Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Biden FBI secretly set up Trump to be indicted after he leaves office, Arctic Frost memos suggest - John Solomon and Jerry Dunleavy

 

by John Solomon and Jerry Dunleavy

Jack Smith’s team primed their criminal case against Donald Trump to resume once his presidency ends.

 

In the final weeks of Joe Biden’s presidency, FBI agents tied to Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation memorialized anew their belief that President Donald Trump broke the law in contesting the 2020 election and secretly arranged to preserve their evidence until 2030 in memos that raise alarm they could revive their prosecution after Trump leaves office.

The FBI memos and emails closing out the controversial Arctic Frost investigation – obtained by Just the News – show the bureau chose not to relinquish the evidence it gathered after Smith went to court to dismiss charges against Trump, even though that is the normal practice for agents. Instead, they created a preservation order keeping the evidence in FBI custody for two years after Trump's second term ends, claiming it was necessary to do so because of ongoing litigation, the memos show.

FBI emails and memos obtained by Just the News dating back to early 2025 show how the FBI agents and DOJ prosecutors who had been working on the criminal prosecutions aimed at Trump and his allies worked to close the 2020 election-related case against the incoming president, while also seemingly leaving open the door for the criminal case to be revived once Trump leaves office and a Democrat again holds the reins at the Justice Department.

“The American people deserve to know how this egregious weaponization of power to target political opponents and President Trump happened inside an institution meant to protect them,” FBI Director Kash Patel told Just the News. “We shut down the weaponized CR-15 squad, and we are going to keep following the facts until there is full accountability. The FBI exists to protect the country, not to preserve political prosecutions for a future administration.”

Following Trump’s victory in November 2024 over Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris, Smith sought to dismiss his case against Trump “without prejudice” – leaving open the possibility that the charges could be refiled in the future.

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan, appointed to the federal bench by President Barack Obama, pointed to the Office of Legal Counsel’s position that a sitting president could not be prosecuted by his own DOJ and granted Smith’s request to dismiss the case without prejudice.

One of the key “Case Closing” documents obtained by Just the News – originating from the FBI's Washington Field Office’s CR-15 team – was dated a couple of weeks into Trump’s second term, on February 5, 2025, when many holdover FBI agents and leaders were still in place.

The newly-released closing document from early 2025 repeated the extensive claims of criminality against Trump, which had been pursued by Smith and the bureau, and it sought to retain all of the evidence for a half decade until at least February 2030, when Trump would be a former president once more and thus when the DOJ guidance prohibiting the prosecution of a sitting president would no longer be in force.

The document was titled “Arctic Frost – Election Law Matters – Sensitive Investigative Matter” and its synopsis was “To Document the Closing of Captioned Investigation.” The listed enclosures buttressing the document were a “Deputy Special Counsel Concurrence” and the “Retention of Evidence Approval.”

The FBI record states, “This Electronic Communication seeks approval to close the captioned full Sensitive Investigative Matter investigation” and argued that “because this was a SIM opened by a Field Office and involved a presidential candidate, the same level of approval required to open the investigation is also required to close the investigation.”

Evidence released last year showed that then-Attorney General Merrick Garland, then-Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco, and then-FBI Director Christopher Wray signed off on the launch of the Arctic Frost inquiry into Trump related to the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot. 

Garland also quickly said he “personally approved the decision to seek a search warrant” for the FBI’s unprecedented raid of Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate in 2022. The Biden White House was also directly linked to the classified documents investigation into Trump, despite its denials, previously-released records show.

“The approval roles on this closing EC match those of the opening EC and, as such, Washington Field Office is seeking approval up to and including the Director of the FBI to close this investigation,” the newly released FBI document said.

The document included a “Summary of the Results of the Investigation” into Trump, which had been pursued by Smith and the FBI, arguing that “the captioned FBI investigation was opened based on specific and articulable facts and circumstances that individuals affiliated with Donald J. Trump for President, Inc. (the ‘Trump Campaign’) engaged in activity that violated federal law.”

The FBI memo alleged that “the investigation revealed that when Donald J. Trump lost the 2020 presidential election, he resorted to crimes to try to stay in office. With various co-conspirators, Trump launched a series of plans to overturn the legitimate election results in seven states that he had lost – Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.”

The bureau record also alleged that “Trump and his co-conspirators used knowingly false claims of election fraud in furtherance of three conspiracies: 1) a conspiracy to interfere with the federal government function by which the nation collects and counts election results, which is set forth in the Constitution and the Electoral Count Act; 2) a conspiracy to obstruct the official proceeding in which Congress certifies the legitimate results of the presidential election; and 3) a conspiracy against the rights of millions of Americans to vote and have their votes counted.”

The section on the “Disposition of Evidence” related to Smith’s anti-Trump investigation argued that “this investigation is subject to a litigation hold and is on the freeze list; as a result, no evidence can be returned or destroyed and must be retained.” 

The FBI memo said that FBI assistant special agent in charge approval “to retain all evidence notwithstanding closure” of the case was obtained “as required” by the FBI’s Field Evidence Management Policy Guide.

“The Retention EC specifies that the evidence will be retained until at least February 1, 2030, but in no case prior to the lift of the freeze and litigation hold and that the Special Counsel's Office concurred with the retention of evidence,” the FBI memo said.

“A prosecutor’s job is to gather facts discreetly, apply the law fairly, and decide whether a case should be brought," Bud Cummins, a former U.S. Attorney in the Eastern District of Arkansas, recently told Just the News. "If the case cannot or should not be prosecuted, the prosecutor should close the file — not write a political narrative, preserve a roadmap, and leave behind a prosecution kit for future use."

"The Jack Smith model turns prosecutorial discretion upside down: When the courtroom is unavailable, the report becomes the weapon," Cummins added. "That is not neutral law enforcement; it is yet another in a long line of blows to the credibility of the Department of Justice.”

The “Summary of the Reason for Closing” the anti-Trump inquiry was also laid out in the newly-released FBI memo.

“As a result of the November 5, 2024 election, Trump is now president-elect and will be inaugurated as president on January 20, 2025,” the FBI memo said. “As a result of the Department of Justice, Office of Legal Counsel's opinion that a sitting president cannot be federally indicted and prosecuted, the United States moved to dismiss the Indictments without prejudice before Trump's inauguration. On November 25, 2024, the District Court granted the Government's unopposed motion and dismissed the Indictments without prejudice.”

