ISRAEL (IINO)

SCREAMS BEFORE SILENCE Full Video [57:00] A documentary film on the sexual violence committed by Hamas on October 7th, Screams Before Silence is a documentary film led by American businesswoman Sheryl Sandberg, that explores the sexual violence by Hamas during the Hamas-led attack on Israel, on 7 October 2023, including events at the massacre at the Nova Festival and abductions to the Gaza Strip.
Failure at the Fence: How Hamas breached Israel’s “Iron Wall” [28:02]
Self-Appointed Chief Rabbi of Saudi Arabia Denied Entry Into The Kingdom
[Ed.: The Saudi’s aren’t cool, and never were. Don’t tell Trump about this. It would shatter his delusions, and he means well, perhaps.]
Something strange is happening to Jews across the world. NACHUM KAPLAN
Jewish immigration to Israel, and Israeli emigration from it, is actually a sign that Zionism has been a great success.
DEC 25, 2025 The Future of Israel
We live in strange times.
Diaspora Jews in the West are wondering whether they should make aliyah (immigrate to Israel), while a growing number of Israelis insist they would like to leave Israel. It is a fascinating juxtaposition that reveals Israelis do not grasp the extent to which Jew-hatred has been re-normalized in the West, nor do they fully appreciate that Israel has a very bright future.
It is hardly surprising that many Israelis are dissatisfied. They are emerging from two years of war, a prolonged hostage crisis, rolling terror attacks, constitutional pandemonium, and a dysfunctional government. Some 82,700 Israelis left in 2024, surpassing the 55,280 who arrived.
Strangely, there is something salutary in this. It means Zionism has succeeded. Israel has become normal enough that its citizens experience the same tiresome bourgeois anxieties as everyone else, including the perennial fantasy that greener pastures lie elsewhere. There was a time when many Jews saw Israel as their only viable refuge.
The data underscores this normality. A 2023 Israel Democracy Institute survey found that about 37 percent of Israelis were contemplating emigration, a startling figure until one notices that between 30 and 35 percent of citizens in Western democracies routinely tell pollsters they want to emigrate. In Canada, the number is 27 percent; in the UK, 31 percent. These are countries to which people normally flock. Israelis wanting to move abroad is not an indictment of Israel’s trajectory, but evidence that Israel has entered the quotidian grumblings of OECD-style middle-class life.
Yet this trend reveals that Israelis have an ossified, almost sepia-toned view of the West, which is understandable given how quickly much of the West has gone to the dogs, and to packs of stray mongrels at that. Antisemitism is at record levels across the West, governments appear unwilling or incapable of confronting it, violence and discrimination have been reabsorbed into the cultural bloodstream, and Jews increasingly sense that their countries have betrayed them.
In the United States, FBI hate-crime statistics released in 2024 showed a 361-percent increase in anti-Jewish incidents year over year. In the UK, the Community Security Trust recorded the highest number of antisemitic incidents since record-keeping began — more than 4,100 in 2023. France reported a 300-percent spike. Germany logged a 25-year high. These are not blips; this is civilizational regression.
I share these sentiments and believe Jews — especially the young, whose futures lie before them — should be acquiring Israeli passports, if only as insurance.
Much of the West is no longer the introspective, morally anchored place that emerged after World War Two, where there was broad consensus on what is considered right and wrong. It has devolved into a postmodernist dystopia where Left-wing ideologues declare moral categories “social constructs,” Islamist immigrants are welcomed as though their imported medieval hatreds constitute some kind of cultural enrichment, and the unlovely Far-Right is dusting off its old regalia and polishing its jackboots.
It is bewildering that Israelis would want to migrate to such places if they understood this decay’s magnitude and how little is being done to arrest it. They also lack the intuition, which too many liberal Jews in the West also lack, that things may deteriorate dramatically. Jew-hatred does not need to reach Holocaust levels to be very bad indeed.
In their daily struggle for survival, weighted with grief and trauma, many Israelis have also lost sight of the fact that the Jewish state’s future is unusually promising. This rarely gets reported because the press, foreign and Israeli, insists on shoving Israeli news into the conflict-zone file, rather than taking a panoramic view of the country. Plus, there is the old journalistic truism: “If it bleeds, it leads.”
Forget the Palestinian question for a moment, if the media will permit you such “heresy.” The conflict is a century old, and Israel has prospered despite it. It will not be resolved anytime soon because the only path to peace involves a radical metamorphosis in the Palestinian political and cultural psyche such that they become willing to live alongside Jews rather than in place of them.
On other fronts, however, there are abundant grounds for optimism about Israel. While Iran is facing a terrible drought and the broader Middle East remains acutely vulnerable to climate change, Israel is ahead of the curve. For decades, Israel’s national mood oscillated with the Sea of Galilee’s waterline. Yet this month Israel began pumping desalinated water into the Sea of Galilee itself — severing, for the first time, the country’s dependency on meteorological whim. Israel now produces more than 80 percent of its domestic water through desalination, the highest proportion among developed states.
Coupled with its world-leading irrigation technologies, this will render vast swathes of Israel arable. The Negev may resemble suburbia within 30 years. Global and regional environmental crises will become export opportunities for Israel. The country already earns $2.7 billion annually from water-technology exports, a figure tipped to triple by 2050.
Israel is also on the brink of a demographic renaissance unrivaled in aging Europe or Asia, where Zimmer Frame futures seem a good investment. Even excluding high ultra-Orthodox birthrates, secular Israelis reproduce at above-replacement levels. Israel’s total fertility rate in 2023 was 3.0, the highest in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, a club of rich countries, where the average is 1.5 believe it or not. Secular Jewish Israelis average 2.2 children, well above Europe’s median of 1.3. By 2050, Israel’s population may reach 15 million, up from today’s 9.8 million.
Demographics, as the old adage goes, is destiny.
It is exceedingly rare for developed countries to maintain such a high fertility rate, but secular Israelis do. Perhaps it is because Judaism, at its core, is a life-affirming civilization rather than a nihilistic one.
The implications are profound. A young population will grant Israel a large productivity dividend. The impact of aliyah will depend on the age and skill profiles of new arrivals, but recent immigrants have tended to be highly educated, multilingual, and economically agile.
Israel’s youth boom will also provide the Israel Defense Forces with a large pool of fighting-age citizens — essential given that Israel’s neighbors, including the Palestinians, also have high fertility rates.
A young population is likewise vital for Israel’s booming technology sector, which has displayed remarkable resilience during the past two years, in addition to its flourishing defense industry.
In 2023 and 2024, Israeli tech firms raised more than $11 billion in venture capital despite war, sanctions chatter, and a torpid global economy. Multinationals such as NVIDIA, Microsoft, Amazon, and Intel expanded their research and development operations in Israel. Intel alone committed $25 billion to its new fabrication plant, the largest investment in the nation’s history. Global capital is not sentimental; it is wagering heavily on Israeli ingenuity.
