U.S. President Joe Biden wears a Team USA jacket before boarding Marine One en route to Camp David on July 26, 2024. Credit: Adam Schultz/White House.
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Israelis accept the breach in relations with the Biden administration
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They are becoming increasingly aware of the central role it is playing in the effort to demonize and criminalize the nation, its leaders and its soldiers.
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Israelis hunkered down Thursday night and braced for Iran’s promised retaliation for Israel’s assassination of Hezbollah and Hamas terror masters Fuad Shukr and Ismail Haniyeh. As they did so, Channel 14 broadcast the results of a Direct Polls survey of the public’s perspective on Israel’s strategic condition and imperatives. The results were stunning.

The poll included three questions. The first related to the public’s staying power in the current war, asking, “How long are you willing to live with the war situation?”

Some 22% of Israelis said they have had enough and want the war to end. Another 14% said they are willing to keep the war going for a few more weeks or months. And 64% of Israelis said they would support fighting the war “for as long as it takes.”

The poll then moved to the public’s assessment of whether the July 31 assassinations of the Hezbollah and Hamas kingpins would set back or advance the completion of the war. Of the answers, 21% of Israelis said the assassinations would prolong the war; 10% had no opinion; and 69% of Israelis said the assassinations expedited the completion of the war.

Finally, the public was asked how Israel should respond to Iran’s threatened aggression. Some 35% of Israelis said that Israel should carry out a limited campaign with the goal of achieving a diplomatic agreement with Hezbollah. Four percent had no opinion. And 61% said that Israel should not be limiting itself to defense but rather should respond to Iran’s threats with a preemptive strike to block Iran from attacking Israel.

The poll shows definitively that after 300 days of war, the Israeli public maintains its unswerving resolve to see the war through to victory. It is willing to pay whatever price is required to defeat its enemies and understands that there is no diplomatic solution to military problems, only military solutions.

Since you need to defeat your enemies to win a war, Israelis are uninterested in “diplomatic initiatives,” and seek offensive operations to defensive operations.

They want to cut a deal

The extraordinary determination and courage of the Israeli people 300 days after Oct. 7 should be a source of strength and inspiration for Israel’s allies. But the Biden-Harris administration doesn’t want to hear about it. Indeed, the sentiments of the public place the Jewish state on a collision course with the administration and with the leadership of the Democratic Party more generally.

At the beginning of the war, the administration’s professed interest in supporting Israel, degrading Hamas’s power and denying Hezbollah the ability to wage a massive offensive against Israel overlapped with Jerusalem’s determination to defeat its enemies, and gave Israelis faith in the administration’s professed “ironclad commitment to Israel’s security. Today, Israelis realize that the overlapping interests of Oct. 8 are largely gone. The administration doesn’t want Israel to win. They want to cut a deal.

Moreover, in October, Biden was capable of drawing a clear moral distinction between Israel and Hamas. Today, Biden, Harris and their advisers hector Israelis with slanderous assertions of moral equivalence, or worse, in the administration’s “on the one hand, on the other hand,” comparisons to Israel’s war effort and the genocidal goals of its enemies. Far from viewing Biden and Harris as their friends, Israelis are becoming increasingly aware of the central role the administration is playing in the effort to demonize and criminalize Israel, its leaders and its soldiers.

If it hadn’t been clear before, the administration’s response to Netanyahu’s July 24 speech to the Joint Houses of Congress last week, and its tepid, even angry response to Israel’s assassination of Shukr and Haniyeh this week made the administration’s animosity undeniable.

In his address, Netanyahu gave a stirring description of the heroism and morality of the people of Israel and the imperative—for the United States—of Israeli victory in the war. For his efforts, he received more than 50 standing ovations from representatives of both parties in the well of Congress. But in their meetings with Netanyahu, Biden and Harris ignored what Netanyahu said completely and insisted that the only thing they support at this juncture is a hostage deal that would leave the vast majority of the 115 hostages in Gaza, and guarantee Hamas’s survival as a regime and a terror army.

Likewise, while failing for more than 24 hours to condemn Hezbollah’s massacre of 12 children in Majdal Shams last Saturday, Biden and Harris made no effort to hide their anger at Netanyahu for ordering the assassination of Shukr and Haniyeh, despite the fact that both men were enemies of the United States no less than of Israel.

Shukr was responsible for the 1983 murder of 241 U.S. Marines in Beirut, in addition to the bombing of the U.S. and French embassies in the Lebanese capital. He was wanted by the FBI, with a $5 million prize on his head for four decades. As head of Hamas, Haniyeh led a genocidal terror group which, like its Iranian state sponsor, views America as the “Great Satan” whose annihilation it seeks first by destroying the “Little Satan”: Israel.

Not only did the administration refuse to support Israel’s move against the terror master, Biden and Harris made it clear to both Iran and Israel and the United States was livid at Israel for carrying out the mission in response to the massacre of children that they failed to condemn.

Disconnect from the goals of the war

On Thursday afternoon, Biden and Harris spoke by phone with Netanyahu. Israelis still of the opinion that Biden and Harris are serious when they speak of their “ironclad commitment” to Israel’s security could have been forgiven if they assumed that the two U.S. leaders would use the conversation as a means to express their support for America’s top Middle East ally as it readied for the expected assault. But by Biden’s own telling, the message they delivered was anything but supportive.

