Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) asks a question during a House committee hearing about antisemitism on campus with the presidents of Harvard, Penn and MIT, Dec. 5, 2023. Credit: Courtesy of the office of Rep. Stefanik.
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Stefanik: No excuse for any American president to withhold aid to Israel
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New York Rep. Elise Stefanik, who could become Trump's running mate, says there would be no weapons embargo on Israel if he returns to power.
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At least a billion eyes watched the dramatic three minutes in which Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) forced the presidents of America's leading universities to answer a rather simple question: "Does a call for the elimination of the Jewish people violate the rules of your academic institution?"

"It depends on the context," the presidents of Harvard, MIT and the University of Pennsylvania told the lawmaker when she asked them that question at the House committee hearing in Washington five months ago. Stefanik rejected their responses. "No." she told the professors, “Calls for the murder of Jews are not context-dependent."

The clarity and determination displayed by Stefanik shook America's prestigious campuses and, among other things, forced two of the presidents to resign from their positions. The power that Stefanik radiated and the enormous snowball effect that began rolling due to her words catapulted her as one of the most talked-about names as Donald Trump, the presumptive 2024 Republican nominee, searches for a running mate or future cabinet members.

In a recent interview with Israel Hayom, Trump committed to having a pro-Israel running mate. Stefanik meets that definition.

On Sunday, Stefanik arrived in Israel for a solidarity trip and visited communities affected by the recent conflict. However, she did not need to witness the difficult sights to stand in support of the State of Israel and the Jewish people, while harshly criticizing U.S. President Joe Biden's attitude towards Israel.

She made it clear that one thing will not happen: If Trump is elected president, there will be no weapons embargo on Israel.

Q: Many Israelis are now disappointed with Biden's line towards Israel, especially regarding the embargo he imposed two weeks ago. The question is, if Trump does win the elections in November and the war is still ongoing, what will his policy be regarding Israel, the war, Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran? What will he say to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu or another Israeli prime minister if he becomes president?

A: Well, first of all, look at President Trump's record in terms of moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, the historic Abraham Accords, the biggest great breakthrough for peace normalization in 25 years, as well as moving Israel to U.S. Central Command, allowing the planning which was so critical to combating the Iranian strike against Israel with the hundreds of missiles that were sent. 

We know that President Trump makes a strong effort when it comes to U.S. support for Israel. And there is a stark difference. Look at Joe Biden's statement to withhold military aid that the U.S. Congress passed overwhelmingly. 

There was no excuse for any American president to withhold that aid to our most precious ally in the region. Under President Trump, that would have never happened.

Q: What do you think about Biden not allowing entry into Rafah and not wanting, for example, Israel to encourage emigration from the Gaza Strip to other places in the world? Is it okay with you to allow Gazans to immigrate to other places, and this situation where Biden does not want us to operate in places where we know Hamas is still present?

A: Israel needs all the operational flexibility to eradicate Hamas. This is a just war. It was Hamas that committed terrorist atrocities against the Israeli people. So, this moral equivocation, this equivocation on policy from the Biden administration, there is no room for it.

And I'm here in Israel to send a message that the American people stand strongly with Israel to eradicate Hamas to protect Israel's right to exist to protect the national security of Israel.

Originally published by Israel Hayom.

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Israel is preparing to dispatch medical experts to North Macedonia after a nightclub fire there killed 59 people and injured more than 150, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar announced on Sunday.

"I spoke with my counterpart, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of North Macedonia Timco Mucunski, to express our condolences for the terrible tragedy," said Sa'ar.

"Israeli medical experts will travel to North Macedonia within the next day to provide medical assistance. I also suggested any other assistance needed. Israel stands by North Macedonia in this difficult time," he added.

The blaze erupted at around 2:30 a.m. during a concert at the Pulse nightclub in the eastern town of Kocani. Macedonia's Interior Minister Panche Toshkovski said pyrotechnics had caused the roof of the club to catch fire. 

“The loss of so many young lives is irreparable, and the pain of the families, loved ones and friends is immeasurable,” tweeted Macedonia's Prime Minister Hristijan Mickoski.

“The people and the government will do everything in their power to at least slightly alleviate their pain and help them in these most difficult moments,” he added.

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The Israel Defense Forces on Sunday struck a command-and-control center in Southern Lebanon used by Hezbollah's Radwan Force.

