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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Social psychosis in Minneapolis - Bradley Steffens

 

by Bradley Steffens

When protesters start to belive they’re bulletproof, we have a problem.

 

The recent cases of Renee Good and Alex Pretti have been described in many ways: tragic, reckless, heroic, foolish, principled, misguided.  But one descriptor has been missing from the public conversation: symptomatic.

Good’s refusal to comply with law enforcement officers’ demands and especially her final words to officers — “I’m not mad at you” — suggest that she was oblivious to the risk she was facing.  In that moment, Good was suffering from a delusion.  She sincerely believed that nothing bad could happen to her.  Pretti appears to have suffered from a similar delusion when he waded into conflict with law enforcement officers while wearing a gun on his belt.  These delusions did not arise from personal mental health issues.  They were symptomatic of a social psychosis — a witch’s brew of moral panic, identity fusion, and mass sociogenic illness.

Few of us in the United States have lived through genuine periods of sociogenic illness, but that does not mean they have not happened here.  The Salem Witch Trials are the best known example, but the internment of 120,000 Japanese Americans during World War II and the Red Scare of the 1950s also meet the textbook definition of a type of sociogenic illness known as a moral panic.  I was born in the midst of the Red Scare, and I know that its delusional thinking was alive and well at the grassroots level well into the 1960s.  On the day that President Kennedy was assassinated, our next door neighbor, a member of the John Birch Society, told my mother that Kennedy’s murder was part of a communist plot — this, long before Lee Harvey Oswald’s involvement with Fair Play for Cuba or his defection to the Soviet Union were known.  Evidence was not needed.  It was a fact.  The commies did it.

It appears that we are in the midst of another moral panic, one emerging from the demonization of Donald Trump, his supporters, and anyone who carries out his policies, including law enforcement officers.  For many liberals, disagreements over policy have morphed into a deep-seated belief in their intellectual and moral superiority to Trump and his minions.  The reason that Good and Pretti acted irrationally is that they were so convinced of their intellectual and moral superiority that they refused to view the law enforcement officers as a threat, as if their moral righteousness literally made them bulletproof.  In short, they did not respect the officers surrounding them.  This delusional lack of respect convinced them that such inconsequential human beings could not harm them.  Why, you could even be nice to them and tell them you are not mad at them.  They could never intrude upon your godlike domain.

Moral panic alone does not explain the behavior of individuals who act immune to bullets.  For that, we must look to another phenomenon.  In 2024, psychologists William B. Swann, Jr.; Jack W. Klein; and Ángel Gómez identified a phenomenon called identity fusion — a state in which a person’s political identity becomes so tightly bound to his sense of self that he will take extreme risks to defend it.  Fused individuals typically display moral absolutism, perceived invulnerability, and disregard for personal safety.  This phenomenon is visible in the Minneapolis cases with painful clarity.

Unfortunately, identity fusion is not confined to the Land of 10,000 Lakes.  The belief that one is morally untouchable, that one is “safe” because one is “right,” is spreading through social contagion.  This is why the Minneapolis tragedies matter.  They are symptoms of a broader phenomenon that is affecting millions.

Irrational at its base, this social psychosis cannot be defeated at the ballot box or argued out of existence in the marketplace of ideas.  It needs to be studied by independent researchers, perhaps with funding from the National Institutes of Health.  If found to be a public health crisis, the surgeon general should address it.  Until then, social and political commentators should be mindful that what they are witnessing is far deeper and more complex than most of the issues they normally address.

Bradley Steffens is the author of two novels and seventy-four nonfiction books for young adults, including Donald Trump: Controversial 47th President and the forthcoming Understanding Anxiety and Panic Attacks.

<p><em>Image: Tony Webster via <a  data-cke-saved-href=


Image: Tony Webster via Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0 (cropped).


Bradley Steffens

Source: https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2026/02/social_psychosis_in_minneapolis.html

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Noem directs federal officers in Minneapolis to immediately start wearing body cameras - Misty Severi

 

by Misty Severi

Noem said that the order was made in conjunction with President Donald Trump's border czar Tom Homan, Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Rodney Scott and acting ICE Director Todd Lyons.

 

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced Monday that the Trump administration is deploying body cameras for every federal agent in Minneapolis after two protesters were killed during clashes with agents in the city last month. 

Minneapolis has been a hotspot for Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids in the wake of revelations of large-scale public fraud linked to the Somali expat community in the state, which has prompted anti-ICE riots in the city.

Noem said that the order was made in conjunction with President Donald Trump's border czar Tom Homan, Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Rodney Scott and acting ICE Director Todd Lyons.