Speaking to reporters, Biden said: “I had a very direct meeting [i.e. phone call] with the Prime Minister [Netanyahu] today, very direct. We have the basis for a ceasefire, and they should move on it, and they should move on it now.”

Asked whether Haniyeh’s assassination “ruined” chances for a ceasefire, Biden responded: “It’s not helped.”

Axios later expanded on the details of the “very direct” conversation between Biden and Harris and Netanyahu, reporting that Biden told Netanyahu that he blamed Israel for the escalation in the war. The United States, Biden reportedly said, would help Israel defend against missile attacks from Lebanon and Iran. But that if Israel seeks to take offensive action on either front, Washington will abandon it. The president also underlined that the United States wants an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and expects Israel to deliver. In other words, the administration opposes Israel’s goal of defeating Hamas and driving the Iranian proxy terror regime from power permanently completely.

The total disconnect between Israeli determination to see the war through to victory and the Biden-Harris administration’s total opposition to Israeli victory against Iran or any of its proxy forces has not escaped the attention of most Israelis. They are increasingly rallying around their government, and particularly, Netanyahu, as they see him standing up less to Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran, and more to the administration, pursuing victory in the face of American opposition.

The more Biden, Harris and their advisers harass Israel—the more they accuse Israel of “escalating” the war—the less Israelis listen to them. Whereas Israelis greeted Biden’s decision after Oct. 7 to deploy two carrier groups to the region with relief, seeing it as a testament to his commitment to Israel’s survival and security, the administration’s announcement that it is deploying naval assets back to the Eastern Mediterranean is being met with skepticism. Israelis question whether the deployment is geared towards supporting Israel or preventing it from degrading Hezbollah’s capacity to wage war against Israel.

Israeli media coverage of the U.S. presidential race drips with dread. As Harris rises in polls, it is dawning on Israeli leaders, warfighters and the general citizenry that if she wins, the current dismal state of U.S.-Israel relations is likely to be the best that they can expect from Washington going forward.

Israel resisted acknowledging the administration’s hostility to its determination to win the war for as long as it could. Leading politicians used Biden’s obvious hostility towards Netanyahu as a means to attack Netanyahu, whom they accused of undermining U.S.-Israel relations. After Netanyahu received 51 standing ovations from Congress, even Netanyahu’s opponents are being forced to admit that he isn’t the problem. Biden’s hostility to Israeli victory is the problem. Netanyahu’s determination to win, despite Biden’s opposition, is widely perceived as the only reason that Israel is still in the fight.

The long-term consequence of Israel’s awakening to the reality of the leadership of the Democratic Party’s hostility to Israeli power and even survival is already beginning to show. Israelis are less interested in U.S. opinion than they were until recently. They are more determined to end Israel’s strategic dependence on U.S. military assistance and munitions. And they are more willing to stand up for themselves when challenged by “friends” abroad.

This shift does not mean that Israelis no longer admire and even love the United States. It means that Israelis are beginning to wake up to the necessity—76 years after achieving independence—for their nation to be strategically independent. Whoever is in power in the United States, that attitude and determination can only have a positive impact on the alliance in the coming years.

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Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) announced Thursday he will force up to eight Senate votes next week on joint resolutions of disapproval aimed at blocking $8.8 billion in U.S. arms sales to Israel, citing concerns over the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

The resolutions, which target weapons sales approved by President Donald Trump’s administration, are expected to face significant opposition in the Republican-controlled Senate. However, Sanders’s effort marks the first major test for Senate Democrats on Israel policy in the new term, reported Jewish Insider.

"[Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu has clearly violated U.S. and international law in this brutal war, and we must end our complicity in the carnage," Sanders said in a statement. He pointed to Israel's suspension of aid deliveries to Gaza and the destruction of parts of the Strip.

“The latest Trump sales provide almost $8.8 billion more in U.S. bombs and other munitions, including more than 35,000 massive 2,000-pound bombs. The United States must not continue to supply endless amounts of military aid and weaponry to the Netanyahu government,” Sanders said.

According to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry, more than 50,000 Palestinians have been killed since Oct. 7, 2023. However, this figure is inflated to include those who died of natural causes, and despite Hamas claims, the losses include a very high proportion of Palestinian terrorists, unprecedented in urban warfare. The war began when Hamas-led terrorists attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing some 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages.

The resolutions are unlikely to pass, given the long-standing bipartisan support for Israel in Congress. However, proponents hope the debate will increase pressure on the U.S. and Israeli governments to address civilian casualties and humanitarian concerns.

The Senate overwhelmingly rejected similar measures Sanders introduced in November, when Democrats controlled the chamber. At the time, 19 Democrats supported at least one of the resolutions, while no Republicans backed them. Most of those Democrats remain in office, and their votes next week could indicate shifting dynamics on U.S.-Israel policy.

Under U.S. law, Congress can block foreign arms sales through resolutions of disapproval, though none has ever passed both chambers and survived a presidential veto. The law guarantees a Senate vote on such resolutions, often sparking contentious debates.