The presence of such terrorist infrastructure "constitutes a blatant violation of the understandings between Israel and Lebanon," according to the military.

"The IDF will strike armed terrorists in Southern Lebanon and will operate in order to remove any threat to the State of Israel," added the statement.

Earlier on Sunday, the IDF confirmed that a parked vehicle near Moshav Avivim in northern Israel had been hit by gunfire likely from Lebanon.

No injuries were reported.

The military was investigating the incident.

"The claim that it was an errant bullet from the funeral of a Hezbollah terrorist in a nearby village [in Southern Lebanon] is completely unacceptable,” said Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz, according to Hebrew-language media.

Jerusalem will “not allow a reality of northern residents being fired on for any reason, and we will respond to any violation of the ceasefire” with Lebanon, he added.

On Friday, Katz confirmed that Israeli troops will remain at five strategic outposts in Southern Lebanon “indefinitely,” despite the launch of talks with Beirut regarding 13 disputed points along the international border.

The five outposts are located at a hill near Labbouneh, opposite the Israeli border town of Shlomi; on the Jabal Blat peak, opposite Moshav Zar’it; on a hill opposite Moshav Avivim and Kibbutz Malkia; on a hill opposite Moshav Margaliot; and on a hill opposite the town of Metula.

On Tuesday, Israel and Lebanon initiated negotiations toward settling the border disputes between the countries. Representatives of the IDF, the United States, France and Lebanon agreed during a meeting in Naqoura in Southern Lebanon to establish three joint working groups aimed at stabilizing the region.

As part of these developments, and in coordination with the United States, five Lebanese detainees were transferred from Israel to Lebanon as a gesture of goodwill to Lebanon's President Joseph Aoun.

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In demonstrations at Columbia University and Trump Tower in New York City, as well as on the op-ed pages of liberal newspapers and websites, leftist anti-Zionists headed to the barricades this past week, both literally and figuratively. They did so on behalf of the new hero of the struggle to “free Palestine,” which means to destroy Israel.

They are not alone in rallying to the cause of Mahmoud Khalil, one of the leaders of the pro-Hamas and antisemitic mayhem that has gone on at Columbia since the Hamas-led terrorist attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. American liberals and many, if not most Democrats, are also all-in on the effort to free Khalil.

Khalil was arrested by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) because, as Secretary of State Marco Rubio said, foreigners who come to the United States to study but use that privilege to advocate for a terror group and to engage in illegal activities, as well as fomenting hate against Jews, have forfeited that right. And so, at the government’s discretion, those persons will be deported.

Trump’s cultural revolution

For those opposed to the president’s policies across the board, he is as much a martyr to the “resistance” to the Trump administration as he is to the cause of eliminating the Jewish state.

To them, the president’s push to punish schools that tolerate antisemitism and to deport those terror-supporting foreign students who have helped drive the surge of hate against Jews on campuses throughout the United States is deeply offensive. They assert that Khalil’s arrest and potential deportation are evidence of Trump’s authoritarianism and willingness to trample on the right to free speech.

Yet even more than that, the credentialed elites that now form the backbone of the Democratic Party view Trump’s war on leftist-dominated colleges and universities that have enabled the surge in antisemitism as one that is directed at them and all they hold dear.

When Washington Post columnist and CNN host Fareed Zakaria blasted the Trump campaign against these institutions of higher learning as a “cultural revolution,” he wasn’t entirely wrong.

What Trump is attempting isn’t a replay of the Chinese cultural revolution—a mad orgy of bloodletting in which Mao Tse-Tung and that country’s Communist Party waged war on all Western learning and all potential sources of internal opposition. What the administration hopes to do is quite the opposite of what that purveyor of liberal conventional wisdom claims.

Instead of destroying learning, the president is trying to rescue American education from “progressives” who have subverted it by imposing woke indoctrination throughout the system—from grades K-12 all the way up to the most elite universities. They may now pose as defenders of the “experts” against Trump’s revolt of the uneducated. But what the left is doing, with the support of their liberal fellow travelers, is part of an effort to undermine the entire edifice of Western civilization and the American republic. They’re doing that by seeking to replace the Western canon and its belief in equality with the woke catechism of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI). It is rooted in the toxic myths of critical race theory, intersectionality and settler-colonialism that preaches an endless race war between “people of color,” who are always victims, and the so-called white oppressor class.

