.

Why, though, should the Europeans give that a thought? They are not even near the region, so would not suffer any of the disastrous consequences -- not just to the Israelis but also to the abysmally governed Palestinians. The Europeans, it seems, just like telling everyone else what to do.


Bassam Tawil is a Muslim Arab based in the Middle East.

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22469/europe-two-state-delusion

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Iran’s new internet litmus test ensures only pro-regime voices will be heard online, experts warn - Danielle Greyman-Kennard


by Danielle Greyman-Kennard

While Iran’s rollback on restrictions may seem like a sign that the regime is ending the internet blackout, experts warned that it is a new tool for the regime to feed the Western audience propaganda

 

An online teacher, Nazafarin, works on her laptop at home, after a nationwide internet shutdown since January 8, 2026, following Iran's protests, in Tehran, Iran, January 24, 2026.
An online teacher, Nazafarin, works on her laptop at home, after a nationwide internet shutdown since January 8, 2026, following Iran's protests, in Tehran, Iran, January 24, 2026.
(photo credit: MAJID ASGARIPOUR/WANA (WEST ASIA NEWS AGENCY) VIA REUTERS)

The Iranian regime’s selective rollback on Internet restrictions has created an ideological litmus test, allowing voices backing the regime to enter online spaces while continuing to isolate the majority of Iranian people digitally, people familiar with the matter told The Jerusalem Post on Thursday.

Iranian Deputy Science Minister Seyed Mehdi Abtahi on Sunday said the regime would allow researchers and professors access to online sites, except those censored by Tehran.

“Based on a list we had, steps have been taken to provide professors with access to the international Internet, and gradually this will be extended to all professors,” he told the Iranian Student News Agency.

Service providers, with the approval of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, have also begun offering an “Internet Pro” package, according to dissident and state-run media reports.

This package allows selected businesses and institutions to access global sites, which remain restricted to the general public.

According to Roger Macmillan, a terrorism and security specialist and former director of the Iranian dissident and diaspora site Iran International, promising access to researchers and academics “is not a liberalization signal.”

“It is the visible face of a control architecture that has been in preparation since at least mid-2025, when internal documents submitted to Iran’s National Cyberspace Center outlined a multiyear plan to eliminate foreign technology dependency and rebuild Iran’s digital ecosystem under permanent state management,” he told the Post.

Iran’s motives in shutting down Internet access were less connected to national security than the regime initially claimed during its January crackdown, Macmillan said.

The regime restricted Internet access to suppress widespread protests across the country, which broke out in response to Iran’s worsening economic crisis.

Suppressing widespread protests across the country

The regime claimed that the blackout was a necessary response to the “foreign-backed” riots that were threatening national security. According to UN experts, such as Mai Sato, it disrupted international monitoring of massive human-rights violations against demonstrators.

“The regime is not reconnecting its population,” Macmillan said. “It is deciding, deliberately and systematically, which Iranians the outside world is permitted to hear. The academics and professionals now receiving access are not the dissidents, the activists, or the ordinary citizens who lived through this war. They are the regime-adjacent voices least likely to threaten the narrative.”

This online landscape has deliberately altered the type of information the West will be privy to, he said.

“The information environment we are reading is not a window into Iranian society,” Macmillan said. “It is the regime feeding us what they want us to hear. The people of Iran still do not have a voice.”

Amir Rashidi, a cybersecurity expert at Miaan, a digital-rights group focused on Iran, told The New York Times: “In Iran, the Internet is no longer being treated as a public right. It is being reframed as a ‘strategic infrastructure’ whose level of access can be adjusted based on security concerns and high-level state priorities.”

He reiterated Macmillan’s claim that Iran has long been planning such an Internet system, although it has repeatedly denied the accusation.

The Internet in Iran was increasingly being treated as a privilege rather than a right, which was the core belief behind the new categorization system determining the level of access a person can receive, Rashidi told the Post.

Iran had failed to communicate the criteria it used to assess whether someone would receive a white SIM card, a type of uncensored access offered by regime authorities, or Internet Pro, he said. There was room to include discriminatory factors such as gender, ethnicity, and religious identities in the process, he added.

While some Iranians could now access certain online spaces, the regime is able to monitor which sites and applications are being accessed, Rashidi said.

With plans to develop its own root certificate, a trust anchor in the online infrastructure, future advancements may also allow the regime to intercept messages or carry out “man-in-the-middle attacks,” he said.

These attacks would allow the regime to alter, intercept, and/or quietly observe private communication, disrupting attempts to whistle-blow to outside authorities such as the United Nations, Rashidi said. 


Danielle Greyman-Kennard

Source: https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/article-893945

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Ukraine whistleblower witness touted Russia collusion claims and Nina Jankowicz while at Trump DoD - Jerry Dunleavy

 

by Jerry Dunleavy

Gavin Wilde, a/k/a "Witness 2," played a key role in the Ukraine whistleblower saga in 2019. The year prior, he penned articles that seemingly endorsed the Russiagate fervor of the times, and supported Biden's internet censorship campaign.

