Wednesday, February 4, 2026

France Challenges Elon - Thomas Kolbe

 

by Thomas Kolbe

Why are the French targeting Elon Musk and X?

 

A raid on Elon Musk’s company X in Paris: On Tuesday morning, the French public prosecutor gained access to the company’s offices. The stated purpose of the investigation is the dissemination of child pornography and violations of personal rights through the spread of Deepfakes.

The French prosecutor’s office carried out the search Tuesday morning at Elon Musk’s X offices in Paris (Apollo News reported). Officially, the raid targets suspicions of distributing child pornography, according to a statement from the authority. As a further justification, the “Internet and Cybercrime” division cited the recently criticized so-called sexual Deepfakes.

These photo and video manipulations are generated using the AI of the Grok application, which the X platform provides to its users. Another allegation against the platform’s operators concerns the distribution of material denying the Holocaust.

The French prosecutor’s office is thus deploying maximum heavy artillery against X at the next escalation level. These appear to be politically motivated accusations, as the operator of a communication platform ethically cannot be responsible for content published by individual users.

Different Stage

Clearly, there is more at stake. At the center is the conflict between the European Union and the U.S. government. The recurring point of contention: enforcing European censorship laws under the Digital Services Act (DSA) -- now using a morally escalated strategy. Child pornography, Holocaust denial -- hardly worse can be imagined. Such content is commercially damaging. And this aligns precisely with the French government’s strategic line, acting here as the executing arm of the EU Commission.

The fight for free speech in Europe has now shifted to a moral battlefield, where rule of law, freedom of expression, and responsibility for certain content are merged into a politically exploitable attack vector.

The message is clear: Those who do not comply with our censorship framework will be pelted with dirt until something sticks. The framework covers the entire conceivable range of direct and indirect censorship -- from chat monitoring to editorial oversight of forum content, to post deletion or algorithmic reach limitations.

 

There is no other way to interpret it: rising criticism from the European public regarding EU Commission policies, open borders, and the green transition has gone too far for the leadership circles. Political fractures loom, seemingly irreparable.

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The raid at the Paris office also resembles a classic political smokescreen. France, one of the many fading stars in the EU sky, would have every reason to debate other pressing topics rather than media-staged raids on X in the style of classic police states. Over all government action -- or more precisely, inaction -- hangs a veritable fiscal crisis. The welfare state is overstretched, the migration crisis forces the country into ever-expanding social programs, and debt is rising again this year by a dramatic five percent of GDP. France is approaching 120 percent debt-to-GDP, nearing de facto insolvency.

Wouldn’t even this visible plunge into the debt spiral alone warrant a deeper debate and new elections, Monsieur le Président?

That a president without a popular mandate, Emmanuel Macron, with approval ratings around 15 percent, chooses to engage in an escalating conflict with Elon Musk on a side front to distract from fundamental problems may be politically understandable. Yet it also exposes the full impotence of France and European politics in general.

The European Union presents itself as a political paper giant, now seeking open conflict with perceived internal and external enemies: internally corroded, lacking trust from the public, economically in decline, and an energy-parasitic actor that has shot itself in the foot multiple times by entering a conflict with its most important supplier, Russia, blindly. The colossus staggers toward its end like a mindless schoolyard bully.

Against this backdrop, the rising pressure on opposition voices must be understood. Open resistance is forming in the digital space against the Euro-regime, now fighting back against the unraveling of its climate and power complex, which can no longer be saved. That efforts are being intensified to suppress dissenting opinions fits seamlessly into this logic of decline.

In the case of platform X, the conflict culminates with the disliked American government under President Donald Trump, alongside whom Elon Musk stands as a vocal defender of free speech -- and against whom EU elites are now aggressively focusing their attacks. Whether one likes it or not: Trump remains one of the last relevant actors actively defending core western values like free speech and market economy, while the EU mutates into a substantial control leviathan across all levels of society.

Eerie Silence

In Europe, it has become eerily quiet around proponents of enlightened politics, those who would defend individual freedoms against an increasingly repressive state apparatus. Tuesday’s actions by French authorities fit perfectly into the EU’s general line: gradually undermining civil rights and freedom of speech through the growing censorship apparatus of the DSA.

And the more cohesive, powerful, and vocal the opposition in Eastern Europe and beyond the Atlantic becomes, forming a strategically acting unit against Brussels’ centralism, the more aggressive -- and simultaneously defensive -- the Brussels body reacts. Its gestures resemble a staggering boxer sensing the next punch could switch off the lights.

Repeated references to child pornography or alleged copyright violations to justify censorship appear as crude deception maneuvers that even the last supporter of the von der Leyen-Macron EU can see through. These are classic issues for which existing criminal law would suffice.

Yet this finding does nothing to change the central fact: Europe still lacks a firm, decisive confrontation of the bourgeois remnants of our society with this increasingly despotic pseudo-elite.

Image: X 


Thomas Kolbe

Source: https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2026/02/france_challenges_elon.html

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'Nonpublic' documents show global scope of Europe's censorship apparatus: House GOP probe - Greg Piper

 

by Greg Piper

Long before Digital Services Act, European Commission expected Big Tech to moderate content from "populist rhetoric" and "anti-elite" sentiment to "political satire" and "meme subculture," House Judiciary Committee says.

 

The European Commission's coercion of Big Tech to globally censor disfavored narratives goes much further than previously thought, according to a House Judiciary Committee interim staff report released Tuesday that tees up Wednesday's hearing featuring an Irish comedian who was arrested in London for criticizing gender ideology while visiting the U.S.

"Nonpublic" documents given to the committee by companies under subpoena show more than 100 "closed-door meetings" between the European Union's executive arm and tech platforms since at least 2020, the year before the Biden administration started its spree of pressuring platforms to censor supposed misinformation, GOP committee staff said.

The EC's supposedly "'voluntary' and 'consensus'-driven regulatory initiatives are neither voluntary nor consensus-driven," resulting in Big Tech suppressing "true information and political speech" about COVID-19, mass migration and gender identity under the banner of "combating hate speech and disinformation," the committee said.

One particularly farcical section, from a 2023 handbook by the EC-created EU Internet Forum, shows tech companies were expected to moderate content from "populist rhetoric" and "anti-elite" sentiment to "political satire" and "meme subculture."

The schemes predate 2022's Digital Services Act by seven years, according to a report timeline that starts in the late Obama and early first-term Trump administrations with the EUIF, officially voluntary codes on combating "illegal hate speech" and disinformation, and Germany's law predating the DSA, which required "global removals of content" illegal only under German law.

"From the very beginning of the EU’s censorship campaign, senior EU leadership envisioned a comprehensive digital censorship law giving the European Commission complete online narrative control," the report says. "European politicians and regulators were explicit about this objective, particularly when meeting with platforms directly."