The FBI memo also included a “Department of Justice Concurrence” written by an unnamed “Deputy Special Counsel” for Smith dated January 8, 2025, just a couple weeks prior to Trump’s second inauguration.

The Smith deputy special counsel is identifiable from the documents as former DOJ prosecutor J.P. Cooney, who is now a candidate in a Democratic primary to be a congressman in Virginia.

“Cooney served as a supervisor in the Department of Justice’s Public Integrity Section and as Chief of the Fraud and Public Corruption Section of the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Washington, D.C. before joining Jack Smith’s Special Counsel’s Office to help lead the investigations and prosecutions of President Donald Trump,” Cooney’s campaign website says. 

“As Principal Deputy to Special Counsel Jack Smith, Cooney was a lead prosecutor in both criminal prosecutions of President Trump for retention of classified documents and efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election.”

The FBI memo quoted extensively from the Smith deputy special counsel – Cooney – who had written to the FBI’s Washington Field Office in January 2025 that "the SCO has submitted a final confidential report to the Attorney General, has concluded its work, and is winding down the office” and that “under the circumstances, the SCO must decline further prosecution of the FBI’s Arctic Frost Investigation, and we do not object to FBI closing the case file.”

“As stated in public filings, the SCO dismissed the case against Donald Trump based on his impending inauguration as president, consistent with the Department’s longstanding policy prohibiting the indictment and prosecution of a sitting president; the dismissal was not based on the merits of the prosecution, which the SCO stands behind,” Cooney had written, according to the FBI. “Because the SCO reached no final conclusions [regarding the prosecution of co-conspirators], our declination of further prosecution should not be read to exonerate any particular person."

Cooney’s email to the FBI closely tracks the sentiments expressed in a letter that Smith sent to Garland the day prior as he sought the release of his final report.

Then-Trump defense lawyer Todd Blanche, now the acting U.S. attorney general, wrote to Garland to block the release of Smith’s report.

“As you know, Courts in Florida and the District of Columbia have now dismissed both of Jack Smith's failed cases against President Trump,” Blanche told Garland on January 6, 2025. “Rather than acknowledging, as he must, President Trump's complete exoneration, Smith now seeks to disseminate an extrajudicial ‘Final Report’ to perpetuate his false and discredited accusations.”

Smith retorted in a letter the next day to Garland, saying, “Mr. Trump's letter claims that dismissal of his criminal cases signifies Mr. Trump's ‘complete exoneration.’ That is false. As the Office explained in its dismissal motions and in the Report, the Department's view that the Constitution prohibits Mr. Trump's indictment and prosecution while he is in office is categorical and does not turn on the gravity of the crimes charged, the strength of the Government's proof, or the merits of the prosecution-all of which the Office stands fully behind.”

The newly-public FBI memo left out exactly one piece of Cooney’s own January 2025 email, according to another FBI memo obtained by Just the News, in which he doubled down on arguing that Trump was a criminal, stating that “I note that Mr. Trump was charged with participating in crimes with at least six co-conspirators.”

Another related closure memo from the FBI obtained by Just the News – dated January 10, 2025 – was specifically penned by the Washington Field Office “To Document ASAC Approval to Retain All Evidence.”

The memo also said that “the anticipated disposition date is no earlier than February 1, 2030, but in no case prior to the lift of the freeze and litigation hold” and that “the Deputy Special Counsel concurs with this request.”

The FBI memo again stressed Cooney’s argument that "the dismissal was not based on the merits of the prosecution, which the SCO stands behind” and that "declination of further prosecution should not be read to exonerate any particular person."

This bureau memo also quoted a message written by the Smith deputy special counsel purportedly on January 8, 2024 (but likely actually the same date in 2025), in which he said that "under the circumstances, and in accordance with the litigation hold requiring the preservation of materials related to the SCO’s work, the SCO concurs with FBI retaining evidence in the Arctic Frost Investigation/SCO Election Interference Investigation." 

The FBI said that it would be retaining evidence including but not limited to search warrant material, interview recordings, voluntary productions, grand jury material, open-source downloads, and a compilation of all discovery provided to Trump during the prosecution of him by the Biden DOJ.

An FBI memo from the Washington Field Office dated September 30, 2025, indicated that “FBI Acting Director Daniel J. Bongino and Attorney General Pamela Bondi approved closing the captioned investigation.”

“Based on the signed approval of FBI Acting Director Daniel J. Bongino and Attorney General Pamela Bondi, the undersigned respectfully requests to close the captioned full SIM investigation while retaining the evidence in the FBI's custody and control,” an FBI official wrote.

The FBI raided Trump’s Florida resort home in August 2022 with the authorization of Garland. The Biden attorney general then picked Smith in November 2022 to lead the twin criminal investigations into Trump related to classified documents and the Capitol riot.

Garland’s appointment order for Smith in November 2022 said the special counsel was “authorized to conduct the ongoing investigation into whether any person or entity violated the law in connection with efforts to interfere with the lawful transfer of power following the 2020 presidential election or the certification of the Electoral College vote held on or about January 6, 2021.” Smith was “further authorized to conduct the ongoing investigation” related to the FBI raid of Mar-a-Lago.

Members of the Biden White House and leaders at the Biden-era Justice Department and FBI were all involved in efforts linked to the launch of the Arctic Frost investigation, which targeted then-former President Trump and his political allies over the events related to the riot. 

Smith indicted Trump in August 2023 related to the then-former president’s alleged actions related to the 2020 election, with superseding charges in August 2024. Smith contended that Trump “pursued unlawful means of discounting legitimate votes and subverting the election results.”

The FBI’s Arctic Frost investigation also targeted dozens of GOP officials and organizations.

Trump and other Republicans have repeatedly alleged that Smith and the FBI were themselves engaging in election influence by trying to bring charges, hold trials, and obtain convictions against Trump ahead of the 2024 election. 


John Solomon and Jerry Dunleavy

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/courts-law/fbi-and-jack-smith-prosecutor-sought-hold-anti-trump-evidence-until-he-left

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Trump: US will prevail over Iran ‘peacefully or otherwise’ - JNS Staff

 

by JNS Staff

The Islamic Republic “cannot have a nuclear weapon,” the American president reiterated.

 

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to the press as he departs the White House, May 12, 2026. Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images.
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to the press as he departs the White House, May 12, 2026. Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images.

U.S. President Donald Trump warned on Tuesday that the Iranian regime would be “decimated” if it refused to agree to end the war, saying the United States would prevail “peacefully or otherwise.”