Canaries in the coal mine

That the Jews and Israel have been falsely labeled as “white” and always in the wrong (let alone oppressors since Jews have suffered persecution for two millennia), and the Palestinian Arabs their victims who are always in the right, is incidental to the damage that woke ideology seeks to do to all Americans.

As is always the case, the Jews are the canaries in the coal mine. They saw themselves as at home in institutions where they have thrived for more than a century once the old quotas against Jewish admission were toppled. Now Jews are targeted by the progressives simply because—as the object of the world’s oldest hatred—they are uniquely vulnerable to be made to suffer for the sin of that success, both in the United States and in Israel.

In a less hyper-partisan era or one in which hatred for Trump was not so integral to political discourse, extremists like Khalil and his cheering section on the left would not only be isolated. Those who today call themselves liberals would realize how much of a threat the toxic ideas of progressives are to everything they cherish. They would understand that these radicals should not only be shunned but actively resisted. But so many political liberals have either embraced those ideas to stay in sync with political fashion on the left or have been indoctrinated in them in their own schooling. As a result, they instinctually identify with the notion that a foreign terror supporter is somehow the poster child for free speech.

The pro-Hamas mob’s goals

Khalil is the grandson of Arabs who fled what is now Israel when the war to destroy the newly established modern-day Jewish state in May 1948 failed. He was born in Syria but subsequently acquired Algerian citizenship. After being educated in Lebanon, he moved to the United States to seek a graduate degree via a student visa in 2022. While in America, he acquired a green card via marriage to a U.S. citizen. That enabled him not only to remain in the country legally but also to get a job. One job that he held was as a public affairs officer for the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), the Hamas-associated agency that helps perpetuate the conflict with Israel.

At Columbia, Khalil was one of the most visible organizers of the pro-Hamas demonstrations since Oct. 7 that included illegal encampments, in addition to takeovers of university buildings and libraries. While portrayed in liberal outlets as an expression of idealism by those who sympathized with suffering Palestinians, Khalil and those who joined him made no secret of their ideological goals. They are not peace activists. Their literature and chants made it clear that they supported Hamas, a terror organization that led the mass murder of 1,200 people and the kidnapping of 251 others on Oct. 7. They explicitly supported terrorism, as even The New York Times reported.

That Khalil’s pregnant wife speaks about his being kidnapped by ICE and the cruelty of such an action remains deeply ironic since her husband and his confederates have no problem with the kidnapping of Israelis—not to mention the slaughter, rape and torture of those Jews whom they targeted on Oct. 7.

They did so because they supported its genocidal goal to purge the Jews from their ancient homeland (“from the river to the sea”) and their terroristic methods (“globalize the intifada”). Under the circumstances, it is hardly surprising that these “mostly peaceful” protests sometimes crossed over into violence and acts of intimidation that at times led some to advise Jews to flee the campus.

While politicians, including former President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, praised them as idealists who should be “heard,” their goals made it obvious what was driving these protests.

Their takeover of parts of the campus made them virtual “no go” zones for Jews not willing to abjure their faith or their identification with their people. There should be no misunderstanding about this. Their effort to silence and shun Jews was not incidental to their purpose. It was integral to their protests and in keeping with the general woke intolerance for those who dissent against their ideology or can be smeared as members of the oppressor class.

Free-speech hypocrisy

Nor should we take seriously the loud clamor about Khalil’s arrest being a Trumpian campaign against free speech.

The same voices loudly clamoring on behalf of Khalil’s right to torment Jews and support an Islamist movement that is designated as a terror organization were silent during the years of the Biden presidency. That administration conducted an unprecedented campaign to silence dissent against their policies during the COVID pandemic, as well as those who opposed them on a host of other issues. They colluded with social-media platforms and Internet providers to squelch those who opposed them in a program of government censorship that was antithetical to democracy, despite their disingenuous claims to be defending it.

Biden’s Department of Justice similarly targeted dissent. They sought to crack down and intimidate parents who protested against the imposition of radical ideologies in their children’s schools, as well as those who conducted peaceful protests against abortion.

But liberals had no problem with these policies.

Some on the left, like the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) were explicit about abandoning their former stance in which they supported all those whose speech was under attack, be they on the right or the left. Now they only defend speech when it conforms to their political opinions and are happy to stand on the sidelines or support the suppression of conservative or other non-leftist views.