What’s more, Israel’s defense industry will continue creating jobs and earning vast export revenue. Defense exports reached a record $14.8 billion in 2024. The government’s badly needed push to reduce its reliance on foreign arms supplies will make Israel more secure. Short wars are won through tactics, intelligence, and technology; long wars are won through industrial capability. Israel is constructing precisely that.
While political pugilism over Gaza’s next chapter will continue indefinitely, the Abraham Accords’ durability during the Gaza war suggests that regional integration is a secular trend that will not easily be undone. Bilateral trade with the United Arab Emirates vaulted from zero to over $3.2 billion annually within two years. Moroccan-Israeli trade has quadrupled.
And the cooperation is not just pecuniary. Israel is developing a hospital on its soil to treat Jordanian cancer patients as part of the joint Israeli-Jordanian industrial zone known as the Jordan Gateway, where Israelis ad Jordanians will be able to work on either side. Such ventures demonstrate how pragmatic integration can elevate regional welfare and prosperity.
Israel’s strategic environment will forever be perilous. It inhabits a neighborhood of thugs and theocrats, and it will always contend with Qatar, Iran, their attendant militias, and assorted deranged factions. This is simply the condition of being a small nation-state in a predatory world. Taiwan does not feel secure vis-à-vis China. Eastern European states do not feel secure vis-à-vis Russia. The phrase “Peace in the Middle East” is sentimental gibberish that many Westerners recite like an incantation. History does not end; the great game must perpetually be played and won.
Israel is well-positioned to play it, even if some of its citizens find it hard to see that right now. As much of the West is decompensates, Israel is consolidating strength. Many Israelis may fantasize about Berlin or Toronto or Melbourne or Miami, but those fantasies are increasingly anachronistic. Many Diaspora Jews, for the first time in decades, understand viscerally that the future is in Israel.
Nachum Kaplan writes the newsletter, “Moral Clarity.”
Israel’s Prime Minister Still Doesn’t Have a Real Home and Taxpayers Keep Paying for the Mess
December 25, 2025 Jewish Breaking News
A newly disclosed Freedom of Information response shows up to NIS 103,098,118 has been approved for the long-running renovation of Israel’s official prime minister’s residence on Balfour Street, a 1930s villa that was never designed to function as a hardened national command home.
The price tag isn’t the whole scandal. While Balfour has been a construction zone, the state has had to secure and retrofit a revolving door of private homes for sitting prime ministers, costs that largely can’t be reused elsewhere. The State Comptroller put the bill at NIS 56 million through late 2023, after years of delay and dysfunction.
And this is after years of trying to build a purpose-built compound. The Comptroller notes the “Almog” plan was restarted and later halted, and the “Shira” alternative has remained stuck without a final government decision, even as its estimated cost was pegged at around NIS 500 million in planning documents.
This isn’t about luxury. It’s about continuity of government in a country that lives under constant terror and missile threats. Israel needs a secure, purpose-built prime ministerial office-and-residence where minutes matter, and taxpayers aren’t forced to bankroll endless patchwork every time a crisis or protest shuts down a neighborhood.
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📊 POLL REVEALS DEEP SPLIT OVER FORMING A GOVERNMENT WITHOUT THE RIGHT
🕑 December 25, 2025 | 11:00 PM Israel Realtime
📊 A new Channel 12 poll highlights a growing and deeply divisive fault line within Israel’s opposition bloc.
According to the data, a clear majority of center-left voters support forming a government even if it depends on outside backing from Arab parties. This position is now openly associated with figures such as Gadi Eisenkot, Yair Golan, and potentially Yair Lapid, and reflects a shift toward pragmatic coalition-building at almost any cost to end the current political deadlock.
However, the poll also reveals a significant internal backlash:
51% of respondents support forming a government that relies on Arab parties from the outside.
- 25% oppose such a move and prefer a unity government with Likud instead.
- – 14% say they would rather see new elections than a government dependent on Arab parties.
– 10% remain undecided.
This split explains the growing alarm within the Bennett–Lieberman camp. For them, the issue is existential: the very voters they rely on are the same ones most likely to abandon them if a government is formed with Arab-party backing.
That concern intensified after Gadi Eisenkot publicly stated on television that he would be willing to rely on Arab parties to form a government — and then reiterated it publicly afterward. For many centrist and right-leaning voters, that position crosses a red line.
The irony, however, is that the math increasingly points in that direction. If current trends continue, a government led by Eisenkot or his allies may indeed require Arab party support — not by ideological choice, but by arithmetic necessity.
In short: the path to replacing the current government may exist, but it runs directly through the most politically sensitive terrain in Israeli politics — and that reality is already reshaping voter behavior.
Projected Knesset Seats (120 total) breakdown:
– Likud (Netanyahu) – 25
– Bennett 2026 (Naftali Bennett) – 22
– The Democrats (Yair Golan) – 11
– Yesh Atid (Yair Lapid) – 9
– Yisrael Beiteinu (Avigdor Lieberman) – 9
– Shas (Aryeh Deri) – 8
– Otzma Yehudit (Itamar Ben Gvir) – 8
– United Torah Judaism – 7
– Yeshar / Eisenkot List – 7
– Hadash–Ta’al – 5
– Ra’am (Mansour Abbas) – 5
Below the Electoral Threshold:
– Blue and White (Benny Gantz) – 1.9%
– The Reservists (Yoaz Hendel) – 1.7%
– Balad – 1.3%
Bloc Breakdown:
– Opposition: 58 seats
– Arab parties: 10 seats
- Coalition: 52 seats
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[Ed.: ‘The enemy within’ IINO is 51% of ourselves!]
The Enemy Within: Son of Hamas Exposes the Fifth Column [12:33] Avi Abelow
December 25, 2025
What you are about to hear challenges deeply held assumptions, but reality doesn’t care about our comfort. Son of Hamas, Mosab Hassan Yousef, exposes the Fifth Column threatening Israel and the West—this is about survival.
December 24, 2025 Jewish Breaking News
Deputy Minister MK Almog Cohen (Otzma Yehudit) stunned the Knesset plenum today by alleging that on the night of October 7, a Shin Bet human source inside Gaza, codenamed “Green Sardine”, reported a Nukhba gathering in mosques at around 3:30 a.m.
Cohen said the alert was relayed to the handler and came roughly two hours before the earliest Fajr prayer time, framing it as a concrete, time-stamped indicator of imminent operational movement. He also claimed that then–Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar convened senior division heads at that hour, yet the information “wasn’t passed on” to the right places.
If accurate, it undercuts the long-running public narrative that there was no usable human intelligence from inside Gaza in the critical hours before the massacre, and it sharpens the core question Israelis still demand answered: who knew what, when, and why it didn’t translate into warnings and action.