Witnesses for the committee's hearing Wednesday include Graham Linehan, the creator of internationally beloved TV shows Father Ted and The IT Crowd, and Finnish member of Parliament Päivi Räsänen, who has been prosecuted repeatedly for sharing a Bible verse and is now awaiting a final verdict from Finland's Supreme Court.

Just as Heathrow Airport police played into the committee's hands by arresting Linehan shortly before House Judiciary's last European censorship hearing, Paris police fit the mold of the committee's narrative by raiding X's local office Tuesday and summoning owner Elon Musk and former CEO Linda Yaccarino for "voluntary interviews" April 20.

Musk discredited the raid, which was officially premised on how its algorithm recommends content to users and gathers data, as emblematic of politically motivated and baseless attacks on free speech by U.K. and EU authorities.

The EC fined X €120 million, or 6% of its global revenue, in the first such DSA action in December, "in obvious retaliation for its protection of free speech around the globe," the committee said Tuesday. 

Days earlier House Judiciary published the full, unreleased commission decision against X, also obtained via subpoena, which showed the EC's specific objections and basis for each financial penalty, including that X doesn't let researchers worldwide automatically scrape its data, stores past ads in a spreadsheet and made the blue checkmark a paid feature.

"Distribution only on a ‘Need to know’ basis - Do not read or carry openly in public places," says the cover page of the 183-page EC decision, marked "sensitive" and dated Dec. 5. "Must be stored securely and encrypted in storage and transmission. Destroy copies by shredding or secure deletion," it says, linking to detailed destruction instructions.

 

The European Commission's coercion of Big Tech to globally censor disfavored narratives goes much further than previously thought, according to a House Judiciary Committee interim staff report released Tuesday that tees up Wednesday's hearing featuring an Irish comedian who was arrested in London for criticizing gender ideology while visiting the U.S.

"Nonpublic" documents given to the committee by companies under subpoena show more than 100 "closed-door meetings" between the European Union's executive arm and tech platforms since at least 2020, the year before the Biden administration started its spree of pressuring platforms to censor supposed misinformation, GOP committee staff said.

The EC's supposedly "'voluntary' and 'consensus'-driven regulatory initiatives are neither voluntary nor consensus-driven," resulting in Big Tech suppressing "true information and political speech" about COVID-19, mass migration and gender identity under the banner of "combating hate speech and disinformation," the committee said.

One particularly farcical section, from a 2023 handbook by the EC-created EU Internet Forum, shows tech companies were expected to moderate content from "populist rhetoric" and "anti-elite" sentiment to "political satire" and "meme subculture."

The schemes predate 2022's Digital Services Act by seven years, according to a report timeline that starts in the late Obama and early first-term Trump administrations with the EUIF, officially voluntary codes on combating "illegal hate speech" and disinformation, and Germany's law predating the DSA, which required "global removals of content" illegal only under German law.

"From the very beginning of the EU’s censorship campaign, senior EU leadership envisioned a comprehensive digital censorship law giving the European Commission complete online narrative control," the report says. "European politicians and regulators were explicit about this objective, particularly when meeting with platforms directly."

Witnesses for the committee's hearing Wednesday include Graham Linehan, the creator of internationally beloved TV shows Father Ted and The IT Crowd, and Finnish member of Parliament Päivi Räsänen, who has been prosecuted repeatedly for sharing a Bible verse and is now awaiting a final verdict from Finland's Supreme Court.

Just as Heathrow Airport police played into the committee's hands by arresting Linehan shortly before House Judiciary's last European censorship hearing, Paris police fit the mold of the committee's narrative by raiding X's local office Tuesday and summoning owner Elon Musk and former CEO Linda Yaccarino for "voluntary interviews" April 20.

Musk discredited the raid, which was officially premised on how its algorithm recommends content to users and gathers data, as emblematic of politically motivated and baseless attacks on free speech by U.K. and EU authorities.

The EC fined X €120 million, or 6% of its global revenue, in the first such DSA action in December, "in obvious retaliation for its protection of free speech around the globe," the committee said Tuesday. 

Days earlier House Judiciary published the full, unreleased commission decision against X, also obtained via subpoena, which showed the EC's specific objections and basis for each financial penalty, including that X doesn't let researchers worldwide automatically scrape its data, stores past ads in a spreadsheet and made the blue checkmark a paid feature.

"Distribution only on a ‘Need to know’ basis - Do not read or carry openly in public places," says the cover page of the 183-page EC decision, marked "sensitive" and dated Dec. 5. "Must be stored securely and encrypted in storage and transmission. Destroy copies by shredding or secure deletion," it says, linking to detailed destruction instructions.

Threat to Musk ahead of Trump livestream was not "unapproved freelance"

On the eve of the DSA taking effect, the EC updated the 2018 disinformation code to require platforms to participate in a "task force," further split into subgroups for subjects including "fact-checking, elections, and demonetization of conservative news outlets," the report says, apparently referring to the "ad scrutiny" subgroup for the last one.

The subgroups collectively met more than 90 times from late 2022 to 2024, bringing together platforms, EC regulators and "censorious civil society organizations." Regulators repeatedly interrogated platforms about "policy changes" related to "fighting disinformation" in the dozen-plus meetings of just the crisis response subgroup, the report says.

Various forums touching on content moderation, such as pertaining to hate speech and disinformation, met more than 100 times, the report says, pointing to a June 22, 2023, email thread among Google staff.

It shows the participants acknowledging that participation wasn't really optional and that they had limited ability to affect the agenda.

Referring to the EC's generative AI subgroup, one Googler told colleagues, "I assume we want to join (we don't really have a choice)" and asked if Google should at least co-chair it. Another responded that "co-chairs set the agenda under (strong) impetus" from the EC, and "consensus" in scare quotes "can be heavily pressed by the EC if they disagree with where it's going."

Taking advantage of the weaknesses of country-specific content moderation — namely privacy risks and ineffectiveness — the EC acted as the world's global internet cop by pressuring platforms to adopt their preferred moderation policies, GOP staff said, citing Oct. 30, 2020 emails between staff for the EC and TikTok. (Many footnotes cite TikTok.)

EU President Ursula von der Leyen and Vice President Věra Jourová even approved EC queries to TikTok on how it planned to update its terms of service and "promotion/demotion" of content ahead of the COVID vaccine rollout, the report says, noting TikTok will soon be "majority-American" owned under President Trump's negotiated deal.

A "characteristic" Dec. 14, 2023 agenda from the crisis response subgroup's dozen-plus meetings shows the EC goading platforms including YouTube and TikTok to share "new developments and actions related to fighting disinformation" about the Ukraine war and COVID, such as "policy changes," the report said, emphasizing actions.

The DSA's implementation perfected the years of pressure, as shown by TikTok's revisions to its community guidelines that prohibit unambiguously legal speech in the U.S., such as "marginalizing speech" that includes “coded statements," "misinformation that undermines public trust" and even "misrepresent[ed] authoritative information."