Some liberal Jewish organizations like the Anti-Defamation League, actively sought to participate in the repression. They did so ostensibly because they foolishly believed it would make Jews safer if outlier crackpots on the far right were silenced. But the real reason was that the group had long since abandoned its brief to defend Jewish life for a partisan agenda as a Democratic Party auxiliary.

Violence isn’t protected speech

Still, that raises the question as to whether conservatives are themselves free-speech hypocrites by supporting Trump’s plan to deport foreign Hamas supporters. It’s a fair question to pose, but the answer is that the accusation is false.

Khalil and other foreign supporters are not being deported for their opinions. Any American or, for that matter, foreign resident can think and say what they like, no matter how hateful or abhorrent. But Khalil and his mob of antisemitic leftists at Columbia—and others like them around the country—turned their support for the genocide of Jews into acts of harassment and violence, breaking not only the rules of the university where they worked and studied (albeit rules that a school administration that was tacitly in sympathy with the Israel-haters refused to enforce) but the law.

That rendered those among their number who were not citizens liable to be expelled from the United States under long-recognized rules and regulations. Foreign residents are in the United States only with the permission of the government. Even green-card holders can have that permission revoked if they violate the law or otherwise act in a manner that violates the terms under which they were admitted. And not only did Khalil violate them. It’s a dead certainty that he lied about his affiliations and intentions in order to gain entry to the United States and to get a green card even after he married a citizen.

Yet the point to focus on isn’t immigration law. Advocacy for Israel’s destruction is speech. The acts of violence and intimidation committed by the pro-Hamas mob Khalil led were not speech.

Foreign students take over

The more germane issue, however, isn’t really about the fate of Khalil or any of the other antisemitic thugs who are either self-deporting or liable to get the same treatment from federal authorities. It is how progressives and their Islamist allies have taken over American higher education in such a way as to make so many colleges and universities hostile environments for Jews.

Part of this is the result of the way foreign students have impacted American education.

Most Americans probably assume that students at one of the nation’s most venerable and respected institutions of higher learning are peers who gained admission on the basis of merit. They would probably be astonished to learn that, according to the university’s website, a majority of its students and scholars are not U.S. citizens but foreign nationals. Unlike many Americans, foreign students, especially from Middle East countries other than Israel, pay the full tuition fees with few of them on scholarships or other programs that reduce costs.

The transformation of schools like Columbia into bastions of hate for Israel and Jews is thus not entirely the function of the American left’s long march through our institutions, but also the product of the Muslim and Arab world’s successful campaign in which they have sought influence in the United States by one means or another.

Still, the stakes involved in Trump’s plans to defund schools that have tolerated and enabled antisemitism are bigger than Khalil or the infiltration of other Islamists and terror supporters into the country.

The left’s promotion of toxic theories aimed at smearing Western civilization and the United States as irredeemably racist has done incalculable damage to the humanities and, as author Heather Mac Donald has written, to the sciences as well. In addition to the harm done to education is the impact ideas that gained credibility from their sponsorship by major universities have had on American society as a whole, as well as the realms of business, journalism and government. What happens at Columbia, Harvard, Yale and other elite schools doesn’t stay there. It seeps into the rest of society because their graduates have so much influence on how the country operates.

Jews may be most vulnerable now, but the left’s takeover of the education system threatens all Americans. If Trump’s efforts fail and the woke orthodoxy that targets basic American values like personal liberty and equal opportunity prevails, this will call into question the nation’s future in a way that few other threats can.

The president’s attack on these schools isn’t a war on education. It’s a battle to save education and America itself at a time when a counter-cultural revolution on the nation’s campuses is desperately needed. Those liberals who say that they oppose Khalil’s views but will fight to defend his rights (even though they wouldn’t do the same for conservatives) and do their best to thwart Trump’s defunding campaign aren’t just undermining Jewish security. They are betraying the basic values of Western civilization that are the foundation of their own freedoms and the existence of the American republic.

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

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A Toronto judge’s recent decision to sentence an 18-year-old woman to 12 months probation, 40 hours of community service and anger management classes for physically assaulting an octogenarian Jewish man is “very disappointing,” the victim told JNS.

“You get a slap on the wrist, naughty naughty,” Joel Sacke, 88, said of the Tuesday verdict.

Hissa Abed was riding in a car with her family on Aug. 18, 2024, when they passed “holding Israeli flags and posters of hostages abducted by Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023,” Howard Borenstein, of the Ontario Court of Justice, wrote in the decision, which the Canadian Jewish News posted.