Shin Bet declined to comment on Cohen’s remarks, and his allegation has not been independently verified in full. But the public disclosure, right on the Knesset floor, will pour fuel on the fight over a State Commission of Inquiry and the accountability chain for Israel’s darkest morning.
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MK Reveals: Shin Bet Agent In Gaza Issued Warning Hours Before Oct. 7 Massacre
[Ed.: Some of us knew this all along: The Deep State of Israel In Name Only (IINO,) enabled the October 7th massacre and then lied about it and covered it up ever since. Yofi.]
♟️ HEZBOLLAH: WEAKER, QUIETER — AND REBUILDING WITH INTENT
December 24, 2025 Israel Realtime
Based on analysis by Amit Segal
Hezbollah today is significantly weaker than it was before the war, but it is far from defeated. Rather than escalating with Israel, the organization has deliberately chosen restraint, using time and quiet as strategic tools while it works to rebuild its capabilities with Iranian backing. The absence of response should not be confused with passivity; it reflects a calculated decision to avoid triggering a confrontation it is not yet ready to fight.
From a military perspective, Hezbollah suffered deep and systemic damage. If its operational capacity stood near full strength before October 2023, it fell sharply by the time of the November 2024 ceasefire and has only marginally recovered since. Beyond the loss of weapons and infrastructure, the organization experienced serious command-and-control breakdowns. Its once-effective decentralized rocket and missile deployment model largely collapsed, and elite Radwan units are no longer positioned for major cross-border attacks. Israeli strikes, the destruction of forward bases, and Lebanese Army deployments near the border have significantly constrained Hezbollah’s freedom of maneuver.
Despite these setbacks, Hezbollah remains organizationally intact and focused on recovery. Its current restraint is not merely the result of weakness but a strategic choice. By avoiding escalation, Hezbollah denies Israel a clear justification for a decisive response while buying time to rearm, retrain, and reorganize. Low-level tension without open war allows it to rebuild gradually, under conditions it considers manageable.
The analysis stresses that Hezbollah’s future is inseparable from the weakness of the Lebanese state itself. Israel has demonstrated its ability to severely damage Hezbollah militarily, but it cannot eliminate it as a political-military actor. Lebanese institutions remain fragile decades after the civil war, and fear of renewed internal collapse often outweighs fear of external threats. This dynamic limits the state’s willingness and ability to challenge Hezbollah directly, giving the organization enduring strategic depth.
At the heart of the issue is money. Since the ceasefire, Iran has reportedly injected around one billion dollars into Lebanon to help rebuild Hezbollah. Western aid, by contrast, is minimal and often trapped in bureaucratic or anti-corruption mechanisms that delay real impact. Lebanese Army soldiers earn extremely low wages, forcing many to take secondary jobs and leaving only a portion of the force fully deployable at any given time. The analysis argues that something as basic as raising salaries could immediately strengthen state authority by dramatically increasing the army’s effective manpower.
The conclusion is blunt. Military success without sustained economic and institutional follow-through is temporary. If the West does not invest seriously in stabilizing and strengthening the Lebanese state, Iran will continue to fill the vacuum. Outspending Iran, not just striking its proxies, is essential to preventing Hezbollah’s quiet resurgence.
Hezbollah today is wounded, cautious, and rebuilding patiently. Israel has achieved meaningful military gains, but the long-term balance will be decided less by firepower than by financial flows, state strength, and political will.
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December 24, 2025 Yeshiva World News
Addressing a graduation ceremony for Israeli Air Force pilots, Netanyahu said Israel is seeking to cut dependence on foreign suppliers, including allies, while preserving its aerial dominance in the Middle East, and pledged to block regional adversaries from obtaining advanced military aircraft that could endanger Israel.
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HATE FOR SALE: Report Accuses Instagram of Promoting Antisemitic Hate Merch to Millions
December 23, 2025 𝗜𝗦𝗥𝗔𝗘𝗟 𝗟𝗜𝗩𝗘 𝗡𝗘𝗪𝗦
[Ed.: President Trump’s “good looking, strong leader” buddy…

A dark deal is sacrificing Jews in Australia and across the West NADAV EYAL
And still, this unspoken bargain continues to trade Jewish safety for sociopolitical convenience.
DEC 23, 2025 The Future of Jewish
Ed Halmagyi’s bakery, Avner’s, became world-famous after the Bondi Beach attack two Sundays ago.
This story was widely reported: A day after, Halmagyi decided to close Avner’s. The message he left on the door was quoted everywhere:
“In the wake of the pogrom at Bondi one thing has become clear – it is no longer possible to make outwardly, publicly, proudly Jewish places and events safe in Australia.”

The message left on Avner’s door, last week
The bakery is in a fashionable Sydney suburb, and Halmagyi is a television personality and a well-known figure in Australia’s food scene. Avner’s was supposed to open in September 2023, but its opening was delayed until October. This week, I spoke with Halmagyi.
“For two years, we were dealing with vandalism, harassment, posters that were anti-Israel, anti-Zionist, or straight-up antisemitic. Graffiti on the windows or around the shop. Basically, that was our reality almost every week — five or six days out of seven — for two years.”
Think about that: five or six days a week. Every week. For two years.
“The bakery is in one of Sydney’s more progressive suburbs. That wasn’t by accident. I wanted to open a business that wasn’t in the shtetl. A place that was both Jewish and Australian. Something that celebrated that identity. But as time went on, more and more people just wouldn’t come on principle because it was a Jewish business. You can’t underestimate how deeply this idea has taken hold: that we, as Jews, as a collective, are responsible for every strategic decision made by the Israeli government and everything that happens in Gaza.”
A typical threat, he told me, would be someone stopping outside the shop and saying: “All Jews are the same. You should all be killed.”
“The threats against me and the business were serious. One person tried to set the place on fire, but used diesel — you need heat in order to ignite diesel — so I managed to stop him. On Sunday, police came to brief us that there was a real, immediate threat against us. After that, someone drove past with a Syrian flag, circling and shouting that he was going to come back and kill the Jews. A few hours later, the massacre happened at Bondi Beach.”
“After Bondi, everything changed forever. The question now isn’t whether someone will show up with six guns and his kid, like at Bondi; it’s whether someone comes with a single gun. Or a knife. Everyone knows something else will happen. The only question is how. There aren’t many high-profile Jewish businesses in Sydney. As one of them, I can’t guarantee anymore the safety of customers, my family, or myself anymore. The world changed.”
He spoke about the dream that ended.