"Effective immediately we are deploying body cameras to every officer in the field in Minneapolis," Noem said in a post on X. "As funding is available, the body camera program will be expanded nationwide. We will rapidly acquire and deploy body cameras to DHS law enforcement across the country. The most transparent administration in American history—thank you [President Trump]. Make America Safe Again."

The move comes as congressional Democrats push Republicans to include body cameras as part of their demands to pass a DHS funding bill this week. Democrats are also calling for the legislation to include requiring judicial warrants for immigration arrests, a ban on agents using masks while on duty and creating a “uniform code of conduct and accountability."

The move also comes after a federal judge in Chicago last year ordered federal agents to wear body cameras, following the agency's use of tear gas against protesters.


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

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/security/noem-directs-federal-officers-minneapolis-immediately-wear-body-cameras

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Hollywood's perpetual outrage machine is part of left's larger propaganda game - Amanda Head

 

by Amanda Head

Political performances outpace musical performances: In years past, the awards shows featured pro-Palestinian rants, this year's fact-free polemics leaned on anti-ICE rhetoric and anti-Trump sentiment in a virtue-signaling extravaganza.

 

Sunday night's 68th Annual Grammy Awards produced many performances, both the musical kind and the political kind. 

The awards, which took place at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles, were hosted by late-night host Trevor Noah and featured a star-studded red carpet. The cause-du-jour for celebrities this year was, unsurprisingly, the deportation operations being carried out by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). 

Like the Stalin show-trials of the 1930's, each participant sought to out-do the next in denouncing ICE, and multiple celebrities got digs in from the stage. Rapper Bad Bunny, during his acceptance speech for Album of the Year said, "Before I say thanks to God, I'm going to say: ICE out. We're not savages, we're not animals, we're not aliens. We are humans and we are Americans." Pop singer Billie Eilish during her acceptance speech for Song of the Year told the crowd, "No one is legal on stolen land. F*ck ICE."

Kehlani during her acceptance speech for an R&B award, simply stated, "F*ck ICE." Kehlani told Rolling Stone that she suffers from Bipolar II Disorder and Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD).

Singer: "I'm a product of bravery"

Olivia Dean, who won the award for Best New Artist, told the crowd, "I'm up here as the granddaughter of an immigrant. I'm a product of bravery, and I think those people deserve to be celebrated." Dean is 26 years old and is British. 

Singer Shaboozey, aged 30, during an acceptance speech for Country Duo/Group Performance said, "Immigrants built this country, so this is for them, for all children of immigrants."

Politics from the podium is nothing new, and it's not isolated to the Grammys. The same slogans and sentiments will be loud and proud at the Academy Awards on March 15 as they were at the Golden Globe Awards last month. While this year's celebrity politics are centered on deportations, a few years ago the cause was the Hamas war against Israel; a few years before that it was Ukraine, and it's seen hundreds of others in Hollywood's history. 

However, facts and details are often forgotten on the red carpet. All of these celebrities, when invoking the plight of "immigrants," fail to distinguish between legal versus illegal immigrants. They also wittingly or unwittingly, sidestep the fact that the illegal immigrants who are being detained and deported are criminals. 

Music industry celebrates murderers, drug traffickers, child sexual abuse and assault, sodomy, and worse

On January 20, the one-year anniversary of President Donald Trump's return to the White House, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) released a rap sheet of just some of their detainees. Among them were those accused of belonging to foreign terrorist organizations, assassination squad members, murderers, drug traffickers, individuals accused of child sex abuse, sexual assault, sodomy, and grand larceny for raping a corpse. 

In a statement accompanying the criminal rap sheet, Assistant DHS Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said, “Today, we thank our law enforcement for a record-breaking first year of achievements, including more than 670,000 removals and two million self-deportations. DHS is committed to continuing to remove dangerous illegal aliens from American communities. 70% of ICE arrests are of criminal illegal aliens who have been convicted or charged with a crime in the U.S. We will not rest until American communities are free of the scourge of illegal alien crime."

Celebrities do not speak for majority of Americans, polls show

While celebrities who enjoy personal security and gated communities can turn a blind eye to illegal immigrant crime and the economic burden it places on society, Americans can not, and their approval of these deportations is highlighted in two separate recent polls.

A new Cygnal poll found that Americans overwhelmingly support ICE operations. 61% support deporting illegal immigrants to their home countries. 73% agree that entering the US without permission is breaking the law. 58% of respondents rejected Democrats' calls to defund ICE and 54% support ICE enforcing the nation's federal immigration laws. 

In a Harvard Caps Harris poll conducted January 28-29, 51% of those polled approved of Trump's response to the anti-ICE riots in Minneapolis. The same poll found that 73% said criminal illegal immigrants should be deported, with over half extending that to all illegals with no lawful right to be in the United States. 67% want state and local officials to cooperate with federal authorities to deport criminal illegal immigrants, including 64% of independents. 67% say local jails should hand over criminal illegal aliens to federal authorities for swift deportation, supported by 62% of independents and even 50% of Democrats.