“As they drove by the rally, Ms. Abed was filming herself inside her car laughing, yelling ‘free Palestine’ as they drove by the demonstrators,” the judge wrote. “She tells the driver she wants to grab one of their flags. The car drives by the demonstrators as Abed tries to grab several flags before she was able to grab the flag from 88-year-old Mr. Sacke.”

The judge added that someone tried to grab the flag back, and in so doing, struck Abed, and that when the car later got stuck in traffic, people hit it with flagpoles and kicked it. “It became an instant chaotic situation. Precipitated by Abed grabbing the flag from Mr. Sacke,” Borenstein wrote.

“As protesters surrounded and were hitting Abed’s car, Abed, her brother and father got out of the car to engage with the protesters,” the judge wrote. “Abed is seen on video grabbing Mr. Sacke from behind with a hand over his shoulder and one hand over his torso as he goes to the ground.”

“He is 88 years old and was injured,” he added. “He was taken to the hospital for treatment. His injuries continue to this day.”

“Never, ever in my life,” Sacke told JNS, did he imagine his safety would be threatened at a peaceful rally. “Here I was punched, kicked, thrown to the ground.”

The judge noted that Abed was charged with assault and theft, for stealing the flag. “The crown and defense agreed to resolve this case by a plea of guilty to mischief under 5,000 in relation to taking the flag,” he wrote, meaning less than 5,000 Canadian dollars. He added that Abed has no criminal record. “I am told she wants to study and work. I have not been told much else about her,” he wrote.

Joel Sacke
Joel Sacke, 88, holds an Israeli flag with a red heart at a rally in Toronto, March 16, 2025. Photo by Dave Gordon.

The judge considered a victim impact statement from the Friends of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre and Sacke, although Abed did not admit to assaulting him.

“What did I do that made Ms. Abed so angry with me that she grabbed my flag and threw me to the ground?” Sacke wrote, in part, in his statement. “Why am I being punished by being depressed in this way?”

“The defense submits this was akin to a hockey game, where one fan grabbed the flag of the other team. With respect, that misses the mark. This is one of the most heated issues we have seen in a long time,” the judge wrote. “People have been killed on both sides of this conflict. Passions are very strong. As is clear in this case and is clear from the victim impact statements, this is not like stealing a hockey team’s flag.”

The judge added that Sacke “attended the rally and carried the Israeli flag to draw attention to the kidnapped hostages and to support each other. He and everyone have the right to peacefully assemble, to gather and to express their views,” but Abed “chose to provoke them, to engage in conduct intended to undermine their right to peacefully assemble and their sense of peace and security.”

Sacke told JNS that an anonymous donor in the community helped replace his glasses, which were broken when he was assaulted. He added that “a civil case is going to all ends, to make sure that justice is served.” (JNS sought comment from Zachary Al-Khatib, Abed’s lawyer.)

Jaime Kirzner-Roberts, senior director of policy and advocacy at Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center, told JNS that the outcome of the trial was “outrageous” but unsurprising.

“We are seeing across the board, every day, hate criminals seeking to do real harm, including real violence, getting away with a slap on the wrist,” she said. “This case—it kind of exemplifies that.”

Kirzner-Roberts told JNS that she is involved in many cases in which “very, very dangerous behaviour” is “treated as though it was a minor infraction.”

Abed “clearly intended to create a physical scene,” Kirzner-Roberts said. The punishment “makes it clear that justice is failing, and that the justice system is specifically failing to deter, actually,” she said. “Criminals know that they won’t face any real repercussions.”

James Pasternak
James Pasternak, a member of the Toronto City Council who represents York Centre, at a pro-Israel rally in Toronto, March 16, 2025. Photo by Dave Gordon.

‘An affront to our morals’

James Pasternak, a member of the Toronto City Council who represents York Centre, the district in which the Aug. 18, 2024 rally took place, told JNS that “one of the great problems that we’re facing through this time, in which we see hateful mobs on the streets of Toronto, is there are no consequences.”

“There are very few arrests. There are very few convictions, and a lot of the charges are dropped,” the Jewish politician told JNS. “That’s why this continues. That’s why this is continuing for 18 months, and that’s why this has cost us almost $28 million in police time.” (The amount corresponds to about $19.5 in U.S. dollars.)

Richard Robertson, director of research and advocacy at B’nai Brith Canada, told JNS that Abed’s “actions were reckless and dangerous” and “an affront to our morals and values” in Canadian society.

