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In-Depth Issues:
Hamas Video Clips Show Six Slain Israeli Hostages ( Ynet News)
New photos and video clips filmed by Hamas of the six Israeli hostages murdered in a Rafah tunnel last year were released on Thursday by the Hostages and Missing Families Forum.
Hersh Goldberg-Polin, Eden Yerushalmi, Ori Danino, Alex Lobanov, Almog Sarusi and Carmel Gat
are seen lighting Hanukkah candles and interacting with one another.
See also
What Hamas Can Never Extinguish - Sarah Tuttle-Singer ( Times of Israel)
Six hostages - later murdered in a tunnel - standing close together underground, lighting a menorah.
No windows. No sky. No sense of time. Just faces we now know, hands shielding a small flame from whatever draft reaches even hell.
Because we are Jews, there is this stubborn impulse to mark time. To insist on ritual even when the world has collapsed into one long agonizing night. This is what Hamas could not extinguish.
Judaism is not only belief; it is practice under pressure. It is community created in impossible places.
A circle formed in a tunnel. A flame lit not because it will save you, but because it reminds you who you are.
The menorah is a symbol of defiance, of people refusing to dissolve into captives, refusing to become only bodies waiting to be traded or killed.
Even knowing the danger, they chose togetherness over despair. They chose memory. They chose each other.
In a hellscape meant to erase them, they made a small Jewish room, and let light enter.
See also The Six Hostages Are All of Us - Omer Lachmanovitch ( Israel Hayom)
There is a visceral, deeply Jewish reaction when watching the videos of the six murdered hostages from the Rafah tunnel.
Even through the cruel staging by the Hamas terrorists, we notice their gestures of kindness toward one another, the generosity and concern that flowed among them.
Watching these videos, one cannot shake the sense that every Israeli was held captive in the tunnel.
In that tiny room deep beneath Gaza, all of Israel was represented.
What took place there was a deeply Jewish sense of shared fate: mutual responsibility, compassion, an instinctive acceptance of the other in their greatest hour of need.
Former Iranian President: Israel Can Easily Enter Our Airspace ( Middle East Eye-UK)
Former Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has warned that Iran's airspace has become dangerously exposed following the recent 12-day war with Israel.
"The skies over Iran have become completely safe for the enemy. We no longer have real deterrence. Our neighboring countries - Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan - all have airspace controlled by the United States and Israel."
Iran's Real Battle: A Deep Crisis in Public Trust - JCFA Iran-Syria Desk ( Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs)
The Iranian press in recent days paints a picture of a country caught between growing external pressure, nuclear uncertainty, and an internal divide that is widening daily.
There is a sharpening awareness in Tehran that the real threat to the regime is the collapse of public confidence.
A persistent economic crisis affects everyday life: the rising prices of fuel, rice, dairy, paper, and building materials are accompanied by an expanding gap between official rhetoric and reality.
Headlines speak of a "separation between the people and officials" and a "sense of injustice" that gnaws at "social capital."
See also A Tehran Woman on Iran's Growing Revolt - Azita ( Ynet News)
Local Spies with Lethal Gear: How Israel Reinvented Covert Action - Daniel Michaels ( Wall Street Journal)
When Israel launched its 12-day attack on Iran in June, a network of secret agents on the ground proved critical in crippling Tehran's defenses.
Some of them weren't professional spies or commandos. They were ordinary locals empowered by Israeli high-tech gadgetry.
Israel's intelligence agency, Mossad, had spent years identifying and cultivating inside Iran a silent force, including victims of Iranian repression, ethnic minorities sidelined by regime policies, and people from Afghanistan and other neighboring countries who can live and work openly in Iran.
At secret camps outside Iran, Israel trained its recruits to operate sophisticated, automated and remotely-controlled equipment.
Then Mossad instructed them to go about their daily routines across Iran, as part of what it calls a "drawer operation" - one that sits quietly in reserve until the drawer needs to be opened.
That day was June 13, when the strategically located agents used rockets, drones and other weapons smuggled into Iran to destroy nearby air-defense systems and missile launchers.
The transformation of clandestine action has been made possible by increasingly compact electronics, batteries and explosives.
Spy agencies can equip field agents with capabilities unimaginable a few years ago.
With the advent of powerful remote or autonomous devices, the people deploying them can be amateurs with minimal training. Being local, they can remain hidden or escape before an attack.