Star turns damaging Democrats' chances

While celebrities may believe they are helping their own cause by espousing such beliefs from the award show podium, they certainly are doing the Democratic Party no favors. In the same Harvard Caps Harris poll, 60% see Democrats as actively encouraging resistance to ICE officers trying to do their jobs and keeping Americans safe. 57% oppose elected officials stalking chaos by urging defiance against ICE.

Their rhetoric on the stage, which they won't be arrested for, also isn't doing any favors to the anti-ICE rioters they're inciting to commit crimes for which they certainly can be arrested. It won't be these celebrities who pay to bail out protesters for obstructing justice...or worse. 

Former prosecutor and president of the Public Interest Legal Foundation J. Christian Adams spoke to Just The News and warned about the legal repercussions these rioters could be facing.

"It is illegal to conspire to obstruct justice. And somewhere the left has gotten it into the body politic that it's okay to get in the face of the police, you know, shove the camera in front of the Kenosha police, shove the camera in front of the ICE agents who are doing their job. You can't interfere in a traffic stop. I know that's a favorite on the left to do is to interfere, but you aren't allowed to do that."

Adams also spoke about the source of the sentiment. As Andrew Breitbart famously advised, politics is downstream from culture and, according to Adams, this originates with culture. 

"Watch the Grammys last night. They have infested the culture with lawlessness. Lawlessness is in vogue in some corners of the culture, particularly Los Angeles, Hollywood, Minneapolis, on the streets, it's just become normalized," Adams said. 

The evening concluded with rapper Kendrick Lamar on top, securing five Grammys including Record of the Year for "Luther" (with SZA) and Best Rap Album for GNX. Bad Bunny made history by winning Album of the Year, marking the first time a Spanish-language album claimed the prize, while Billie Eilish and Finneas took Song of the Year. Lady Gaga and Jelly Roll also took home major awards alongside lifetime honors for Cher.


Amanda Head is the White House correspondent at Just The News. Follow her on X.

Source: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/hollywoods-outrage-machine-part-lefts-larger-fact-short-propagnada-machine

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Sydney nurses plead not guilty over viral video threatening Israeli patients - i24 News

 

by i24 News

The trial is scheduled to start on August 31 and is expected to last five days, with a pretrial hearing set for June 1.

 

Sarah Abu Lebdeh, 27, and Ahmad Rashad Nadir, 28
Sarah Abu Lebdeh, 27, and Ahmad Rashad Nadir, 28Social media

 

Two Sydney-based nurses have formally pleaded not guilty to charges linked to a controversial video that sparked international outrage last year.

Sarah Abu Lebdeh, 27, and Ahmad Rashad Nadir, 28, are accused of making threats against Israeli patients during a recorded conversation with Israeli influencer Max Veifer in February 2025. The clip quickly went viral, prompting widespread condemnation in Australia and within the global Jewish community, and led to both nurses being suspended from practice nationwide.

At Downing Centre District Court, Judge Stephen Hanley confirmed that both defendants deny the allegations. They face charges under Australian law for using a carriage service to menace, harass, or offend, with Abu Lebdeh also charged with threatening violence against a group.

The trial is scheduled to start on August 31 and is expected to last five days, with a pretrial hearing set for June 1. Nadir’s attorney has flagged plans to challenge the admissibility of the viral video as evidence.

Video poster
Australia reels from Bondi attack: Court files reveal new details, leaders toughen security laws

The case highlights the growing legal scrutiny surrounding online content and raises questions about professional conduct, accountability, and the potential consequences of social media posts for healthcare workers.


i24 News

Source: https://www.i24news.tv/en/news/international/asia-pacific/artc-sydney-nurses-plead-not-guilty-over-viral-video-threatening-israeli-patients

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The Trump Administration's Delusional Gaza 'Master Plan' - Khaled Abu Toameh

 

by Khaled Abu Toameh

Hamas is not going to recognize Israel's right to exist or give up its Jihad (holy war) against the "Zionist entity" because of new homes, luxury apartments and tourist resorts.

 

  • Even if Hamas does agree to surrender some of its weapons as part of a façade to appease Trump, the terror group will undoubtedly continue to keep or replace as many as possible to maintain a military, political and security presence in the Gaza Strip.

  • Hamas is not worried about the newly established Palestinian technocratic committee that is supposed to govern the Gaza Strip: the committee does not pose a direct threat to the terror group. The committee is primarily tasked with managing civilian affairs, delivering essential services such as water, electricity, healthcare and education, and rebuilding infrastructure. Security will remain in the hands of Hamas....