The executive summary of TikTok's changes specified the updates were "mainly" to comply with the DSA, as "advised by the legal team."

Platforms were expected to "continuous[ly]" review their community guidelines to comply with the DSA, according to the EC's own "takeaways" from a May 7, 2025, session on DSA "systemic risk assessment."

They didn't have to guess whether the EC wanted them to prioritize censoring American content, according to the report. 

Emails between TikTok and EC staff in November 2021 show the latter asking how the former will fight disinformation from the U.S. on COVID vaccines for kids, including removing claims about efficacy. 

A year later, EC staff demanded an explanation "in writing" from YouTube, Twitter and TikTok, through the disinformation code group, why they were allowing an American documentary on vaccines, with YouTube "promptly" reporting back it had removed the video.

Then-EU Commissioner for Internal Market Thierry Breton's threat letter to X ahead of Musk's livestream with presidential candidate Donald Trump in 2024, soon disavowed by the EC, was not an "unapproved freelance from a rogue Commissioner acting alone," the report says.

May 28, 2024, emails between EC and TikTok staff show Jourová, the vice president, traveling to California to meet with TikTok's CEO and its safety chief to discuss "election preparations." When they asked if the conversation would be "mostly EU focused," she said they would discuss "both" U.S. and EU preparations for elections.


Greg Piper

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/congress/nonpublic-documents-show-global-scope-europes-censorship-apparatus-house-gop

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US plastic surgeons organization recommends delaying gender-affirming surgery until patient is 19 - Misty Severi

 

by Misty Severi

The ASPS, which represents more than 11,000 physicians globally, found that there is low certainty in the risk-benefit ratio for gender-related surgical interventions for minors.

 

The American Society of Plastic Surgeons published a position statement Tuesday recommending surgeons delay gender reassignment surgeries until a patient is 19-years-old, which earned praise from the Trump administration.

The release cites a Department of Health and Human Services article last year that highlights a “rapid expansion and implementation of a clinical protocol that lacked sufficient scientific and ethical justification," when it comes to pediatric gender-affirming care.

The ASPS, which represents more than 11,000 physicians globally, agreed with HHS that there is low certainty in the risk-benefit ratio for gender-related surgical interventions for minors. 

“Available evidence suggests that a substantial proportion of children with prepubertal onset gender dysphoria experience resolution or significant reduction of distress by the time they reach adulthood, absent medical or surgical intervention,” the ASPS’s statement reads. “Evidence regarding adolescent onset presentation, which has become increasingly common since the mid-2010s, is more limited but similarly does not allow for confident prediction of long-term trajectories.”

Although the statement recommends postponing gender reassignment surgeries until the patient is no longer a minor, it does not give specific guidance when it comes to the use of hormonal gender-affirming care such as puberty blockers, even as it cites “substantial uncertainty” about the long-term benefits and harms of puberty blockers.

The nine-page report received praise from the Trump administration, including HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., for taking a stand that helped "protect future generations of American children from irreversible harm." 

“When the medical ethics textbooks of the future are written, they’ll look back on sex-rejecting procedures for minors the way we look back on lobotomies," Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Administrator Mehmet Oz added. "I applaud the American Society of Plastic Surgeons for placing itself on the right side of history by opposing these dangerous, unscientific experiments.”

The announcement by the ASPS comes just days after a New York jury awarded $2 million in damages to 22-year-old Fox Varian in the first malpractice suit from a detransitioner to go before a jury. She underwent gender-transition surgery at age 16, according to The Free Press.    

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

Source: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/health/us-plastic-surgeons-organization-recommends-delaying-gender-affirming

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A Texas Political Shock - Bill King

 

by Bill King

After decades of GOP dominance, a shocking Texas special election and collapsing approval ratings suggest independents are abandoning Republicans—and the political ground is shifting fast.

 

Until Saturday night, Texas Senate District 9 had been represented by a Republican for over 30 years. In 2022, Kelly Hancock won the seat by 20 points. Last November, Donald Trump beat Kamala Harris in the district by 17 points. So when Hancock stepped down to accept the appointment as controller, Republicans had little reason think the seat would be in jeopardy.

But on Saturday, Democrat Taylor Rehmet trounced his Republican opponent by over 14 points—a 31-point swing since the 2024 election. The results have sent shock waves through the Texas Republican establishment.

Some Republican pundits have discounted the results because it was a special election with a very low turnout. It is certainly true that the turnout in Saturday’s election was much lower than last November (15% vs. 64%). But the results are consistent with polling over the last year, signaling that Texans have been turning increasingly negative on the Republican leadership of the state.

Over the last year, the University of Texas Polling Project has conducted seven polls asking voters whether they approved or disapproved of the job various state leaders were doing. Trump and all statewide Republican leaders began the year with positive approval ratings. By the end of the year, all were in negative territory. The average move downward was 24 points.

The crosstabs in the polls show that the groups who have turned most negative are independents, Latinos, and young people. Of course, there is considerable overlap between these because Latinos and young people eschew both parties at higher rates than other groups. Nonetheless, the moves within these groups in 2025 were breathtaking. For example, this was the drop in Trump’s approval rating with these groups last year:

But perhaps even more startling is that Trump’s approval rating with Republicans dropped by 17 points (88→71)—and this was before the debacle that has played out in Minnesota, or his threat to invade Greenland. One political operative I spoke with, who closely followed the Tarrant County race, estimated that 15-20% of Republicans voted for the Democratic candidate.

I think the poll’s questions on what issues Texas voters are most concerned about are telling. The issues garnering the most response were “political corruption/leadership” (18%), inflation (16%), and the economy (14%).  67% said they were very concerned about the cost of health care. Two-thirds of Texans believe that Trump’s tariffs are leading to higher prices. Texans also disapprove of state leaders’ handling of abortion (-17), regulation of marijuana/THC (-20), and public education (-23).

Let me tell you what was not on the list at all: the danger that Sharia law would take over the state.

For the last two decades, Republican leaders have governed the state to satisfy their base—pandering to the issues important to those voters and ignoring what most Texans wanted. That was largely because independents, even though they frequently disagreed with the positions state leaders were taking, found Democratic candidates even further outside their comfort zone. But the Tarrant County results and the polling trends over the last year suggest Republican leaders may have gone so far that independents now view Democrats as the lesser of the two evils.

***

This article was originally published by RealClearPolitics and made available via RealClearWire 


Bill King

Source: https://amgreatness.com/2026/02/04/a-texas-political-shock-republicans-cant-ignore/

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IDF admits civilians likely killed in retaliatory strike on Hamas commander after soldier wounded - Yonah Jeremy Bob

 

by Yonah Jeremy Bob

"The strike targeted the terrorist Bilal Abu Assi, a Hamas Nukhba Platoon Commander who led the infiltration into Kibbutz Nir Oz on the brutal October 7th massacre," the IDF stated.