Israel's Growing Partnerships across Central Asia - Alex Winston ( Jerusalem Post)
Israel is looking to expand its diplomatic ties and trade with five Central Asian countries: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan.
Although they are Muslim-majority nations, the "Stans" have discovered the benefits of working with the Jewish state.
"Israel established diplomatic relations with all five countries in Central Asia in the early '90s as the Soviet Union fell apart," said Yuval Fuchs, deputy director-general for Eurasia and the Western Balkans at the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Israel has quietly become a partner that many of these countries want to work with.
While even post-independence, the Central Asian nations were dependent upon Russia. But after 35 years of independence, and Russia's invasion of Ukraine, many Central Asian states have distanced themselves from Russia politically and economically, seeking to diversify their diplomatic friendships.
Israel is seen as technologically advanced with much innovation, politically stable, and militarily competent, but geographically distant and non-threatening.
Hyperbaric Pressure Chambers Help Wounded IDF Soldiers Heal - Sarit Rosenblum ( Ynet News)
Every day, dozens of wounded soldiers enter the hyperbaric pressure chambers at the Israeli Navy's Institute for Maritime Medicine in Haifa.
The institute was originally intended to treat diving injuries. Since Oct. 7, it has become a critical rehabilitation hub for injured soldiers with severe burns, amputations, blast injuries, and hearing damage.
At the height of the war, up to 50 soldiers a day were treated at the institute.
At the heart of the institute, located adjacent to Rambam hospital, are advanced hyperbaric chambers that can treat up to 12 patients simultaneously.
They are used for decompression sickness, embolisms, blast injuries, gas poisoning, and complex tissue damage.
Patients breathe oxygen at pressures higher than atmospheric levels, increasing oxygen delivery to tissues and supporting processes such as wound healing, blood vessel growth, and bone regeneration.
One of the most significant breakthroughs during the war has been the treatment of hearing damage. Over the past two years, thousands of soldiers with hearing damage have been treated there.
A recent study found that 88% of those who began treatment within seven days showed significant improvement. 60% of soldiers who were initially deemed unfit for combat returned to active service.
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News Resources - North America, Europe, and Asia:
- 11 People Murdered, 29 Injured, in Shooting Attack on Hanukkah Event in Sydney, Australia - Andrew Thorpe
At least 11 people were killed in a shooting attack on a Jewish community Hanukkah event sponsored by Chabad at Sydney's Bondi Beach. One shooter was killed, while another is in custody. 29 people have been injured, including two police officers. A senior law enforcement official confirmed that one of the gunmen was Naveed Akram, 24.
Witnesses said two men dressed in black stepped out of a vehicle and opened fire with semi-automatic rifles on a Hanukkah by the Sea event, advertised as a night of family fun and attended by many children.
Rabbi Eli Schlanger, assistant rabbi at the Chabad of Bondi, was killed in the shooting. One witness said the shooting lasted for about 10 minutes. (Australian Broadcasting Corporation-Daily Mail-UK-New York Times)
- U.S. Forces Raid Ship, Seize Cargo Headed to Iran from China - Benoit Faucon
A U.S. special operations team boarded a ship in the Indian Ocean last month and seized military-related articles headed to Iran from China, U.S. officials said, in an interdiction operation aimed at blocking Tehran from rebuilding its military arsenal.
The cargo consisted of components potentially useful for Iran's conventional weapons, one official said, adding that the shipment was destroyed. The U.S. had gathered intelligence suggesting the cargo was going to Iranian companies that specialize in procuring components for its missile program, a second official said.
"By remaining a permissive jurisdiction for the export of illicit technologies, China is an enabler for Iran's ballistic missile program," said Behnam Ben Taleblu, an Iran director at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. Companies in China typically provide technologies that improve the precision of Iran's missiles, he said. (Wall Street Journal)
- U.S. Briefly Withheld Intelligence from Israel during Biden Era - Erin Banco
U.S. intelligence officials temporarily suspended sharing some key information with Israel during the Biden administration, according to six people familiar with the matter. In the second half of 2024, the U.S. cut off a live video feed from a U.S. drone over Gaza which was being used by Israel in its hunt for hostages and Hamas militants. The suspension lasted for at least a few days. The U.S. also restricted how Israel could use certain intelligence in its pursuit of high-value military targets in Gaza.