“We’ll win it one way or the other,” Trump told journalists at the White House before departing for China. “Their navy is gone, their air force is gone; every single element of their war machine is gone.”

The regime “killed 42,000 people at least over the last month and a half—we’re gonna... we’ll win,” the president continued.

The Islamic Republic “cannot have a nuclear weapon,” Trump stressed. “They will not have a nuclear weapon. They know that... we don’t play games.”

“We’re either going to make a deal or they’re going to be decimated—so one way or the other, we win,” Trump said.

He added that Iran would likely not be among the topics he planned to discuss with Chinese President Xi Jinping during his visit, saying Washington had Tehran “very much under control.”

Trump on Tuesday told Sid Rosenberg, host of “Sid & Friends in the Morning” on WABC radio, that the Islamic Republic had initially agreed to hand over its enriched uranium, “but then they changed their mind.”

“I call it the nuclear dust because it’s appropriate. It’s easier for people to understand. And we’re going to get it,” he reiterated.

“The problem is there’s only two countries in the world that can get it, us and China, because nobody has the equipment. Because when we bombed it, it was a total—that I was right—it was a total obliteration. The entire mountain collapsed on top of it,” said Trump.

On Saturday, the U.S. president warned that “Operation Project Freedom” in the Strait of Hormuz could be resumed and expanded if Tehran does not agree to a deal ending the war and dismantling its nuclear program.

Trump launched “Operation Project Freedom” on May 4 to safeguard merchant vessels following a series of Iranian attacks in the vital waterway. Tehran has largely blocked the strait since the start of the war, triggering a spike in global fuel prices and putting pressure on financial markets.

The operation was suspended two days after its launch at the request of Pakistan, which is mediating talks with Tehran.

Trump’s threat followed an exchange of fire between U.S. and Iranian forces in the Strait of Hormuz, adding to uncertainty over the temporary ceasefire that Washington says remains in effect.

Trump told journalists on Monday that the Islamabad-brokered truce with the Iranian regime was “unbelievably weak” and “on life support.”

“I would call it the weakest right now after reading the piece of garbage [proposal] they sent us. I said, ‘I’m not even going to waste my time reading it.’ I would say it’s one of the weakest. Right now, it’s on life support,” he declared. 


JNS Staff

Source: https://www.jns.org/news/u-s-news/trump-us-will-prevail-over-iran-peacefully-or-otherwise

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Trump Can Stare Down a Weak Xi Jinping This Week - Gordon G. Chang

 

by Gordon G. Chang

China's people — to the regime "building material" — are now extremely unhappy in the Communist Party "engineering state." Gloom, as a result, has descended over Chinese society.

 

  • Xi Jinping's inward-facing actions, however, betray a deep sense of insecurity. Trump can take advantage of it.

  • China's people — to the regime "building material" — are now extremely unhappy in the Communist Party "engineering state." Gloom, as a result, has descended over Chinese society.

  • Xi has responded to the unhappiness in society by initiating a censorship campaign against "excessively pessimistic sentiment." Most significantly, he is not willing to implement structural changes to put more money in the pockets of the laobaixing, the common folk.

  • No wonder China's intellectuals and social media users refer to this moment as their country's "garbage time of history."

  • Unfortunately, Xi considers the United States an existential threat not because of anything Americans say or do but because of who they are. An insecure ruling organization in Beijing is afraid of the inspirational impact of American values and form of governance on the Chinese people. This means, try as Americans might, their democracy will never have amicable relations with China as long as it is ruled by the Communist Party.

Chinese President Xi Jinping's inward-facing actions betray a deep sense of insecurity. US President Donald Trump can take advantage of it. Pictured: Trump and Xi in Beijing on November 9, 2017. (Photo by Thomas Peter-Pool/Getty Images)

The Washington Post this week reported that Xi Jinping, on the eve of his summit with President Donald Trump, is "confident in China's power." The country, from the outside, looks strong.

Xi's inward-facing actions, however, betray a deep sense of insecurity. Trump can take advantage of it.

As Yanzhong Huang of the Council on Foreign Relations wrote in the New York Times on May 10, Xi has created and reinforced ridiculous narratives of American decline inside the "information cocoon" the Communist Party has created. For instance, the notion of an "American kill line" — millions of American families are "teetering on a precipice" where they are "one lost job, illness, or unexpected expense away from ruin" — has taken hold in China.

"Insular, nationalist voices are amplified more than ever," Huang writes. "Zhang Weiwei, a university professor who served as Deng Xiaoping's interpreter and has millions of online followers, absurdly claimed in a viral video in January that China is the only country in the world whose people eat well."

Why the hostility?

The Communist Party is in defensive mode. Its leaders have no other way to justify their failures than to denigrate others, primarily the United States.

China's people have largely lost hope, and it is not hard to see why. The regime's leaders, says Dan Wang, author of Breakneck: China's Quest to Engineer the Future, "treat society as a big engineering project, where people are yet another building material that the leadership just want to tweak and destroy if necessary."

China's people — to the regime "building material" — are now extremely unhappy in the Communist Party "engineering state." Gloom, as a result, has descended over Chinese society.

"As a leader of a totalitarian—not simply authoritarian—regime, the Communist Party controls narratives domestically," Piero Tozzi, senior director for China Policy of the America First Policy Institute, told Gatestone on May 10. "It is increasingly difficult for it to dispel the nationwide awareness of malaise."

The pervasive pessimism has resulted in people "lying flat" — embracing a "low-desire life" — or "retiring" — leaving cities to work on farms. In one way or another, the Chinese are opting out of society.

The University of Pennsylvania's Victor Mair has collected other words and phrases for leaving society, including "Buddha whatever," "Kong Yijiism," and "involution." "China today has so many memes for opting out," he wrote in July 2023. Young educated Chinese constantly find new ways to show discontent. People with resources, not surprisingly, are leaving China.

The gloom is most fundamentally reflected in the country's collapsing demography. Beijing reports the county's population was 1.4 billion at the end of last year. The UN's median estimate for turn-of-the-century population is 633.4 million. Others, such as Yi Fuxian of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, have issued far lower numbers. "Left unaddressed," Yi wrote, "China's demographic trap could precipitate a civilizational collapse."

"China has embarked on a road of demographic no-return," wrote Wang Feng of the University of California, Irvine.