“I wanted to show what it means to be Jewish and Australian. A place that was part of the local community. You wouldn’t find a better bagel anywhere in Australia, maybe only a handful better in the United States. Our challah was exceptional. Our babka was world-class. No one needs honey cake — it isn’t essential — but people buy it because it makes them happy. I wanted to make people happy. Parents came in the morning after dropping their kids at school. In the afternoons, we’d draw with chalk on the pavement with the kids.”
Ed Halmagyi with a challah from Avner’s Bakery (photo: Avner’s Bakery/Instagram0
“But everything changed on Sunday after Bondi. The range of what’s possible expanded — and it now includes the possibility of Jews being massacred simply because they can. Jewish schools and institutions have armed guards, fences, walls. You can’t do that for a bakery. It doesn’t make economic sense, and it destroys the openness, connection to the community, the family atmosphere.”
He is impatient with the wave of sympathy now being expressed towards the Jewish Community; it reminds him of American writer and professor Dara Horn’s book, “People Love Dead Jews.”
“Some of the people expressing solidarity now are the same ones who held racist views, or legitimized violence.”
It doesn’t sound like Halmagyi is leaving.
“I love being Jewish. I love being Australian. I love being part of Sydney. But Sydney is going to have to have a very uncomfortable conversation with itself. Certain attitudes spread through this society over two years and made this massacre possible. When you see a bunch of reckless fools wearing Chinese-made keffiyehs chanting ‘Globalize the intifada!’ — this is where it leads. Australia allowed it.”
In one sense, the story Halmagyi tells is about antisemitism, pure and simple. There’s no way to deny that the war in Gaza itself enhanced and empowered hostility toward Israelis and toward Jews identifying with Israel. But there is a difference between criticism — even resentment — and placing collective blame on an entire people.
That angle has been widely discussed. To some extent, though, I think this story is no less about enforcement, or rather the failure to enforce rules and the law in the face of antisemitism. This is not the same thing.
There is a dominant theme out there: The rising tide of anti-Israel antisemitism following the war is serving as an ideal opportunity for age-old hatred. While there is no question animosity is growing, and the constant images coming from Gaza (together with biased interpretations) have fueled it. But the story is larger than that. This is not a flare-up, not (only) a bottom-up grassroots reaction.
Israeli security services believe there is a “power or state-led” campaign that goes beyond encouraging anti-Israeli sentiment. It is now pushing classic antisemitism — globally, and specifically in the West.
Israel does not know with certainty who is behind the operation or operations, but it has become a central concern in Jerusalem. Israeli officials told me the issue requires close examination, not least because it appears to extend beyond any single country or arena. The anti-Israel and anti-Jewish rhetoric — across social media posts, as well as popular opinionators — has surged in recent months, according to those Israeli experts.
While some of this can be understood as fallout from the war’s end and the heavy toll in Gaza, they say they have reached a disturbing conclusion, supported by intelligence: This represents a new, state-led endeavor. It goes well beyond the known phenomena on platforms such as TikTok. One substantive shift has been the move away from Gaza-focused attacks on Israel and Israelis toward more classic, generalized antisemitism.
Within the Israeli government, officials identify a broad, global, and primarily artificial effort — that is, engineered rather than organic — to intensify hostility and hatred toward Israelis and Zionist Jews. The emphasis is on the word artificial. Professional assessments presented to senior figures of Israel’s defense apparatus have concluded that only state actors with large influence operations, backed by intelligence services, or alternatively a number of private influence firms hired by a state, are capable of executing the kind of coordinated and timed actions now appearing worldwide.
Against this backdrop, Israel’s broader relationship with Qatar comes back into focus. A senior, well-informed Israeli official told me: “It seems the Qataris have made a fundamental decision to try to destroy relations between Israel and the Trump Administration at their very foundation. They are in jihad.”
A few weeks ago at the Doha Forum (a large event held annually since 2003 in the capital city of Qatar), Qatar’s prime minister gave an interview to Tucker Carlson. The prime minister spoke of the transfer of funds to Hamas over many years, with the support of Israeli governments, the Mossad and the Shin Bet, as well as administrations in Washington, D.C. Those remarks made headlines in Israel.
But the truly troubling statement was about Gaza’s reconstruction. The Qatari prime minister said: “… we are not the ones who are going to write the check to rebuild what others destroyed,” adding that “our payments will only go to help the Palestinian people if we see that the help coming to them is insufficient.” That is very far from what Qatar promised to do with regard to rebuilding Gaza.
The prime minister also rejected the notion that a ceasefire was already in place in Gaza: “It’s not yet there. What we have just done is a pause. We cannot consider it yet a ceasefire. A ceasefire cannot be completed unless there is a full withdrawal of the Israeli forces, which is not the case today.” Rhetorically, at least, this grants legitimacy to a renewal of Palestinian attacks against IDF forces inside the Gaza Strip.
At another level — rooted in Australia, Bondi Beach, and a small bakery — this is a story about power structures with a legal and moral duty to stop racist lawlessness against Jews, and their abdication of that duty.
If people repeatedly make death threats outside a bakery in Sydney, day after day, one would expect local police to intervene. Australia demonstrated during COVID that it is fully capable of enforcing its rules extremely heavy-handedly. Yet demonstrations with flags of terror groups were seen in Sydney again and again after October 7, 2023. Laws were simply not enforced. The pro-Hamas radical echo chamber received a waiver.
This did not happen only in Australia. Look at U.S. campuses. There are no universities or colleges whose rules allow harassment of students, or demonstrations that openly sabotage study, even for the most just cause. And yet, here too, radicals were given a pass. A specific pass to go after Israel, those who support it, and ultimately Jews who identify as Jewish.
The question, of course, is why.
Why would the Sydney police not treat the constant harassment and intimidation of Avner’s as what it was: a vile racist campaign, deserving resources and manpower to stop it? Why would they not see certain phenomena at demonstrations for what they were: clear and present incitement to violence, and promotion of terror groups?
The answer is that there was a deal here. A dark one.
The deal here is murky, but its logic is not. Different governments and power structures arrived at the same outcome from different motives.
Some genuinely despised Israel, or at least its current government, and saw leniency toward anti-Israeli and anti-Jewish hate as a way to signal that. Others understood, often quite well, the operational realities of fighting Hamas in Gaza, but were constrained by domestic political coalitions they felt compelled to appease. Think of the reflex, especially visible in parts of Democratic Party presidential candidate Kamala Harris’ campaign, to “hear out” every radical accusation directed at Israel, no matter how extreme or detached from reality.
This dynamic was fed by a media frenzy united less by concern for Palestinians than by fixation on the Jewish state. A bargain emerged: no serious policy shift in the Middle East, no real break with Israel, but a permissive atmosphere at home. More demonstrations. More protests. More “expression.” Much of it aimed, directly or indirectly, at local Jewish communities.
And so, in practice, they struck a dark deal. Jews, most of whom were assumed to be pro-Israel anyway and therefore “guilty,” were sacrificed.