 

Smoke rises from the Gath shelter, housing displaced Palestinians, after an Israeli air strike in the west of Khan Yunis, southern Gaza Strip on January 31, 2026.
Smoke rises from the Gath shelter, housing displaced Palestinians, after an Israeli air strike in the west of Khan Yunis, southern Gaza Strip on January 31, 2026.
(photo credit: Bashar Taleb / AFP via Getty Images)

 

The IDF on Wednesday afternoon admitted that it had likely mistakenly killed an undetermined number of Palestinian civilians in Gaza during a retaliatory strike against Hamas for wounding an Israeli soldier earlier in the day.

Early Wednesday morning, the IDF announced that Hamas had ambushed and wounded an IDF soldier near the Yellow Line in northern Gaza.

Although the IDF returned fire on the Hamas fighters who carried out the ambush, the military's statement did not clarify that the attackers had been killed, as is frequently mentioned in such statements.

The IDF said in its afternoon statement, "In response to the blatant violation of the ceasefire agreement overnight (Wednesday), during which terrorists opened fire at IDF troops in the northern Gaza Strip, and as a result, severely injured a reserve officer, the IDF struck a Hamas terrorist in the southern Gaza Strip earlier today." 

IDF says strike targeted Hamas Nukhba commander Bilal Abu Assi

"The strike targeted the terrorist Bilal Abu Assi, a Hamas Nukhba Platoon Commander who led the infiltration into Kibbutz Nir Oz on the brutal October 7th massacre, during which dozens of civilians were abducted and murdered. The terrorist likely took part in holding deceased hostages captive throughout the war, and in addition, the terrorist led terror attacks against IDF troops throughout the war," the IDF added.

Hamas Nukhba Platoon Commander Bilal Abu Assi during the infiltration into Kibbutz Nir Oz on October 7, 2023.
Hamas Nukhba Platoon Commander Bilal Abu Assi during the infiltration into Kibbutz Nir Oz on October 7, 2023. (credit: IDF SPOKESPERSON'S UNIT)

However, already in the morning, there were foreign and Palestinian reports of dozens of Palestinians having been killed in multiple strikes by Israel, both in northern and southern Gaza.

IDF says it took measures to mitigate harm to civilians, omits mention of proble

Responding to these reports on Wednesday afternoon, the IDF said it was "aware of the claim that several uninvolved civilians, including a medical staff member, were hit in the strike. Prior to and during the strike, steps were taken in order to mitigate harm to civilians as much as possible, including the use of surveillance and precise munitions. The IDF regrets any harm caused to uninvolved civilians."

Strangely, the statement said nothing about a probe into the attack, as such statements usually do.

Also, the statement seemed to only address one of multiple claimed attacks and it was not clear why the others attacks were not mentioned.

The IDF and Shin Bet concluded that they "will continue to operate against any attempts by the terror organizations in the Gaza Strip to execute terror attacks against IDF troops and Israeli civilians, whilst mitigating harm to uninvolved civilians."

While many countries and global critics have accused Israel of systematically violating the October 2025 ceasefire and killing over 550 Palestinians since then, including at least dozens of civilians or more, Israel has said that Hamas tries to violate the ceasefire by attacking or setting up attacks on Israel and the IDF on a daily basis.

If prior to October 7, Israel was conservative in responding to such attacks or preparations for such attacks if they did not target central Israel, following Hamas's invasion, the IDF is pushing for a forward-leaning posture against any potential threats near Israel's borders.


Yonah Jeremy Bob

Source: https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/defense-news/article-885606

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Nvidia CEO: 'The implications of building AI infrastructure in Israel are profound' - NIV Lelien

 

by NIV Lelien

Huang, the founder and CEO of Nvidia, is considered one of the most influential figures in today's global AI economy.

 

Huang at the ACM/IEEE Supercomputing Conference in 2018.
Huang at the ACM/IEEE Supercomputing Conference in 2018.
(photo credit: Raysonho @ Open Grid Scheduler / Scalable Grid Engine VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS )

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said the economic impact of the "Israel 1" supercomputer his company is building in northern Israel could be "very deep," arguing that large-scale AI infrastructure can spark downstream growth in startups, universities, and industry, according to an interview and remarks published by Walla.

Huang, the founder and CEO of Nvidia, is considered one of the most influential figures in today's global AI economy. Many of the best-known AI systems, including ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini, run on hardware, processors, and servers manufactured by Nvidia. This reality has helped propel the company to record market valuations in recent years.

Huang was among the keynote speakers at the 3DEXPERIENCE World conference in Houston, hosted by French software giant Dassault Systèmes, a global leader in computer-aided design and 3D physics-based simulation. Its SOLIDWORKS software is used to design a wide range of industrial products, from everyday consumer goods to advanced defense systems.

During a joint press conference with Dassault Systèmes CEO Pascal Daloz, Huang answered questions from journalists, including one from Walla about Israel and the expected economic impact on the country's battered north from "Israel 1," the supercomputer Nvidia is currently building there.

"We are very proud to work with Israel in building supercomputers," Huang replied with a smile. Data center technology itself is "a kind of miracle," he said, because it enables a company to become a service provider and a regional cloud, adding that the company that builds such capability "will be worth a lot." 

An NVIDIA logo appears in this illustration taken August 25, 2025.
An NVIDIA logo appears in this illustration taken August 25, 2025. (credit: REUTERS/DADO RUVIC/ILLUSTRATION/FILE PHOTO)

Huang urged people to think about what forms around what he called an "AI factory," referring to the supercomputer. Above it, he said, startups emerge, research expands, universities and students gain new capabilities, and major companies use the system to build generative AI, creating what he described as an economic flow "downstream."

"The economic effects of a supercomputer are very deep," he said.

"It's all intelligence, and the changes it creates," Huang added. AI, he argued, is needed in every industry, scientific field, application, and company. "So the implications of AI infrastructure in Israel are very important, and I'm very happy we are building the system," he said in remarks.

Daloz, whose company also maintains a local presence in Israel, reiterated the optimism. "AI, meaning building supercomputers, is a field that is difficult to research," he said, adding that he assumed Israel had found a way to "virtualize" aspects of it. AI, he argued, can open many opportunities, including wealth creation. Israel, he said, could capture benefits for startups while also creating products for markets beyond Israel and for the wider world.

Israel's AI infrastructure gap

Both CEOs, however, also touched on a painful reality: Israel currently lacks adequate infrastructure for AI development, including a significant data center that enables large-scale AI applications, a situation expected to change with the planned data center in the north.

Despite investments by Nvidia, Intel, and other companies, Israel's position in AI development remains weak, the report said. A committee chaired by Prof. Jacob Nagel, which examined the issue and presented its conclusions to the prime minister several months ago, reached bleak findings: Israel lacks a national AI strategy, faces a severe shortage of AI infrastructure and suitable energy capacity, lacks sufficient supercomputing resources (a gap Nvidia is now trying to address), and suffers from a serious shortage of skilled personnel. The report also warned that Israel is slipping in global innovation and development rankings.

