Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Why did Gulf states ask Trump to hold off on Iran strikes? - analysis - Amichai Stein

 

by Amichai Stein

According to regional analysts, Gulf leaders fear that even a limited American strike on Iranian energy or military infrastructure could provoke retaliatory attacks targeting vital infrastructure.

 

People walk past a caricature depicting US President Donald Trump, in Tehran, Iran, May 4, 2026.
People walk past a caricature depicting US President Donald Trump, in Tehran, Iran, May 4, 2026.
(photo credit: MAJID ASGARIPOUR/REUTERS)

Fears over a broader regional war and attacks on Gulf infrastructure led the leaders of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar to intensify efforts to persuade US President Donald Trump to delay any potential strike on Iran.

Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social on Monday that he originally planned to strike Iran on Tuesday.

“I have been asked by the Emir of Qatar, Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia, Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud, and the President of the United Arab Emirates, Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, to hold off on our planned Military attack of the Islamic Republic of Iran, which was scheduled for tomorrow, in that serious negotiations are now taking place,” the president tweeted.

He added that “in their opinion, as Great Leaders and Allies, a Deal will be made, which will be very acceptable to the United States.”

According to regional analysts, Gulf leaders fear that even a limited American strike on Iranian energy or military infrastructure could provoke retaliatory attacks targeting desalination facilities, electrical grids, oil infrastructure, and shipping lanes throughout the Gulf.

Brine water flows into the Mediterranean Sea after passing through a desalination plant in the coastal city of Hadera
Brine water flows into the Mediterranean Sea after passing through a desalination plant in the coastal city of Hadera (credit: NIR ELIAS / REUTERS)

Saudi Arabia concerned over infrastructure strikes, Iranian civil war

Saudi Arabia is worried that if Trump strikes the energy and electricity infrastructure in Iran, the Iranians still have the capability of striking back and destroying desalination plants, electricity generation plants - the infrastructure of Saudi Arabia - which cannot be fully defended,” Bernard Haykel, professor of Near Eastern Studies, Princeton University and Senior Fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, told The Jerusalem Post.

“In the summer, if you lose water desalination, you’re in deep trouble. It could cause a humanitarian crisis,” Haykel said.

He also added that Saudi leaders’ concerns go beyond immediate retaliation and include fears that military escalation could destabilize Iran itself.

“They don’t want a failed state in Iran because a failed state in Iran could lead to a Libya-like situation with civil war. That’s also something that could very seriously destabilize the region,” he said.

According to Haykel, Riyadh and other Gulf capitals have consistently favored de-escalation and negotiated arrangements with Tehran over military confrontation.

“They would like to come to some sort of detente, a de-escalation agreement with the Iranians,” he said. “This has been their position from the very beginning. They were against the war to start with, and they’ve been trying to reach an accommodation with the Iranians and a negotiated settlement.”

Haykel argued that Gulf governments believe Iran’s regime faces greater long-term danger from internal pressures than from external military action.

“The Saudis believe, like I do, that the real threat to the regime is domestic, not external,” he said. “If you leave the regime in place, the people in Iran will eventually take care of it.”

At the same time, Haykel said Gulf states remain deeply skeptical that Washington would sustain a prolonged campaign against Iran if retaliation intensified.

“I don’t think they really think that Trump cares about them,” he said. “They are worried that he would just leave, declare victory, and leave, and then they’re stuck with Iran and control of Hormuz and extorting them.”

The Strait of Hormuz remains one of the Gulf states’ central concerns. Roughly a fifth of the world’s oil passes through the strategic waterway, and Gulf officials fear that any Iranian effort to disrupt shipping there could have catastrophic global economic consequences.

“There are different priorities for each actor,” said William F. Wechsler, senior director of Middle East Programs at the Atlantic Council and senior director of the N7 initiative. “For Trump, it is the nuclear file; for Israel, it is proxies and rockets; for the Gulf, it is Hormuz and shorter-range weapons like drones.”

Gulf governments united over opposition to escalation

Wechsler said Gulf governments remain united in opposing any “great escalation” of the conflict despite divisions on other regional issues.

“The governments of the Gulf are divided on many issues but united in their opposition to a great escalation in the war,” he said. “They are understandably concerned about the potential for Iranian strikes on their energy production facilities, electrical grids, and water systems being successful.”

Such attacks, he warned, “would bring great immediate hardship and raise unwelcome questions about the long-term sustainability of their national economic models.”

While many Gulf leaders privately favor weakening or even replacing the Iranian regime, Wechsler said they doubt Washington has either the strategy or the willingness to achieve that outcome militarily.

“Most Gulf governments would prefer an outcome that removes the Iranian regime,” he said, “but are skeptical that the US has a plan, much less the capacity, to achieve that objective in the near term.” 


Amichai Stein

Source: https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/article-896740

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Did We Really Have To Attack Iran? History Lessons From North Korea - Bart Marcols

 

by Bart Marcols

Fred Fleitz's 'North Korea, Nuclear Brinkmanship, and the Oval Office' shows how decades of diplomatic weakness turned North Korea nuclear—and warns that Iran is following the same path.

 

Did Iran pose an imminent threat to America? Was the Islamic Republic on the cusp of nuclear breakout? Anyone asking those questions would do well to read the new book by Fred Fleitz, North Korea, Nuclear Brinkmanship, and the Oval Office, a study of another outlaw state that recently achieved nuclear status.

National security expert Fred Fleitz shows how North Korea exploited the globalist approach to nuclear nonproliferation. A thoughtful reader will explore the history for comparisons and contrasts with Iranian tactics. Every reader will come away with a clear understanding of how diplomacy works, and especially how easily American policymakers miscalculate.

Fleitz is well-positioned to research and write this history because he lived much of it and created some of it. He was the chief of staff and executive secretary of the National Security Council (NSC) and spent over 25 years in national security positions with the DIA, CIA, State Department, and as congressional staff. He is currently vice chairman of the American Security Initiative of the America First Policy Institute (AFPI).

Fleitz grabs the reader by the throat: North Korea has nearly 50 nuclear weapons and thousands of missiles capable of hitting the United States because of bungling by presidential administrations of both parties. His timeline shows countless examples of missed opportunities to stop their nuclear development and of transparent North Korean gambits to blackmail the world into accepting yet another step toward nuclearization. If this sounds familiar to Iran watchers, that’s because Iran pursued the same strategy.

There has been a steady pattern. Periods of accommodation and conciliation allowed rapid, irreversible progress toward nuclearization and missile development. Administrations taking hardline positions would slow the progress but never reverse it, and they were roundly criticized by globalists and domestic political opponents. The parallels with Iran are stark: we would not be forced into kinetic action to stop Iranian nuclearization if we collectively had learned the lessons of North Korea.