That is what happened to a small bakery in Sydney. And then it enabled Bondi Beach.
In remembrance of Sophia and Boris Gorman, may their memory be a blessing, who were murdered together on Bondi Beach while trying to disarm one of the terrorists.
Qatar EXPOSED: The Hidden POWER Behind Hamas — And the West’s SILENCE [37:32] Mordechai Kedar
December 21, 2025 Stand Tall Israel
[Ed.: I really wish President Trump could see this, and then invite Mordechai for lunch sometime… And yes, I AM careful what I wish for!
The Mask Is Off: Israel’s Legal Elite Is Governing. Not Advising Avi Abelow
December 22, 2025 Pulse of Israel
For years, Israelis were told the Attorney General and the legal system is a neutral gatekeeper of the rule of law. Professional jurists. Safeguarding democracy.
That illusion is collapsing, fast.
What we are witnessing today is not law enforcement. It is ideological rule by unelected officials, using “legal opinions” to override elections, paralyze governance, and protect their own, while holding everyone else to a harsher standard.
This week’s “harsh legal opinion” against establishing a national commission of inquiry into October 7 that would equally represent the coalition and opposition parties exposed the truth.
The Attorney General claims the proposal would “prevent reaching the truth,” that it is “riddled with fundamental flaws,” and that it was designed to create an investigation mechanism “convenient for the government.”
Translated into plain language: Any investigation not designed and controlled by the legal camp, which is just as complicit in the Oct. 7th travesty and must be investigated as well, is illegitimate.
That is not legal reasoning. That is political control.
The same pattern appears again and again.
When the government decides to close Galei Tzahal radio station, it should be understood as the removal of an enormous and unjustifiable fiscal burden from the army, an army that exists to fight wars, not to operate a radio station that often demoralizes its own soldiers through its politically biased reporting, she suddenly rules legislation is required, despite a previous Attorney General ruling that a government decision was sufficient.
Then she sends the government to the Knesset to legislate, only to claim legislation is impossible during an election year.
Conveniently forgotten: this same legal establishment had no issue approving the appointment of a Chief of Staff during a previous election year.
What becomes clear is that the law is elastic, when it serves the ideology of the politically left deep state legal elite.
Nowhere is this legal rot clearer than in the Sde Teiman video scandal.
The Attorney General appointed the Military Advocate General to oversee the investigation into the leak, even though the illegal video leak originated from within the office of the Military Advocate General itself.
Then came the stunning admission: the Military Advocate General acknowledged personal involvement in leaking or authorizing the release of the video.
And yet, the Attorney General has done everything to protect the MAG:
* No criminal investigation
* No disciplinary action
* No recusal
* No accountability
The soldiers, whose lives were shattered by a fabricated video, were relentlessly investigated by the MAG and brutally smeared by the mainstream media for over a year, despite the case finally being quietly dropped last week.
Yet, the senior legal official, the Military Advocate General, who leaked the manipulated video that ruined the lives of these soldiers, sparked massive international damage to Israel and helped drive a UN resolution falsely accusing IDF soldiers of rape, a modern blood libel, instead of facing consequences, is being protected by the Attorney General and Supreme Court Justice.
That is not equality before the law. That is self-policing by a closed elite.
As if this were not enough, the Attorney General’s own son was involved during his IDF service in the improper taking of military equipment.
And yet:
* No public investigation
* No moral sermons
* No legal crusade
The matter disappeared quietly.
This is not about personal guilt. It is about selective enforcement.
Soldiers fighting Israel’s enemies are treated as legal liabilities as the legal elite and their families are treated with discretion and silence.
Here is the truth more Israelis are finally willing to say:
No democracy can survive when unelected officials hold absolute power and cannot be fired.
In no business, army, or institution can senior leadership:
* Fail repeatedly
* Abuse authority
* Sabotage the mission
* And remain untouchable
Yet this is exactly the system the legal establishment in Israel has created.
The Attorney General and the senior legal echelon are not accountable to voters. They are not accountable to elected leaders. And they are not removable, even when they block governance, cover up scandals, or act ideologically instead of professionally.
That is not “checks and balances.”
That is rule by permanent bureaucracy.
A country is not run by legal priests interpreting sacred texts.
It is run by a people who elect leaders to govern.
The government must have the authority to hire and fire senior unelected officials who fail in their roles, just like any CEO running a company or any commander running an army.
Without that power:
* Elections become symbolic
* Governance becomes impossible
* Democracy becomes an illusion
What we have today is a system where unelected officials abuse their power to block the will of the people, and are then impossible to remove.
That must end.
Democracy must be returned to the people.
Israel was founded so Jews would govern themselves, not so an ideological legal class would rule them from behind closed doors.
Ending absolute power, restoring accountability, and rebalancing authority between elected leaders and professional advisors is not radical.
It is the minimum requirement for democracy.
Israel is facing a crisis that goes beyond politics, personalities, or parties.
At its heart is a simple democratic question: Who governs the country, elected leaders or unelected officials?
Recent controversies surrounding the Attorney General have raised troubling concerns. Legal opinions increasingly function not as professional advice, but as binding vetoes over elected policy.
Investigations are blocked if they are not institutionally controlled. Standards of enforcement appear inconsistent.
The Sde Teiman affair deeply damaged public trust. IDF soldiers were publicly investigated at lightning speed on the basis of libel, while the legal system, up to the Supreme Court, is still actively blocking efforts to investigate the Military Advocate General’s involvement in the illegal leak that inflicted major international harm, despite her own admission in the leak.
Separately, allegations involving the Attorney General’s own family were handled quietly, without the public scrutiny imposed on others.
These cases may differ in scale, but together they highlight a structural problem: unchecked power without accountability.
In any functioning democracy, senior unelected officials must be subject to oversight and removal when they fail. This is not political interference, it is democratic balance.
When officials cannot be replaced under any circumstances, governance freezes, public trust erodes, and elections lose meaning.
Restoring accountability is not about weakening the law.
It is about ensuring the law serves the public, not rules over it.
Israel’s democracy depends on correcting this imbalance, calmly and responsibly, before it becomes irreversible.
The mask is off.
The public is waking up.
And the era of unaccountable legal rule must come to an end.
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December 22, 2025 Israel Live News
According to reports, local youths recognized the language, verbally abused him, and then beat him repeatedly until he lost consciousness. He was hospitalized and is now in stable condition.
There is no other language in the world that puts its speakers at risk simply for being heard.
And yet today, speaking Hebrew outside Israel can be dangerous, a reality that should alarm everyone.