Xi Jinping has responded to the unhappiness in society by initiating a censorship campaign against "excessively pessimistic sentiment." Most significantly, he is not willing to implement structural changes to put more money in the pockets of the laobaixing, the common folk.

Xi's control and surveillance mechanisms, in their totality, are especially merciless. Those people with low social-credit scores have been completely cut off from society and must sleep in the streets.

No wonder China's intellectuals and social media users refer to this moment as their country's "garbage time of history."

"These days, there is a sense of bitter anger among the people at being the voiceless victims of the state's obsession with world power and beating the United States," wrote Helen Gao in the New York Times in November 2025.

What does Huang of the Council on Foreign Relations suggest? Deterrence and "restoring the human connections that once helped hold the relationship together."

Xi, however, has been determinedly cutting links with foreign parties, a tactic Chinese leaders have used through millennia when they felt pressure from the outside threatened their rule. There is little the U.S. can do in this situation. It cannot force Xi to reestablish these links.

Unfortunately, Xi considers the United States an existential threat not because of anything Americans say or do but because of who they are. An insecure ruling organization in Beijing is afraid of the inspirational impact of American values and form of governance on the Chinese people. This means, try as Americans might, their democracy will never have amicable relations with China as long as it is ruled by the Communist Party.

When Xi is worried about contact with the outside, it is hard to engage his regime or society. Trump is confronting a brittle China in Beijing this week.

 


Gordon G. Chang
is the author of Plan Red: China's Project to Destroy America, a Gatestone Institute distinguished senior fellow, and a member of its Advisory Board.

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22528/trump-weak-xi-jinping

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Trump May Wish to Reconsider Supporting Term Limits - Edward Ring

 

by Edward Ring

Term limits don’t drain the swamp—they empower the permanent bureaucracy by forcing out the only elected officials experienced enough to challenge it.

 

 

Attempts to restructure government at the federal level are mostly on the Democrat agenda. Pack the US Supreme Court. Elect presidents via popular vote. Turn Puerto Rico and Washington, DC, into states with two senators each. Implement national mail-in voting, automatic voter registration, legalize ballot harvesting, lower the voting age to 16, let felons vote, let noncitizens vote. And, of course, end the Senate filibuster. If they could, Democrats would do all of this.

Meanwhile, however, there is a growing bipartisan movement to implement term limits for members of the House and Senate. A bill has been introduced in the 119th Congress, and President Trump has supported term limits consistently since he first ran for president in 2016. But federal term limits would do more harm than good. Explaining why offers insights into how an entrenched bureaucracy gains power in democracies, and California is a prime example.

Term limits came to California back in 1990 via a ballot initiative, because it was the only way the state’s Republicans, still relatively influential, could get rid of Willie Brown. For decades, Assembly Speaker Brown controlled everything that happened in the state legislature. If Brown didn’t support your bill, your bill was dead. As a 25-year veteran member of the Assembly, Brown virtually ruled Sacramento by 1990. Every piece of legislation required his imprimatur. And every aspiring Democrat, including Brown’s protégé Kamala Harris, went through Brown on their way to prominence in state politics.

The consequences have been enormous. Brown may not have been a Republican favorite, but he got things done. By virtue of his many years in the Capitol, Brown knew how every lever of power worked, and he knew every bureaucrat, every union official, and every lobbyist. He was a perennial player; he knew the game backwards and forwards, and when something had to happen in California, Brown was there to make it happen. Say what you will about his politics or his party; back then, California had a government that worked.

Today, California’s politics are gridlocked, while the state has moved from purple in the 1990s to the deepest shade of blue in the nation. This transition is in no small part because, since 1990, California’s politicians are termed out after 12 years. That limit applies to their cumulative time in the state legislature. If they serve three terms in the state assembly and then are elected to the state senate, their six years served in the assembly are deducted from how long they can serve in the senate. Ever since term limits were passed back in 1990, not one state legislator has been active for more than 12 years.

The consequences don’t invite imitation. More than ever, Sacramento is ruled by a faceless, all-powerful blob. This amorphous and unaccountable blob is a gelatinous mélange of lobbyists, union bosses, and entrenched political staffers who bounce from one elected official’s Capitol office to the next. It is an amalgamation of career professionals who spend 30–40 years in the Capitol, learning every nuance of power. They are perpetual. The politicians are transient. Term limits didn’t shrink the blob. The opposite happened.

By limiting how long politicians can serve in Sacramento, the opportunity for any politician, good or bad, to wield genuine influence is fatally undermined. It takes a few terms before any politician in Sacramento begins to fully grasp how the system works. And by then, they’re about to be termed out. There is no opportunity for elected leaders to emerge in the legislature who have developed the skill and ability to stand up to the blob. And the blob does not answer to the people.

It’s important to emphasize the variety of ways, all of them strategic, that losing long-serving and highly skilled politicians would affect the United States. The history of our federal system yields important examples of politicians who spent decades in the House or the Senate and, throughout those decades, developed as statesmen whose influence defined our politics and our culture. But we would not just lose statesmen who have earned the allegiance of their constituents and a leadership role in the House or Senate. We would lose the quiet experts and coalition builders who rallied and maintained the political will to build America.

If there had been term limits, we would not have had Henry Clay, known not only for being the architect of the Missouri Compromise of 1820 and the Compromise of 1850 but also for championing through Congress strategic tariffs and infrastructure spending that catalyzed America’s emergence as a manufacturing superpower in the 19th century. Term limits would have also eliminated Carl Hayden, the driving force behind massive water and power infrastructure projects in the 20th century that enabled America to become the world’s largest economy.

Clay served in the House and Senate from 1806 to 1852. Hayden served from 1912 to 1969. Their greatest accomplishments were in the latter half of their careers in politics. The projects they fought for take decades to realize. Who will provide continuity and expert oversight for national efforts of this magnitude if politicians get termed out after 12 years?

As someone who has supported President Trump ever since he emerged as a candidate for president in 2015, I am often asked if there is anything he’s ever done that I disagree with. Here in California, Democrats often perceive a Trump supporter as a member of a cult, unable to express dissent of any kind. So to be clear, I agree with almost every policy the president has enacted. My friends in Washington, DC, share stories of incredible corruption and waste that are finally being expunged; they describe agencies that were nothing but engines to disburse funds to favored constituents, with no regard for their mission or for delivering genuine results.

None of these reforms could have happened without President Trump. And while his rhetorical style may be pugilistic, unnervingly spontaneous, and at times needlessly cruel, when it comes to actions, he is almost always right. But I disagree with him on term limits.