The story of North Korea’s march to nuclear weapons is a depressing exposé of the Deep State, with the machinations and hubris so common in the foreign affairs establishment. Foreign Service officers are famously resistant to policy direction from elected or appointed officials because they think they’re smarter than anyone else in the room. Fleitz details the efforts of careerists to downplay the threat of North Korean nuclear weapons and defy successive administrations’ containment policies. Unfortunately, the careerists triumphed, and Pyongyang succeeded in its nuclear march.

The hubris of the career service, however, pales next to that of former President Jimmy Carter. Carter’s efforts advanced North Korea’s nuclear program farther in one weekend than in any five-year period selected at random, and it was President Clinton who let it happen.

The Clinton administration had a habit of using private, “Track II” diplomatic efforts that sidestepped the foreign policy apparatus. North Korea had invited Carter several times to mediate. The State Department rejected the idea, fearing that Carter would freelance.

President Clinton eventually overrode the objections of his advisors and agreed to send Carter. He announced that Carter was going as a private citizen, with no authority to represent the US government or to negotiate any deal. But two days into his visit, Carter did exactly that. He agreed to a framework that included concessions the US had never seriously considered.

To make matters worse, Carter didn’t even brief the administration. He went on CNN, announced to the world that he had averted a war, and warned the administration not to interfere! Carter’s arrogant gesture “cut the legs out from under the Clinton administration’s efforts” (p. 35) and resulted in one of the most destructive arms control agreements in history, the Agreed Framework.

The Agreed Framework bought North Korea several years of nuclear development with only token international oversight. James Schlesinger, who had served as CIA director, Energy Secretary and Defense Secretary, called the Agreed Framework “a negotiated surrender” by the US to North Korean nuclear ambitions.

As a result of the Agreed Framework, America and the allies gave North Korea two light water reactors and billions of dollars’ worth of fuel oil over the next several years in exchange for Pyongyang’s agreement not to build two nuclear reactors and to surrender spent fuel rods. The fuel rods were never surrendered. This was much like the deals negotiated with Iran over the years: empty promises with no real oversight or enforcement mechanism.

The agreement was presented as an executive agreement rather than a treaty because the administration knew it would never be ratified by the Senate. Even the name of the agreement was deceptive. In a linguistic sleight of hand that would later become famous as a Clintonian trademark, it was called the Agreed Framework rather than a Framework Agreement. Calling it an “Agreement” would have marked it clearly as a treaty and triggered treaty ratification requirements.

Twenty years later, the Obama administration did something similar with the JCPOA, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, which gave similar (unratifiable) concessions to Iran. In an unprecedented legislative maneuver, the Senate never ratified it. Again, it was not called a treaty or an agreement, but just a “Plan of Action.” Obama followed the same pattern with Iran that Clinton had with North Korea.

North Korea, Nuclear Brinkmanship, and the Oval Office is quite readable. Fleitz pulls no punches in telling the story, but he does not try to bias the reader against any American political faction. He simply tells the truth. He was there, and he gives the reader a clear view of how bureaucratic battles are fought, won, and lost. He covers both the internal Washington bureaucratic battles and the diplomatic struggles.

This book should be required reading for every policymaker and analyst in Washington. It offers a rare opportunity to see the entire foreign policy apparatus at work. The lessons could be applied to every policy discussion. It is especially relevant to this moment because we are seeing a very similar story unfold in Iran, and we know how the North Korea story ends.

It is a sober warning; I hope our nation heeds it. 


Bart Marcols was the principal deputy assistant secretary of energy for international affairs during the George W. Bush administration. Marcois also served as a career foreign service officer with the State Department.

Source: https://amgreatness.com/2026/05/20/did-we-really-have-to-attack-iran-history-lessons-from-north-korea/

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The four reasons why we can’t move on from a blood libel - Jonathan S. Tobin

 

by Jonathan S. Tobin

“The New York Times” and its enablers are counting on the public’s short attention span and “suicidal empathy” of liberal Jews to bury Nicholas Kristof’s lie about rapist dogs in Israel.

 

Israel Prison Service officers prepare Palestinian prisoners for release as part of a hostage deal between Israel and Hamas, at Ktzi’ot Prison in southern Israel, Feb. 26, 2025. File photo by Chaim Goldberg/Flash90.
Israel Prison Service officers prepare Palestinian prisoners for release as part of a hostage deal between Israel and Hamas, at Ktzi’ot Prison in southern Israel, Feb. 26, 2025. File photo by Chaim Goldberg/Flash90.

On May 11, The New York Times published Nicholas Kristof’s astonishing compendium of charges that the State of Israel is deliberately raping Palestinian Arab prisoners not just by the usual means of such crimes but by training dogs to sexually assault them. In the week since then the question hanging over both the newspaper and its critics is what, if any, consequences would there be for publishing a 21st-century blood libel.

As far as the Times is concerned, the answer is none. And given the applause this piece of journalistic malpractice generated from its core readership, the unlikelihood of a threatened libel suit being successful, coupled with the dismal turnout for a demonstration outside of its offices in Midtown Manhattan, they have some reasons to believe that they are right.

Unrepentant and unembarrassed

 
The article sparked outrage from those who pointed out the lack of credible evidence to back up this astonishing charge, which the newspaper, as well as its liberal and leftist readers, largely ignored. It also prompted cheers from Israel-bashers and antisemites everywhere, who view it as something they could place alongside the false accusations about the Jewish state committing “genocide” and creating mass starvation in the Gaza Strip, as well as practicing “apartheid” at home.

During the days that followed the article’s publication, hopes that the paper’s management would issue some sort of clarification or correction about it proved vain as they stood by Kristof, without giving any more reasons for readers to trust them than he did. So, as far as the nation’s largest newspaper is concerned, those who are angry about its shoddy reporting and normalization of classic tropes of antisemitism should just move on.

And with the publication of all of three letters-to-the-editor on May 18—none of which even mentioned the dogs, which was the most shocking and offensive element—senior Times management is trying to tell us that the matter is closed.

Are they right?

Those in charge at the Times likely assume that journalism is now a business where stories rarely last more than a single news cycle. They also know that readers—even many in their audience, who are largely made up of credentialed elites steeped in leftist doctrines—have become so immersed in nonstop social-media feeds that their attention spans are short.

Under the circumstances, they have likely come to the conclusion that even if they are aware of how wrong their actions have been, they won’t have to answer for Kristof.

While those responsible for one of the worst moments in the Times’ long reportorial history may think that is so, that won’t happen. And it won’t happen for four reasons.

Legal jeopardy

 
The first is that Israel’s government is likely to follow up on its threat to sue the newspaper, even if most legal experts think that such an effort would be a waste of time. There is a genuine danger of embarrassing and damaging revelations for the newspaper in any legal proceeding, regardless of whether it would be successful.

On the face of it, the chances of Israel being able to sue and win a libel lawsuit are slim to none. Under the “actual malice” standard that governs U.S. law that stems from The New York Times v. Sullivan Supreme Court legal precedent, it is very difficult to win such cases. The three-part test that any public figure suing for libel must satisfy is to prove knowledge of falsity, reckless disregard for the truth and an intent to cause harm. That has proved nearly impossible to satisfy in most cases. And it’s unlikely that a foreign leader like Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu or an individual country could even get a U.S. court to consider such a lawsuit.