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UNDERNEATH the Real Location of the Second Temple, What We Found Is ASTONISHING [1:37:40] Yishai Fleisher
Dec 21, 2025 Yishai Interviews
Hanukkah Special in secret locked areas under the Temple Mount with Knesset Member Ohad Tal, Mosab Hassan Yousef (Author and Activist) and me. Mosab says “The evidence is overwhelming and … this is the only way to experience truth.” Exclusive new video filmed on location by Joshua Fleisher and Shlomo Weprin. Links to reach or follow MK Tal are below
Timestamps
1:36 – 3:00 MK Ohad Tal intro to the Temple Mount
3:01 – 3:51 Mosab Hassan Yousef intro to Al Aksa and Dome of the Rock
3:52 – 5:40 MK Tal answers the question, “How do you feel as a Jew in Jerusalem?”
5:41 – 6:29 Mosab exclaims the religious and ideological dimensions of the conflict.
6:30 – 8:37 Entering the Western Wall Tunnels – Mosab speaks about “Burying the truth”
8:38 – 17:23 “The Rock” under the Dome, Origin of Temple Mount Plaza, Mamluk Construction
17:24 – 20:44 3,000 Years of Jerusalem – Gates, Bridges, Walls, Residences
20:45 – 23:42 Romans and Muslims in Jerusalem – Ancient & Modern – The Hard Evidence
23:43 – 27:10 Mosab, “Israel made the biggest mistake after 1967 by handing over the keys…”
27:12 – 41:26 Under The Muslim Quarter Stunning Chamber of the Jewish Sanhedrin (including Mosab and MK Tal’s Deep Discussion of the roots of a solution to the regional conflict)
41:27 – 47:10 Exclusive Secret Ritual Baths – Working Until Today!
47:11 – 49:59 Roman Ruins Built On Jewish Streets Revealed
49:59 – 56:52 Live Psalms of King David and King Solomon – Mosab, MK Tal & Yishai discuss
56:52 – 1:05:00 Herodian Masonry and the Biggest Stones On Earth
1:05:01 – 1:16:08 Muslim Wakf Pours Concrete Obstacles – Jewish Sages Pray For World Peace
1:16:09 – 1:18:00 Hidden Teshuva Synagogue – Most Beautiful In The World
1:18:01 – 1:30:10 Current Work and New Excavations
1:30:11 – 1:35:09 Chief Rabbi Rabinowitz of Western Wall Blesses Mosab – Family and Future
1:35:10 – 1:37:40 Wrap Up and Farewell
DELUSIONAL? Trump Team Floats $112 Billion Plan to Rebuild Gaza as High-Tech Coastal Hub
AG Seeks To Halt Funding For Yeshivos That Serve Overseas Students
December 21, 2025 Jewish Breaking News
Israeli forces have arrested three Gaza terrorists in Rahat who allegedly infiltrated Israel during the October 7 massacre—and managed to stay inside the country for more than two years.
The raid, carried out under the “New Order” enforcement operation, located the suspects at a compound in Rahat. During searches, investigators seized ammunition—including 50 rounds of 9mm and additional 7.62 rounds—and a metal lathe believed to have been used for weapons-related activity.
i24NEWS reported that the three suspects are from the Khan Younis area and were allegedly running a clandestine weapons-production setup—described by police sources as a “ticking bomb”—with the intent of enabling attacks and arming other terrorists in the south.
All three detainees and the seized materials were transferred for Shin Bet handling and interrogation—where the key question now is who helped them survive, hide, and operate on Israeli soil for so long.
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[Ed.: Creepy!]
⚠️ BREAKING – Highly Unusual Movements Detected Across Iran’s Air, Missile, and Drone Forces:
December 21, 2025 Jewish Breaking News
Western intelligence is tracking what’s being described as unusual, highly coordinated activity across Iran’s air, missile, drone, and air-defense elements—patterns that go beyond routine day-to-day movements. Officials say it could be an exercise, but the scale and synchronization are what’s raising eyebrows.
According to those familiar with the monitoring, analysts are watching command-and-control signals, deployments, and logistical shifts tied to the IRGC Aerospace Force—the regime’s spearpoint for ballistic missiles and long-range drones.
This comes as Tehran pushes to restore capabilities battered in the Israel-Iran war, including efforts to rebuild key missile production infrastructure—exactly the kind of groundwork that can precede a major drill, a deterrence show, or a real-world posture change.
Iran has also been staging headline-grabbing launch drills in recent weeks, including large-scale ballistic and cruise-missile activity in the Gulf of Oman—signals meant to project readiness even as the regime scrambles to recover.
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Everything about Israeli ‘settler violence’ is backwards. NACHUM KAPLAN
In the West Bank, ongoing violence against Jews requires “context,” while Jewish violence is disproportionately the focus — because few people understand the facts on the ground.
DEC 20, 2025 The Future of Jewish
There has been a nasty spike in violence in Judea and Samaria, and it is not the Jewish settlers attacking Palestinians that you keep reading about.
Two Israeli soldiers were stabbed in an attack a few days ago, just a few hours after another was injured in a car-ramming. Understanding the frequency of such attacks is essential to grasping what is happening in the area.
The much-reported rise in Jewish extremists attacking Palestinians has not sprung out of nowhere. Since the October 7th massacre and kidnappings in 2023, attacks against Jews in Judea and Samaria have surged.
In 2024, there were 6,828 attacks, more than 18 a day, against Jews — in the form of shootings, stabbings, car-rammings, and other incidents, according to the Shin Bet, Israel’s internal security agency. It is astonishing that only 46 people have been killed.
The post–October 7th surge began from levels already vastly higher than generally appreciated because the mainstream media does not report them. In 2023, there were 3,436 Palestinian attacks against Jews in Judea and Samaria, almost 10 a day. This is the backdrop against which the rise in Jewish attacks against Palestinians this olive-harvest season must be seen. Jewish attacks, which dominate international headlines, are at record levels at 752 so far this year, according to the Israel Defense Forces. This is up from the 675 incidents recorded in 2024.
The data is unequivocal: Palestinian terror targeted at Jews dwarfs Jewish attacks on Palestinians. Most Jewish deaths and injuries in Judea and Samaria come from terror attacks, whereas most Palestinian deaths and injuries come not from Jewish settlers or civilians, but from Israeli security forces confronting the Palestinian terrorists behind the thousands of attacks. Yet most people are unaware of this because the international media applies such intense scrutiny to Jewish attacks on Palestinians. The result is a skewed narrative in which Jews, particularly settlers, are cast as the overwhelming aggressors, despite the data showing the opposite.
The IDF estimates that there are 300 to 400 Jewish extremists, including about 50 hardcore ones, behind the recent attacks on Palestinians. Not all of them are settlers. Some come from other parts of Israel, or from illegal outposts, showing that the phrase “settler violence” is a loaded, reductionist caricature.
Some argue that Israel does not do enough to curtail this violence, although Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has ordered the evacuation of 14 illegal outposts and the removal from Judea and Samaria of some 70 Jewish extremists, prompting a riot from Jewish extremists.