Trump has reversed efforts by his predecessor, Joe Biden, to impose restrictions on arms transfers to Israel. The upcoming votes will test how the Democratic Party, now in the Senate minority, navigates U.S. policy toward Israel under the Trump administration.

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For the third time since the ceasefire with Beirut took effect on Nov. 27, terrorists in Lebanon fire rockets into northern Israel, with air raid sirens sounding in Kiryat Shmona and surrounding areas on Thursday morning.

The Israel Defense Forces confirmed that two rockets were fired; one was intercepted while the other struck short inside Lebanon. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

The incident follows a similar rocket barrage six days ago targeting Metula. Lebanese media reported Israeli artillery fire in response, with some schools in Southern Lebanon suspending activities due to the strikes, amid claims eight Lebanese were killed, Reuters reported.

No peace in Beirut if Israel attacked

Defense Minister Israel Katz warned that Israel would retaliate forcefully if attacks continued, stating, "If Kiryat Shmona and Galilee are not quiet, Beirut will not be quiet either."

He emphasized that the Lebanese government bears responsibility for any attacks emanating from its territory and vowed that Israel would not allow a return to the security situation of Oct. 7, 2023.

Asaf Langleben, head of the Upper Galilee Regional Council, condemned the attacks from Lebanon, stressing that the security challenge remains significant as residents return to the region.

"We will not accept sporadic rocket fire in any form. The second attack in less than a week is proof the threat is still here," he said, calling on the Israeli government to immediately complete its northern defense infrastructure and to implement plans to strengthen the local economy and settlement efforts.

Despite the attack, local authorities announced that daily activities, including a planned farmers market and Agur Race, would proceed on Friday as scheduled.

Last Saturday, the IDF intercepted three rockets fired from Lebanon out of at least six launched, marking the first such incident in over three months. In retaliation, the military struck Hezbollah command centers and launch sites in southern Lebanon. The escalation led to concerns in Washington, with U.S. officials urging Israel to refrain from striking targets in Beirut in response to the attack on Metula.

Hezbollah denied responsibility for the rocket fired on Saturday, saying it had “no link” to the launches and remained committed to the ceasefire.

While the situation along the Israel-Lebanon border remains tense, the Israeli government has not announced any immediate operational changes, and defense officials continue to monitor developments.

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Michael Netzer, a celebrated comic book artist best known for his work on characters such as Batman, Spider-Man and Wonder Woman, has lived many lives—figuratively and literally.

Born in the United States to a Druze father and a mother with a hidden Jewish past, Netzer’s path led him from a remote Lebanese village to the global stage of comics and ultimately to a spiritual awakening that brought him home to Israel.

“I knew I was a Lebanese Druze,” says Netzer, who was born in Detroit in 1955 and moved to Lebanon at the age of three. “I had no idea there was any connection to Judaism or Israel. In Lebanon, Israel was considered an enemy state.”

His early years were spent in the mountainous village of Deir Kobil, where improvised childhood games, a one-room schoolhouse and rural isolation shaped his worldview. It was there that his gift for drawing emerged.

“One of my first drawings was of a magnificent bird,” he recalls. “I started copying images from encyclopedias and kept drawing non-stop.”

In the aftermath of the 1967 Six Day War, Netzer’s mother, Adel, abruptly decided to return to America with her children—without informing her husband. That decision marked the beginning of a new chapter.

“Seven years passed before I returned to Lebanon, and it felt like an entirely different world,” he said.

Settled in the United States, Netzer entered public school at age 11 and discovered comic books for the first time. The visual storytelling medium captivated him, eventually drawing him into the orbit of legendary artist Neal Adams, who invited the young illustrator to join his New York studio.

Michael Netzer's illustration of Wonder Woman. Credit: Courtesy

By the age of 21, Netzer had become one of the most in-demand comic book artists in America. “I was drawing for all the major characters,” he says. “It was a dream come true.”

Despite his professional success, Netzer found himself spiritually unfulfilled. In his early twenties, he walked away from the industry, embarking on a cross-country journey in search of divine truth.

“I felt the world needed a prophet,” he reflectrs. “I wondered why there had been so many prophets in the past and none in modern times. I felt I was being called.”

His journey took him through California and ultimately into the desert, where he spent weeks in solitude, reading the Bible and reflecting on his purpose. A passage in the Book of Daniel struck a deep chord: “At that time, Michael, the great prince who stands guard over your people, will arise.”

“It was as if the text was speaking directly to me,” he says. “I realized a great role was waiting.”

When Netzer returned to his mother’s home months later, his grandmother Hania, nearing the end of her life, made a stunning revelation.

“She told me, ‘You won’t find the truth with the Christians, Muslims, or Druze—only with the Jews. Because we are Jews,’” Netzer recounts.

According to his family history, Hania had been adopted by a Druze family after her parents were killed in anti-Jewish violence in Lebanon.

The revelation made sense after a lifetime of subtle signs. “In New York, all my professional mentors and collaborators were Jewish," he says. "I felt an unexplained connection to the Jewish people even before I knew I was one of them.”