Huang has described AI as infrastructure in its own right, the article noted, comparable in its necessity to systems such as the internet and electricity.

Israel has no domestic supercomputing infrastructure of its own, lacks adequate energy infrastructure for AI data centers, and lacks planning tracks to build power-generation facilities to meet AI's growing electricity demand. Israeli universities have only about 120 researchers working in core AI fields. By comparison, the University of California, Berkeley alone has around 70 researchers in the field.

The Nagel committee proposed allocating 25 billion shekels, which the article estimates was roughly $7 billion at the time and about $8 billion today. The report argued that the figure remains insufficient compared with far larger investments elsewhere, citing US spending via the CHIPS law, massive Chinese investments, and a Saudi plan to invest more than $100 billion over the next five years. Israel's leadership, the article said, should heed the advice offered by figures such as Huang and Daloz, given their concern and clear-eyed assessment.

'Physical AI' partnership

The Houston meeting between the two CEOs also followed the announcement of an expanded partnership between Nvidia and Dassault Systèmes. The companies said they plan to invest in what they call "physical AI," combining AI models with physics-based simulation to support the "AI economy," including simulations for designing autonomous and electric vehicles and planning AI data centers based on Nvidia's server-rack architecture.

Huang noted that the two companies have worked together for more than 25 years. In practical terms, he said, they function as both customers and partners: Dassault runs its systems on Nvidia hardware, while Nvidia uses Dassault products to plan and design processors, servers, and other components.

Another Israel-linked moment

The Walla report also pointed to another recent Israel-linked episode: in December, Huang met at Nvidia's US headquarters with Avinatan Or and his partner Noa Argamani, described in the article as survivors of Hamas captivity, roughly two months after Or's release. The meeting was organized by Amit Krig, Nvidia's senior vice president and head of the company's Israeli development site, and included Nvidia Israel's leadership. During the conversation, the couple discussed plans they had already made together, and Huang noted that they were planning a long trip around the world.


NIV Lelien was a guest of Dassault Systèmes in Houston.

Source: https://www.jpost.com/business-and-innovation/tech-and-start-ups/article-885601

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Iran’s ballistic missile arsenal: Types, ranges, and regional impact - explainer - Reuters, Jerusalem Post Staff

 

by Reuters, Jerusalem Post Staff

Iranian officials have repeatedly said Tehran had recovered from the damage incurred during the war and that its capabilities are better than ever.

 

An Iranian missile system is displayed next to a banner with a picture of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during Iranian Defence Week, in a street in Tehran, Iran, September 25, 2025.
An Iranian missile system is displayed next to a banner with a picture of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during Iranian Defence Week, in a street in Tehran, Iran, September 25, 2025.
(photo credit: MAJID ASGARIPOUR/WANA)

Iran, which is set to resume nuclear talks with the United States on Friday in Oman, has always warned its formidable ballistic missile program - one of the biggest in the Middle East - is a red line in any negotiations.

The latest test of Iran's missile capabilities occurred during the 12-day war in June 2025 with Israel, during which Tehran fired salvoes of ballistic missiles into Israel, killing dozens of people and wrecking dozens of buildings and apartment blocks in the country's center and north.

According to an analysis from the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) and AEI Critical Threats Project, Israel "likely destroyed around a third of the Iranian missile launchers" during the conflict.

Iranian officials have repeatedly claimed that Tehran had recovered from the damage incurred during the war and that its capabilities are better than ever.

What are ballistic missiles?

A ballistic missile is a rocket-propelled weapon that is guided during its initial ascent but follows a free-fall trajectory under gravity for most of its flight. It delivers warheads - containing either conventional explosives or potentially biological, chemical, or nuclear munitions - over varying distances, with classifications ranging from short to intercontinental ranges depending on the missile type.

(illustrative) A missile is launched during an annual drill in the coastal area of the Gulf of Oman and near the Strait of Hormuz, Iran.
(illustrative) A missile is launched during an annual drill in the coastal area of the Gulf of Oman and near the Strait of Hormuz, Iran. (credit: REUTERS)

Western powers regard Iran's ballistic missile arsenal both as a conventional military threat to Middle East stability and a possible delivery mechanism for nuclear weapons, should Tehran develop them. Iran denies any intent to build atomic bombs.

Iranian missile types and ranges

Iran has the largest stockpile of ballistic missiles in the Middle East, according to the US Office of the Director of National Intelligence. Iranian missiles have a self-imposed range of 1,240 miles, which officials in the past said was enough to protect the country since it covers the distance to Israel.

Many of Iran's missile sites are located in and around the capital, Tehran. There are at least five known underground "missile cities" in various provinces, including Kermanshah and Semnan, as well as near the Gulf region.

The semi-official Iranian news outlet ISNA published a graphic in April 2025 showing nine Iranian missiles it said could reach Israel. These included the Sejil, which ISNA said was capable of flying at more than 10,500 milesper hour and had a range of1,550 miles; the Kheibar, with a range of 1,240 miles; and the Haj Qasem, with a range of 870 miles.

The Arms Control Association, a Washington-based think tank, says Iran's ballistic arsenal included the Shahab-1, with an estimated range of 190 miles; the Zolfaghar with 435 miles; Shahab-3 with 500 to 620 miles; Emad-1, a missile under development with a range up to 1,240 miles, and a Sejil model under development with an expected range of 930 to 1,550 miles.

Iran also has cruise missiles such as the Kh-55, an air-launched nuclear-capable weapon with a range of up to 1,860 miles.

Missile strategy, development

Iran says its ballistic missiles provide an important deterrent and retaliatory force against the US, Israel, and other potential regional targets.

According to a 2023 report by Behnam Ben Taleblu, a Senior Fellow at the US-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies, Iran continues to develop underground missile depots complete with transport and firing systems, as well as subterranean missile production and storage centers. In 2020, Iran fired a ballistic missile from underground for the first time, it said.

"Years of reverse-engineering missiles and producing various missile classes have also taught Iran about stretching airframes and building them with lighter composite materials to increase missile range," the report said.

In June 2023, Iran presented what officials described as its first domestically made hypersonic ballistic missile, state-owned outlet IRNA news agency reported. Hypersonic missiles can fly at least five times the speed of sound and follow complex trajectories, making them difficult to intercept.

The Arms Control Association says Iran's missile program is largely based on North Korean and Russian designs and has benefited from Chinese assistance.

In October, CNN reported that China had been playing a large part in helping Iran rebuild its missile capabilities following the 12-day war's destruction.

According to that report, CNN, citing European intelligence sources, reported that Iran received shipments containing over 2,000 tons of sodium perchlorate, a key ingredient in the production of the solid-fuel propellant Iran uses in its missiles.

Regional attacks

Iran responded to US participation in Israel's air war against Iran in June by firing missiles at the US Al Udeid air base in Qatar, but Tehran gave advance warning, and no one was hurt. Washington announced a ceasefire hours later.

Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) used missiles in January 2024 when they alleged that they had attacked Israel's spy headquarters in Iraq's semi-autonomous Kurdistan region, and that they had also fired at Islamic State militants in Syria.

Tehran also announced missile strikes targeting two bases of a Baloch militant group in neighboring Pakistan.

Saudi Arabia and the US have said they believe Iran was behind a drone and missile attack on Saudi Arabia's prized oil facilities in 2019. Tehran denied the allegation.

In 2020, the Islamic Republic launched missiles at US-led forces in Iraq, including the al-Asad air base, in retaliation for a US drone strike that killed Major General Qassem Soleimani, a top commander of the IRGC. 


Reuters, Jerusalem Post Staff

Source: https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/iran-news/article-885573

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Hamas terrorists use ambulances, schools, hospitals in violation of US-brokered ceasefire, IDF official says - Benjamin Weinthal

 

by Benjamin Weinthal

'There are disturbing developments over the last few weeks. We see the return of Hamas to the front line,' IDF official says

 

FIRST ON FOX: Amid the recent start of phase two of the U.S.-brokered ceasefire between Hamas and the Jewish state, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) claim that Hamas has violated the deal through its misuse of ambulances, hospitals and schools to regain control of the northern Gaza Strip.

The IDF provided Fox News Digital with exclusive video footage of what it alleges is Hamas operatives using an ambulance to transport terrorists and weapons from the "inner yard of the Yemen Al-Saeed Hospital" to various checkpoints in northern Gaza.

"You see an armed suspect going into the ambulance with a Kalashnikov. The ambulance is connecting the dots for us. We passed the information to the American headquarters of the footage of the militants," an IDF official said of the video shared with Fox News Digital.

GAZA’S RAFAH BORDER CROSSING PARTIALLY REOPENS UNDER CEASEFIRE DEAL

Hamas smuggling transporting weapons

The Israel Defense Forces accuse Hamas terrorists of allegedly using ambulances to transport terrorists and weapons in northern Gaza. (IDF)

The first phase of the agreement required that Hamas return all hostages held in Gaza. The second core part involves the disarming of Hamas, the U.S. and EU-designated terrorist movement.

An IDF spokesperson told Fox News Digital, "There are disturbing developments over the last few weeks. We see the return of Hamas to the front line, to the yellow line."

The yellow line separates IDF-controlled territory in Gaza, which is estimated to be 53%, from the enclave area not under Israeli control.

"Hamas has returned to schools, hospitals and kindergartens and is turning them into military bases. A Hamas commander is in charge of each school in Jabalia in northern Gaza," the IDF official claimed.

They continued, "We have seen Hamas with Kalashnikovs and, over the past few weeks, Hamas has been using ambulances. We have tracked over several weeks that Hamas uses ambulances to do checks in Jabalia. It is a big change. We see the confidence of Hamas using ambulances. It is a symbol for Hamas that it is gaining confidence and rebuilding itself, a sign of a potential raid on our bases in the future."

The city of Jabalia was the scene of intense combat for the IDF during the over two-year war with Hamas. In May 2024, Fox News Digital reported the IDF secured the bodies of seven hostages from Jabalia. Hamas turned the "civilian area into a fortified combat compound," the IDF said at the time about Jabalia.  

Hamas using ambulances

An Israel Defense Force video allegedly shows armed terrorists loading weapons into an ambulance near a hospital in northern Gaza. (IDF)

When asked about the number of Hamas fighters in Jabalia in January 2026, the IDF official told Fox News Digital, "There are 3,000 Hamas operatives in Jabalia. 75,000 citizens have returned to Jabalia."

HAMAS CONFIRMS FIVE LEADERS KILLED INCLUDING 'MASKED SPOKESPERSON' IN MAJOR BLOW TO TERROR GROUP

The official said, "In the Jabalia refugee camp there are still functioning tunnels. We are working on destroying tunnels inside of the yellow line and are at an advanced stage of clearing tunnels."

Fox News Digital has reported extensively during the war on Hamas’ use of hospitals as military centers. The IDF operation against Kamal Adwan Hospital in Gaza resulted in the capture of roughly 100 suspected Hamas terrorists.

IDF marks the Yellow Line in Gaza.

The IDF announced that as part of the ceasefire agreement and in accordance with the directive of the political echelon, IDF troops under the Southern Command have begun marking the Yellow Line in the Gaza Strip to establish tactical clarity on the ground. (IDF)

Shortly before the ceasefire came into effect in Oct. 2025, the IDF showed international reporters a Hamas terrorist tunnel adjacent to the Jordanian Field Hospital in Gaza City.  The IDF said that Hamas terrorists were in the hospital and Jordanian medical personnel cooperated with Hamas. The state of Jordan denied the links to Hamas at its field hospital.

The IDF official said, "At the Yemen Al-Saeed Hospital, a Hamas commander with the rank of lieutenant colonel controls the hospital. We have notified the Americans. The freedom of action of IDF is limited. Hamas is violating the ceasefire. We have footage of Yemen Al-Saeed Hospital that we used to see before Oct. 7. Hamas places citizens in the hospital. The ambulance with Hamas goes through major crossroads."

Hamas invaded parts of southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, and murdered over 1,200 people and kidnapped more than 250 individuals.

IDF SAYS GAZA STRIKES HIT TERRORISTS, WEAPONS FACILITIES AFTER CEASEFIRE BREACH; HOSPITALS REPORT 30 KILLED

Hamas terrorists use ambulance to transport weapons

The IDF has accused Hamas terrorists of allegedly violating the ceasefire by using an ambulance to transport terrorists and weapons in northern Gaza. (IDF)

The IDF official, along with many U.S. and Israeli counter-terrorism officials, have placed large question marks over the possibility of disarming one of the world’s worst and most ideologically committed Islamist terrorist movements.

Hamas officials have stressed over the last week and since the ceasefire started that it will not disarm. The senior Hamas official, Moussa Abu Marzouk, told the Qatari government-controlled outlet Al-Jazeera last week that the Hamas agreement to abandon its weapons "never happened, not for a single moment did we talk about the surrender of weapons, or any formula about destroying, surrendering, or disarmament."

Hamas terrorists

Hamas terrorists emerge in a show of strength escorting Red Cross vehicles carrying three Israeli hostages to be released as part of the ceasefire deal. (TPS-IL)

The IDF official said, "There is a lot of belief in phase two and it will include disarming Hamas. I am very pessimistic in this matter. Hamas will not give away its weapons, and it will put on a show. Hamas might have civilians give away weapons. The game will be how good the show is." The official added, "We have indications from the ground level that there is no process of full disarmament by Hamas. We have intelligence that Hamas operatives know that no full disarmament is planned."