 

A year before he assisted the Ukraine whistle-blower in an anti-Trump impeachment saga, national security official Gavin Wilde published multiple articles seemingly promoting Russia collusion claims and calls for social media censorship while working for the Trump Defense Department.

Wilde — known only as “Witness 2” in internal intelligence memos from the Ukraine impeachment episode but identified by Just the News — had worked with disgraced FBI agent Peter Strzok and had co-authored the flawed January 2017 intelligence community assessment on Russian meddling in the 2016 election prior to serving on the Trump National Security Council in 2018 and 2019. Just before he took on that new role, Wilde used his perch at the Defense Department and the National Security Agency to pen a series of articles in early 2018 which echoed leftwing themes about Russian interference and Donald Trump.

Supported internet censorship

Wilde wrote six articles in 2018 for International Policy Digest where he often hyped up Russian disinformation threats and even approvingly cited advocates for online censorship such as Nina Jankowicz. Jankowicz was later ridiculed as the "The Disinformation Nanny." The articles by Wilde cited alleged evidence from since-discredited anti-disinformation operations such as the "Hamilton 68 Dashboard," which was run by the anti-Trump-oriented Alliance for Securing Democracy. Wilde's stories also linked to articles that promoted baseless Trump-Russia collusion claims.

“Gavin Wilde has analyzed Eurasian security issues for the U.S. Department of Defense for nearly a decade,” Wilde’s author description for the articles stated. “He has lived, worked, and studied extensively in the region. The views expressed here are his own.”

Wilde’s articles noted that “the views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and do not necessarily reflect the official views of the U.S. government or the Department of Defense.”

Wilde’s official online biography says that he was the Director for Russia, Baltic, and Caucus Affairs for the first Trump White House’s National Security Council in 2018 and 2019 — during the Ukraine impeachment saga. Wilde said that he “coordinated whole-of-government efforts to counter Russian malign influence efforts — including counterintelligence, cybersecurity, and election security initiatives” during his stint on the NSC.

Wilde’s time in government spanned much longer than that, with his biography listing him as a “senior analyst” at the Defense Department from 2009 to 2021, although it appears he was working at the Carnegie Endowment by 2020.

His biography said that, during Wilde’s time at the Defense Department, he “directed analysis to provide impactful insights to the U.S. intelligence, policymaking, diplomatic, and military communities” and “oversaw integration and collaboration with counterpart offices, interagency partners, and foreign liaison services.”

“This guy sounds like a leftwing activist, but it doesn’t appear to me upon cursory examination that he violated any law regarding his publications as a government employee,” Kurt Schlichter, a retired Army colonel and accomplished trial lawyer, told Just the News.

Just the News confirmed that Wilde is the unnamed "Witness 2" identified in the Ukraine impeachment documents released this month by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard. The 2019 claims by Witness 2 were critical in helping the intelligence community watchdog push the whistle-blower's complaint forward, and his Russiagate-linked biases were concealed from House investigators during the impeachment saga.

Wilde did not respond to requests from Just the News for comment sent to him through the Carnegie Endowment, Defense Priorities, and the Alperovitch Institute, three organizations where Wilde is currently listed as working.

Wilde published baseless Trump-Russia collusion claims

Wilde penned a January 2018 piece titled, “The Kremlin Subverts Media Abroad to Cement the Narrative at Home” where he linked to the 2017 intelligence community assessment on alleged Russian meddling (without noting his role in its authorship). He said that “in the intervening year since the U.S. intelligence community (IC) assessed Kremlin-orchestrated meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, Washington and the general public have undergone a re-education of sorts on the subject of ‘active measures’ – the Soviet-era term encompassing political subversion, including disinformation and propaganda.” 

Wilde seemed to write a copy or version of the January 2018 article for republishing at The Small Wars Journal too.

Wilde’s article also linked to a piece by Wired which repeatedly blasted Trump, suggested the president was an “unwitting ally” of Russian influence efforts, hyped the Russian meddling threat, cited as fact the bogus Steele Dossier, and quoted former CIA Director John Brennan suggesting the Trump campaign had been “treasonous” in its dealings with the Russians.

“As the investigation into Russia’s influence on the 2016 election — and the Trump campaign’s potential participation in that effort — has intensified this summer, the Putin regime’s systematic effort to undermine and destabilize democracies has become the subject of urgent focus in the West,” the article cited by Wilde asserted. “According to interviews with more than a dozen US and European intelligence officials and diplomats, Russian active measures represent perhaps the biggest challenge to the Western order since the fall of the Berlin Wall.”

The article cited by Wilde asserted that “sometimes, too, Russia finds a witting or unwitting ally in its information efforts” and claimed that “the most high-profile example of the past 18 months, of course, has been Donald Trump” and that “every time he tweets ‘#FAKENEWS’ about a story that is, in fact, true, he helps undermine the trust and confidence in a free and independent press.”