  • Building skyscrapers and an airport in the Gaza Strip will not change the Palestinians' views on Israel. The Palestinians are not going to give up the "right of return" because of foreign investment in the Gaza Strip. Hamas is not going to recognize Israel's right to exist or give up its Jihad (holy war) against the "Zionist entity" because of new homes, luxury apartments and tourist resorts. The only way to change the hearts and minds of Palestinians is through a deep and thorough process of re-education and actual serious pressure, for once, from the outside world. This requires brave, strong and pragmatic leadership -- both from the Palestinians and the international community -- an attribute that, unfortunately, does not seem to exist.

At the recent annual meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Jared Kushner presented his "New Gaza" master plan that outlines a post-war vision to transform the territory into a hub for "coastal tourism" and commerce. However, building skyscrapers and an airport in the Gaza Strip will not change the Palestinians' views on Israel. Hamas is not going to recognize Israel's right to exist or give up its Jihad (holy war) against the "Zionist entity" because of new homes, luxury apartments and tourist resorts. Pictured: Kushner presents his plan in Davos on January 22, 2026. (Photo by Mandel Ngan/ AFP via Getty Images)

At the recent annual meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Jared Kushner, President Donald J. Trump's son-in-law, presented his "New Gaza" master plan that outlines a post-war vision to transform the territory into a hub for "coastal tourism" and commerce.

The plan features 180 luxury skyscrapers, new logistics corridors, a port, an airport, and 100,000 housing units, along with significant industrial zones/data centers.

This is the second economic plan presented by Kushner since the 2019 "Peace to Prosperity: A New Vision for the Palestinian People and the Broader Middle East," also known as the "Deal of the Century." The economic portion of that plan was a $50 billion investment to transform the Palestinian economy over 10 years. The deal aimed to fund 179 projects across the West Bank, the Gaza Strip, and neighboring countries.

That "Deal of the Century," sadly, failed to materialize: it was rejected as a "conspiracy" by Palestinians, who said they viewed it as a heavily biased, pro-Israel proposal that violated international law, and denied them a Palestinian state and the "right of return," which means flooding Israel with millions descendants of Palestinian refugees, and turning the Jews into a minority in their own country -- the same plan, in fact, as the current effort to Islamize Europe and the United States by demography.

"There is not one positive thing about the 'Deal of the Century,'" Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas said in February 2020.

"No one could accept this plan for a population of 13 million people. There is no real opportunity in it. This deal is categorically rejected and has no place at the negotiating table."

Hamas also rejected the "Deal of the Century." Then Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh denounced the deal as a "blatant violation against our land, people, and the Islamic Ummah [nation]," adding:

"We declare our absolute rejection of all items included in the deal announced by Trump. We confirm that accepting any plan that abdicates or gives up the rights of the Palestinian people or the Palestinian national principles is forbidden. Palestine and its just cause will never be compromised or divided. We confirm that all options are open for the Palestinian people to face off the aggressive 'Deal of the Century' that targets the Palestinian existence: land, people, history, and Arab and Islamic identity."

The PA and Hamas, however, have so far refrained from commenting on Kushner's new Gaza master plan. That is probably because they are convinced that the plan is not feasible and will meet the same fate as the "Deal of the Century."

Moreover, the PA and Hamas apparently do not want to alienate Trump by outrightly dismissing his son-in-law's plan. In their view, Trump is the only one who can stop Israel from resuming the war in the Gaza Strip and destroying Hamas's military and terror infrastructure.

Although Kushner has demanded that Hamas and the other terror entities in Gaza disarm to ensure the success of his plan, the leaders of the terror group continue to reject all calls to lay down their weapons.

Last week, senior Hamas official Mousa Abu Marzouk said that his group had never agreed, at any stage, to hand over its weapons. He insisted that the issue of the "resistance weapons" had never been subject to negotiations at any stage. "We agreed in the Trump plan [to end the Gaza war] on a general framework for ending the war, but the weapons issue has not yet been raised in negotiations," Abu Marzouk told Qatar's state-owned Al-Jazeera TV network.

Even if Hamas does agree to surrender some of its weapons as part of a façade to appease Trump, the terror group will undoubtedly continue to keep or replace as many as possible to maintain a military, political and security presence in the Gaza Strip.

Hamas is not worried about the newly established Palestinian technocratic committee that is supposed to govern the Gaza Strip: the committee does not pose a direct threat to the terror group. The committee is primarily tasked with managing civilian affairs, delivering essential services such as water, electricity, healthcare and education, and rebuilding infrastructure. Security will remain in the hands of Hamas, whose members will undoubtedly continue to rule through a shadow government. With thousands of Hamas militiamen still roaming the streets of the Gaza Strip, the technocratic committee, conversely, will be at the mercy of the terror group.