Nevertheless, some legal experts have pointed to reasons why the Times may still be in trouble.

George Washington University Law School Professor and Fox News legal analyst Jonathan Turley points out that while the Jewish state is unlikely to be able to sue the Times and Kristof for libel, soldiers who were implicated in the story may be able to do so.

Mark Goldfeder, CEO of the National Jewish Advocacy Center and a law professor at Touro Law School, writing in National Review, agrees. But he thinks Israelis need not sue in American courts. He believes that they can sue the Times in an Israeli court, though not for libel.

By holding them accountable under a civil-law charge of “injurious falsehood” and “negligent publication,” they can create a viable case. Doing so will mean an opening that will allow Israelis to go to the federal district court in New York City, and then “compel evidence production from a U.S. entity for use in foreign litigation.” As he notes, “A properly framed application does not ask the court to adjudicate the case; it simply asks the court to order the Times to produce the factual basis for one published allegation.” It stands a chance of forcing compliance.

In either instance, the result would mean that the Times and Kristof would have to produce the evidence it claims to hold, how it obtained that evidence, and other information and communications that might undermine its credibility. Even if that doesn’t lead to a win in court, the resulting revelations will likely be extremely damaging for the news outlet and possibly be of greater importance to its reputation than the ludicrous accusation of dog rape would be to Israel.

Even left-wing journalists remain unconvinced
The second reason why this isn’t going away has to do with questions being raised by journalists about what happened at the Times.

What we’re learning is that some liberal journalists who share the negative view of Israel, demonstrated by Kristof and the editors who enabled him, are asking questions about how this story was produced. To put it mildly, the way the paper handled it was fishy. Doubts about their decisions are being voiced not only by conservative critics but also reportedly by members of the paper’s notoriously woke news staff.

As veteran media reporter Dylan Byers writes in Puck, some Times reporters don’t understand why a charge of such magnitude and dubious provenance was only published in the paper’s opinion section and not on the news pages.

Many readers of the Times have pointed out with justice that there is no longer any real difference between opinion and news there, let alone the church-state divide that once existed between the two prior to the publication taking a hard-left turn in the last generation. Many who work at the newspaper think that there should be such a division, at least in principle. And if there is, the failure of management to allow its news staff to do their own investigation into Kristof’s tall tales of dog rape makes the whole thing even more suspicious.

Regardless of what you think of Israel—and few at the Times aren’t hostile to it—the failure of the paper to either break the claims as news or to advance the story with further reporting that doesn’t fall under the label of opinion calls into question its credibility. And that’s something, as Byers reports, that has not gone unnoticed in its offices on 42nd Street.

Even if lawsuits don’t create discovery that unravels the allegations, the ferment within the media organization could bode ill for the editor who must be deemed primarily responsible for this atrocity.

Kathleen Kingsbury became editor of the Times’ opinion section in 2020 in the wake of its scandalous retraction of an op-ed by Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.). That retraction was forced by a newsroom mob that revolted against the publication of a view they didn’t favor. The result was the firing of veteran editor James Bennet for allowing a conservative opinion on its pages. He was replaced by Kingsbury, a woke writer who clearly sees no distinction between journalism and leftist activism.

By exposing the newspaper to the sort of unflattering scrutiny brought on by Kristof’s smears, Kingsbury may wind up paying the price for the paper’s dropping of traditional journalistic ethics and commonly accepted rules about publishing far-fetched claims. Times publisher A.G. Sulzberger—a member of the fifth generation of his family to serve in that capacity and two generations removed from anyone in it who was nominally Jewish—may believe that appealing to the hard left is good business. But once readers start learning more about how Kristof’s claims were published, Sulzberger might start looking for a scapegoat for this mess. And Kingsbury is first in line to walk the plank.

They’ve gone too far this time
There is a third reason why this controversy is far from dead. Despite the ineffectual nature of the public protests, the blood libel finally disillusioned many of those in the Jewish community who were still ready to continue to view the Times as “the paper of record,” despite its troubling record of bias against Jews and Israel.

The newspaper crossed a line with its absurd story about dogs being trained to rape human beings. That cannot be ignored or undone, and going forward will color the debate not only about this newspaper’s credibility but that of the mainstream liberal media that it exemplifies.

Until now, liberals who had not gone completely over into the anti-Zionism and open antisemitism that has become normalized by the Times could try to claim that its coverage was still fair, despite abundant evidence to the contrary.

But the dog-rape charge is so ridiculous and utterly without substantiation—animal trainer after animal trainer have attested to the improbability and impossibility of it happening—that only someone already drenched in both Jew-hatred and woke ideas about journalists not having to prove their allegations could believe it.

The fact that the only two mild criticisms of its story to be published as letters failed to mention the rape canard makes it obvious that any vestigial belief in minimal standards there is gone. Many on the left may cling to the Times, since it validates all of their pre-existing prejudices and opinions. That every news story reads more like opinion than what would have been considered news at the newspaper a generation ago may also appeal to them. But what Kristof and his editors have done is make it harder than ever to maintain the fiction that the Times is anything but a left-wing rag and undeserving of the respect it once earned.

As much, if not more than its sins of the past—like Walter Duranty’s 1932 Pulitzer Prize-winning denials of Joseph Stalin’s terror famine in Ukraine—Kristof’s rapist dogs will be thrown in the faces of its employees long after the columnist is forgotten.

‘Suicidal empathy’ exposed
The fourth reason why the discussion of this particular story won’t go away is that it has exposed a critical failing within the Jewish community about the way it responds to attacks.

The instinctual identification by many Jews with those locked in conflict against the State of Israel is nothing new. Yet some are still willing to think that the proper response to a dog-rape libel is to assume that where there’s smoke, there’s fire. All that does is help those who seek Israel’s destruction and Jewish genocide. Anger about this will at least (or at least, ought to) fuel a discussion that ought to change the way we discuss the information war against the Jews.

The newspaper was counting on not just cheers from those who are ready to believe any lie about Israel, no matter how despicable. They were also relying on responses from those labeling themselves as “liberal Zionists,” as well as other Jews whose ties to Israel are far more tenuous, who speak up to shift the attention from the paper’s misconduct or Palestinian crimes to investigations of the Israeli prison system. And that’s exactly what some writers at left-wing publications, like The Forward, JTA and Haaretz, essentially did.

By accepting the story as credible enough to justify treating its charges as plausible, such people are practicing what the Canadian psychologist Gad Saad calls “suicidal empathy.”

In this manner, they help to flip the script from the documented outrages committed by Palestinian Arabs, including the widespread and horrific acts of sexual violence and murderous brutality that happened on Oct. 7, 2023, to one about dubious allegations. And in so doing, they validate a false narrative about moral equivalence between the two sides.