One source said intelligence officials have latitude to make some intelligence-sharing decisions in real time without an order from the White House. The decision inside the intelligence agencies to withhold information was limited and tactical, as officials sought to ensure that Israel was using American intelligence in accordance with the law of war. The intelligence sharing resumed after Israel provided assurances that it would follow U.S. rules.
Denying battlefield intelligence to a key ally, particularly during a conflict, is unusual, said experts.
In the final weeks of the administration - months after the intelligence was shut off and restored - intelligence officials proposed at a National Security Council meeting chaired by President Biden that the U.S. more formally cut off some intelligence that had been provided to Israel following the Oct. 7 attack. Biden chose not to cut off the intelligence.
(Reuters)
News Resources - Israel and the Mideast:
- Hamas Second-in-Command Ra'ad Sa'ad Killed in Gaza Strike - Yoav Zitun
An Israeli drone strike on a vehicle in western Gaza City on Saturday killed Ra'ad Sa'ad, chief operational planner of the Oct. 7 massacre. He was considered Hamas's second-in-command and was leading efforts to rebuild the group's weapons production capabilities. (Ynet News)
See also Israel Killed Top Hamas Official for Rearming instead of Demilitarizing - Yonah Jeremy Bob
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz said Saturday night they had ordered the targeted killing of number two Hamas official Ra'ad Sa'ad due to his leadership over the group's post-war rearmament activities. IDF sources gave specific examples of soldiers wounded by IEDs planted at Sa'ad's direction in recent weeks.
Sa'ad has been part of Hamas since the 1990s, and served time in both Israeli and Palestinian Authority prisons. He was close with Hamas founder Sheikh Ahmed Yassin and with top Hamas military leaders.
At one point, Sa'ad was the brigade commander for Gaza City, and he established Hamas's naval commando unit. The only high-ranked Hamas official remaining is its current chief, Az-al-din Al-Hadad. (Jerusalem Post)
- Behind Israel's Decision to Target Senior Hamas Figure - Ron Ben-Yishai
The decision to carry out a targeted killing of a senior Hamas figure in the heart of Gaza City during a ceasefire was highly unusual. Israeli officials cite several factors behind the decision. First, the strike eliminated one of the central architects of the Oct. 7 attack. Ra'ad Sa'ad played a key role in building Hamas's military capabilities, founding its military academy and shaping combat doctrines, including urban warfare, artillery operations, and large-scale raids such as the Oct. 7 massacre.
Second, the operation sent a message to Washington and regional mediators that Israel will not accept any scenario in which Hamas remains a dominant military or governing force in Gaza, even during a ceasefire. Despite U.S. calls for restraint, Israeli officials have made clear they are unwilling to tolerate signs of renewed freedom of movement or consolidation of power by Hamas terrorists.
Third, by striking Sa'ad in a highly visible manner, Israel sought to send a clear warning to senior Hamas figures that no ceasefire, diplomatic process, or international pressure will allow them to remain in Gaza as an armed or governing authority. Israel is signaling that Hamas's survival as a military force in Gaza remains a red line for Jerusalem.
(Ynet News)
Global Commentary and Think-Tank Analysis:
The Gaza War
- It's All about Hamas's Disarmament - Amb. Daniel B. Shapiro
The core elements of phase two of President Trump's plan for Gaza are Hamas's disarmament, the reconstruction of Gaza, the establishment of an interim Palestinian technocratic government under an international "Board of Peace" chaired by Trump, the deployment of an international stabilization force, and the gradual return of a reformed Palestinian Authority (PA) to governance in Gaza. All of these objectives hinge on Hamas's disarmament.
Following the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attacks, I led a State Department task force on "day-after" planning for Gaza. We immediately established as one of our core assumptions that unless Hamas was defeated, disarmed, and removed from power, there would be no "day-after." The postwar gains we envisioned - Gulf-funded reconstruction, an international security force, and PA involvement in governance - would all be impossible if Hamas remained armed and in control.
Qatar and Turkey have proven that, when properly motivated, they can exert decisive influence over Hamas. Trump should once again leverage both, using fresh incentives to press Hamas to surrender its arms. A critical mass of Hamas fighters and remaining leaders could then accept safe passage into exile, allowing an international stabilization force and technical experts to safely decommission Hamas's remaining tunnel networks.