And here is where it becomes complex: Three primary motivations drive the Jewish attacks on Palestinians, and all of them can be true (or intermittently and overlappingly true) at the same time. Extremism is one. Some are fanatics, Jewish supremacists, and thugs.
Vigilantism is another. With so many Palestinian attacks, it is unsurprising that there is violent pushback. The third, and most underreported, motivation is that some Jews set up illegal outposts to prevent the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority from building illegally and expanding their tenuous claim.
When news bulletins discuss Judea and Samaria, they present it as a single place under Israeli occupation and omit key facts. Under the Oslo Accords1 from 1993 to 1995, Judea and Samaria was divided into Areas A, B, and C. The Palestinian Authority administers Area A fully; in Area B it also administers but shares security responsibilities with Israel. Most Palestinians live in Areas A and B. Israel administers Area C, which is where the Jewish settlements and illegal outposts are situated.
This complicated arrangement was designed to allow as many Palestinians as possible to govern themselves while a final agreement was worked out, one intended to include the territory and borders of a Palestinian state. It remains in place 30 years later because the Palestinian Authority walked away from the accords and initiated the Second Intifada, murdering more than a thousand Israelis from 2000 to 2005, including hundreds in Israel proper.
The violence taking place today is in Area C, which is under full Israeli control, including the issuance of building permits — making the Jewish settlements entirely legal, a fact rarely reported. Area C is rocky highland, sparsely populated, and mostly State of Israel land.
What is illegal are the Jewish outposts beyond the settlements, anything built on privately owned Palestinian land, and almost all building the Palestinian Authority undertakes without Israeli approval. Palestinian Authority construction in Areas A and B is legal.
The so-called “Hilltop Youth,” a group of about 100 young Jews who establish illegal outposts, do so partly because they are messianic extremists, but partly to stake a claim so the Palestinian Authority cannot build there illegally. Both these things are true at once. The world is complicated, and few places are more so than Judea and Samaria.
There are vastly more illegal Palestinian buildings than Israeli ones, making it darkly comedic that Jewish construction is cast as the central problem. The Palestinian Authority has built 81,317 illegal Palestinian structures in Area C, compared with 4,111 illegal Israeli structures (which includes absurdities such as bathroom extensions built during periods of settlement freezes).
This extensive illegal Palestinian construction is what those Jews establishing illegal outposts are trying to stop. The Palestinian Authority’s goal is to build extensively in Area C to create so-called “facts on the ground” for any future political settlement — despite showing no interest in such a settlement.
This is why Israeli authorities do not crack down on the illegal outposts as harshly as many would like. It is not merely corruption or ideological sympathy with Jewish settlers, but because Israel also wants to stop the Palestinian Authority’s illegal land grab. This is why Israel sometimes normalizes (legalizes) outposts, for which the strategic rationale is entirely understandable. However, it is also true that some Jewish extremists use these illegal outposts as staging grounds for raids on Palestinians and as hideouts from Israeli authorities.
None of this nuance and context permeates the mainstream narrative. In its place are headlines about “rampaging settlers” supported by — yawn — “the most Right-wing government in Israel’s history.” This is the standard pablum and perfumed hysteria from The New York Times, the BBC, The Washington Post, and other mastheads as tired as I am on a Sunday morning.
There is no question that Jewish attacks on Palestinians — whether in the name of extremism or vigilantism — are reprehensible. Those responsible should be arrested, tried, and punished if found guilty. However, these attacks are vastly fewer than terror attacks against Jews.
The problem in the way much of the international press reports this story is one of emphasis and proportion. When Jews are the victims of violence, the story is usually ignored, downplayed, or quickly contextualized away; when Jews are the perpetrators, the story is magnified and treated as emblematic of Israeli aggression and the conflict’s root cause.
Consider these few illustrative examples of the daily terror with which the half-million overwhelmingly peaceful Jews in Judea and Samaria live. I have chosen these because they occurred in the six months before the October 7th pogrom, allowing us to see the problem’s scale with less distortion.
In April 2023, a Palestinian terrorist opened fire on a British-Israeli family’s car in the Jordan Valley, killing two teenage sisters and their mother. The slaying shocked Israel. Thousands attended their funerals in pouring rain. It received only modest international coverage because the victims were Jews. Contrast this with the coverage recent Jewish attacks on Palestinian olive groves receive, and you begin to appreciate that media reporting is disingenuous.
In June 2023, two Palestinian gunmen opened fire at a gas-station diner near the Eli settlement, killing four Israelis (including a teenage boy) and wounding four more. Hamas proudly claimed the “heroic” attack. Israeli news covered it extensively, complete with grieving communities and victim profiles. International coverage, by contrast, was perfunctory.
Within 24 hours, attention pivoted to the Israeli response, in which a few enraged settlers burned a car and some fields in a nearby village. The response, in which fortunately no one was harmed, garnered more international coverage than the massacre. It was framed as evidence of a “cycle of violence,” rather than a clear asymmetry between deliberate mass murder and a fringe vigilante act.
In August 2023, a Palestinian terrorist shot a Jewish father and son from point-blank range at a car wash in Huwara. It received almost no foreign coverage. Reuters, almost snidely, called it a “suspected Palestinian shooting,” and wrote no follow-up stories. In the weeks that followed, when the IDF raided the terror cells responsible, reporters produced reams of damning coverage of alleged Israeli brutality and stories about how Palestinians were living in fear of settler retaliation.
This lopsided emphasis distorts public understanding of the conflict, making Israelis — and Jewish settlers in particular — seem like the antagonists, when the moral valence runs precisely the opposite way. Media reporting inverts the situation’s morality: Jews are depicted as chiefly culpable for the violence despite far more often being the victims of it.
Another aspect missing from the mainstream narrative is that conflict is not the only interaction between Jewish settlers and Palestinians. They live economically intertwined lives, work side-by-side in the dozens of major industrial complexes in Area C, and there are as many peace activists on both sides as there are agitators. This does not get reported because it would expose two major lies the media loves to peddle: that Israel is an apartheid state and that Jewish settlers are violent extremists.
This matters because media narratives shape international perceptions, diplomacy, and policy. When audiences are inundated with stories of settler attacks but rarely hear about the vastly higher number of daily terror attacks that Israelis face, it distorts their perception of the conflict.
This warped framing emboldens extremists and removes responsibility from the instigators. It also feeds antisemitism by reinforcing the pernicious notion that Jewish lives somehow matter less, or that Jewish suffering is deserved.
This is a guest essay by Nachum Kaplan, who writes the newsletter, “Moral Clarity.”
You can also listen to the podcast version of this essay on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, and Spotify.
WAR UPDATE. REALITY CHECK Avi Abelow
December 20, 2025 Pulse of Israel
Let’s be clear: we are still at war, attacking terrorists almost every day in Gaza and Lebanon.