Though some may be well-meaning, those who prioritize sympathy for the side that started the current war (and all those that preceded it between Jews and Arabs) and lost it—bringing great suffering to their people—aren’t so much being fair-minded or kind. Rather, they bolster terrorists and undermine efforts to defeat them and to defend Israelis, all while virtue-signaling their self-righteousness.

Some are also using the Times story as a cudgel with which to beat Netanyahu and Israeli Minister of National Security Itamar Ben-Gvir, whom they oppose for other reasons, for their alleged indifference to prison abuses on their watch.

It’s true that Israeli military prisons may be no better than those in other countries. Maybe they’re worse. But also understand that the large number of Palestinian prisoners who were captured post-Oct. 7 after committing unspeakable atrocities, in addition to other terrorists caught in Gaza, are not only deserving of contempt from civilized persons. Their propensity for violence has made these facilities unsafe for themselves and those Israeli reservists who have been given the unpleasant job of guarding them. They are equally a great danger to each other, which is one more aspect of his story, among others, that Kristof chose to ignore in a quest to point a finger and demonize Israelis.

As for Ben-Gvir, he is popular on the far right and despised by centrists and the left. But he appealed to a far larger group than only his voters when he vowed that the Oct. 7 criminals weren’t going to be given privileges or anything more than the bare minimum required by law. To scapegoat him or treat his attempts to keep this problem under control as a reason to diminish outrage about Kristof’s lies is wrong. Nor should it divert any attention from his libelous charges or the documented use of rape by Palestinian Arabs, as the Times clearly intended.

By crossing over from debatable accusations to blood libels, Kristof has similarly exposed both the futility and the intellectual bankruptcy of those Jews who have internalized so much of the post-Oct. 7 surge in antisemitism around the globe. But they also expose themselves as failing to realize the implications of their foolish stands. Instead of validating these positions, the fallout from Kristof’s writing will further discredit them.

For all these reasons—and even if the Times never owns up to the betrayal of its obligation to report the truth—the controversy and the debate about Kristof and his mythical rapist dogs will linger in the public imagination in ways the writer never intended for many years to come. 


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

Source: https://www.jns.org/opinion/column/jonathan-s-tobin/the-four-reasons-we-cant-move-on-from-a-blood-libel

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HUD proposal to end women's shelter admission based on gender identity sparks male violence debate - Greg Piper

 

by Greg Piper

No highly visible organizations have yet weighed in on HUD proposal to eliminate Obama administration gender identity rule for federally funded shelters.

 

Do men who identify as women really threaten women fleeing male violence?

That's the raging debate in a regulatory proceeding on "equal access to housing," prompted by President Trump's Day One executive order against "gender ideology extremism," which has quietly amassed over 600 public comments in its first three weeks without any apparent input as of Tuesday from large national groups.

The Department of Housing and Urban Development proposed removing references to "gender" and "gender identity" throughout its regulations, and possibly replacing them with "sex," to ensure HUD-funded housing programs and emergency shelters treat individuals by their "immutable biological classification as either male or female."

By rolling back the Obama administration's expansion of the Equal Access Rule, the Trump administration would let funding recipients again "require reasonable assurances and evidence to confirm the sex of an individual seeking service in order to protect the safety of other individuals in the facility," the April 29 proposal says.

The 2016 revision removed an explicit allowance in the 2012 revision for "inquiries related to an applicant's or occupant's sex for the limited purpose of determining placement in temporary, emergency shelters with shared bedrooms or bathrooms."

This "impermissibly restricted single-sex facilities without proper congressional authorization," ignoring the Fair Housing Act's allowance for single-sex shelters while creating "a new class of individuals" to be protected by federal nondiscrimination law," and violated the "privacy and safety of homeless women" and faith-based providers' religious liberty, the new HUD proposal says. 

It would use the agency's funding levers to enforce compliance and preempt state or local laws that require providers to treat individuals by their gender identity.

HUD Secretary Scott Turner, a former NFL player, suspended enforcement of the 2016 rule two days after his confirmation, saying he was "getting government out of the way of what the Lord established from the beginning when he created man in His own image." The regulatory proposal doesn't say why it took another 14 months to propose the rule's elimination.

The gender-critical Women's Liberation Front urged its supporters on Monday and Tuesday to file comments on their experiences with women-only spaces in "federally funded housing, rape crisis, or domestic violence services," but confirmed to Just the News it hasn't filed its own comment yet. Someone used WoLF's name to file a comment Monday. 

High-profile groups that advocate for either sex-based or gender identity-based treatment, such as the Alliance Defending Freedom and ACLU respectively, have yet to file comments. A substantial number of commenters filed anonymously.

"Many individuals wouldn't comment on any matter touching on gender identity if they had to leave their names," though "I was surprised to see how many comments there are already," WoLF treasurer Nancy Stade told Just the News

Organizations that "know the drill and want to wait to see what other comments come in and include responses" are more likely to wait to speak under their own names until closer to the June 29 deadline, she said.

Keeping men out of women's shelters hurts churches?

Just the News could find only a smattering of comments by groups, all opposing the Trump administration's proposed changes, as opposed to individuals. None mentions the female sex or grapples with why females might not seek coed emergency shelter.

Some individual comments are clearly based on form letters, however. Several refer verbatim to "data from the National Alliance to End Homelessness" on transgender people's greater likelihood to be "unsheltered" and have "considerably more health and safety challenges."

One of the more novel comments, left anonymously but full of legal citations, argues HUD violated the Administrative Procedure Act because it "has not identified a statute to authorize" the rule and based the proposal solely on President Trump's executive order. It's also arbitrary and capricious by not grappling with the rationale for and benefits of the 2016 rule.

The proposed rule "places the doctrines of particular belief systems above the often messy reality made visible by current scientific research," the National Organization for Women's Missouri chapter claimed. (WoLF has argued the opposite, that government imposition of gender identity is an "unconstitutional establishment of religion.")

"Forcing people to out themselves as trans/nonbinary/intersex puts them at risk for harassment and possibly even physical assault that may result in death," NOW Missouri said.

The Chicago-based Center for Disability & Elder Law said the proposed rule "replaces clear working rules and introduces vague standards," such as requiring evidence of sex, "creating legal risk, operational confusion, and staff-resident conflict." 

It would subject people who already "experience disproportionate rates of housing discrimination, homelessness, harassment, and violence" to "humiliation, invasive scrutiny, and arbitrary exclusion" and discourage them from seeking help, the center said. 

Ayuda Legal Puerto Rico blasted the proposal for "restricting the definition of sex and establishing a burdensome identity validation process," which "violates intimacy and harms all residents of public housing, regardless of their identity." 

It notes HUD's acknowledgment that some people would need to seek "alternative shelter arrangements" under the proposal. "For many people experiencing homelessness, those alternatives simply do not exist. […] Individuals may face an impossible decision: between undignified shelter conditions and homelessness."