The article linked to by Wilde also claimed that “it hasn’t escaped the notice of investigators and intelligence services that there have been a number of suspicious deaths tied to the 2016 election operation, including a one-time KGB official who appears to have been a source for the infamous Christopher Steele ‘dossier’ assembled about alleged Trump ties to Russia.”

The piece that Wilde cited also quoted Brennan telling the Senate Intelligence Committee in 2017 that “I know what the Russians try to do. They try to suborn individuals and try to get individuals, including US individuals, to act on their behalf, wittingly or unwittingly.” The article said that Brennan “then offered a chilling, general observation about what he’s seen—pointing, in a roundabout way, to one possible explanation for the Trump campaign’s repeated contacts with Russians.”

“Frequently, people who go along a treasonous path do not know they are on a treasonous path until it is too late,” Brennan said.

The article cited by Wilde concluded with the assertion that “after a year that saw the passage of Brexit and Trump’s election — both efforts aided by the amplification of the Kremlin message machine — Western democracy indeed seems deeply imperiled.”

Wilde’s source for “well-documented” Russian efforts was discredited "Hamilton 68"

The January 2018 article written by Wilde about alleged Russian influence operations was based on the now-infamous "Hamilton 68" website created by the Alliance for Securing Democracy. “A primary factor undermining Washington’s ability to assess and counter this Russian threat is the refusal by partisan political commentators to disaggregate Moscow’s well-documented mischief from the more opaque allegations of collusion between Russian operatives and the Trump campaign,” Wilde wrote.

The examples of “well-documented” efforts by Russia were buttressed by a link to the Hamilton 68 Dashboard on “Tracking Russian Influence Operations on Twitter.”

The same month, Wilde wrote his article endorsing Hamilton 68, the group who sought to tie Republican calls to “#Release the Memo” — a demand that the GOP-led House Intelligence Committee’s report critiquing the Carter Page FISA and its reliance on the discredited Steele Dossier — were linked to Russia.

The Alliance for Securing Democracy — which launched in 2017 and ran Hamilton 68 — counted amongst its advisory council a number of prominent anti-Trump figures. David Kramer, a former senior director at the McCain Institute for International Leadership, had pushed the Steele Dossier to numerous reporters and to the Obama State Department in 2016 and 2017.

William Kristol, the former editor-in-chief of the Weekly Standard, emerged as a strident Trump critic. Michael McFaul, the U.S. ambassador to Russia under former President Barack Obama, is a longtime Trump foe.

Clinton campaign foreign policy adviser Julianne Smith was allegedly linked to the Clinton Plan intelligence in 2016, and Smith had been deputy national security adviser to then-Vice President Joe Biden during the Obama administration.

Michael Morell, a former acting CIA director, was an advisory council member as well. Morell injected into the American political bloodstream the idea that Trump was an “agent” of Putin and Russia, a refrain that would be repeated over and over again by the Clinton campaign and by mainstream media.

Journalist Matt Taibbi posted in 2023 that Yoel Roth, then the head of Twitter’s Trust and Safety, had claimed in a 2018 email that an analysis showed that Hamilton 68 "falsely accuses a bunch of legitimate, right-leaning accounts of being Russian bots." Roth had also reportedly internally assessed at Twitter in 2018 that he was “increasingly of the opinion that [Hamilton 68] is actively damaging and promotes polarization and distrust through its shoddy methodology[.] Real people need to know they’ve been unilaterally labeled Russian stooges without evidence or recourse.”

The Washington Post announced in 2023 that it “issues minor corrections in coverage of Hamilton 68.” 

“Hamilton 68 mixed the smattering of real Russian accounts with a crowd of mostly American, mostly anti-establishment accounts to create a dashboard that falsely synthesized the appearance of Russian social media backing for everything from the Devin Nunes memo to the Parkland shooting,” Taibbi told the House in 2025.

Wilde called for stricter social media censorship to deal with Russian info ops

Wilde then wrote an article in February 2018 which stated that “when disinformation is introduced into the algorithm—for instance, to meddle with the outcomes of something as trivial as a game show or as consequential as a presidential election—calls for stricter regulation will inevitably follow.” He included a link to a November 2017 article by NPR.

The outlet cited by Wilde reported, “The nongovernmental organization Freedom House released its annual Freedom on the Net report this week. Russian interference in the U.S. election, the subject of daily reports for most of the past year, played a part in a decline of Internet freedom in the U.S. But Americans did plenty themselves.”

Wilde’s own article called upon social media companies to take action against alleged Russian disinformation.

“Given that social media represents an ever-evolving social and commercial experiment, concrete ideas to legislate it are fragmentary and hotly debated,” Wilde wrote. “So it was last October 2017, when the Senate Judiciary Committee grilled social media giants Facebook, Twitter, and Google—a spectacle for which the quiz show hearings of 1959 were downright prescient.”