When asked about disarming Hamas, Brig. Gen. Yossi Kuperwasser (res.), a former head of research in the IDF's Military Intelligence Directorate, told Fox News Digital, "Hamas is not willing to disarm but may be ready to give up some heavy weapons." 

Fox News Digital efforts to reach the Hamas spokesman were not successful. 


Benjamin Weinthal reports on Israel, Iran, Syria, Turkey and Europe. You can follow Benjamin on Twitter @BenWeinthal, and email him at benjamin.weinthal@fox.com

Source: https://www.foxnews.com/world/hamas-terrorists-use-ambulances-schools-hospitals-violation-us-brokered-ceasefire-idf-official-says

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Mamdani mystique melts while NYC freezes, at least 13 die of hypothermia on streets - Ben Whedon

 

by Ben Whedon

The warm embrace of collectivism: Downtown Manhattan received 11.4 inches of snow in last weekend’s blizzard, and the death toll reached double digits. Yet, he enjoys a favorable rating among New York City residents.

 

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani is under fire from all directions over his handling of the recent snowstorm that has brought the Big Apple to a halt.

Downtown Manhattan received 11.4 inches of snow in last weekend’s blizzard, according to CBS News. Though the development led to scenes of New Yorkers frolicking in the unplowed streets in the immediate aftermath, the novelty wore off quickly as uncollected garbage piles displaced walls of snow streetside.

The death toll, moreover, reached 16 by Monday, while the backlash to Mamdani’s leadership has crossed the political aisle and attracted criticism from even those within his movement. Despite the array of criticism, however, Mamdani’s popularity remains strong. Overall, 48% of New Yorkers across the state had a favorable view of him in a recent Siena College poll, which surveyed voters after the snow arrived. Just 32% had an unfavorable view of him.

In New York City specifically, however, Mamdani enjoyed a 68% approval rating and a 20% unfavorable rating. The NYC suburbs, however, awarded him a 35% approval rating and a 47% unfavorable rating. Conducted Jan. 26-28, the survey questioned 802 registered voters in New York state and has a margin of error of +/- 4.3%.

His own supporters plead for help: “Being homeless shouldn’t be a death sentence”

Members of Mamdani’s Democratic Socialists of America, including existing city lawmakers, have highlighted the situation and taken to social media to urge concrete action from the mayor.

“[Mayor Mamdani] we need your help in finding temporary placement for residents who have been impacted by Sunday’s snowstorm caused blackout,” posted city councilmember Chi Ossé.

Queens Borough President Donovan Richards, moreover, fumed over the death toll, openly breaking with Mamdani over his refusal to relocate the homeless population ahead of severe weather. “Being homeless shouldn’t be a death sentence,” he said, adding that “[y]ou can’t let the people stay out there. These are people in crisis.”

His opposition blames Mandani's lack of planning and experience

The death toll, moreover, hit 16 by Monday, Mamdani announced. Thirteen of those deaths came from hypothermia while a further three were the result of overdoses. Mamdani’s political opposition directly attributed those deaths to a change in policy the mayor implemented to end the relocation of homeless people off the streets ahead of severe weather.

“New York City has just experienced what it means to have a Democrat-Communist mayor,” posted former NYC Mayor Rudy Giuliani. “The policy of NYC before, during, and after I was Mayor was to remove homeless people from the streets when it approached freezing. The incumbent mayor has changed that policy. During the recent storm, at least ten people were found dead on the streets. Isn’t this tantamount to—at minimum—reckless disregard for human life? Will there be any accountability?”

Republican city councilwoman Vickie Paladino, for her part, could not feign surprise at the response.

“Did anyone think he had any plan for any of this?” she asked, referring to Mamdani. “He's a 33-year-old rich kid with zero work experience and even less life experience. He has no idea how anything works. He was a member of the assembly for a few years and barely even showed up. The people he surrounds himself with are just like him. He got elected on vibes by transplants. What did you honestly think was going to happen?”

Famous residents: "The streets are a disaster"

“Yes, there’s always snow in NYC. It’s never been perfect. We get it,” posted comedian Michael Rapaport, an NYC local. “But you Zoron the Moron campaigned on ‘change’ and ‘new ideas.’ Eight days after the storm we still got dog shit, piss piles, and dirty snowbergs on every corner. So what exactly is new?”

“Will & Grace” actress Debra Messing, for her part, appeared to take a dig at Mamdani on Saturday, referencing the failure of the city to properly plow the streets.

“Sitting in a taxi trying to get to an appointment. Should take 20 minutes, we are at an hour and ten minutes and counting,” she posted on X. “The streets are a disaster. It hasn’t snowed in 5 days and the streets still haven’t been cleared. Poor ambulance sitting in essentially a parking lot with sirens going. I’m praying for the person needing emergency care. I’ve lived here for 15 years (this go around) and this has never happened. The plows have always worked around the clock to get the city back to working. I wonder what happened?”


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

Source: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/wedmamdani-mystique-melts-while-nyc-freezes-over

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Tuesday, February 3, 2026

From Gaza to Iran, Israel readies space 'surprises' for next conflicts - exclusive - JPost exclusive

 

by JPost 

Israel’s space capabilities play a key role in the Jewish state’s strategic military capabilities, and now the space industry is moving toward dual-use and commercial roles as well

 

Israeli satellite launching into space
Israeli satellite launching into space
(photo credit: MINISTRY OF DEFENSE)

Israel is quietly developing new space‑based capabilities designed to give the country an edge in the next war with Iran, Avi Berger, head of the Space Office at the Defense Ministry’s Directorate of Defense Research & Development (MAFAT) told Defense & Tech by The Jerusalem Post

Speaking during Israel’s Space Week, Berger said the lessons of recent conflicts have pushed Israel to accelerate innovation in orbit.

“We knew right away that we had to build and create new surprises for the next war,” he said. “Whatever was deployed in June won’t be enough next time. The IDF now has new capabilities – and we can’t forget that the enemy will be different next time around, too.”

Six months after Israel’s Rising Lion and America’s Operation Midnight Hammer, tensions in the Middle East are once again at an all-time high, driven by US military deployments and Iran’s murderous crackdown on protesters.

Israel’s space capabilities play a key role in the Jewish state’s strategic military capabilities. They are a real “eye in the sky,” keeping a close watch on Israel’s enemies from afar, 24/7.

Elbit Systems' JUPITER space camera launches aboard the NAOS Satellite aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.
Elbit Systems' JUPITER space camera launches aboard the NAOS Satellite aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. (credit: ELBIT SYSTEMS)

Space as Israel’s operational backbone

Israel first forayed into space 45 years ago to retain an early-warning capability along the border with Egypt. Since then, Israel has joined the prestigious space club and is one of only 13 countries with indigenous launching capabilities.

For Israel, the launch alone is a great achievement. It is carried out to the west, against the rotation of the Earth, so that its trajectory takes it out over the Mediterranean Sea, thus avoiding enemy territory during the launch period.