Alaska Christian Conference President Michael Burke, an Episcopal priest, said the proposal will "increase the cost of the impacts for individuals, churches, and businesses" beyond the "terrible" outcomes for the person denied sharing a shelter with the opposite sex.

"I have seen many examples of persons denied entry to homeless shelters and services because of either marital status or sexual orientation or gender identity," he said.

"The proposed redefinition of 'sex' is not grounded in medical or scientific consensus," according to Evan Lempke, a "future public health professional" who is a prominent transgender activist and touted as such by Lempke's employer, Lehigh University

Loitering in women's bathroom hoping for oral sex

The quickest way to find comments supporting the rule appears to be searching for the term "women," as opponents of the rule tend to avoid sex-based language altogether.

"Because homeless women are often traumatized from living on the streets, and are often victims of male violence in one form or another, sleeping arrangements and bathing facilities in homeless shelters should be based on biological sex," a lengthy anonymous comment with purported anecdotes from women's shelters says.

"One man leered at women and trailed them through the shelter, his shorts manifesting the tangible proof of his interest, such that women stopped wearing pajamas outside the bed area," a women's shelter worker said, according to the comment. 

Retired Ohio University faculty Alden Waitt said she taught English and women's studies in four state "penal facilities for men," and "violence was an everyday occurrence" at two of them, with students "targeted and later assaulted merely for taking classes." 

While not all inmates "displayed violent tendencies, enough did so and went after smaller, meeker, even disabled, inmates," Waitt wrote. "Put these men in prison with vulnerable women, and these trapped women will have no recourse once assaulted."

"Politically women have lost civil rights, politicians have abandoned us. It’s time to take action," supporter Karina Abou wrote

"As a Democrat, I support single sex housing and shelters as a way to protect women and their underage children," Michelle Krueger wrote. "Women and children make up 80% of victims of sexual violence while males commit 98-99% of sexual violence and 90% of all violent crimes. It's not bigotry or a phobia" to maintain female-only shelters.

Some opponents argue men who identify as women aren't a threat to women and that the proposal would hurt females, similar to arguments made against female-only girls' sports. 

"Transgender women are statistically less likely to assault women than men. Transgender women are not transitioning to assault women," Donald Chaze wrote. "Would women have their genitalia checked just to make sure other women can’t use the women’s bathroom?"

"It is not ethical or scientifically logical to require women to have to provide 'evidence' proving their sex," and the proposal "will actually put women at greater risk of harm," Kate Holton wrote.

"Transgender, nonbinary and intersex women are safer in women’s shelters and in women’s spaces. There is no history of violence on the part of trans women in women’s shelters and programs," an anonymous commenter wrote, claiming "most women are ok with trans women in female spaces" and the latter's presence actually reduces "all violence toward women." 


Greg Piper

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/federal-agencies/feds-proposal-let-womens-shelters-ban-men-sparks-debate-male-violence

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Smotrich: ‘The PA started a war, and it will be met with war’ - JNS Staff

 

by JNS Staff

Smotrich confirmed that ICC prosecutors had submitted a secret request for an arrest warrant against him.

 

Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich holds a press conference at the Finance Ministry in Jerusalem, May 19, 2026. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90.
Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich holds a press conference at the Finance Ministry in Jerusalem, May 19, 2026. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90.

Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich on Tuesday accused the Palestinian Authority of waging “war” against the Jewish state, as he confirmed that International Criminal Court prosecutors had submitted a secret request for an arrest warrant against him.

“The prosecutor submitted a request for arrest warrants. Whether they will actually be issued or not, we do not know; they also do not want us to know; this is part of the tactic,” Smotrich told reporters at a press conference in Jerusalem.

“What is certain is that the Palestinian Authority and its people stand behind this entire process,” the senior Cabinet minister said. “They stand behind the legal warfare at the ICC and the International Court of Justice.”

Smotrich described the legal efforts against top Israeli officials at the ICC and ICJ as “not a diplomatic struggle and not a legal struggle,” but rather “a declaration of war by a hostile entity against the State of Israel.”

“This is a declaration of war against the State of Israel, and when war is waged against us, we must respond forcefully,” he declared.

As part of Jerusalem’s response, Smotrich said he would be signing a military order to immediately evacuate Khan al-Ahmar, a Judean Desert site where Palestinian Bedouin have illegally erected buildings and dwellings. Jerusalem has sought for years to relocate the community, which is located in the strategic E1 corridor between Jerusalem and Ma’ale Adumim.

Immediately following the press conference, Smotrich’s office published a letter in which he instructed Hillel Roth, his representative in the Israeli Defense Ministry’s Civil Administration, to take “all necessary measures” to carry out the evacuation as soon as possible.

“I promise all our enemies: This is only the beginning,” Smotrich said in his remarks at the press conference.

“From today onward, every economic or other target I can act against within my authority as finance minister or as a minister in the Defense Ministry will be targeted—not with words and gimmicks, but with actions,” he added.

Israel’s Channel 12 News broadcaster reported on Monday that in addition to Smotrich, ICC prosecutors were also considering secret arrest warrants against Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz and Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir. The report said Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir and his predecessor, Herzi Halevi, were also under scrutiny by the Office of the Prosecutor.

In 2024, the ICC issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and then-defense minister Yoav Gallant in connection to the war against Hamas in Gaza, which was started by the terrorists’ invasion of southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

After U.S. President Donald Trump’s reelection, Washington slapped sanctions on Feb. 6, 2025, against four ICC judges for investigating U.S. citizens and U.S. allies. 


JNS Staff

Source: https://www.jns.org/news/israel-news/smotrich-the-pa-started-a-war-and-it-will-be-met-with-war

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US-Saudi civil nuclear pact nears signing without toughest safeguards urged by Democrats - Reuters

 

by Reuters

A State Department letter dated May 18 to Democratic Senator Edward Markey says the pact only requires Washington and Riyadh to forge a less onerous "bilateral safeguards agreement."

 

U.S. President Donald Trump and Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed Bin Salman attend a bilateral meeting at the Royal Court in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 13, 2025.
U.S. President Donald Trump and Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed Bin Salman attend a bilateral meeting at the Royal Court in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 13, 2025.
(photo credit: REUTERS/BRIAN SNYDER)

A proposed US pact with Saudi Arabia on its development of nuclear power lacks the strictest guardrails that Democratic lawmakers had urged, according to a US State Department letter sent to one of the senators.

The administration of US President Donald Trump said last year that it was pursuing a civil nuclear pact with Saudi Arabia to boost US industry and strengthen diplomatic ties.

However, nonproliferation advocates are concerned because Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, has said that the kingdom would seek to develop nuclear weapons if regional rival Iran did so.

A dozen Democratic US lawmakers wrote to Secretary of State Marco Rubio in March urging him to push for a UN protocol - that Washington has backed for decades - that grants the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency broad oversight of a country's nuclear energy activities, such as the power to carry out snap inspections at undeclared locations.