The Committee on the Judiciary and the Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government released a 2023 report which linked the lab to the broader Election Integrity Partnership and its alleged censorship activities.

“Enter the Election Integrity Partnership, a consortium of ‘disinformation’ academics led by Stanford University’s Stanford Internet Observatory that worked directly with the Department of Homeland Security and the Global Engagement Center, a multi-agency entity housed within the State Department, to monitor and censor Americans’ online speech in advance of the 2020 presidential election. Created in the summer of 2020 ‘at the request’ of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, the EIP provided a way for the federal government to launder its censorship activities in hopes of bypassing both the First Amendment and public scrutiny.”

Wilde promoted collusion promoter and future “Disinfo Czar” Nina Jankowicz

Wilde’s article from February 2018 also called upon social media companies to take action — and approvingly cited Nina Jankowicz in this regard.

Wilde said: “To more strategically approach the problem, we should liken it to the concept of foreign aid, according to disinformation expert Nina Jankowicz’s recent article for the Wilson Quarterly. She lobbies for concerted ‘capacity building,’ which may be a ‘harder, longer process, but one that seeks to move beyond band-aids and vaccinate against the virus, prioritizing the citizens who fall victim to disinformation.’ Prioritizing the citizens of the vast social network ahead of the network itself will help foster an online culture of resiliency against disinformation.”

Jankowicz was later selected by the Biden administration to be the executive director of the Department of Homeland Security’s ill-fated Disinformation Governance Board. Her fingerprints were also all over a State Department-commissioned report repeatedly cited by the Biden White House when establishing an online task force launched by then-Vice President Kamala Harris in 2022.

Jankowicz has a lengthy history of either labeling claims as disinformation that were later found to have credibility or giving credence to assertions that were later discredited — a history that had begun before Wilde pointed to her expertise in his article.

Prior to Wilde citing Jankowicz, she had publicly pushed debunked claims of Trump-Russia collusion. The Washington Examiner reported that Jankowicz had repeatedly shared the debunked Russiagate claims in 2016 and beyond.

“Husband texted me ‘you have news to wake up to.’ Never thought it would be this,” she tweeted on Nov. 1, 2016. “Confirms our worst fears about Trump. I am horrified.”

She was sharing Hillary Clinton’s infamous Halloween 2016 tweet, which said, ”It’s time for Trump to answer serious questions about his ties to Russia.” It included a screenshot with the caption: “Donald Trump has a secret server (Yes, Donald Trump). It was set up to communicate privately with a Putin-tied Russian bank called Alfa Bank.”

Jankowicz tweeted again that “Trump had not one, but two secret email servers to communicate with influential Russian bank. Unbelievable.” She was sharing a Slate article by Franklin Foer, whom Fusion GPS had been feeding Trump-Russia stories to, according to emails released by former special counsel John Durham.

Jankowicz had pushed other collusion claims in 2016, including information sourced from Steele’s discredited dossier. The British ex-spy was hired by Fusion, which had been hired by Clinton campaign general counsel Marc Elias. Jankowicz tweeted in September 2016 that “Trump’s Kremlin ties don’t end at Manafort. This is serious people.”

She was responding to a statement by the Clinton campaign about a Yahoo News story in which Clinton spokesman Glen Caplin said, “It’s chilling to learn that U.S. intelligence officials are conducting a probe into suspected meetings between Trump’s foreign policy adviser Carter Page and members of Putin’s inner circle.”

The 2016 story, written by Michael Isikoff, was titled “U.S. intel officials probe ties between Trump adviser and Kremlin.” It infamously recounted claims from the Steele dossier, including about Page, and anonymously cited Steele as a “Western intelligence source.”

Jankowicz wroteWiczipedia Weekly story about the Isikoff article, wherein she talked about Page, saying, “The fact that a man publicly associated with the campaign set up meetings with high-ranking energy and finance officials in Russia while the candidate he served was publicly encouraging the Kremlin to hack U.S. servers is worrisome.”

Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s report “did not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities.” Page was never charged with wrongdoing.

Department of Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz criticized the DOJ and FBI for at least 17 “significant errors and omissions” related to the FISA warrants against Page and for the bureau’s reliance on the discredited dossier.

Jankowicz had also referenced Clinton’s claims about Trump in June 2016 and shared a link to a since-deleted Medium piece she had written which featured an imaginary mural of Trump and Putin kissing. Jankowicz wrote, “Putin’s Russia is not a country that any American voter would seek to emulate. The United States should not elect a demagogue who intends to do exactly that.”

She was sharing a statement from Democratic National Committee national press secretary Mark Paustenbach, who said, “Trump’s campaign still maintains strong ties to Russia and pro-Kremlin elements.” She also shared a link to a Clinton campaign article in August 2016, tweeting, “Trump’s bizarre relationship with Russia [...] Foreign policy matters.”