Imagine what Washington, DC, already gripped by a deep-state bureaucracy, would be like if elected politicians were termed out of office right about the point where they’d acquired enough experience to navigate this swamp. Whatever oversight is still possible, whatever reforms and restructurings that might be in the interests of the American people would no longer have advocates who had mastered the details and could exercise long-term leadership. Of course, many members of Congress become swamp rats, entrenched, bought, manipulated, and indifferent to their constituents. But our obligation as citizens is to expose them and ensure that they lose the next election. If they’re such a problem, we must find a candidate to oppose them who can earn a majority of the votes in their district. That’s how you term-limit a bad politician. You beat them in an election.

When you eliminate the bad politicians, you also eliminate the good ones. You turn the machinery of government over to people who have spent decades learning how to control elected politicians, many of whom come into Congress without any previous experience in government. It is easy to disparage all politicians and, therefore, wish to control them by sticking a revolving door into the system and pushing everyone in and out after 12 years. But be careful what you wish for.

Photo: A lone Capitol police officer is seen in an empty corridor of the US Capitol in Washington, DC on March 19, 2020. Two US lawmakers including a Florida representative on March 18, 2020, became the first members of Congress to announce they have tested positive for the novel coronavirus. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) 


Edward Ring is a senior fellow of the Center for American Greatness. He is also the director of water and energy policy for the California Policy Center, which he co-founded in 2013 and served as its first president. Ring is the author of Fixing California: Abundance, Pragmatism, Optimism (2021) and The Abundance Choice: Our Fight for More Water in California (2022).

Source: https://amgreatness.com/2026/05/13/trump-may-wish-to-reconsider-supporting-term-limits/

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Hamas is preventing Gazan contractors from crossing Yellow Line to rebuild Rafah - report - Jerusalem Post Staff

 

by Jerusalem Post Staff

The contractors were threatened at gunpoint by Hamas militants, who refused to permit them passage to the site. The contractors, who came from various parts of the Strip, were forcibly turned away.

 

YOUNG PALESTINIAN workers break up concrete while working on rubble in Khan Yunis, in the southern Gaza Strip.
YOUNG PALESTINIAN workers break up concrete while working on rubble in Khan Yunis, in the southern Gaza Strip.
(photo credit: Ramadan Abed/Reuters)

 

Palestinian contractors from Gaza, who were scheduled to reach the Israeli-controlled side of the strip in order to work on rebuilding Rafah, were blocked by Hamas last week, KAN reported on Tuesday.

The passage was facilitated by the IDF and the US-led Civil-Military Coordination Center as part of initial efforts to build a new Palestinian city in Rafah, often referred to as "Emirates City" in diplomatic circles.

The project was named after being funded by the United Arab Emirates, which has pledged approximately $1.2 billion towards Gaza's recovery. This specific project is aimed at housing tens of thousands of displaced Gazans.

However, the contractors were threatened at gunpoint by Hamas militants, who refused to permit them passage to the site. The contractors, who came from various parts of the Strip, were forcibly turned away.

Hamas views the UAE-funded project not just as aid, but as a political maneuver to replace its authority, having previously labeled the board as "international guardianship."

Terrorists from Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad stand on a street during Eid al-Fitr in Gaza City, March 20, 2026.
Terrorists from Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad stand on a street during Eid al-Fitr in Gaza City, March 20, 2026. (credit: REUTERS/DAWOUD ABU ALKAS)

'We are approaching a resumption of fighting in Gaza'

This marks the first time Hamas has actively blocked activity approved by Trump's Board of Peace, which is attempting to move forward with rebuilding the strip and reestablishing civilian governance.

This is seen as proof that Hamas is taking advantage of the ceasefire to strengthen its own position. They have refused to agree to disarm or transfer their power to civilian governance.

Israeli officials have reportedly warned the US that fighting in Gaza could be resumed if the situation persists.

The incident underscores ongoing frictions with Hamas, potentially signaling a breakdown of the status quo and current de-escalation efforts.

Clause 13 of the Trump Plan mandates that any interference with reconstruction by armed factions is a violation of the ceasefire, effectively giving Israel the legal "green light" to restart operations.


Jerusalem Post Staff

Source: https://www.jpost.com/american-politics/article-895965

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Mossad chief, Shin Bet head visited UAE to coordinate during Operation Roaring Lion - report - Shir Perets

 

by Shir Perets

The report comes just after the WSJ published that the UAE was behind some of the recent strikes against Iranian assets, such as the attacks on Lavan Island's refinery at the beginning of April.

 

Mossad chief David Barnea (L) and Shin Bet chief David Zini at a Memorial Day ceremony at the Western Wall, in Jerusalem's Old City, April 20, 2026.
Mossad chief David Barnea (L) and Shin Bet chief David Zini at a Memorial Day ceremony at the Western Wall, in Jerusalem's Old City, April 20, 2026.
(photo credit: CHAIM GOLDBERG/FLASH90)

 

Mossad chief David Barnea visited the UAE at least twice during Operation Roaring Lion to coordinate regarding the war, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday, citing Arab officials and a source familiar with the matter. Barnea reportedly flew to the UAE in March and April.

According to KAN News, Shin Bet chief David Zini also visited the UAE, and the two countries were coordinated on security issues during the war.

The report comes just after the WSJ published that the UAE was behind some of the recent strikes against Iranian assets, such as the attacks on Lavan Island's refinery at the beginning of April.

According to the report, which cited sources informed in the matter, the UAE carried out the strikes secretly as a response to Iran targeting Emirati civilian and energy infrastructures.

Iran later sent another barrage of drones and missiles against both the UAE and Kuwait in response to this attack, even if there was no official confirmation of who was behind it at that time.

A cleric walks near a residential building damaged by a strike on March 4, in Tehran, Iran, April 14, 2026.
A cleric walks near a residential building damaged by a strike on March 4, in Tehran, Iran, April 14, 2026. (credit: THAIER AL-SUDANI/REUTERS)

Israel and the UAE have continued to grow their partnership in the shadow of the Iran war, with United States Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee confirming that Israel sent Iron Dome batteries to the United Arab Emirates to use in defense against Iranian attacks during an interview at a Thursday Tel Aviv University conference.

“Can I say a word of appreciation for the United Arab Emirates... they were the first Abraham Accords member,” Huckabee said when asked about a potential expansion of the Abraham Accords.