Back to Kushner's master plan. The assumption that boosting the Palestinian economy would have a moderating effect on the Palestinians has already proven delusional. After the signing of the Oslo Accord between Israel and the PLO in 1993, the international community poured billions of dollars on the Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. This beneficence, however, did not prevent Hamas, whose stated goal is the destruction of Israel, from gaining popularity and winning the 2006 PA legislative election.

The international aid, in addition, did not prompt then PA President Yasser Arafat or his successor, Abbas, to make far-reaching concessions to Israel during the peace negotiations. Both Arafat and Abbas placidly rejected several peace proposals made by Israeli leaders.

The Palestinians first rejected an offer by then Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak at the 2000 Camp David summit. The offer included a Palestinian state in most of the West Bank and Gaza Strip with parts of east Jerusalem.

In 2008, then Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert proposed a plan that would have provided over 90% of the West Bank and a land swap for the remaining territory. The Palestinians rejected the proposal.

In 2010, former Israeli President Shimon Peres, during a meeting with then Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, talked about his vision for turning Gaza into the "Singapore of the Middle East":

"Right now, we have virtually withdrawn from Gaza which is not being occupied. We are currently implementing a restoration program.... All border crossings have been opened. We are determined to turn Gaza into the same kind of prosperous entity as Singapore. "

In May 2024, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu laid out a plan for lasting peace and reintegrating the Gaza Strip into the regional economy through large infrastructure and economic investment. The Palestinians also rejected that plan.

Building skyscrapers and an airport in the Gaza Strip will not change the Palestinians' views on Israel. The Palestinians are not going to give up the "right of return" because of foreign investment in the Gaza Strip. Hamas is not going to recognize Israel's right to exist or give up its Jihad (holy war) against the "Zionist entity" because of new homes, luxury apartments and tourist resorts. The only way to change the hearts and minds of Palestinians is through a deep and thorough process of re-education and actual serious pressure, for once, from the outside world. This requires brave, strong and pragmatic leadership -- both from the Palestinians and the international community -- an attribute that, unfortunately, does not seem to exist.

 


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

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22245/gaza-master-plan-delusion

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China's Year of the Horse is Already Coming Up Lame - Lawrence Kadish

 

by Lawrence Kadish

Perhaps not since Soviet dictator Josef Stalin had at least eight of his top generals tortured and executed on the eve of World War II have we seen another nation dismantle their top military brass in the manner just pursued by Chinese President Xi Jinping.

 

Pictured: A drone show ahead of the Lunar New Year of the Horse, in Harbin, China on January 5, 2026. (Photo by Jade Gao/AFP via Getty Images)

 

The Chinese New Year celebration observed later this month is the "Year of the Horse," but you probably will not want to put any money down on either win, place or show.

Perhaps not since Soviet dictator Josef Stalin had at least eight of his top generals tortured and executed on the eve of World War II have we seen another nation dismantle their top military brass in the manner just pursued by Chinese President Xi Jinping.

In the closing days of January, Communist China's government announced that it was investigating their army's top general for "suspected serious violations of discipline and law." So we are clear, that top general, Zhang Youxia, was considered the highest military member of the Chinese government just below Xi. This was no casual action by China's strongman.

Like in Stalin's purge, General Zhang is not alone. The Chinese Defense Ministry said they were also investigating a number of senior staff on their Central Military Commission, China's top military body, along with General Liu Zhenli, who had been in charge of their military's Joint Staff Department.

One media outlet quoted Neil Thomas, a fellow at the Asia Society Policy Institute's Center for China Analysis: "Xi Jinping has completed one of the biggest purges of China's military leadership in the history of the People's Republic."

In Stalin's case, he so decimated his military command that when Hitler invaded three years later, German troops could see the spires of Moscow before they were turned back, in part due to the fierce Russian winter. In Xi's case, it may take years to restore his nation's military leadership.

This purge was not the only setback for Xi's effort to project global dominance. The Supreme Court of Panama just ruled that a contract held by a Hong Kong company to run the ports situated on both ends of the strategically vital Panama Canal is unconstitutional. While that decision creates a "clean sheet of paper" as to who may run those ports next, it shows the door to a company that was clearly a conduit for Chinese power and Latin American influence.

Needless to say, the Chinese government is not pleased. Its Foreign Ministry issued the expected protest about "resolutely safeguard(ing) (their) legitimate rights."

For a regime that has used its military "rights" to harass and intimidate nations throughout the Pacific Rim, for a nation that has placed military bases on artificial islands -- thereby violating the sovereign waters of nearby countries -- and for a ruthless Communist giant that has used its economic power to bully and threaten others, it must come as quite a shock that in the Year of the Horse, the track just got so very muddy.