The Clinton campaign article Jankowicz was sharing pushed Russia collusion claims, including asking, “What’s behind Trump’s fascination with Vladimir Putin? … Why does Trump surround himself with advisers with links to the Kremlin? … Why is Trump encouraging Russia to interfere in our election?”

Jankowicz kept pushing baseless Trump-Russia collusion allegations in 2017 as well.

“Preach,” she tweeted in March 2017 when sharing a screenshot and a Washington Posarticle by Jennifer Palmieri, the Clinton campaign’s communications director, which was titled “The Clinton campaign warned you about Russia. But nobody listened to us.” The article described efforts to push concerns about Trump and Russia at the Democratic convention in 2016 and beyond. The article concluded that “the possibility of collusion between Trump’s allies and Russian intelligence is much more serious than Watergate.”

All these facts about Jankowicz were public prior to Wilde touting her expertise. After Wilde’s 2018 article, Jankowicz also cast doubt on the Hunter Biden laptop story, touted British ex-spy Christopher Steele as a disinformation expert, wrongly tried to undercut the assessment that Iran was attempting to hurt Trump’s reelection chances just before the 2020 vote, critiqued the media's promotion of the Wuhan lab leak hypothesis, and more.

Wilde’s ties to anti-Trump controversies concealed — until now

Wilde allied with and assisted the CIA whistle-blower — identified by lawmakers and media reports as Eric Ciaramella — during the Ukraine saga and spoke with Intelligence Community Inspector General Michael Atkinson’s team on August 21, 2019 — a year after he penned his Russia collusion-themed pieces.

“Witness 2” — now known to be Wilde — was also referenced nearly one hundred times in Atkinson’s recently-declassified October 4, 2019, session before the House Intelligence Committee. The declassified memos also recounted that “one of the jobs Witness 2 is engaged in is to secure the election in 2020.”

Witness 2 disclosed in 2019 that he had also worked on the controversial January 2017 intelligence community assessment that claimed Vladimir Putin tried to help Trump beat Hillary Clinton in that year’s presidential race, an assessment that the CIA now admits included flawed spy tradecraft. The assessment also cited the discredited anti-Trump dossier written by British ex-spy Christopher Steele.

Wilde — whose name remains redacted — told investigators at the time he had been assisting the alleged whistleblower with making his disclosures, and also admitted to having a connection to Peter Strzok, the FBI agent who was fired in 2019 for his misbehavior while helping lead the discredited Russia collusion probe.

Witness 2’s potential biases — including his involvement with the ICA and, presumably, his prior affiliation with Strzok — were recorded in interview notes by the inspector general’s team in 2019, but were redacted and hidden from congressional investigators during the watchdog’s testimony.

Now, Wilde’s biases, his role in the Ukraine impeachment saga, and his questionable writings are public — but a half decade later. 


Jerry Dunleavy

Source: https://justthenews.com/accountability/russia-and-ukraine-scandals/ukraine-whistleblower-witness-touted-russian-collusion

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Senate approves budget plan to fund immigration enforcement, bowling over Democrat blockade - John Solomon

 

by John Solomon

President Donald Trump has temporarily arranged for key Homeland Security employees to be paid but set a June 1 deadline for Congress to solve the Democrat blockade.

 

The Senate voted 50-48 early Thursday to approve a budget plan to fund immigration enforcement agencies, the first in a multistep plan to bowl over a Democrat blockade that has kept much of the Homeland Security Department shuttered for weeks.

The bill will fund Homeland's immigration enforcement for the remainder of Trump's presidency, taking the issue off the table for Democrats.

After a five-hour, rapid-fire voting round that stretched into the wee hours of the morning, only Republican Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska broke from their party, giving the GOP enough votes to advance the budget resolution to the House.

The House must first approve the blueprint before the final funding bill for all of Homeland Security can be considered in a process known as budget reconciliation that allows passage of the legislation without any Democrat support.

President Donald Trump has temporarily arranged for key Homeland employees to be paid but set a June 1 deadline for Congress to solve the Democrat blockade.

"Today’s Democrats are a rogue and radical party," Senate Majority Whip John Barasso, R-Wyo.,  said, addressing Homeland Security workers. "You deserve better than reckless Democrat hostage-taking. You deserve the tools and support from Congress necessary to carry out the mission Congress has given you. Our country depends on you."

Democrats used the budget maneuver to introduce several amendments on affordability issues, forcing senators on the right to vote no repeatedly.

"Republicans want to shell out billions of dollars to Donald Trump's private army without any common-sense restraints or reforms. Democrats want to put money in people's pockets by lowering their costs," Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said in explaining Democrats' tactics. 


John Solomon

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/congress/senate-approves-budget-plan-fund-immigration-enforcement-bowling-over-democrat

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Judge rules Virginia redistricting vote unconstitutional, AG vows to appeal - Misty Severi

 

by Misty Severi

The Tazewell County Circuit Court issued the injunction barring the certification of the referendum after ruling the measure was unconstitutional.