Netzer believes his mother may have known the truth but chose to keep it hidden. “She was shocked when my grandmother told me. Maybe it was new to her, maybe not. But she never talked about Israel or Judaism when we were growing up.”

The discovery of his Jewish roots ignited a desire to connect more deeply with the Jewish people—and ultimately led Netzer to make aliyah. “On my way to Israel, I passed through Lebanon during the war. I saw IDF soldiers entering Druze villages. The connection felt real and ancient,” he recalls.

With the help of the Jewish Agency, Netzer arrived at Kibbutz Revivim, a haven for artists. To formalize his Jewish identity and deepen his understanding, he chose to undergo a conversion process. “It wasn’t about doubt—it was about learning and growth,” he explains.

He later moved to Kiryat Arba and then to Ofra, taking a job as a graphic designer at Nekuda, the magazine of the settler movement. It was there that he met his future wife.

“I wasn’t sure at first if marriage was part of my spiritual path,” he says, “but we now have five children and a life rooted in purpose.”

Netzer’s siblings remained in Lebanon, maintaining their Druze identity and expressing little interest in reconnecting with their Jewish heritage. “They don’t feel the pull I did,” he says.

While interfaith marriage is typically forbidden in the Druze community, Netzer notes that such boundaries were not always strictly observed in his village. “Religion is passed through the father, so we were seen as Druze. No one suspected our Jewish background.”

He believes that Lebanon’s remaining Jewish presence, if any, is minuscule. “People say the name ‘Beirut’ comes from ‘Be’er Yehud’—the Jewish well. The city was built by Jewish businessmen."

When asked how he distinguishes between the cultures he’s lived in, Netzer is candid. “Muslims can be very tough—willing to hurt and be hurt. I was bullied as a child for my limp, even by my brother. In Beirut, the atmosphere was harsh, loud and angry.”

In contrast, he praises Israeli society for its underlying warmth. “People say Israelis are rude, but if you’ve lived in America and then come to Israel, you feel it—a fresh breeze of humanity.”

Michael Netzer: “I set out to find something and what I found was that I already belonged.” Credit: Courtesy.

For Netzer, his journey from a remote Lebanese village to the pages of Marvel and DC Comics—and finally to a life of Jewish faith in Israel—is one of destiny fulfilled.

“There’s no doubt in my mind,” he concludes. “I set out to find something and what I found was that I already belonged.”

A version of this article was first published in Hebrew by Olam Katan.

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Settlements and National Missions Minister Orit Strook urged fellow members of the Security Cabinet to change Israel's policy toward the Palestinian Authority, in a letter published on Thursday.

In the missive to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other senior ministers, she called for an urgent Cabinet meeting to redefine the security establishment's long-held approach of strengthening the P.A.

Strook said Ramallah had launched a major "public relations campaign" to improve its image and secure additional funding from the international community in an effort to take control of Gaza after the current war.

However, the P.A. continues to undermine Israel's security, she wrote, noting that a recent study by the Impact-se NGO revealed that its latest textbooks continue to promote terrorism and hatred against Jews.

She also highlighted the P.A.'s continued financial and logistical support for terrorism, its anti-Israel campaigns in international fora and courts, and its systematic campaign to seize lands in Judea and Samaria.

Strook also condemned Ramallah's practice of sheltering terrorists who have harmed Israelis, while simultaneously imprisoning and torturing Palestinians accused of cooperating with Israel or selling land to Jews.

Many members of the Jewish state's security brass support P.A. control of swaths of Judea and Samaria as a "moderating force" opposed to Hamas, Islamic Jihad and other Iranian-backed terrorist organizations.

Members of Ramallah's forces have a long history of attacking Israeli soldiers and civilians. In 2023, the P.A.'s ruling Fatah faction boasted that most of its "martyrs" had once served in the P.A. Security Forces.

In addition, Hamas has recruited dozens of PASF operatives, using them as gunmen and for intelligence gathering, Kan News reported in 2023.

Dozens of members of the U.S.-trained and -armed P.A. police forces have been implicated in terrorism against Israeli civilians and military personnel in the past few years alone, according to research published by the Jerusalem-based Regavim Movement think tank in March 2024.

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The Israel Defense Forces arrested the terrorist cell behind regular rock-throwing attacks targeting Jewish drivers on the Route 60 highway in southern Samaria this week, the military said on Thursday.

IDF soldiers "closed a circle and, in a targeted operation, arrested three terrorists who had had regularly thrown stones toward Route 60" in the area of Silwad, near Ramallah, according to the military's statement.

Route 60 is the main north-south highway in Judea and Samaria. Arab rock-throwers from Silwad have repeatedly targeted drivers near the Jewish community of Ofra, with attacks increasing in recent months.

As part of counter-terrorism activities across the Judea and Samaria region, Israeli security forces arrested some 80 wanted terrorists this week, confiscating dozens of weapons, explosives and ammunition.

During a "focused effort" to thwart terrorist attacks emanating from the Balata camp on the eastern outskirts of Nablus (Shechem) in central Samaria, Israeli security forces arrested "several wanted individuals," the IDF said.

On Thursday morning, the forces confiscated an M16 rifle belonging to a detained terrorist in Nablus's Jabal Shamali neighborhood, the army said.