“We are relieved that the court has found her responsible for the chaos that unfolded and hope that the judge’s findings will serve as a deterrent for those who think it is acceptable to endanger the well-being of others in such an un-Canadian manner,” Robertson said.

Richard Marceau, vice president of external affairs and general counsel at the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, told JNS that “at a time when antisemitism is at alarming levels, it is essential that individuals found guilty of hate-motivated crimes face sentences severe enough to deter others.”

It’s also vital, he said, to “send a clear message that antisemitism has no place in Canada.”

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  • Words count:
    279 words
  • Type of content:
    Video Page
  • Byline:
  • Publication Date:
    March 16, 2025

Welcome to “Basic Law,” the new JNS show hosted by Aylana Meisel, executive director of the Israel Law and Liberty Forum. This series is a deep dive into Israel’s legal system, dissecting the most pressing legal and constitutional issues facing the nation today.

https://youtu.be/e32z9NnPdyg

The guest is Dr. Yaacov Ben-Shemeshm a constitutional law scholar and professor at Ono Academic College and Tel Aviv University.

⚖️ Topics covered:
✅ The role and unprecedented power of Israel’s attorney general
✅ Why the Israeli government is moving to dismiss the AG
✅ The clash between judicial activism and democracy in Israel
✅ The debate over legal reform and the future of the Supreme Court
✅ Oct. 7, the ICC and legal challenges facing Israel’s leadership

Subscribe and turn on notifications to stay updated on “Basic Law” and Israel’s legal landscape!

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 at the following link: https://reg.eventact.com//welcome?Form=iZpQAAA&c=iOAE&Event=iUJEAAA&lang=en

If you liked this video, tune into @JNS_TV. Don’t forget to hit the subscribe button!

Catch every story from Israel and the Jewish world:

Latest news: https://bit.ly/jewish_news_service

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You can also join the fight against media bias! Donate here: https://bit.ly/Support-JNS

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e32z9NnPdyg
  • Words count:
    631 words
  • Type of content:
    Opinion
  • Byline:
  • Publication Date:
    March 16, 2025
  • Media:
    1 file

The recent arrest of Columbia University graduate student and activist Mahmoud Khalil has sparked outrage among progressives and pro-Palestinian activists who decry his detention as an unconstitutional attack on free speech. However, quite the opposite is true. This case is not about censoring controversial ideology; it is a matter of immigration law, national security and law enforcement.

Khalil, a green-card holder from Syria of Palestinian descent, violated the terms of his residency by supporting a U.S.-designated terrorist organization. Under U.S. law, this constitutes grounds for deportation.

Green-card holders are not citizens, and as such, are not afforded the same free speech rights as full U.S. citizens. They are, in fact, required to abide by firmly established legal requirements to maintain their residency status. Anybody seeking entry or residency in the United States must renounce any affiliation with terrorist organizations, as indicated in the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), Section 212(a)(3)(B). Federal law forbids noncitizens from endorsing, supporting or promoting terrorist activity or groups. It makes engaging with such entities grounds for deportation under 8 U.S. Code § 1182. This particular provision enacts protections to U.S. national security by deterring people with extremist ties from obtaining legal status.

Khalil’s actions have gone far beyond expressing fringe political or ideological views. He participated in protests where Hamas propaganda was distributed with the Hamas logo, including materials from the “Hamas Media Office” and a booklet celebrating the Hamas-led terrorist attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. He is also the self-proclaimed “spokesperson” for Columbia University Apartheid Divest (CUAD), a group that has intimidated, threatened and harassed Jewish students, and violently occupied and vandalized campus buildings.

Hamas has been a U.S.-designated foreign terrorist organization for more than 28 years. It is responsible for horrific acts of violence, including the Oct. 7 massacre of 1,200 people in Jewish communities in Israel’s south—and the kidnapping of another 251 men, women and children—the deadliest day for Jews since the Holocaust. Vocalizing support for Hamas and spreading terror propaganda is not a matter of free expression; it is a national security threat to America.

It’s important to note here too, that the same protesters who chant for “Death to Israel” chant for “Death to America.” The United States has a responsibility to protect its citizens from radical individuals who may offer material or ideological support to terrorist groups.