 

Virginia Attorney General Jay Jones, a Democrat, promised Wednesday night to appeal a judge's block on the state's redistricting referendum, which narrowly passed Tuesday night.

The Tazewell County Circuit Court issued the injunction barring the certification of the referendum after ruling the measure was unconstitutional. 

“As I said last night, Virginia voters have spoken, and an activist judge should not have veto power over the People’s vote,” Jones said in a statement shared on X. “We look forward to defending the outcome of last night’s election in court.”

The referendum allows the state legislature to redraw its congressional maps in a manner expected to favor Democrats by giving Democrats a 10-1 majority instead of its current 6-5. 

The order will likely head to the state Supreme Court, which is already expected to address a challenge to the referendum later this month.

The Virginia Supreme Court declined to block the referendum outright in March, saying "[i]t is the process, not the outcome, of this effort that we may ultimately have to address. Issuing an injunction to keep Virginians from the polls is not the proper way to make this decision."


Misty Severi is a news reporter for Just The News. You can follow her on X for more coverage.

Source: https://justthenews.com/nation/states/virginia-ag-vows-appeal-injunction-redistricting-referendum

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Orthodox NYC Council member storms out of first Jew-hatred task force meeting after City Halls says it won’t define hate - Debra Nussbaum Cohen

 

by Debra Nussbaum Cohen

“I can’t recall ever hearing something so absurd from someone in the administration,” Simcha Felder told JNS. “That’s unconscionable and unacceptable.”

 

NYC Council task force Jew-hatred antisemitism Simcha Felder
New York City Council member Simcha Felder is pictured as the council’s Task Force to Combat Antisemitism holds its first hearing, April 22, 2026. Credit: John McCarten/NYC Council.

 

Simcha Felder, an Orthodox Jewish member of the New York City Council, stormed out of the first meeting of the council’s newly formed Task Force to Combat Antisemitism after Phylisa Wisdom, executive director of the Mayor’s Office to Combat Antisemitism, said that City Hall’s policy is not to define hate, including Jew-hatred.

Eric Dinowitz, a council member and co-chair of the bipartisan task force, pressed Wisdom during the hearing on Wednesday about how her office defines antisemitism.

“The vast majority of the Jewish community values the IHRA definition,” he said, of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s working definition of Jew-hatred.

Among the contemporary examples that are part of the working definition is singling the Jewish state out for unique criticism and denying its right to exist. One of Zohran Mamdani’s first actions as mayor in January was to revoke his predecessor’s executive order using the IHRA definition as city policy.

“Where cities have laid out that anti-Zionism is a proxy for ‘Jew,’ they saw a decrease in incidents,” Dinowitz told Wisdom, who assumed her position in February.

“The policy of this administration,” Wisdom responded, “is that we will continue to not have a codified definition of any form of hate.”

New York City Council antisemitism task force Jew-hatred
Simcha Felder, a New York City Council member, is pictured as the council’s Task Force to Combat Antisemitism holds its first hearing, April 22, 2026. Credit: John McCarten/NYC Council.

Felder, who represents heavily Charedi neighborhoods in Brooklyn, including Borough Park and Flatbush, questioned whether Wisdom has ever experienced real Jew-hatred.

The Orthodox council member also pointed out that the state law mandating Holocaust education in public schools is widely ignored. “It would be very helpful if children at a young age got that education,” he said. “Schools throughout the state are in violation of state law.”

Felder also said that elected officials’ tendency to link Jew-hatred and Islamophobia in the same breath, even when data shows no equivalence in incidence, normalizes anti-Jewish sentiment.

After Wisdom said that city policy was not to define hate, Felder stormed out.

“The last straw was when they asked her about determining whether or not something is a hate crime, and she said that she and her assistant are going to decide case-by-case whether something is a hate crime or not,” he told JNS, of Wisdom. “That was outrageous. She is not competent to decide. I don’t think she should have been hired.”

“That was nuts, and that’s why I exploded,” he said.

“I can’t recall ever hearing something so absurd from someone in the administration,” added Felder, who has represented his area in the state Assembly and in the New York City Council for a combined 21 years. “That’s unconscionable and unacceptable.”

New York City Council antisemitism task force Jew-hatred Eric Dinowitz Inna Vernikov
New York City Council members Eric Dinowitz and Inna Vernikov are pictured as the council’s bipartisan Task Force to Combat Antisemitism, which they co-chair, holds its first hearing, April 22, 2026. Credit: John McCarten/NYC Council.

‘Government of inaction’

During the newly formed task force’s inaugural hearing, which ran for five hours on Wednesday, Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez, senior New York City Police Department officials and representatives of the Mayor’s Office to Combat Antisemitism testified, including about what city data confirms is a deepening crisis.

Jews, who make up about 10% of the city’s population, are targets of more than half of all hate crimes committed there. The hearing illuminated pointed disagreements about the problems of Jews being targeted by verbal attacks and slurs, which are considered protected free speech.