Lawrence Kadish serves on the Board of Governors of Gatestone Institute.

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22250/china-year-of-the-stalking-horse

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Power grid watchdog warns that over-reliance on wind and solar will make winter blackouts likely - Kevin Killough

 

by Kevin Killough

The North American Reliability Corporation's latest long-term assessment warns that half the U.S. will face increased risks of blackouts during winter storms as demand for electricity increases while coal- and natural gas-fired power plants are retired.

 

The North American grid watchdog Thursday published its annual long-term reliability assessment, and the analysis offers a sharp warning about the growing threat of blackouts across much of the United States in the coming years. 

“The overall resource adequacy outlook for the North American BPS is worsening: In the 2025 LTRA [long-term reliability assessment], NERC finds that 13 of 23 assessment areas face resource adequacy challenges over the next 10 years,” the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC) report states. 

During January’s Winter Storm Fern, many parts of the U.S. grid neared the point where demand exceeded supply. If the grid continues to shut down fossil-fuel generation and tries to meet demand with intermittent wind and solar, according to NERC, more Americans will face blackouts when demand is high. 

Language grows more dire each year

As electricity demand grows, including data centers, the nation’s grid is relying on intermittent wind and solar resources to meet that growing demand, NERC explains, while plants running on reliable coal and natural gas are slated for retirement over the next five years. “The continuing shift in the resource mix toward weather-dependent resources and less fuel diversity increases risks of supply shortfalls during winter months,” NERC warns. 

The language in these annual assessments from NERC has gone from describing maintaining resource adequacy on the renewable-heavy grid from being a challenge to being a problem. 

“The electricity sector is undergoing significant and rapid change that presents new challenges and opportunities for reliability. With appropriate insight, careful planning, and continued support, the electricity sector will continue to navigate the associated challenges in a manner that maintains reliability and resilience,” NERC stated in its 2019 LTRA

By 2023, NERC’s assessment had begun warning that large portions of the nation’s grid would be stressed during periods of high demand. “The North American BPS [bulk power system] is on the cusp of large-scale growth, bringing reliability challenges and opportunities to a grid that was already amid unprecedented change,” NERC reported. 

Last year’s assessment no longer talked of opportunities. “NERC finds that most of the North American BPS faces mounting resource adequacy challenges over the next 10 years as surging demand growth continues and thermal generators announce plans for retirement,” the watchdog warned. 

Fossil-powered plant retirements 

The 2026 assessment forecast that by 2030, half of the U.S. grid will face either an elevated risk of blackouts or a high risk of blackouts, including Texas, the Pacific Northwest, Midwest, and central Atlantic states. 

Isaac Orr, vice president of research for Always On Energy Research, called the report “startling.” 

The increased demand, according to the report, will add approximately 245 gigawatts, or a 35% increase, to the grid over the next 10 years. The total sales growth in electricity between 2010 and 2024, Orr said, was just 6%. So, the projected growth is expected to be enormous. The report urges policymakers and utilities to “keep plans for deactivating existing generators flexible.” 

“Translated into English: If the first rule of holes is to stop digging, the first rule of electric grid reliability is to stop shutting down reliable power plants, including those powered by coal,” Orr said. 

Grid performance during winter storm

Last week’s Winter Storm Fern saw many areas of the U.S. come very close to blackouts as grids were stretched to their limits by weather-related demand. While many people experienced blackouts, these were not due to generation resource inadequacy. 

Orr and Mitch Rolling, director of research for Always On Energy Research, explained on their “Energy Bad Boys” Substack that there were “close calls and some uncomfortable lessons” for some parts of the grid during the storm. 

The Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO) — a regional trade organization (RTO), which plans, operates and manages the bulk power system across a region — came close to having to take high-demand customers off the grid — called load shedding — to prevent blackouts. 

This was likely, Orr and Rolling wrote, because wind speeds cratered during the storm, leaving the RTO’s wind resources dropping from 60% of their capacity factor down to just 7% on Saturday. 

New England ended up weathering the story by burning oil. At 5 p.m. local time on Saturday, the grid manager in the region was deriving 37% of its generation from oil, 25% from natural gas, 17% from nuclear, 12% from hydroelectric, and 8% from renewables, according to Meredith Angwin, a retired utility chemist and author of “Shorting the Grid.” 

Typically, New England burns no oil, and only about 0.4% of the U.S. total electricity generation comes from it, most of which is in Hawaii. The New England grid also was cut off from hydroelectric imports from Canada, as the neighbors up north cut off exports to meet their own demand. As homes in New England demanded more natural gas, competing with generators, the grid had to burn oil to keep from collapsing. 