The detained terrorists and confiscated weapons were transferred for investigation to the Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet) and the Israel Police's Judea and Samaria District, the military statement added.

Palestinian terrorists targeted Israeli Jews in Judea and Samaria at least 6,343 times in 2024, according to figures published by the Rescuers Without Borders (Hatzalah Judea and Samaria) NGO on Feb. 17.

Twenty-seven Israelis were murdered in Judea and Samaria in 2024, and more than 300 others were wounded, the group said in its annual report.

The figures, which were cross-checked against official data from Israel’s security services, included 3,668 instances of rock-throwing; 843 attacks with Molotov cocktails; 671 attempts to blind drivers with laser pointers; 526 explosive charges; 364 cases of arson; and 179 terrorist shootings.

The rescue group also recorded 37 attempted or successful stabbings; 36 bottles of paint being thrown at vehicles; and 19 Palestinian car-ramming attacks, including 12 that caused injuries to Israelis.

The report noted that the Shin Bet last year foiled more than 1,000 potential terrorist attacks in Judea, Samaria and Jerusalem.

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  • Publication Date:
    March 27, 2025

Nobody seriously believes that the U.S. Senate will reject President Donald Trump’s nomination of former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee to be ambassador to Israel. Republicans managed to get far more controversial nominees, such as Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard confirmed, so they should have comparatively little trouble pushing Huckabee, a man without skeletons in his closet, over the goal line.

Indeed, it’s likely that he will be in Israel, as he predicted, by Passover. But that hasn’t stopped the Jewish left from trying to stop his nomination.

The political arm of Reform Judaism is publicly opposing Huckabee. So too are the left-wing lobby J Street and the Jewish Democratic Council of America. The Jewish Council for Public Affairs, an umbrella group of Jewish community relations councils around the country, didn’t condemn the nomination outright but made clear its disdain for him with comments deprecating him as a “Christian nationalist.” 

These views were summed up in an op-ed published in The Hill by Lily Greenberg Call, a veteran Democratic operative who had worked for the campaigns of former President Joe Biden and former Vice President Kamala Harris and resigned from a post at the Department of the Interior because she felt the Biden-Harris administration was too supportive of Israel after the Oct. 7, 2023 massacre. “Unconditionally supporting Israel actually makes Jews unsafe” and the Jewish state is “antithetical” to “Jewish values,” Call asserted.

On the other side of the issue, more mainstream, liberal Jewish groups like the Anti-Defamation League and the American Jewish Committee said that they looked forward to working with Huckabee. More ardently pro-Israel groups like the Zionist Organization of America and the Orthodox Union endorsed him enthusiastically.

Seen in that context, it’s easy to dismiss Huckabee’s Jewish critics as outliers or merely predictably partisan. But that would be a mistake.

Christian nationalism?

The angry response to Huckabee from the Jewish left echoes something deeply troubling about American Jewry’s attitudes toward both Israel and its Christian supporters, like the former governor. And the talk about “Christian nationalism” reflects a broader backlash among political liberals in general against any expression of faith in the public square. 

At its heart, liberal Jewish distrust of the strong backing Israel gets from evangelicals and other conservative Christians is a function of three factors. One is simple partisanship. Another is the shocking and quite irrational religious prejudice on the part of some Jews. The other is the notion that faith should influence public policy.

The latter was put on display in the viral comments that former Politico reporter Heidi Przybyla uttered on MSNBC in February 2024.

Przybyla condemned political conservatives and Trump backers as “Christian nationalists,” because they believe that the rights of all Americans “don’t come from any earthly authority,” she said “They don’t come from Congress or the Supreme Court. They come from God.”

That is something that Huckabee believes. But that belief was shared by all of America’s Founding Fathers, not least a non-denominational Deist like Thomas Jefferson. It was, after all, the man who would eventually become the third president of the United States who wrote in the Declaration of Independence that it was “self-evident” that all Americans were “endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights.” 

While Przybyla was widely skewered for her ignorant comments, she was reflecting the wide gap that has opened up between people of faith, regardless of their religion, and those who have contempt for traditional religion. Sadly, nothing reflects that divide more closely than attitudes toward Israel. 

Faith and antisemitism

As a Gallup poll published last June suggested, support for Israel in the United States is primarily a function of religious faith. And declining religiosity is directly linked to growing hostility to Israel. 

The survey, which tracked opinions about the Jewish state and the Palestinians over the last quarter-century, demonstrated that support for Israel was far more prevalent among those who attended religious services regularly, and it declined among those who did not attend a church or a synagogue.

The study also provided at least a partial explanation for the generational differences about Israel. If younger Americans are less supportive of Israel than older ones, it is to some extent the result of their being less religious than their elders. The fact that people 29 or younger are also more likely to have been indoctrinated in the toxic neo-Marxist ideas of critical race theory, intersectionality and colonial-setter ideology that brands Israel and the Jews as “white” oppressors—and which is antithetical to traditional faith—is also part of this depressing trend. 

That’s just as true for younger Jews. Most of them have had the woke catechism of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI), which ironically excludes Jews, drilled into them in K-12 schools and again in college. That makes them more inclined to think that a concept is inappropriate if it is antithetical to the principles of equal opportunity and individual rights. It also makes them more inclined to think a sectarian Jewish state is somehow racist, or that Jews somehow are not the indigenous people of their ancient homeland.