INA states that any noncitizen who “endorses or espouses terrorist activity or persuades others to endorse or espouse terrorist activity or support a terrorist organization” is inadmissible and subject to deportation. This is not an unreasonable decision; it is simply the implementation of the law.

This national security enforcement measure is not unique to America. Countries regularly deny visas or rescind residency status for people who pose potential security risks. Khalil’s participation in extremist activities is more than just a university protest or a political statement—it is a clear alignment with groups that actively endanger American interests and allies.

By drawing an absurdly false equivalence between Khalil’s arrest and censorship, these “activists” simultaneously distract the public from the real threats to free speech. The legitimate threats to expression on campuses target Jewish and pro-Israel students, who face harassment, exclusion, censorship and even physical threats for being outwardly Jewish or stating their spiritual or familial connections to Israel.

Mahmoud Khalil’s arrest isn’t about suppressing dissent. It’s about security and upholding public order—something that violent, non-peaceful protesters actively undermine by glorifying martyrdom, praising terrorist leaders and relentlessly aiming to delegitimize Israel’s existence.

Green cards, visas and citizenship are a privilege, not a right. The United States has clear legal standards for who can remain in the country, and supporting terrorist organizations is a blatant violation of those standards. 

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  • Words count:
    158 words
  • Type of content:
    Video Page
  • Byline:
  • Publication Date:
    March 16, 2025

Welcome to the first episode of “Judeacation” hosted by JNS Middle East correspondent Josh Hasten. This new series takes you inside Judea and Samaria—the heartland of Israel.

Meet the pioneers and personalities living on the front lines, defending Israel’s future while preserving its ancient past. The first guest is Eve Harow, director of tourism and education at One Israel Fund and host of the Land of Israel Network.

https://youtu.be/ZTZvI92jADo

Topics covered include: ✅ What life is like in Judea and Samaria post-Oct. 7 ✅ The truth about security, terrorism and Jewish rights in the region ✅ The battle over Israeli sovereignty and the role of U.S. policy ✅ The rise of Christian Zionist support and global advocacy for Judea ✅ Why Judea and Samaria are crucial to Israel’s security and identity

Subscribe, like and turn on notifications for more in-depth coverage of Israel’s most pressing issues: JNS YouTube Channel.

https://youtu.be/ZTZvI92jADo
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https://youtu.be/ZTZvI92jADo
  • Words count:
    388 words
  • Type of content:
    News
  • Byline:
  • Publication Date:
    March 16, 2025

Israel and Azerbaijan will sign an agreement in Jerusalem on Monday granting the State Oil Company of the Republic of Azerbaijan (SOCAR) a license for gas exploration in Israel, the Israeli Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure said on Sunday.

The accord, which is expected to strengthen Israel’s energy security, is the latest sign of the friendly ties between the Jewish state and the predominantly Shi’ite Muslim country.

The gas exploration deal will be signed during a visit to Israel by Azerbaijan’s Economy Minister Mikayil Jabbarov, who also serves as the chairman of SOCAR, in a ceremony with Israeli Energy Minister Eli Cohen at his office.

SOCAR is part of a consortium that includes British multinational oil and gas firm BP, and Israel’s NewMed Energy (formerly Delek Drilling), which won a tender from Israel’s Energy Ministry in 2023 to drill in Mediterranean fields adjacent to the country’s Leviathan field, one of the world’s largest offshore gas discoveries.

Jabbarov, who is also expected to meet with Israeli President Isaac Herzog and senior business leaders, is the first Azerbaijani minister to visit Israel since the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led massacre in southern Israel, which triggered the 15-month war in Gaza and delayed the deal.

The visit comes one month after Hikmet Hajiyev, the assistant to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and head of the Foreign Policy Affairs Department of the Presidential Administration, met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in his second such trip in the last three months.

For Israel, ties with Azerbaijan, which shares a 428-mile border with Iran—a country that is home to tens of millions of Azeris—are of strategic importance as a conduit for intelligence and because it supplies more than a third of the Jewish state’s oil.

At the same time, Azerbaijan is a leading purchaser of Israeli military hardware, which helped Baku in the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War against archrival Armenia in 2020.

Two years ago, secular Azerbaijan made history when it became the first Shi’ite country to open an embassy in Israel, despite repeated violence and threats from neighboring Iran. The diplomatic landmark was the product of a three-decade-old covert and overt relationship rooted in a centuries-long affinity between the two nations, which has blossomed from a people-to-people relationship to a robust security- and energy-related focus.

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