Kerry Clapp, an energy consultant, explains in his “A Pragmatic Approach to Energy” Substack that the Texas grid saw wind and solar outages increase as the temperature dropped. Battery storage provided a “negligible” amount of power to the grid, while coal, natural gas and nuclear kept the lights on, Clapp wrote. 

Policy choices matter

Orr and Rolling point out that Energy Secretary Chris Wright’s orders earlier this year that kept coal plants running may have prevented shortfalls. 

The data on those facilities’ output during the storm isn’t currently available, but three plants in Michigan and Indiana that were prevented from shutdowns could have provided nearly as much as MISO’s entire wind resources early Saturday morning, when the wind farms were only producing a fraction of their capacity, according to Rolling and Orr. 

Orr told Just the News that looking at the nation’s grid performance during Winter Storm Fern shows that NERC’s warnings are not merely hypothetical. 

“NERC’s analysis is a clear warning that surging electricity demand and announced generator retirements mean much of the United States may not be able to avoid rolling blackouts during the next winter storm. However, it is important to understand that this outcome is not a foregone conclusion and that policy choices matter,” Orr said. 


Kevin Killough is the energy reporter for Just The News. You can follow him on X for more coverage.

Source: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/energy/grid-watchdog-warns-over-reliance-wind-and-solar-will-make-winter-blackouts

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Israel's Knesset moves to try Nukhba terrorists as Phase I of Trump's Gaza plan ends - Avi Solomon

 

by Avi Solomon

On Wednesday, a small forum will take place, with the participation of MK's Rothman, Malinovsky, Karin Elharar, Yoav Segalovitz, and Minister Yariv Levin.

 

Hamas Nukhba Battalion terrorists who were captured on October 7th massacre seen in a jail cell at a prison in central Israel, where high risk Hamas and Hezbollah prisoners captured in recent war are being held, March 4, 2025.
Hamas Nukhba Battalion terrorists who were captured on October 7th massacre seen in a jail cell at a prison in central Israel, where high risk Hamas and Hezbollah prisoners captured in recent war are being held, March 4, 2025.
(photo credit: CHAIM GOLDBEG/FLASH90)

 

The Knesset on Tuesday began accelerating efforts to pass the bill to bring Nukhba terrorists to trial, which was spearheaded by Constitution Committee Chairman MK Simcha Rothman (Religious Zionist Party) and MK Yulia Malinovsky (Yisrael Beytenu).

The push comes as Phase I of US President Donald Trump's 20-point plan concludes in Gaza.

Beyond formal committee discussions, additional meetings are being held to ensure that the main deliberations proceed smoothly and efficiently, including opposition members in the decision-making process.  

On Wednesday, a small forum will take place with MKs Rothman, Malinovsky, and Karin Elharar, Yoav Segalovitz, and Minister Yariv Levin.

Terrorists from Hamas's Nukhba Force being held at Ofer Prison near Jerusalem, August 28, 2024.
Terrorists from Hamas's Nukhba Force being held at Ofer Prison near Jerusalem, August 28, 2024. (credit: Chaim Goldberg/Flash90)

Where will the special tribunal be located?

Under the proposed legislation, a special tribunal will be established to try the Nukhba terrorists. As planning progresses, the bill’s sponsors asked the IDF Planning Directorate to assess the feasibility of holding the hearings in the Gaza border area.

However, this option faces challenges that may result in a change of direction, since it creates the need for the terrorists’ lawyers to travel from Palestinian Authority territory and to cross into Israel.

Ofer Prison is also under consideration as a possible location for the trial. But another set of difficulties arises with this option, since the facility is located beyond the Green Line. Additional locations proposed by the IDF include Qalandiya Camp, Salem Camp, and Ketziot Camp.

Preparations for the hearings and legislative schedule

The court proceedings are expected to be broadcast live, except for hearings designated as classified. The defendants will be heavily guarded during the sessions, and preparations are underway for the participation of the October 7 victims.

The goal of the bill’s sponsors is to complete its passage in the second and third readings in the Knesset plenum by the end of the current winter session.


Avi Solomon

Source: https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-885411

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‘I don’t support ICE’: Gas station refusal ignites debate over denying service to federal agents - Charles Creitz

 

by Charles Creitz

Gregory Bovino was followed out of Speedway store by manager who said he 'personally don't care' if refusal was illegal

 

 


 

   

 

 

 

 

A string of recent incidents in which ICE agents and Department of Homeland Security leadership have been refused service at corporate gas stations and hotel chains has raised questions about whether private businesses can lawfully deny service to federal law enforcement officers.

The incidents — including ICE agents who were turned away from hotels and a Border Patrol commander being denied service at a gas station — have prompted debate over whether such refusals amount to lawful private discretion or illegal discrimination against federal law enforcement carrying out official duties.