That liberal Jews and those organizations that are most influenced by this doctrinaire secularism is also part of their alienation from Israel is unsurprising. The fact that some, like most of those affiliated with the Reform movement, are avowedly religious may seem like a contradiction in terms. But it’s easily explained when you realize that they see their religious beliefs, as many liberal Jews do, as not so much a matter of faith in revelation or scripture but a reflection of their opinions on political issues, which they define as social justice. 

Their discomfort with Christians, like Huckabee, who believe that the Almighty has promised that they will be blessed if they bless Israel, may seem counterintuitive. But it is part of an aggressively woke and secular mindset that sees such beliefs as inherently illegitimate.

Though many cast most of the blame for a decline in Jewish support for Israel on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as well as partners in his coalition who are members of right-wing and religious parties, the truth is it has far more to do with the demography of a community that is rapidly assimilated and the prevailing ideology on the American left. As JNS reported recently, the Pew Research Center has published a study that indicated that less than 1% of Israeli adults raised Jewish say that they’ve “switched” faiths, compared to 24% of U.S. adults raised Jewish.

Of course, partisanship is also part of the opposition to Huckabee. In this, the most hyper-partisan moment in living memory, Jewish Democrats can be counted on to oppose just about anyone whom Trump nominates for office.

But it’s important to understand that the fact that Trump is the most pro-Israel U.S. president since the creation of the modern-day Jewish state cuts no ice with Jews on the political left. For the most part, even those who are still at least nominally Zionist think of Israel as only legitimate if it reflects their secularism and their ideas about how to solve the conflict with the Palestinians.

The fact that in recent decades, the Israeli electorate has, for the most part, voted for leaders from the right like Netanyahu is problematic for many American Jews. And the understandable Israeli support for Trump has caused many of them to see Israel as the moral equivalent of a “red state.” 

Unlike their Israeli counterparts, they have little understanding about the rejectionist ideology of Palestinian Arabs. Palestinians have repeatedly refused offers of statehood and independence when it meant they must live in peace with a Jewish state no matter where its borders might be drawn. This has made little impression on liberal Americans, including Jews.

This disconnect with normative Israeli political views, which have only been reinforced by the horrors of Oct. 7 and its aftermath that made the notion of a two-state solution not so much a bad idea but madness, is made clear when you hear the left’s criticisms of Huckabee. 

The idea that Israel needed to be “saved from itself,” as former President Barack Obama believed, is integral to liberal Jewish attitudes toward Israel. That anyone would still think that, after Oct. 7, an independent Palestinian state would mean anything but more war and bloodshed for both peoples is hard to explain. But the alienation of American Jews from the realities on the ground in the Middle East is so great that nothing, not even the launching of a genocidal war endorsed by most Palestinians, will dissuade them from their ignorance.

Yet the disdain for pro-Israel Christians, such as Huckabee who told me in an interview with him on my podcast that the conflict between Israel and its enemies is between “good and evil,” is not just a matter of politics. It also stems from their sneering contempt for evangelicals.

Much like the rest of America's credentialed elites, of which they are so representative, liberal and left-wing Jews look down their noses on that broad section of the American electorate that is deeply religious. It’s not just that they disagree with them on abortion, gun rights or any other issue. They have held onto notions about the connection between religious belief and antisemitism that may have made sense a century ago but are now badly outdated. 

Contempt for evangelicals

In 19th century Europe or early 20th century America, it may have been reasonable to think that the more religious Christians were, the more likely they would be antisemitic. But now it’s just the opposite. As the Gallup poll showed, it is people of faith, especially those outside of the shrinking mainline Protestant denominations, who are the most philo-semitic and supportive of Israel.

Conversely, it is the most aggressively secular and most educated demographic slices of America that are heavily influenced by woke ideology and lingering neo-Marxist hostility to Judaism that are the most antisemitic.

Yet most liberal Jews on the two coasts still think of conservative Christians as flyover country hayseeds, who would gladly kill all the Jews but aren’t smart enough to figure out how to do so. Such a murderous desire is normative among Palestinian Arabs and the bizarre red-green alliance of Marxists and Islamists elsewhere that supports their war on Zionism, but it is not among evangelicals. Still, that fact hasn’t dented the consciousness of Jews who instinctively distrust Huckabee and everyone like him.

The argument that conservative Christians’ support for Israel can’t be trusted because of their eschatological beliefs is particularly illogical as well as deeply foolish. Most Christian Zionists do not predicate their love for Israel on the idea that its survival is part of an end-of-days scenario that will lead to the return of Jesus. But even if all did believe that, why should Jews—whether they are secular or religious, liberal or conservative—care if they don’t think that will ever happen?

A pro-Israel ambassador

One doesn’t have to like Trump or be comfortable with the political views of evangelicals such as Huckabee to believe that the latter’s wholehearted support for Israel and realistic views about Palestinian intentions are not only sincere but a very good thing.