Michael Gerber, NYPD deputy commissioner for legal matters, testified that Jews accounted for more than 50% of confirmed hate crime victims in New York City in both 2024 and 2025—a proportion that has held steady.

In 2025, there were 566 confirmed hate crimes in the city and 327, or 58%, were antisemitic. In the first quarter of 2026, 78 of 143 confirmed hate crimes, again more than half, targeted Jewish people, he said.

Brooklyn is home to what Gonzalez described as the largest Jewish population of any county in the United States and has borne a disproportionate share of Jew-hatred. In 2025, Brooklyn recorded 239 hate crime incidents, 62% of which targeted Jews. In the first quarter of 2026, the majority of Brooklyn hate crimes continued to target Jews.

Dinowitz, a former teacher and Democrat who co-chairs the task force with Inna Vernikov, a Republican, said that about a quarter of anti-Jewish hate incidents in the city have been directed at children or at places children frequent, including schools and playgrounds. (Dinowitz and Vernikov are Jewish.)

“Throughout our history as a people, we have seen inaction leading to the persecution and eviction of Jewish people from their homes,” Dinowitz said at the hearing. “Today we will not be a government of inaction that allows Jews to be persecuted because we are looking the other way.”

NYC Council task force Jew-hatred antisemitism Eric Dinowitz Inna Vernikov
New York City Council members Eric Dinowitz and Inna Vernikov are pictured as the council’s bipartisan Task Force to Combat Antisemitism, which they co-chair, holds its first hearing, April 22, 2026. Credit: John McCarten/NYC Council.

Hate crime data

One of the hearing’s most contentious issues concerned how the NYPD counts and reports hate crime data. JNS has reported that after the city recorded a 182% increase in Jew-hatred in the city in the first month of Mamdani’s mayoral administration, in January, that the city has twice changed the way it reports hate crime statistics.

Gerber said that in early March, the NYPD stopped using what he called “hodgepodge numbers,” which he described as figures that did not reflect confirmed hate crimes or the full universe of incidents flagged for investigation by the department’s Hate Crimes Task Force.

Although many have suspected that Mamdani ordered the change in data reporting, NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch has said that she made the decision on her own, and Gerber reiterated that at the hearing.

Tisch “ordered us to stop using” the earlier figures and “it was not at the directive or initiative of anyone at City Hall,” he said. “We should have done a better job explaining what we were doing, and on reflection should have made those changes in one step rather than two.”

In February, the city said it would only report “confirmed” hate crimes rather than including suspected hate crimes that are being investigated. In March, it said it would report both “confirmed” and “reported” hate crimes. JNS has reported that the city’s decisions make it difficult to compare 2026 statistics with those from prior years and that different city and police sites have varied counts of hate crimes, including anti-Jewish ones.

NYC Council task force Jew-hatred antisemitism Eric Dinowitz Inna Vernikov
New York City Council members Eric Dinowitz and Inna Vernikov are pictured as the council’s bipartisan Task Force to Combat Antisemitism, which they co-chair, holds its first hearing, April 22, 2026. Credit: John McCarten/NYC Council.

“The fact that a victim is a member of a protected class is not enough,” Gerber said, of what is classified as a hate crime. “The law requires more before we can bring that charge.”

The legal threshold, which requires prosecutors to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a perpetrator was motivated at least in part by bias, was a recurring source of frustration for council members.

Several pressed Gerber and Gonzalez on where the legal lines fall.

Chanting in support of Hamas outside a synagogue is protected speech, as is screaming an antisemitic slur at someone on the street, according to Gerber. He said that something would rise to the level of “hate crime” only if there is a specific threat of violence or obstruction.

Blocking the entrance to a synagogue or school is a crime, and those who do so are subject to arrest, he said. But anti-Israel graffiti on a restaurant isn’t necessarily considered a hate crime, and the NYPD would have to prove the motivation was anti-Jewish rather than political, he said.

Dinowitz, the task force co-chair, said that police officers misread the use of “Zionist” and “Zio,” which perpetrators use as stand-ins for “Jew.”

“There are people using this as a proxy,” he said. “Kosher restaurants being graffitied with the word ‘Zionist,’ there should be no question that those are hate crimes,” he said. “What you’ve delivered is the ‘out.’ If you just use the word ‘Zionist’ instead of ‘Jew,’ you may be okay.”

Gerber told the council members on the task force that his hands are tied.

“We have to follow the law, which distinguishes between religion and political viewpoints,” he said. “It is not lost on me that this may well be an anti-Jewish hate crime, but we have to prove that.”

Vernikov, the Republican co-chair of the task force, cited a recent incident which upset Jewish parents in her South Brooklyn district.

Two nights earlier, protesters marched through the heavily Jewish area carrying Palestinian flags and some covered their faces with keffiyahs. They paused outside a synagogue, where a rabbi was helping a bar mitzvah boy prepare. Parents called her office, frightened.