The most recent flashpoint unfolded at a Speedway gas station, where video captured by conservative activist Cam Higby showed U.S. Border Patrol Cmdr. Gregory Bovino being followed out of the store by a man identifying himself as a manager.

Bovino himself was silent on the matter when asked by Higby among the crowd outside Speedway, while Deputy Homeland Security Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said similar situations had transpired at several different gas stations where agitators stalked agents.

'TASTES LIKE DEMOCRACY': SAN FRANCISCO BAKERY SELLS ANTI-ICE COOKIES

Gregory Bovino walks

USPB Cmdr. Gregory K. Bovino walks out of a gas station in Minnesota. (Roberto Schmidt/Getty Images)

When Higby asked the man why he refused Bovino service, he replied: "Because I wanted to. I don’t support ICE and nobody here does."

The man remained silent when asked if he thought it was legal to deny service to federal agents based on their role, while the employee could be heard saying, "If it is [illegal] I personally don’t care."

Fox News Digital reached out to Speedway and its parent company, 7-Eleven, for a response. An employee who picked up the corporate phone line said he would forward this reporter’s message to the "proper department," but no comment was returned.

The incident follows other similar situations, including the case of a then-Hampton Inn-branded hotel in nearby Lakeville, Minnesota, where employees repeatedly refused service to ICE agents; canceling reservations and asking them to "pass on" the news they were unwelcome.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem was also denied entry to a building in a Chicago suburb to use the restroom.

BEN & JERRY’S CO-FOUNDER CALLS FOR ICE TO BE 'DEFUNDED AND DISBANDED': 'THIS IS NOT FREEDOM'

After public apologies from Hilton and the franchisee, Everpeak Hospitality, Hilton eventually took corrective action by removing the inn from its rolls and even sending a crane to remove its Hampton Inn sign from the roadside.

Hilton CEO Christopher Nassetta later told The Guardian that it also closed a DoubleTree hotel where ICE agents were staying after the property received bomb threats.

Nassetta suggested a distinction in the two cases: "A safety and security issue is a different issue — it’s closed to all."

ANTI-ICE AGITATORS OCCUPY MINNESOTA TARGET STORE, DEMAND RETAILER STOP HELPING FEDERAL AGENTS

ICE agents stand outside in the cold in Minnesota.

The GSA removed a Minnesota Hampton Inn from all federal lodging programs after the hotel refused to accommodate ICE and immigration agents. (Christopher Juhn/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Former Assistant U.S. Attorney for North Florida Zack Smith told Fox News Digital that, from a practical standpoint, the behavior of people like the Speedway manager as reported was wrong.

TRUMP ADMIN SLAMS DEMS’ ‘CALL 911 ON ICE’ PUSH AS RECKLESS, LINKS POLICY TO RIOTS AND VIOLENT ARRESTS

"It’s shameful conduct to try to penalize men and women who are going out, day in and day out, seeking to enforce federal… law, seeking to penalize them and refusing to provide them services," said Smith, currently a senior legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation’s Institute for Constitutional Government.

"We've seen this in the past, particularly when a lot of emotions were high in the aftermath of George Floyd's death in Minneapolis, in other places where individuals were refusing service to law enforcement."

Smith said in an exclusive interview that while the businesses may retain the legal right to deny Bovino or others services, it doesn’t make it right.

PHILADELPHIA’S THREAT TO PROSECUTE ICE COULD TRIGGER LANDMARK COURT FIGHT OVER AUTHORITY, EXPERTS WARN

Protestors clash with law enforcement in Minneapolis

U.S. Border Patrol Cmdr. Gregory Bovino, center, joins federal agents at the scene of a shooting in Minneapolis. (Ellen Schmidt/MinnPost via AP)

"I think that's shameful conduct and, at the end of the day, it ultimately has harmed many of those businesses. Now, in terms of whether businesses have the right to turn away law enforcement officers, just because they may have the right to do it doesn't make it the right thing morally to do."

The best recourse, Smith said, is not a legal one — but the power that every American consumer has. That appeared to be the case after the Speedway tape went viral and critics promised to stop patronizing the otherwise ubiquitous convenience store chain.


 

 

Video 

After Bovino was blocked from Speedway, conservative ire erupted online at the chain and its parent 7-Eleven — including for not publicly addressing the situation in any prominent way, as Hilton had.

"I suspect part of that is the reason, you mentioned earlier, that Hilton was revoking the franchise of some hotels that refuse to honor reservations for federal law enforcement [is] they understand that many consumers are not going to approve or like it when businesses are refusing service to individuals simply because they are members of law enforcement," Smith said.

Charles Creitz

Source: https://www.foxnews.com/politics/i-dont-support-ice-gas-station-refusal-ignites-debate-over-denying-service-federal-agents

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