“Look at the benefits,” he said. “Israel just sent them Iron Dome batteries and personnel to help operate them. How come? Because there’s an extraordinary relationship between the UAE and Israel.”

More players in Iran war revealed

On Tuesday, Reuters revealed that Saudi Arabia launched numerous, unpublicized strikes on Iran in retaliation for attacks carried out in the kingdom during the Middle East war, marking the first time the kingdom is known to have directly carried out military action on Iranian soil.

The attacks, launched by the Saudi Air Force, were assessed to have been carried out in late March, the two Western officials said. One said only that they were "tit-for-tat strikes in retaliation for when Saudi [Arabia] was hit."

Reuters was unable to confirm what the specific targets were.

In response to a request for comment, a senior Saudi foreign ministry official did not directly address whether strikes had been carried out.

Tobias Holcman, Shoshana Baker and Reuters contributed to this report.

This is a developing story.


Shir Perets

Source: https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/iran-news/article-896041

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Like Trump in 2024, independents in CA are breaking for Republicans with 'common sense' policies - Amanda Head

 

by Amanda Head

California hasn’t had a Republican governor since Arnold Schwarzenegger in 2011; Los Angeles hasn’t had a Republican mayor since 2001. An NBC Los Angeles online survey said that about 89% of respondents viewed Pratt as the clear winner of the mayoral debate.

 

In what could cause a seismic November shock in California, independent voters in the Golden State are breaking for Republicans across statewide races, recent polling shows.

The striking development captured in the latest California poll from Kreate Strategies shows that independent voters are showing a clear shift toward Republican candidates, including Steve Hilton who leads the field at 22%, edging out Democrat Xavier Becerra at 20% in the top-two primary format. Kreate says it was not paid by any campaign or outside organization. 

A broader realignment in California politics

With Sheriff Chad Bianco, another Republican, pulling in 13 percent, the data reflects how no-party-preference voters — who make up a growing bloc and now outnumber Republicans in registration — may be increasingly breaking for GOP hopefuls rather than defaulting to the Democratic machine that has dominated Sacramento for decades.

This trend among independents isn’t isolated to the governor’s race; it signals a broader realignment in California politics where unaffiliated voters are rejecting the status quo on issues like housing costs, crime and energy policy. 

The poll’s movement — Hilton gaining four points while several Democrats are holding steady or have slipped — highlights how these swing voters, often frustrated by one-party rule, are willing to cross over to Republicans who emphasize practical solutions over progressive orthodoxy. 

It's no longer "vote blue no matter who" in California, even amongst independents.

The implications are profound: if independents continue this pattern in races up and down the ballot, Republicans could secure top-two advances or even general-election upsets that were unthinkable just one cycle ago. 

The poll should serve as a wake-up call for Democrats accustomed to coasting on demographic advantages if California’s independent voters are no longer reliable allies in the progressive project, but are instead fueling a Republican resurgence built on voter dissatisfaction with entrenched governance.

Similar to 2024, common sense policies to address dissatisfaction

This shift mirrors President Donald Trump’s successful strategy in the 2024 presidential campaign, where he made significant inroads with independent voters by focusing on pocketbook issues, border security, law and order, and government efficiency. 

Nationally, Trump narrowed or closed the gap with independents compared to 2020 — winning them outright in key battleground states like Pennsylvania, Arizona, and Georgia — helping deliver his historic popular vote victory and Electoral College sweep. 

Just as California independents are drawn to Hilton and Bianco’s outsider critiques of Sacramento dysfunction, Trump’s appeal cuts through partisan lines by positioning Republicans as the agents of change against perceived elite failures, proving that unaffiliated voters can respond powerfully when offered what they say is a clear alternative to the status quo.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Los Angeles needs a villain

It's not just the gubernatorial race where independents are looking longingly at Republicanesque policies. Los Angeles could deliver a major blow to Democrat rule in the City of Angels as it appears poised for its villain era, or at the very least, its anti-hero era. 

In a three-way race between current Los Angeles mayor Karen Bass, LA Councilwoman Nithya Raman, and former reality show villain Spencer Pratt, Pratt is surging in prediction markets like Kalshi, where on Tuesday, he surged to an all-time high with a 35% chance of winning the race. 

Similar to Trump's campaign in 2024, Pratt has emphasized several straightforward, results-oriented issues that appeal to independents and frustrated voters tired of entrenched political failures in Los Angeles.

In a city still dealing with the effects of the "defund the police" movement, many residents are calling for a reinvigorated police force after the LA City Council approved a $150 million cut to LAPD's budget.

Pratt's ideas for aggressive public safety measures — such as hiring more police officers, enforcing the rule of law, cracking down on open drug dealing and crime, and welcoming federal support to restore order — position him against what he calls a breakdown in basic law enforcement.

On homelessness, Pratt pushes a “treatment-first” approach that treats the crisis primarily as a drug addiction problem (driven by fentanyl and “super meth”) rather than a simple housing shortage. 

He has proposed clearing encampments (with grace periods before enforcement), mandatory treatment where needed, zero tolerance for public drug use and street fentanyl, and auditing NGOs (nongovernmental organizations) for fraud and waste in billions spent with little visible progress.  

Fiscal accountability and government reform form another core pillar: ending mismanagement of tax dollars, investigating corruption in city programs and recovery efforts (especially post-Palisades Fire), protecting ratepayers from utility failures, and ensuring funds go to actual services like fixing streets and infrastructure instead of bureaucracy.  

Pratt frames these not as partisan ideology but as practical fixes: “no more politicians, no more lying” and has repeatedly resisted aligning with a political party.

Furthermore, in order to achieve what he's promised in his campaign, he will have to be satisfied with accusations of villainy, which to some will be more an anti-hero than villain. 

In comic books, an anti-hero is a central protagonist in a story who lacks traditional heroic traits like moral purity, bravery, or selflessness, instead possessing flaws, questionable motives, or even villainous qualities while still driving the narrative forward.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ 

The Deadpool franchise is built around its eponymous anti-hero. Batman is an anti-hero, as was Tony Soprano on "The Sopranos" and Walter White on "Breaking Bad."

Spencer Pratt mastered the villain role on the reality show "The Hills," deliberately leaning into the chaos, backlash, and public hatred because it made for compelling television — and paid the bills. 

He owned the “guy you loved to hate” persona without apology, as he discusses in his book. That same thick skin and strategic embrace of controversy could serve him well as Mayor of Los Angeles. 