Gerber said that based on the video he reviewed, the protestors did not stop or block entrances, which meant that their actions were not criminal. He acknowledged that the department did not have enough uniformed officers on site, because the anti-Israel group stood previously at a commercial site to protest without marching.

“They were on the sidewalk,” Gerber said. “We can’t say the sidewalk is open to the public except for them. That would be content-based speech regulation.”

“What can I tell my constituents, so they can feel that their children will be safe?” Vernikov said.

NYC Council task force Jew-hatred antisemitism Phylisa Wisdom
Phylisa Wisdom, head of the New York City mayor’s Office to Combat Antisemitism, is pictured as the New York City Council’s Task Force to Combat Antisemitism holds its first hearing, April 22, 2026. Credit: John McCarten/NYC Council.

‘Openly, proudly and safely’

Vernikov noted that the task force invited all five district attorneys of New York City’s boroughs, but Gonzalez, of Brooklyn, was the only one to appear before the task force.

He established a Hate Crimes Bureau when he took office in 2017, and six prosecutors and four analysts and clerks staff the bureau, he said.

“Jewish life should be lived openly, proudly and safely,” Gonzalez testified. “No one should be afraid riding the subway, going to shul, visiting friends or opening a Jewish-owned business.”

While the Manhattan and Queens district attorneys offices each receive more than $1 million in dedicated hate crime funding from the city, his office, which handles the highest volume of antisemitic hate crimes, has received $50,000, he told the council.

“I asked for $1.1 million,” he said. “We received $50,000 to fight all hate crimes. The increase in incidents has not been matched by more funding.”

Gonzalez described a conviction rate of more than 90% on cases brought to trial but noted that juries sometimes convict on the underlying crime, like assault or vandalism, but acquit on the hate crime enhancement.

NYC Council task force Jew-hatred antisemitism Phylisa Wisdom
Phylisa Wisdom, head of the New York City mayor’s Office to Combat Antisemitism, is pictured as the New York City Council’s Task Force to Combat Antisemitism holds its first hearing, April 22, 2026. Credit: John McCarten/NYC Council.

Juvenile offenders and people with serious mental illness are among the most significant perpetrators, he said, and argued for more investment in prevention and education.

“When I confront young people who have been arrested, they don’t understand the history or the meaning of a lot of these symbols,” he said. “Social media plays a role. The education piece, which is not happening, is critical.”

Gale Brewer, a council member who represents the Upper West Side, said that of a dozen middle schools in her district, only four have taken students on an educational trip to a Holocaust museum in the city.

“It is a free program. I will badger the others and they will go,” she said. “We’re not doing enough. We have to focus on prevention.”

Report to come

Wisdom, who runs the Mamdani administration’s office on hate crimes, which it says it won’t define, testified that her office added another staffer and is embarking on a listening tour of Jewish community leaders.

The office plans to release a report before the High Holy Days summarizing what it heard from the Jewish community and how that will shape policy over the remaining years of the mayor’s term, Wisdom told the task force.

The public portion of the hearing included vivid personal accounts and sharp criticism.

A Queens public school educator described a student doing a Hitler salute in his classroom, but the city’s Education Department and district superintendent didn’t follow up after the principal filed a report.

NYC Council task force Jew-hatred antisemitism
The New York City Council’s Task Force to Combat Antisemitism holds its first hearing, April 22, 2026. Credit: John McCarten/NYC Council.

A subway rider, who wears a kippah, described his fear riding public transit after a masked group took over a subway car last year. “I am openly identifiably Jewish,” he said. “This is an unacceptable breach of public safety.”

Not all testimony supported the task force.

Leo Ferguson, who identified himself as scholar in residence at Jews for Racial and Economic Justice, called the committee “not serious” and accused Vernikov, who has faced criticism in the past for her comments about Muslims, of undermining its credibility.

He argued that Jewish community safety cannot be separated from the safety of other communities.

Dinowitz pressed officials to commit to specific next steps: more granular reporting on perpetrator demographics and enhanced training protocols for police, who too often dismiss reports of antisemitic attacks as political speech.

Gerber agreed to bring the request for disaggregated age data back to Tisch, the police commissioner.

“This work has to lead somewhere meaningful,” Dinowitz said, at the close of the hearing. “Anything that forces a Jewish person to hide their Star of David or remove their yarmulke is a problem we have to address. We have to do the work to get it done.”


Debra Nussbaum Cohen is the New York correspondent for JNS.org. She is an award-winning journalist, who has written about Jewish issues for The New York Times, Wall Street Journal and New York magazine, as well as many Jewish publications. She is also author of Celebrating Your New Jewish Daughter: Creating Jewish Ways to Welcome Baby Girls into the Covenant.

Source: https://www.jns.org/news/u-s-news/orthodox-nyc-council-member-storms-out-of-first-jew-hatred-task-force-meeting-after-city-halls-says-it-wont-define-hate

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