It has simply been rebranded,sold to the public as a “ceasefire,” or in President Trump’s language, “peace in the Middle East.” But slogans do not change reality. Jihadist enemies do not disappear because diplomats declare progress.
So what is the real update?
The Trump administration has just concluded another round of diplomatic talks with Turkey and Qatar about Gaza. And once again, it reminds us of a truth Israel must never forget: Israel can rely only on itself.
Steve Witkoff’s update after meeting with Turkish and Qatari officials about a so-called second phase of a Gaza “peace” deal is not encouraging, it is absurd. Qatar and Turkey are not neutral brokers. They are the primary funders, enablers, and political protectors of Hamas and the global Muslim Brotherhood.
Sitting with them to discuss Gaza’s future is not diplomacy. It is proof that this process is detached from Middle Eastern reality. Any deal built with Hamas’s sponsors is guaranteed to fail. Worse, it buys time, time our enemies use to regroup, rearm, and prepare the next round, while we prepare as well.
Meanwhile, over the weekend, the Prime Minister of Lebanon claims the country is “only steps away” from disarming Hezbollah in southern Lebanon.
This is fiction.
Hezbollah will never disarm voluntarily. Everyone in the region knows it. This statement is political theater, designed to placate Trump administration pressure, not to deliver results. Lebanon does not control Hezbollah. Hezbollah, backed and directed by Iran, controls Lebanon. Even the Lebanese army itself is deeply penetrated by Hezbollah-aligned Shiite elements.
And then comes the one statement rooted in reality.
Israeli Minister Bezalel Smotrich said plainly this weekend what many leaders are unwilling to admit publicly: Israel will likely have to launch military operations in Gaza and Lebanon before Israel’s next elections at the end of 2025.
On this, trust Smotrich.
Not the diplomats.
Not the mediators.
Not the press releases.
Israel is the only force capable of ensuring Hamas and Hezbollah are no longer threats on our borders, and that Iran is prevented from using our immediate surroundings to threaten Israeli lives.
No amount of talking with jihadi Muslim patrons will stop the jihadi goal of destroying Israel. President Trump is attempting a diplomatic approach, and his intentions may be good. But pressure, incentives, and negotiations that ignore the nature of our enemies will fail.
In the Middle East, security is not achieved through conferences or ceasefire declarations.
It is achieved through decisive action, when jihadists lose land, lose power, and lose the ability to threaten.
Israel must do what only Israel can do.
And with all of that said, one truth must be acknowledged clearly and honestly: President Trump has been the best U.S. president Israel has ever had. His election was nothing short of a miracle. It fundamentally changed America’s posture toward this war, ending the Biden administration’s weapons embargo on Israel in the midst of an existential war, and its pressure to halt Israel’s fight without securing our hostages, and instead having a U.S. President backing Israel’s right to win and bring our hostages home.
Now it is on us.
Strengthen your faith in God. Stand unwavering in your support for Israel and the Jewish people, who are on the front lines defending not only themselves, but all of civilization against the growing red-green jihadi threat facing us all.
Ignoring it or trying to appease it only empowers it. Only defeating it, and forcing it to pay a real price, will stop it.
That day will come, even if not us as soon as we would like.
Am Yisrael Chai.
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🕑 December 20, 2025 – 6:30 PM Israel Realtime
🕯️ Seventh candle was lit today in Keter HaHermon, as major security developments continue to unfold across multiple fronts.
⚠️ Lebanon / Hezbollah: A senior Israeli official told Yedioth Ahronoth: “The likelihood of a renewed war in Lebanon is high”. The same reporting says the official assessed a new, full-scale war with Hezbollah in Lebanon as “very likely.”
Northern preparations: Separately, convoys of Israeli tanks and armored personnel carriers (APCs) have been observed moving toward northern Israel—an indicator of active preparations if a large-scale ground operation becomes necessary.
🇮🇱🇺🇸 Iran: Reports say Prime Minister Netanyahu and President Trump are expected to discuss the possibility of another strike on Iran. This comes amid growing concern in Israel about the pace of recovery at Iran’s nuclear sites and the status of Iranian missiles damaged in the recent 12-day war (as reported by NBC).
🇮🇱 Prime Minister’s Office: As planned, a meeting of the international mechanism took place in Naqoura under American auspices between Israel and Lebanon. With the Prime Minister’s approval and under the direction of the Acting Head of the National Security Council, Dr. Yosef Dreznin, Deputy Head of the NSC for Foreign Policy, participated in the meeting.
The meeting was described as a continuation of the ongoing security dialogue, with a stated goal of ensuring Hezbollah’s disarmament by the Lebanese Army. The talks also addressed ways to advance economic projects meant to demonstrate shared interests in removing the Hezbollah threat and securing long-term, sustainable safety for residents on both sides of the border.
💥 Syria / ISIS: In response to last week’s attack on American soldiers, the U.S. military launched extensive strikes against ISIS targets in Syria. United States Central Command reported that U.S. and Jordanian forces hit 70+ ISIS targets using 100+ precision munitions.
President Trump also issued a warning aimed at any potential threats, stating: “if you attack or threaten the United States in any way, you will be hit with a force you have never experienced before.”
🇮🇱🇦🇺 Bondi Beach follow-up and Netanyahu remarks: Australian police reported that seven armed suspects arrested near Bondi Beach “hold ideological positions similar” to the terrorists from Sunday’s attack. In a Sky News interview, Prime Minister Netanyahu urged Australia to respond forcefully and argued that armed security could have changed the outcome, saying: “Damn it, wake up. You don’t need any more warnings. You’ve already had enough. Just imagine if, at that Hanukkah gathering on that beach, you had a few armed people. If you had a few armed guards—ten, fifteen, even five—it would have ended. That saves the situation. And it’s needed now. They hate Jews. Let me tell you, they also hate Australia… they’ll burn your flag and they’ll burn you. They are against our shared civilization.”
▪️ New Year celebrations: Australia, France, and Germany have now cancelled their usual New Year’s celebrations.
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⚠️ Netanyahu’s Warning to Trump: Iran Is Racing Ahead and Israel Has Strike Plans Ready
December 20, 2025 Jewish Breaking News
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is expected to brief President Trump on military options against Iran, after Israeli assessments that Tehran is accelerating its ballistic-missile buildup and restoring production lines and air defenses damaged in previous strikes, according to an NBC report.
Israeli officials see the trend as an immediate threat: more missiles, rebuilt infrastructure, and tougher air defenses mean the window to stop Iran’s next leap could be narrowing fast.
The scenarios reportedly range from independent Israeli action to varying levels of U.S. involvement, including support roles and potential joint operations, with the briefing expected during Netanyahu’s upcoming U.S. visit.
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