Prior to David Friedman, who served as ambassador to Israel during the first Trump administration, all U.S. ambassadors to Israel treated Jerusalem the way Roman proconsuls viewed subject peoples. They were primarily there to order Israelis around and impose policies based on failed “land for peace” patent nostrums. Their priority was not, as is the case for most American ambassadors to foreign countries, to promote better relations between their hosts and the United States.

Friedman was a powerful advocate for a rational policy based on the realities of the conflict rather than the conventional wisdom of the “experts” of the foreign policy establishment who had steered U.S. Middle East policy for decades. 

As much as anyone, he deserves the credit for persuading Trump to ignore them and move the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem in 2018 and steered the president toward diplomacy that would end the ability of the Palestinians to hold the peace process hostage to their intransigent fantasies of Israel’s destruction.

Huckabee will be equally supportive of the alliance and of Jewish rights and realistic about the Palestinians. And, as an evangelical, his presence in Jerusalem can do much to promote better interfaith relations. Yet for liberal Jews who believe that Israel must make suicidal concessions to Palestinians, whose goal is to destroy the Jewish state, and who have no interest in good relations with evangelicals for reasons that have nothing to do with foreign policy, his nomination is anathema.

Attitudes toward the Huckabee nomination are, therefore, something of a test of American opinions about faith, radical ideologies and whether American foreign policy should aim at strengthening Israel’s efforts to defeat enemies or to weaken them. That so many Jews oppose him is a disturbing reminder of the profound problems currently facing American Jewry.

Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of JNS (Jewish News Syndicate). Follow him: @jonathans_tobin.

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  • Words count:
    910 words
  • Type of content:
    Opinion
  • Byline:
  • Publication Date:
    March 27, 2025

In a timely and urgent cinematic release, the Jewish Broadcasting Service (JBS) will host the exclusive television premiere of “Blind Spot” a searing new documentary that confronts one of the most troubling phenomena in modern American academic life: the explosion of antisemitism on college campuses. The broadcast premiere is scheduled for March 30, at 7 pm EDT, and will be followed by an in-depth interview with executive producer Leonard Gold on a special edition of “A Special Look” with Teisha Bader at 8:35 pm EDT.

The film—produced by Ironbound Films, known for such acclaimed works as “Israel Swings for Gold and Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel”—is also available on streaming platforms and will air with closed captioning. Additional encore showings will follow at 11 pm EDT that same evening and throughout the week.

As reported by JBS, “Blind Spot” is the first and only film to examine the trajectory of antisemitism on U.S. campuses both before and after the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks on Israel, an event that served as a cultural and ideological flashpoint, unleashing a tidal wave of anti-Jewish sentiment in institutions of higher learning across America.

Told through the firsthand accounts of more than two dozen Jewish students from over a dozen universities, the film paints a disturbing picture of how normalized anti-Israel hostility has metastasized into open antisemitism, often escalating into verbal harassment, physical threats, and academic discrimination.

These students are not political activists or public figures. They are ordinary undergraduates and graduate students—many of whom, until recently, considered their Jewish identity to be a quiet, private part of who they are. What “Blind Spot” makes abundantly clear is that this is no longer an option. In today’s academic climate, Jewish students are being forced to choose between silence and self-respect, between social comfort and spiritual truth.

For Gold, a lawyer by training and a father moved by personal experience, this documentary is deeply personal. Gold was first awakened to the problem of school-based antisemitism in 2009 when one of his sons endured virulent anti-Jewish hostility at a prestigious private school in New York City. What began as a personal struggle evolved into a broader mission: to expose the ideological rot permeating American campuses and to empower students to stand up for themselves and their people.

“‘Blind Spot” is not just a film,” Gold explains in his upcoming JBS interview. “It’s a call to action—a refusal to look away from what’s happening to our kids in institutions we thought would help shape them, not break them.”

The documentary serves as a witness, but also as a clarion call to Jewish parents, community leaders, donors and policymakers: The problem is real, it is widespread, and it must be confronted.

“Blind Spot” does not limit its focus to headline-making protests or high-profile scandals. It lays bare a systemic failure of university leadership to protect Jewish students from hostile learning environments, even as they enforce strict standards for other protected groups.

JBS reported that the film’s central theme is this, Jewish students are at the front lines of a modern-day civil rights struggle. Whether in lecture halls, dormitories or student government chambers, they are being singled out, marginalized and attacked—not for what they’ve done, but for who they are and what they represent.

The campuses themselves may appear picturesque—brick-lined quads, leafy greens and ivy-covered buildings—but the intellectual climate, the social atmosphere and the moral posture toward Jewish identity is, in many cases, toxic.

The documentary exposes a through-line of demonization of Israel that morphs seamlessly into the demonization of Jews. Asking Jewish students to renounce their connection to Israel or face exclusion is not political discourse—it is a modern form of antisemitism cloaked in the language of social justice.

One of the most powerful insights of “Blind Spot” is how this escalating hostility is catalyzing a spiritual and cultural awakening among Jewish students. Many of them, raised in environments where Jewishness was an incidental or quiet part of their identity, are now being forced to reckon with what it means to be Jewish in a world that targets Jews with venomous hatred.