But a State Department letter dated May 18 to Democratic Senator Edward Markey, a copy of which was seen by Reuters, says the pact only requires Washington and Riyadh to forge a less onerous "bilateral safeguards agreement."

US PRESIDENT Donald Trump and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud attend the Saudi-US Investment Forum in Riyadh in May. The deeper the Saudi-American partnership becomes, the less incentive Riyadh will have to normalize ties with Israel, the writer asserts.
US PRESIDENT Donald Trump and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud attend the Saudi-US Investment Forum in Riyadh in May. The deeper the Saudi-American partnership becomes, the less incentive Riyadh will have to normalize ties with Israel, the writer asserts. (credit: BRIAN SNYDER/REUTERS)

Lawmakers urged Rubio to push for 'gold standard'

The lawmakers had also urged Rubio to push for voluntary "gold standard" non-proliferation protections in any agreement with Saudi Arabia. Rubio had supported a gold standard for Saudi Arabia when he was a senator.

That standard, which Saudi Arabia's neighbor the UAE agreed to in 2009 before it built its first nuclear power plant, bans enrichment of uranium and reprocessing of nuclear waste, both of which can be pathways toward developing fissionable material for nuclear weapons.

But the letter makes no mention of the gold standard.

The State Department's Paul Guaglianone, a senior legislative affairs official, said in the letter to Markey that the agreement was in "final review" prior to Trump's signing of it.

The agreement "lays the legal foundation for a decades-long, multi-billion-dollar civil nuclear partnership between our two countries that advances several priority economic and strategic objectives," Guaglianone wrote.

The White House did not reply to questions about when Trump would sign the agreement, or how it would ensure safety, but referred to a statement by Energy Secretary Chris Wright from last November saying the agreement has a "firm commitment to nonproliferation."

The State Department said it could not discuss details of the proposed agreement as it was undergoing final review prior to signing, but a spokesperson said the draft contains all of the terms required by law, and reflects "a shared commitment by the United States and Saudi Arabia to strong nuclear safety, security, and nonproliferation standards."

The Saudi embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

'Selling out national security'

Markey said the Trump administration was "selling out national security" because the proposed pact lacks sufficient safeguards.

"Trump is giving nuclear-weapon-wannabe Saudi Arabia nuclear technology without the strongest safeguards, which is the same technology that the Trump administration went to war with Iran over," Markey said in a statement.

Once Trump signs the agreement and sends it to Congress, the Senate and the US House have 90 days to pass resolutions opposing it. If they do not, the deal would go into effect and allow the US to share nuclear power technology with Saudi Arabia.

Henry Sokolski, executive director of the Nonproliferation Policy Education Center, said Washington should push for stricter standards, including for enriching uranium, given that reactors can operate for decades. "If you let a country make nuclear fuel, you'd better hope they are your friend forever," he said. 


Reuters

Source: https://www.jpost.com/international/article-896780

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Is Europe Ending Up as One Big No-Go Zone? - Robert Williams

 

by Robert Williams

"In Western Europe, especially in France and the UK... these [Sharia] councils claim to operate within British law, but in practice, they prioritize patriarchal religious norms over civil rights." — From "Immigration, Islamisation, and the Rise of Parallel Societies."

 

  • Given the enormity of the problem, the authors of the report had to limit their focus to "seven EU countries where no-go zones are most reported: France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Sweden, and the Netherlands."

  • No-go zones, according to the report, are especially characterized by high rates of crime, violence and terrorist recruitment.

  • "This institutional reluctance, driven by political correctness, allowed gangs to operate with impunity in NGZs, where cultural segregation and weak policing created fertile ground for such crimes, effectively rendering the state an accomplice through its failure to protect victims." – From "Immigration, Islamisation, and the Rise of Parallel Societies," a report by New Direction – Foundation for European Conservatism.

  • "In Western Europe, especially in France and the UK... these [Sharia] councils claim to operate within British law, but in practice, they prioritize patriarchal religious norms over civil rights." — From "Immigration, Islamisation, and the Rise of Parallel Societies."

  • In Germany.... [s]howcasing how extremely poorly equipped authorities are to deal with this sort of torment, the Muslim men were fined symbolic amounts for simply wearing illegal uniforms, but not for their vigilante brutality enforcing sharia law.

  • "What is happening? This is my home!" – Belinda de Lucy, TalkTV, July 12, 2025.

  • "Numerous testimonies... describe women facing insults, intimidation, or exclusion for failing to conform to Islamic dress codes. In such contexts, what was once a personal religious expression becomes a communal norm, enforced not by the state but by the collective will of the neighborhood." — From "Immigration, Islamisation, and the Rise of Parallel Societies."

No-go zones, according to the report, are especially characterized by high rates of crime, violence and terrorist recruitment. Given the enormity of the problem, the authors of the report had to limit their focus to "seven EU countries where no-go zones are most reported: France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Sweden, and the Netherlands." Pictured: A garbage dumpster burns in the street during a riot in Villeneuve-la-Garenne, in the northern suburbs of Paris, on April 21, 2020. (Photo by Geoffroy van der Hasselt/AFP via Getty Images)

In late March, the European Conservatives and Reformists Group, a center-right political group in the European Parliament, published a report about no-go zones in Europe about no-go zones in Europe titled "Immigration, Islamisation, and the Rise of Parallel Societies: Focus on urban areas of Islamist entrenchment and state withdrawal," authored by New Direction – Foundation for European Conservatism

For many years, the existence of no-go zones in European cities was publicly denied by the ruling elites and their spokespersons in the mainstream media. If anyone raised the issue, as US President Donald Trump did in December 2015, when he spoke of no-go zones in London and Paris, or here at Gatestone Institute, they were mocked and denigrated for it (here and here). Meanwhile, the problem exponentiated. According to the report:

"There are now an estimated 900 to 1,000 areas across Europe that exhibit the key characteristics of no-go zones. This includes major urban suburbs as well as districts in medium-sized or smaller cities, reflecting a broad and growing territorial trend."

Given the enormity of the problem, the authors of the report had to limit their focus to "seven EU countries where no-go zones are most reported: France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Sweden, and the Netherlands."

The report noted -- no surprise -- that no-go zones are closely correlated to the mass immigration of Muslims into Europe since the 1970s (more than 40% of the population in the studied no-go zones is "foreign-born"). The report adds:

"The Muslim population is markedly overrepresented in designated no-go zones. In these areas, the average proportion of Muslim residents reaches 29%, significantly exceeding both the EU-wide average of 4,9% and the average in comparable urban areas outside no-go zones....

Since 2000, a disproportionate share of asylum seekers and new EU citizens have come from countries where Islam is the dominant religion. Of the top 15 origin countries among asylum seekers between January 2024 and March 2025, 11 are Muslim-majority... Similarly, the 3 largest nationality groups granted EU citizenship in 2023 were all from Muslim-majority nations (Syria, Morocco, and Albania)."

No-go zones, according to the report, are especially characterized by high rates of crime, violence and terrorist recruitment. In Belgium in 2022, 44% of all robberies took place in Brussels -- home to just 10% of the country's population – and in the no-go zone of Molenbeek.