If he makes tough, unpopular calls — clearing encampments, boosting police funding, enforcing accountability, or shaking up a broken bureaucracy — critics will paint him as the villain again. Pratt likely won’t flinch in the face of harsh criticism, especially if he succeeds at ultimately, making the city better for everyone.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

LA Mayoral debate 

Last week, the three met on stage during the first televised debate, hosted by NBC. Pratt delivered a powerful performance, outshining Bass and Raman in fiery exchanges at the Skirball Cultural Center that focused on public safety, homelessness and the city’s response to the Palisades Fire. 

Moderated by the network's LA affiliate NBC4 and Telemundo 52 on May 6, the nonpartisan forum saw Pratt repeatedly confront Bass over what he called mismanagement of key crises, drawing strong audience reactions as he positioned himself as a blunt outsider voice for frustrated Angelenos. 

Post-debate polls underscored his strong showing, with an NBC Los Angeles online survey finding that about 89% of respondents viewed Pratt as the clear winner. If Pratt receives over 50% of the vote in the June 2 primary, he wins outright and won't have to campaign for the general election. 

Amanda Head is White House correspondent for Just The News. You can follow her here.  


Amanda Head

Source: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/trump-2024-independents-ca-are-breaking-republicans-common-sense-policies

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Daniel Mahoney’s new book reveals how the pathology of leftism threatens America - John Dale Dunn

 

by John Dale Dunn

The book is an accessible look at the mindset of leftism that drives so much of political discourse in America today.

 

Daniel J. Mahoney has written several books about 20th-century politics and political figures. His most recent book, The Persistence of the Ideological Lie: The Totalitarian Impulse Then and Now, focuses tightly on present-day totalitarianism and political tyranny. The book, although short, covers a lot of ground, everything from Racialism and the 1619 Project to wokeism and socialist crit theory to socialist dominance in the academy to leftist support for despots and tyrannies.

The book’s starting point is the racialist mob violence of the past few years, which is built upon a revolutionary framework. Their embrace by America’s institutions, rather than by ordinary Americans, has resulted in conflict and enmity in America and a continuing atmosphere of political polarization. The left’s goal is to destroy American institutions, allow a revolutionary tyranny to rise in their place, one unconstrained by our Judeo-Christian values, fused with Greek moral philosophy.

This is, says Mahoney, a “Great Refusal,” one that entirely rejects goodness and virtue. Under this theory. There is no natural law and no natural order of things—such talk is rejected without debate. There is certainly no received wisdom or anything worthwhile in traditional thinking and mores.

 

Instead, there is only what the late German American philosopher Eric Voegelin described as an imaginary Second Reality, one that is intemperate and fanatical. Voegelin arrived at his theory by studying the French Revolution, which, despite its high-flown language about “liberty, equality, and brotherhood, revolved around the insane idea of replacing human nature, human behavior, and Biblical-Enlightenment social constructs with a destructive cult that rejects Western Civilization’s foundations and values.

There are common themes found in those individuals who have an impulse to tyranny:  self-righteousness, fanaticism, negativity, lack of awareness of human limits, a refusal to recognize truth, the rejection of civil authority, affection for totalitarian government, a dislike of self-government, and an affection for terrorism. Those who desire tyranny are also often angry and lack self-confidence. Mahoney diagnoses in leftists a collection of tormented souls who blame their torment on others.

Part of the problem we face now, writes Mahoney, is that the West never ascertained that, even as communism died in the Eastern Bloc, it never ensured that it hadn’t taken hold in the West. What was then a five-decade-long Gramscian march through the West’s institutions continued unabated.

To understand the Soviet socialism that still infects the West, Mahoney uses Fyodor Dostoevsky, particularly his novel Demons, and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn as his analytical lenses. Mahoney credits the latter as the source for the idea of the “ideological lie.” Contrary to the left’s sales pitch about the wonders of communism for the human experience, communist totalitarianism is an evil ideology that destroys the most important elements of human existence—private property, the family, religion, and the nation.

Mahoney writes:

Totalitarian ideology negates conscience and dismisses the moral law of which it is a dark reflection as an antiquated justification for class oppression, a tool of the forces of “privilege” and oppression… In this grotesque transvaluation of value, whatever promotes world-transforming revolution is necessary and good, and whatever stands in its way is, by definition, retrograde and evil. The age-old distinction between good and evil, right and wrong, is replaced by the morally corrupt distinction between “progress” and “reaction.”

o understand how so many Americans became invested in this revolutionary, anti-constitutional ideology, Mahoney examines the work of the late Michael Polanyi, a Hungarian British polymath philosopher, who wrote about the search for truth. In the context, Polanyi introduced the concept of a “moral inversion” driven by the French Enlightenment’s hatred of religion. The result was the creation of the delusion that humans shall be as gods. This replaced morality and religion with positivism and moral nihilism.

Mahoney’s book gets a lot done in less than 150 pages. He reminds the reader of the importance of the search for the truth and the preservation of liberty for the citizens, while maintaining civic order, all of which are essential for civic order.

Mahoney writes:

This book aims to provide nothing less than a full-throated defense of moral and political sanity against the latest eruptions of ideological mendacity in our time… This book … aims not only to repudiate repudiation and the widespread nihilism of our time but to affirm those enduring verities always worth affirming.”

Well said, well done.

Image: Amazon (fair use).


John Dale Dunn
is a physician and attorney in Brownwood, Texas.

Source: https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2026/05/daniel_mahoney_s_new_book_reveals_how_the_pathology_of_leftism_threatens_america.html

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The Education Ministry's Bible revolution - Orly Harari

 

by Orly Harari

Education Ministry publishes new learning framework, announcing inclusion of Bible studies in core learning requirements.

 

Students in a classroom (illustrative)
Students in a classroom (illustrative)                                                                     iStock

The Education Ministry has published its "learning framework" document for the 2026-2027 school year, setting out the structure of studies, teaching hours, and curricula across Israel’s education system.

The document provides school principals with a framework that combines mandatory subjects with administrative flexibility, aiming to adapt the education system to current challenges and changing realities.

The new framework places special emphasis on strengthening core subjects and excellence programs, while establishing a national goal of advancing STEM fields (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics). Under the plan, mathematics and science will become mandatory weekly subjects throughout the system, alongside additional dedicated enrichment hours to expand opportunities for excellence.

Alongside scientific studies, the Ministry will continue strengthening values-based and identity-focused education through Bible and heritage studies.