This is not just about geopolitics. It’s about personal courage, collective memory and the unshakable dignity of self-definition. The students featured in the film are not merely victims; they are heroes. They are the inheritors of a long tradition of resilience, and they are choosing to speak, protest and live proudly in the face of intimidation.

As universities across America continue to grapple—or fail to grapple—with antisemitism, “Blind Spot” arrives at a critical moment. It reminds viewers that silence is complicity, and that the failure to respond to campus Jew hatred is not just an institutional failure—it is a moral collapse.

Through powerful interviews, harrowing anecdotes, and an unflinching gaze at the culture of denial and appeasement, the film challenges us to see what so many have chosen not to see. It demands that viewers confront the uncomfortable truth: antisemitism is alive and well in American academia and its consequences are devastating.

For anyone concerned about the future of Jewish life in America—or the integrity of higher education—“Blind Spot” is essential viewing. It is an indictment, an inspiration, and above all, a mirror held up to a society that must now decide what it will do with what it sees.

Because once you’ve seen it, you can’t look away.

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  • Words count:
    534 words
  • Type of content:
    Video Page
  • Byline:
  • Publication Date:
    March 27, 2025

The willingness to succumb to antisemitism is always a sign of a sick society, says JNS editor-in-chief Jonathan Tobin. The mainstreaming of Jew-hatred in the media, popular culture and political discourse since Oct. 7, 2023, has created a perilous moment for Jews, but it is also a sign of just how lost so many Americans have become. He believes what’s needed now is a willingness to understand that it is Western civilization, which has its roots in Judaism, that is under attack as much as Israel.

https://youtu.be/0rSzLv-4EFQ

He’s joined in this week’s episode of “Think Twice” by Newsweek senior editor-at-large and podcaster Josh Hammer, the author of the new book Israel and Civilization: The Fate of the Jewish Nation and the Destiny of the West.

Hammer says he was inspired to write his book by the reaction to Oct. 7, in which so many Americans chose to side with the medieval Islamist death cult of Hamas. The surge in antisemitism, he argues, is a direct result of a far-reaching attack on Western civilization, which has its roots in Judaism. Hammer believes the answer to this should be a “biblical restoration” in which Jews and Christians work together to fight for Western values against the assault on them from the toxic ideas of the Marxist woke left. Those who want to get rid of the West and the idea of the nation-state inevitably start with Israel and the Jewish tradition.

The author says the place to start is to embrace faith and to encourage Christians to do so, as well as Jews, since that is the best antidote to what ails society, including antisemitism.

Hammer also advocates for a realistic rather than a moralistic U.S. foreign policy, such as that prescribed by U.S. President Donald Trump’s “America First” agenda, since that is the best guarantee of the alliance between America and Israel.

Both Tobin and Hammer agreed that the left is the primary engine of antisemitism today and that Trump’s efforts to defund schools that tolerate and encourage Jew-hatred and enforce toxic DEI policies are a good start towards defeating it. But they also noted the disturbing trend among a small group of right-wing podcasters like Candace Owens and Tucker Carlson toward embracing anti-Israel and antisemitic positions. Hammer speculated that support for that position among some Christians is ignorance of the Jewish roots of their own faith.

Listen/Subscribe to weekly episodes on SpotifyApple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsiHeart Radio or wherever you listen to your podcasts.

Watch new episodes every week by subscribing to the JNS YouTube Channel.

This episode of “Think Twice” is sponsored by The Jewish Future Promise — ensuring a vibrant and thriving future for Jews and Israel.
Sign the promise: https://jewishfuturepromise.org/jns/

JNS will host its inaugural International Policy Summit on Monday, April 28, 2025. This daylong event will convene government officials, policymakers, diplomats, security experts, leaders of pro-Israel organizations, and influencers for vital discussions aimed at addressing Israel’s critical challenges and opportunities in a post-Oct. 7 world.
Registration at this point is for invitees only. However, you can submit a request for registration using the following link.

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https://youtu.be/0rSzLv-4EFQ
  • Words count:
    220 words
  • Type of content:
    Update Desk
  • Publication Date:
    March 27, 2025
  • Media:
    1 file

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke with UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy about the Russia-Ukraine war and the Iranian nuclear threat, according to Tammy Bruce, the U.S. State Department spokeswoman.

Rubio and Lammy “reiterated their shared commitment to ensuring that Iran never develops or acquires a nuclear weapon,” per the readout. U.S. President Donald Trump recently announced a “maximum pressure” campaign on Iran.

Rubio also thanked Lammy “for the UK’s work to align Europe and Ukraine to support a durable peace in Ukraine” and emphasized both “the need for further European contributions to bolster security in Europe” and Trump’s “determination to bring about peace through negotiation,” per the readout.

Lammy recently came under fire for comments after Israel renewed airstrikes in the Gaza Strip and halted aid to the coastal enclave after Hamas rejected the ceasefire extension proposal.

He stated twice that the new blockade was a “breach” of international law, leading the British prime minister’s official spokesperson to reconfirm that the government’s position is that Israel was “at risk” of breaching humanitarian law, the BBC reported. (JNS sought comment from the State Department about whether Rubio raised the incident with Lammy.)

Lammy later told Bloomberg that it was a “matter for the court” to decide if international law had been broken.

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