The satellite technology, as well as the launcher, which according to some reports launches the Jericho ballistic missile and can place up to 380 kilograms into orbit, is not something Israel wants falling into enemy hands. The electro-optical reconnaissance satellite with advanced capabilities is also a feat of engineering, would be a gem of intelligence should it be obtained by countries like Iran. That would, of course, be a disaster for Israel.

As a result of launching westward, Israeli satellites operate in retrograde orbits and decrease the launcher’s payload capacity, as it requires more thrust to place the satellite into orbit compared to it flying eastwards.

Berger emphasized that Israel’s presence in space is driven by necessity. The shock of October 7 accelerated this shift when the state understood that the country was dealing with seven active fronts.

 “We are in space for Israel’s and the IDF’s operational needs,” he said, adding that satellite constellations now form the backbone of the country’s intelligence‑gathering architecture.

“A single constellation can cover everything from Gaza to Iran. It doesn’t matter which front ignites – you have intelligence.”

These constellations generate gigabytes of imagery across the Middle East, enabling real‑time data extraction and rapid retasking of satellites. “All of this is powered by what I call ‘AI on steroids,’” he added.

Though Iran and its nuclear and ballistic missile projects are of top concern for Israel, the advanced satellites have likely monitored much more than that, such as Iran’s malign activity throughout the Middle East, including the trafficking of weapons to Hezbollah, as well as to the Houthis in Yemen.

Last year, Berger said that the June war with Iran had underscored the critical need for space superiority.

“The war with Iran has further sharpened our understanding that we must dramatically increase investment in developing and maintaining Israeli superiority over our adversaries in space,” he said, in August, at the DDR&D-led International DefenseTech Summit, organized in collaboration with the Yuval Ne'eman workshop for Science, Technology & Security at Tel Aviv University.

Berger added that “in accordance with the ministry's strategy, our objective for the coming years is that Israeli space capabilities will be present at every point in the Middle East, collecting intelligence and providing alerts around the clock and in all weather conditions. Space is a decisive component in ensuring the IDF's freedom of action.”

The Israeli satellite constellation was a “full partner” in all operational activity “before, during, and after Operation Rising Lion [with Iran],” he said, explaining that “Over the 12 days of war, we collected tens of millions of square kilometers of extremely high-quality imagery, day and night. Targets were built in real time, and critical communications were provided with high availability to support strike operations discreetly and without risking our forces.”

A changing global space battlefield

Since the establishment of the Outer Space Treaty in 1967, space was understood to be of no one country’s domain and that its use and exploration should be for peaceful purposes.

“Space should be accessible to all countries and can be freely and scientifically investigated,” the treaty reads.

Space has become crucial in the modern world, and Berger told D&T that the global space environment has transformed dramatically in the past decade. 

“Elon Musk’s entry into the space sector changed everything,” he said. “Space became more accessible.”

The war in Ukraine has further blurred the lines between civilian and military space assets. Systems such as Starlink and Maxar demonstrated how commercial platforms can shape battlefield outcomes. “Nations that can’t reach space themselves suddenly realized how vulnerable they are.”

But, he warned that the world, including Israel, must prepare for threats from major powers.

“Russia and China are active in space, and the moment they choose to use those capabilities, whatever they target is at risk.”

Building Israel’s space economy

Innovation, Science and Technology Minister Gila Gamliel echoed Berger’s assessment, framing space as both a security necessity and a strategic opportunity.

“Space has become a new line of defense,” she said at the opening conference of Space Week.

She pointed to Operation Rising Lion, Israel’s strike on Iranian nuclear facilities, as the first conflict in which satellites played a decisive role from start to finish.

“We proved our leadership in space innovation for security needs.”

Gamliel highlighted Israel’s growing international partnerships, including a decade‑long cooperation agreement with NASA and participation in the Artemis lunar program.

“Israel is proud to work alongside NASA, selecting Israeli companies to contribute to humanity’s return to the Moon,” she said.

The ministry also signed new space agreements with Azerbaijan and Hungary and is actively seeking Israel’s first female astronaut. “She will inspire a new generation of Israeli girls, and boys, to pursue scientific and technological careers.”

Today there are over 90 countries and dozens of private commercial companies operating in space.

According to The State of the Israeli Space Industry 2026 report published by Startup Nation Central during Israel Space Week, Israel’s space sector is evolving from a closed, defense-centric field into one that is more oriented toward the dual-use commercial sector.

The Israeli space technology landscape has some 90 companies: 50 active space companies and another 40 developing space-related applications. The report found that there has been a shift from the space satellites to the services built around it, “space-as-a-service” platforms.

The report found that there was a steady increase in the sector over the past decade, with a “particularly strong surge” between 2020 and 2023 with a growth of 66%, outpacing the 22% growth observed in the wider tech ecosystem.

“In 2026, space technology is no longer a niche market but a fundamental pillar of global economic and security infrastructure,” the report read. “By combining military-grade reliability with innovative in-orbit operations, Israel is solidifying its role as a strategic partner in the $600b+ global space economy. As space becomes an increasingly critical global utility, Israel’s space sector is well-positioned to deliver commercially relevant capabilities within the evolving orbital economy.”

Thinking outside the box

But Berger and Gamliel stressed that Israel must continue to strengthen its commercial and academic space ecosystem.

“Space is deep tech,” Berger said. “Access to space is expensive, and that makes it difficult for startups. Israel needs to help its start-ups break into deep tech and space.”

Gamliel pointed to the government’s flagship initiative: the new Space Center in Mitzpe Ramon, a NIS 60‑million “Space City” that will provide regulatory support and subsidized access to space infrastructure. “For the first time in Israel, companies will receive help at every stage, from regulatory guidance to launch,” she said.

Announced in December by The Israel Space Agency (ISA) and the Israel Innovation Authority (IIA), the national research and development laboratory intends to reduce the cost and complexity of accessing space for Israeli technology companies.

The initiative, called Access to Space, will be operated by Creation Space and will provide subsidized services for testing, launch, and in‑orbit operation of space technologies. 

The laboratory will offer at least 35% discounts on market rates for launch and testing services and is expected to support the launch of a minimum of 15 experimental payloads within three years. The goal is to help companies move from laboratory development to operational deployment in space.

Berger added that Israel’s universities need specialized facilities and stronger research and development (R&D) infrastructure so that smaller companies can reach orbit.

Nevertheless, D&T has understood that Israel’s space ecosystem still has far to go to reach the stars again. Start-ups don’t have the same access to R&D infrastructure or support as do the larger companies like Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) or Elbit Systems.

As Israel expands its military, scientific, and commercial presence in orbit, both leaders made clear that space is now essential to national survival.

Gamliel framed the moment as part of a broader human shift, telling the crowd that “people are going to space not as isolated pioneers, but together.”

For Berger, Israel “always has to think outside the box. We don’t have any other choice.” 


JPost

Source: https://www.jpost.com/defense-and-tech/article-885413

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