There is precedent for this. In 1982, U.S. diplomats helped arrange the peaceful departure of some 14,000 Palestine Liberation Organization personnel from Beirut while the Israeli military besieged the city.
The writer served as U.S. ambassador to Israel (2011-17), and as deputy assistant secretary of defense for the Middle East. (Atlantic Council)
- Israel's Yellow Line in Gaza Corrects Its Strategic Depth Deficit - Amine Ayoub
The Yellow Line in Gaza separating the areas controlled by the IDF and Hamas is not a political border designed for annexation; it is an operational necessity designed for sanitation. It represents the shift from a failed doctrine of "containment."
For two decades, the assumption was that a high-tech fence on the 1967 armistice line, combined with economic inducements, would contain the threat. Oct. 7 demonstrated the catastrophic failure of that approach. We learned that allowing a terror state to metastasize just meters from civilian communities creates an intolerable risk.
The Yellow Line corrects this strategic depth deficit. It acknowledges that security cannot be maintained from the outside looking in; it requires internal lines of control that prevent the adversary from achieving strategic mass.
If the IDF withdraws its forward positions today, there is no "revitalized" Palestinian Authority capable of stepping into the breach. The only organized force with the logistical capacity and the will to seize control is the remnant of the Hamas battalions, currently melting into the civilian population.
The diplomatic obsession with the "Day After" often ignores the reality of the "Day Present." Stabilization is impossible without security, and security in a post-conflict zone requires area denial.
To demand the dismantling of the Yellow Line is to demand that Israel voluntarily surrender its leverage and its security for a return to the status quo ante. From a strictly military standpoint, removing this crucial "firebreak" before the total capitulation of Hamas would be operational malpractice.
If the international community wants the line to fade, they should stop pressuring Israel to withdraw and start pressuring Hamas to surrender.
The writer, a fellow at the Middle East Forum, is based in Morocco. (Ynet News)
Palestinian Arabs
- West Bank Palestinians Failed to Rise Up in Support for Gaza - Ewen MacAskill
I returned to the West Bank in November for the first time in 20 years, where I had visited regularly as a correspondent for the Guardian during the second intifada. I had been invited to attend a conference at Birzeit University, on the outskirts of Ramallah, organized by Progressive International. I witnessed how dispirited Palestinians have become.
I was curious as to why there had been no Palestinian uprising in the West Bank comparable to the second intifada, in support of their compatriots in Gaza. Curious, too, about how much support there was for Hamas in the West Bank, and whether anyone believed that an independent Palestinian state was something we might see in the next few decades.
Ramallah, the political center of the West Bank, looked cleaner and more prosperous than the last time I was there. Young, fashion-conscious Palestinians sat chatting in cafes and bars; according to some of the older generation, they are generally less concerned about politics.
While Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat backed the second intifada, his successor, Mahmoud Abbas,
resisted pressure over the past two years to launch a new uprising in the West Bank. Abbas's decision is unpopular among Palestinians, but his decision was supported by Maher Canawati, the mayor of Bethlehem, who said: "People in the West Bank understood that this was not the time to do what they did in the first and second intifada. We do not want to give them an excuse to attack us....If we decided to go with an uprising, it would give them the green light to retaliate as they did in Gaza."
The Palestinian Authority, nominally responsible for administration of the West Bank and run by Fatah, is synonymous with corruption, embezzlement, dodgy contracts and nepotism. Palestinians I spoke to were incensed by the way jobs were so often awarded not on merit but on family links, contacts, or political affiliation.
Regarding the 7 October massacre, in which more than 1,200 Israelis and foreigners were killed and about 250 taken hostage, Palestinians viewed Hamas as part of the resistance and few that I met were prepared to criticize the attack.
(Guardian-UK)
- Let the Saudis Tell the Palestinians: "Your War Against Zionism Is Over" - Dr. Einat Wilf interviewed by Sherry Makover-Balikov
Dr. Einat Wilf, a former Labor MK, explained in a recent interview with Maariv why she views Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas as an adversary. "I spoke about his commitment to the Palestinian ethos that believes in the right of return and fights against the existence of a Jewish state for the Jewish people."