Some of the most notorious Muslim terrorists grew up in Molenbeek or spent time there, including those behind the 2015 Paris attacks, the 2016 Brussels airport and metro attacks, and the 2014 attack at the Jewish Museum of Belgium. Molenbeek was apparently also a breeding ground for terrorist recruitment for ISIS, with Belgium contributing the highest number per capita of Western ISIS fighters.

"Molenbeek is like another world, another culture, festering in the heart of the West," journalist Matthew Levitt wrote in 2016, after the Paris attacks.

Molenbeek, however, is just one example. According to the report:

"Several European neighborhoods have repeatedly played a key role in jihadist networks.... Seine-Saint-Denis [a Paris suburb]... has produced several figures of French jihadism. Samy Amimour, a member of the Bataclan terrorist commando, was born in Drancy. Other members of jihadist networks (such as the 'Cannes-Torcy' cell) came from towns like Clichy-sous-Bois, Aulnay-sous-Bois, or Stains.... In summary, European no-go zones provide an environment where terrorism can more easily take root."

In the UK, states the report, parts of the industrial-scale rape of white girls by predominantly Pakistani Muslim gangs took place "particularly in no-go zones like Rotherham, Rochdale, and Oldham" through "a disturbing pattern of state complicity through silence and inaction."

"This institutional reluctance, driven by political correctness, allowed gangs to operate with impunity in NGZs, where cultural segregation and weak policing created fertile ground for such crimes, effectively rendering the state an accomplice through its failure to protect victims."

No-go zones are also parallel societies that follow Islamic norms predicated on sharia law -- far removed from Western norms -- rather than the law of the land in which they live:

"In Western Europe, especially in France and the UK, community-based Islamic structures are establishing parallel normative systems that operate independently of national laws. The most emblematic example is the United Kingdom, where Sharia Councils function as unofficial religious courts. The most well-known, the Islamic Sharia Council in London (established in 1982), handles over 1,000 cases per year, primarily concerning family law (marriage, divorce, inheritance, child custody)....

"Investigative reports revealed disturbing practices: women pressured to return to abusive husbands, divorces denied without the husband's consent, and blatant inequality in child custody and property division. Officially, these councils claim to operate within British law, but in practice, they prioritize patriarchal religious norms over civil rights."

These Islamic norms spill over into the "mainstream." In Germany in 2014, Muslims created "sharia patrols" to enforce religious rules in the streets of Wuppertal. Initially the patrol was deemed legal by a local court, but this was later overturned by the federal judiciary. Showcasing how extremely poorly equipped authorities are to deal with this sort of torment, the Muslim men were fined symbolic amounts for simply wearing illegal uniforms, but not for their vigilante brutality enforcing sharia law.

Nowadays, Muslim men in certain neighborhoods simply corner women and harass them. Belinda de Lucy, a British former member of the European Parliament was accosted in the street near her home in west London while walking to pick up her daughters from school. Two Muslim men in Islamic garb blocked her from walking down the street, threatening her, shouting at her, and calling her names for not wearing sharia-conforming dress (she was wearing a large T-shirt and shorts halfway down her knees) until she burst into tears and called the police.

"What is happening? This is my home!" de Lucy said in a television interview, describing how the police's response was as scary as what should rightly be called an assault.

"They sent round a gentleman [police officer] who kept reminding me that he was Muslim... I felt I had to be careful what I say and how I address this... in the end all I got from the local police was 'We'll talk to the local imam and get him to chat with the congregation.' And it really shocked me..."

It is not so shocking, considering that in Muslim-majority countries, which often practice gender apartheid, women have no rights and are regarded as second-class, inferior beings, like property:

"Women have rights similar to those of men equitably, although men have a degree ˹of responsibility˺ above them. And Allah is Almighty, All-Wise."
Quran: 2:228 (Dr. Mustafa Khattab translation)

"Men are in charge of women by [right of] what Allah has given one over the other and what they spend [for maintenance] from their wealth. So righteous women are devoutly obedient, guarding in [the husband's] absence what Allah would have them guard. But those [wives] from whom you fear arrogance - [first] advise them; [then if they persist], forsake them in bed; and [finally], strike them. But if they obey you [once more], seek no means against them. Indeed, Allah is ever Exalted and Grand."
Quran 4:34 (Sahih International translation)

"O women, give in charity, for I have been shown that you are the majority of the inhabitants of Hell."
They asked, "Why is that, O Messenger of Allah?"
He replied, "You curse a lot and are ungrateful to your husbands. I have not seen anyone more deficient in intellect and religion who overcomes the mind of a resolute man more than one of you."
They asked, "O Messenger of Allah, what is the deficiency in our intellect and religion?"
He said, "Is not the testimony of a woman equal to half the testimony of a man?"
They said, "Yes."
He said, "That is the deficiency in her intellect."
— Hadith: Sahih al-Bokhari

"The Prophet (ï·º) said, 'Isn't the witness of a woman equal to half of that of a man?' The women said, 'Yes.' He said, 'This is because of the deficiency of a woman's mind.'"
— Narrated Abu Sa'id Al-Khudri, Hadith, Sahih al-Bukhari 2658, Book 52 Hadith 22; Vol:3, Book 48, Hadith 826

The report continues:

"The rise of Islamic norms comes with a transformation of urban life in immigrant-dense neighborhoods... European traditions and customs give way to conservative Muslim practices...

"In suburbs like Sevran, located in the Seine-Saint-Denis departement in France, women have reported being informally excluded from cafés and local restaurants....

"Numerous testimonies... describe women facing insults, intimidation, or exclusion for failing to conform to Islamic dress codes. In such contexts, what was once a personal religious expression becomes a communal norm, enforced not by the state but by the collective will of the neighborhood.

"In Grenoble, legal and political tensions escalated after the city's ecologist mayor, Éric Piolle, proposed changes to public swimming pool regulations. These included allowing female-only swimming hours and authorizing the wearing of burkinis... Grenoble, a city with a significant Muslim population, became a national focal point in the ongoing debate over religious accommodation in public life.... In the end, the French supreme administrative court... ruled against such accommodations, affirming the principle that public institutions must remain free from religious particularism."

The report concludes:

"Europe now stands at a crossroads. An increasing segment of the European population is now rejecting the values, symbols, and collective identity of their country of citizenship, giving rise to a new class of nationals who feel no allegiance to the nation-state and do not recognize themselves in its cultural roots and project."

The real question is whether this shift -- perpetrated by European leaders who seem solely self-interested in wooing votes, can be reversed -- or whether European citizens are looking at a future of inevitable submission to Islam. At present, unfortunately, the second path appears more likely.


Robert Williams is based in the United States.

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22476/europe-no-go-zones

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Bill to dissolve Knesset passes preliminary reading - Israel National News

 

by Israel National News

Knesset plenum approves bill to dissolve itself in preliminary vote, with 110 MKs in favor and no abstentions or votes opposed.