Bible studies will continue as a disciplinary subject taught for two hours weekly, while the “Heritage Paths" program in elementary and middle schools will be expanded to reinforce Jewish roots and identity.

One significant innovation in the new framework is making financial education a mandatory subject for ninth-grade students, aimed at providing students with tools for responsible financial conduct.

In addition, the Ministry is emphasizing the thoughtful integration of artificial intelligence tools into teaching, requiring schools to incorporate digital learning experiences in core subjects according to age group.

In the area of emotional resilience and well-being, the "Strengths Along the Way" program will become mandatory in order to strengthen students’ emotional and social support systems. This will include programs such as “Choosing Life" and “Friendship and Relationships Without Violence," while high schools will continue advancing the “flexible matriculation" model and integrating academic courses.

Education Minister Yoav Kisch said: "The reorganization of the learning reflects a clear vision: The State of Israel’s education system must prepare Israel's students both for tomorrow’s world and for life itself. We are strengthening core subjects, science, and technology, integrating artificial intelligence and digital learning, while at the same time deepening education in identity, values, roots, and personal and social resilience. For the first time, Bible studies are also anchored as a core subject throughout the education system, as part of a vision connecting excellence, identity, national responsibility, and genuine readiness for the future." 


Orly Harari

Source: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/427006

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US returns two rare, ancient coins to Israel following joint antiquities theft investigation - Miriam Sela-Eitam

 

by Miriam Sela-Eitam

One of the coins, depicting the Temple's seven-branched menorah, was minted in Hasmonean-ruled Jerusalem, while the other, the second of its kind ever found, was minted in ancient Ashkelon.

 

Hasmonean-era coin depicted the seven-branched menorah (L) and silver tetradrachm minted in Ashkelon during the Persian period (R) which were returned to Israel from the United States earlier this week, May 13, 2026.
Hasmonean-era coin depicted the seven-branched menorah (L) and silver tetradrachm minted in Ashkelon during the Persian period (R) which were returned to Israel from the United States earlier this week, May 13, 2026.
(photo credit: EITAN KLEIN / ISRAEL ANTIQUITIES AUTHORITY)

Two rare and ancient coins allegedly smuggled from Israel were returned to the country by the United States earlier this week the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) revealed on Wednesday.

The coins were formally repatriated during a handover ceremony in New York City on Monday following an international operation conducted by the IAA’s Theft Prevention Unit in cooperation with Homeland Security and the Antiquities Trafficking Unit at the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office.

After being illegally excavated and smuggled from Israel, the two coins were brought to the US and recently put up for auction.

Intelligence received of the potential sales by the IAA’s Theft Prevention Unit was quickly passed on to American authorities, which then led to the opening of an investigation against both the auction houses facilitating the sales and the sellers.

Evidence was rapidly collected and the two coins were confiscated from the auction house in order to be returned to Israel.

Dr. Eitan Klein (R) and Colonel Matthew Bogdanos (L) in the event that was held in New York City, May 13, 2026.
Dr. Eitan Klein (R) and Colonel Matthew Bogdanos (L) in the event that was held in New York City, May 13, 2026. (credit: Antiquities Trafficking Unit)

One of the coins, depicting the seven-branched menorah that stood in the Temple in Jerusalem on one side, was minted during the reign of the last Hasmonean king, Mattathias Antigonus, who ruled in Jerusalem from 40 to 37 BCE.

This is not only one of the earliest artistic renditions of the menorah, but is the only Jewish coin to depict the seven-branched candelabrum.

On its other side, the coin bears a depiction of the showbread table, another sacred object used in the Temple.

According to the IAA, Antigonus's choice as king and high priest to portray distinctly Jewish symbols on coins minted during his reign most likely stemmed from his desire to gain support from his subjects as he struggled against his rival Herod, who enjoyed the Romans’ political and military support.

Due to the coin’s rarity and as the last coin marking Hasmonean independence, coins of its type are defined as an “Item of National Importance” and are banned from being exported outside of Israel.

The second coin returned to Israel is a silver tetradrachm dating to the Persian period, over 2500 years ago, that was minted in Ascalon (modern day Ashkelon).

It is the second of its kind ever to be found, making it one of the rarest ancient coins that were minted in Israel. The other coin of its kind is housed in the Israel Museum’s coin collection.

Much like the Hasmonean coin, it is banned from being removed from Israel due to its rarity.

Its design is inspired by the ancient Athenian tetradrachm – the standard currency in the Eastern Mediterranean during this period.

One side of the coin depicts the helmeted Greek goddess Athena, while the other side portrays an owl spreading its wings. In the upper right corner above the owl are the letters “Aleph” and “Nun” written in Phoenician script – an abbreviation for the name of its mint, Ascalon.

Antiquities smuggling: A dangerous international phenomenon

“These extraordinary coins represent an important piece of history that is finally coming home,” said Colonel Matthew Bogdanos, chief of the Manhattan District Attorney's Office’s Antiquities Trafficking Unit at the handover ceremony. “Furthermore, they represent an extraordinary partnership between the Antiquities Trafficking Unit in New York and the Israel Antiquities Authority. This is a partnership that should serve as a model for the return of looted cultural heritage around the world.”

Dr. Eitan Klein, Deputy Director of the Antiquities Theft Prevention Unit, who represented the country at the repatriation ceremony in New York, noted that the illegal antiquities trade is a widespread international phenomenon that requires international cooperation between countries and enforcement agencies to end.

The illegal antiquities trade is a “distressing international phenomenon, which constitutes an economic engine promoting antiquities looting and untold damage to cultural heritage assets,” echoed Ilan Hadad, an archaeologist and inspector in charge of antiquities commerce at the IAA’s Theft Prevention Unit.

“For the sake of money, thousands of years old antiquities from the State of Israel are looted, smuggled and sold abroad,” he said, noting that the IAA is diligently working to fight the phenomenon in order to “preserve and protect the historical heritage of the State of Israel.”

Heritage Minister Amichai Eliyahu praised the coins’ return and the US’s cooperation “not only in the security arena, but also to bring home our historical story.”

“The theft of antiquities is an attempt to erase this history of ours and cut us off from our roots. They will not succeed,” Eliyahu said. “We will continue to act resolutely together with partners around the world to stop this phenomenon and to protect our heritage.” 


Miriam Sela-Eitam

Source: https://www.jpost.com/archaeology/article-896001

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