Before Oct. 7, "I said our enemies, especially the Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank, still seek a reality where Jews have no state....[I] explained that someone who grows up believing he will take back his house in Israel will get up each morning and dig a tunnel to 'liberate Palestine.' I said, 'listen to them. They say openly that they aim to destroy the Jewish state.'...Then, on Oct. 7, everyone understood."
"One cannot ignore how refugee and return ideas shape Palestinianism, or that a people next to us was formed around a destructive idea of negating Zionism....Peace and security are impossible while the Palestinian ideology that negates Zionism persists."
"The Palestinians are not ready for peace or any arrangement that includes a Jewish state. Still, Israel must say it strives for peace under conditions....The Saudi crown prince said he would advance the Abraham Accords if a path to two states opens....For a hundred years, the Palestinians have said they are not ready for a neighboring Jewish state. The day they want to live beside us, not on our ruins, they will find we were never the problem."
"Return the ball to the crown prince. Ask him to help West Bank Arabs abandon the war. Tell the Palestinians, your war against Zionism is over. The Jews will have a state, and you can live beside them, not instead of them. That means you are not refugees and have no right of return, and in return, we will help with budgets and education."
"In Gaza, we would say the war does not end with disarming Hamas but when the ideology disintegrates - and no one in Gaza is a refugee....We talked only about disarming Hamas, while its greatest weapons are ideology, refugeehood, right of return, and international legitimacy....Once Palestinians understand that ideology is dead and the Jews are here to stay, they can live alongside us, and a political arrangement will be possible." (Jerusalem Post)
Israeli Security
- Training the Israel Air Force to Stop another Oct. 7 - Amir Bohbot
In an interview with a fighter pilot who trains Israeli Air Force squadrons, we get a glimpse into the emerging ability of the pilots to stop Hizbullah's Radwan forces in southern Lebanon if they approach the border, to disrupt the arrival of 100 pickup trucks carrying Houthi or jihadist fighters from Syria, and even to prevent Hamas terrorists in Gaza from crossing the Yellow Line.
For Capt. D., 27, one of the newest and most complex training scenarios for fighter pilots is the "explosive event" scenario in the border areas, a framework based on the events of Oct. 7.
"Everyone says openly: There is no scenario that won't happen anymore; there is no longer 'illogical' - there is maybe low probability. Here we train for everything....Just like we train for Iran, we train for border defense."
In a border-defense mission, there is a "golden hour," and each minute of response time is critical. To be ready, they usually choose to train for the hardest scenario. "In the past, a pilot on regular alert would wait for instructions from the command center. Today, authority has been decentralized and given to the pilots in this scenario. This means that...the pilot...will make decisions himself....Flight squadrons will not prevent an infiltration on a scale like Oct. 7, but it can significantly disrupt it even before reaching the border." (Jerusalem Post)
Israel and the West
- Why Would Celebrities Call to Free a Terrorist Murderer? - Lt.-Col. (res.) Maurice Hirsch
Over 200 celebrities and public figures are using their platform to call for the release of convicted Palestinian terrorist Marwan Barghouti. Do these people actually know why Barghouti is in prison?
In 2000, Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's Fatah organization launched a full-blown terror war - the Second Intifada. Barghouti established the Tanzim and the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, both part of Fatah, as organizational structures to carry out acts of terror. From September 2000 through April 2002 when he was arrested, Barghouti and the other terrorists carried out over 1,000 terror attacks that resulted in the death of over 150 Israelis.
A report published by the Israeli government in May 2002, based on seized documents, noted that "The Al-Aqsa Brigades organization, headed by Arafat, was put under the direct authority of Marwan Barghouti, who had no compunction in using women and even children to execute terrorist activity, which killed hundreds of Israelis." The report included documents showing the involvement of Barghouti in the terror.
Barghouti was indicted for his role in 37 different terror attacks and was tried in an Israeli civilian court. In its final verdict regarding his responsibility, the court convicted Barghouti only for the five counts of murder for which he had not only been implicated by the other terrorists, but for which he had personally confessed to during his interrogation.
The drive to release Barghouti is based on his alleged potential to become the leader of the Palestinian people. This position is simply outrageous. Surely there must be potential Palestinian leaders who are not terrorists and convicted murderers. If not, what does that say about Palestinian society? It is time to demand that the Palestinian leadership abandon terror.
The writer, former director of the Military Prosecution in Judea and Samaria, is director of the Palestinian Authority Accountability Initiative at the Jerusalem Center.
(Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs)
- How Antisemitism Is Entering Mainstream Culture - Michal Cotler-Wunsh and Nadav Steinman
For decades, efforts to demonize, delegitimize and apply double standards to Israel, and implicitly justifying violence against Jews, occurred mostly in academic institutions, fringe activist movements and international forums. But lately, these ideas have migrated into mainstream public life in the West - into sports stadiums, concert halls, music festivals, and entertainment platforms. Demonizing and otherwise targeting Jews and the Jewish state, once the realm of UN resolutions or academic debates, have now become commonplace in mainstream forums.
The working definition of antisemitism by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA), adopted by more than 40 countries including the U.S., Germany, France and Britain, explicitly identifies as antisemitic the denial of Jewish self-determination and the application of double standards to Israel. Today's virulent anti-Zionism, masquerading as criticism of the Israeli government, has stoked Jew-hatred and helped unleash and normalize it in the public square.
Israel, the Jew among nations, is uniquely targeted for bans from cultural events, Israeli artists and athletes are singled out, Jewish visibility is increasingly framed as provocation, and convicted terrorists are recast as political prisoners. The letter signed by 200 celebrities calling for the release of convicted Palestinian terrorist Marwan Barghouti reflects an environment where violence against Israelis is romanticized, and anti-Zionism is presented as a moral duty, couched in the language of human rights.
The normalization of antisemitism creates the conditions for hate that does not stop with Jews, because it's never about Jews alone. What is being mainstreamed is a thuggish sensibility in which any targeted group can be demonized. The deeper threat from rising antisemitism is the general erosion of fundamental principles of life and liberty. The Barghouti letter shows not just the moral lapse of celebrities. It is a siren warning of a fire that isn't even close to being extinguished.
Michal Cotler-Wunsh, formerly Israel's special envoy for combating antisemitism, is chief executive of the International Legal Forum, where Nadav Steinman is board chair.
(Washington Post)
Observations:
- Israeli Ambassador Yechiel Leiter, 66, was born and raised in Scranton, Pa. He immigrated to Israel at 18, served in the 1982 Lebanon War as a combat medic, and earned a doctorate in political philosophy at the University of Haifa. He also worked as Benjamin Netanyahu's chief of staff from 2004-05 when he was finance minister.
- The history of the U.S.-Israel relationship adds some perspective as to its future. Leiter said, "When we bombed the Osirak nuclear reactor in Iraq in 1981, Reagan was irate. He threatened [Prime Minister] Begin with sanctions." When Israel bombed Syria's nuclear reactor in 2007, "Bush 43 doesn't threaten sanctions, but he's not very happy about it." Then came the attack on Iran's nuclear facilities. "In 2025, we almost became one intelligence community. People don't understand the level of collaboration that we had for three, four months."
- "While all these idiots were writing about 'daylight' and anger" between the U.S. and Israel or between Trump and Netanyahu, Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister "Ron Dermer and I used to come out of the White House laughing. 'Let them say it. It's perfect. We couldn't break this cover if we tried.' We reached a situation where we begin the operations, and the U.S. completes the operations." Israel helped the U.S. by swallowing the big initial risk and doing most of the "dirty work." The U.S. helped Israel by finishing off what only it had the military capability to do.
- Much of Leiter's case for optimism rests on what Israel can offer America. In the Middle East, "the potential is an extended Abraham Accords, to the degree that Israel and its neighbors enter into a regional entente, so the U.S. could reduce its footprint and have its allies take responsibility for the region."
- This vision hinges on Israeli strength. "Without that, Saudi Arabia is not going to protect the region itself." Leiter views Israel as America's only realistic way out of being dragged into Middle East wars. "The U.S. will need fighting allies." Nonfighting allies like Saudi Arabia spend more on fancy military equipment but get pushed around by Iran.
- Leiter said Vice President JD Vance "may not have the same intestinal identification with Jews that Donald Trump has. He didn't grow up in New York, and probably he didn't light Hanukkah candles with Jewish friends and business partners. But so what? I've been in a dozen consequential meetings with JD, and I haven't noticed in him a scintilla of anti-Israelism or distance from Jews or Israel....Where it matters, I've only seen good and positive stuff. JD believes in America first, and I think he believes that part of America first is having a strong ally like Israel."
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