 

Knesset plenum
Knesset Plenum                                                     Danny Shem Tov/ Knesset spokesperson

The Knesset plenum on Wednesday afternoon held a dramatic discussion and preliminary reading vote on a coalition bill to dissolve the 25th Knesset.

A total of 110 MKs supported the proposal, with no opponents or abstentions.

The move is being led by the haredi parties following the coalition's failure to advance the Draft Law in the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee.

As part of the political understandings reached, a bill to dissolve the Knesset submitted by the Blue and White faction is also expected to pass in a preliminary reading in the plenum.

According to parliamentary procedure, the bills approved in the current afternoon vote will not lead to the immediate dissolution of the Knesset, but will first be transferred for further discussions and drafting in the Knesset Committee.

After the committee discussion is completed, the bills will be returned to the Knesset plenum, to be voted on in their first reading. If they pass the first reading, they will again be transferred to the committee for final preparations, and only later will be brought for final approval in the plenum in their second and third readings.

If one of the laws is approved in its third reading, the official date for Israel’s elections will also be set.

According to the coalition bill's explanatory notes, “It is proposed to determine, in accordance with Sections 34 and 35 of Basic Law: The Knesset, that the 25th Knesset will disperse before the end of its term, and that the elections for the 26th Knesset will be held on a date to be determined by law, as proposed by the Knesset Committee as part of the legislative process." 


Israel National News

Source: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/427371

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Anti-Israel progressive wins Philadelphia primary - Joseph Strauss

 

by Joseph Strauss

With AOC backing and anti-Israel message, Chris Rabb wins primary in Philadelphia.

 

Chris Rabb and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
Chris Rabb and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez                          Matthew Hatcher/Getty Images

Chris Rabb - a progressive state lawmaker who is staunchly critical of Israel - is poised to become the newest member of Congress’ “Squad" after winning a Democratic primary Tuesday in Philadelphia.

Rabb had made opposition to Israel and AIPAC, the pro-Israel lobbying group, a focal point of his campaign in Pennsylvania’s Third Congressional District.

He also recently made headlines when it was reported that his Instagram account had shared a post saying the Bondi Beach massacre was a false flag by “Zionists"; he disavowed the post and said it was shared by a former staffer.

NBC News called the election on Tuesday night.

“They told me this wasn’t possible. That’s what they said," Rabb said during a victory speech. “I don’t know who they are, but I know who we are. I’m looking at we the people. And I’m not talking about we the people 250 years ago. That was a much smaller we. I’m talking about the aggressive fabulosity of this we."

Rabb’s top two opponents were Sharif Street, a state senator who garnered support from J Street and figures in the political establishment, including Philadelphia’s mayor and Sen. Cory Booker of N.J., and Ala Stanford, a pediatric surgeon who has faced scrutiny for being boosted by a group that’s alleged to be a shell organization for AIPAC.

With about 84% of expected votes in, Rabb held a strong lead with 44% of the vote; Street received 29.5% of counted votes, and Stanford was in third with 24.1%.

Rabb will be the Democratic nominee for a November general election that he is almost assured to win in the country’s “bluest House district."

Before Rabb, efforts to elect a new “Squad" member had fallen short this cycle, though those candidates - like Nida Allam in North Carolina - were up against incumbents, or, as in the case of Kat Abughazaleh in Illinois, lacked Rabb’s experience in elected office.

Rabb’s campaign picked up momentum in recent weeks. He was endorsed by a number of left-wing House representatives including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib, Ro Khanna and Summer Lee, who is also from Pennsylvania. He also rallied alongside the progressive streamer Hasan Piker, a staunch critic of Israel who has been accused of antisemitism, in Philadelphia.

If elected in November, Rabb’s platform would make him one of the harshest critics of Israel in Congress. He supports a complete embargo on arms sales to Israel. He posted on X last week that “the Nakba never ended," and said he would co-sponsor a resolution with Omar and Tlaib to “recognize the Nakba and reaffirm Palestinian refugees’ right to return."

Maryland Rep. Jamie Raskin, who is Jewish and has sponsored the Block the Bombs to Israel Act, endorsed Rabb. He was also endorsed by the anti-Zionist group Jewish Voice for Peace, and a slew of left-wing groups including Democratic Socialists of America and the Working Families Party, as well as groups that explicitly work to counter AIPAC such as Track AIPAC and PAL PAC.

“We will be with Congressman Rabb every step of the way in the fight to abolish ICE, free Palestine and win Medicare for All," the DSA wrote on X Tuesday night.

The super PAC American Priorities, which seeks to be a counterweight to AIPAC’s super PAC, United Democracy Project, spent more than $400,000 boosting Rabb, according to FEC filings.

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, who is Jewish and supports a continued US-Israel relationship, was reportedly rumored to be working behind the scenes to quietly derail Rabb’s campaign; Shapiro has not publicly weighed in on the race and did not respond to a request for comment.

The latest polling data to come out of this race was collected in early April, and had Stanford leading with 28% with Rabb trailing by 5 percentage points and Street in third at 16%. But much has changed in the weeks since those polls, including a significant mobilization from the left to back Rabb.

The poll was also conducted by 314 Action Fund, a political action committee that endorsed Stanford. A few weeks after the polling was released, Drop Site News, which has an anti-Israel bent, reported that the group is operating as a shell organization for AIPAC, the way other groups did in Illinois races earlier this year. AIPAC did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Stanford’s reported support from AIPAC thrust her into the spotlight on Israel. During a tense moment at a candidates’ forum last month, Stanford was pressed by an audience member on whether she believed Israel was committing a genocide.

She refused to use the term to describe Israel’s military actions, and said, “For Israelis who have been accused of committing it, it’s hurtful for them."

Stanford has been endorsed by the district’s representative, Dwight Evans, who is retiring at the end of this term, and a handful of other US House representatives including Madeleine Dean and Chrissy Houlahan from Pennsylvania. Hawaii’s Jewish governor, Josh Green, also endorsed Stanford.

Meanwhile, Street had the chance to become Pennsylvania’s first Muslim member of Congress. He has been critical of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, saying he should be prosecuted for war crimes, but is far more moderate on Israel than Rabb and made the subject less central to his campaign messaging. Like Stanford, he has not referred to Israel’s military actions as a “genocide" and advocates for a two-state solution, as well as continued US aid to Israel.

Booker traveled to Philadelphia on Monday to stump for Street.

Street is the son of former Philadelphia mayor John Street and has the support of a number of state legislators and City Council members, as well as the Philadelphia City Democratic Committee. Rue Landau, the only Jewish member of the City Council and its first openly LGBTQ member, endorsed Street.

Street was listed as “primary approved" on the website of liberal pro-Israel advocacy group J Street, which has recently drifted to a position that advocates for continued weapons sales, but a phasing out of military subsidies, to Israel. 


Joseph Strauss

Source: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/427355

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