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![]() Latest Article from Ilan BermanThe Next Steps For Iran After Its War With IsraelJuly 14, 2025 • Forbes What a difference a year can make. Last summer, Iran appeared to be well and truly on the march. Its chief Palestinian proxy, Hamas, had succeeded in bogging Israel down in a costly ground war in Gaza – and turning global public opinion against the Jewish state in the process. The United States, under the Biden administration, didn't appear to have much of an answer to Iran's persistent pursuit of nuclear status, or to the growing regional threat posed by its other proxies, like Yemen's Houthi rebels. And vulnerable Gulf states, acutely aware of this dynamic, were increasingly seeking some sort of accommodation with Tehran. As a result, the Iranian leadership's strategic ambitions had begun to expand dramatically. That, however, was before Israel's offensive against Hezbollah in southern Lebanon left the Shi'ite militia decimated. Israel's parallel October strike on Iran succeeded in destroying Iran's air defense architecture, leaving its nuclear facilities exposed. Then, in December, Syria's Bashar al-Assad fell from power unexpectedly, overthrown by Islamist rebel forces, robbing Tehran of another regional ally. But it was not until June 2025 that the extent of Tehran's fragility was truly revealed. Beginning on June 13, Israel's "Operation Rising Lion" systematically targeted key nodes in Iran's nuclear program, as well as senior military leaders and nuclear scientists responsible for making it tick. That effort, in turn, was dramatically amplified by the Trump administration's decision to wade into the fray, using American military superiority to target hardened and buried elements of Iran's atomic effort – to devastating effect. Now that the dust has settled, the regional picture in the Middle East looks strikingly different. But, while the Islamic Republic is now down, it isn't out. The weeks ahead are liable to see some big changes within the country, as Iran's political establishment scrambles to survive.
![]() Latest Article from Michael FreundIsrael must take Joseph's Tomb back from the PalestiniansJuly 13, 2025 • Jerusalem Post Nearly 25 years after the IDF ignominiously pulled out of Joseph's Tomb in Nablus, Israel may at last be on the verge of correcting that grievous affront to Jewish history and destiny. According to a report last week in Yediot Aharonot, the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee's Subcommittee on Judea and Samaria, chaired by Religious Zionist Party MK Zvi Sukkot, convened a special session to discuss for the first time the restoration of Israeli sovereignty to the holy site. IDF officials who participated in the meeting promised to prepare a feasibility study within six weeks, which could pave the way for the renewal of a permanent Jewish presence at the site.
![]() Latest Article from Clifford MayLaw and disorder: Interpol does the bidding of bad guysJuly 9, 2025 • The Washington Times Interpol is such a cool idea: Cosmopolitan cops chasing criminals around the world. That's the image that's been projected in movies like "Interpol" (1957), "The Medallion" (2003), "The International" (2009), "Now You See Me," (2013), "Darc" (2018), and "Red Notice" (2021). The reality, I'm sorry to tell you, is rather different. The roots of the International Criminal Police Organization, as it's officially known, go back nearly 102 years. It currently has 196 member countries. But it's not an international FBI. It doesn't have agents who carry weapons, investigate crimes, or make arrests. It doesn't enforce international laws.
![]() Latest Article from Tevi TroyThe Presidents and Iran, A HistoryJuly 4, 2025 • The Washington Examiner With President Donald Trump's decision to intervene in the Iran-Israel war, Iran, a country 6,500 miles away from Washington, D.C., has once again taken an outsize role in the story of an American presidency. In fact, Iran has been a big part of American presidencies for nearly a century. ![]() Latest Article from Jonathan SchanzerQatar's money isn't just dirty – it's filthyJune 19, 2025 • The Jewish Chronicle Gift or grift? The tiny Persian Gulf emirate of Qatar has just given the United States a 747 jet to serve as the new Air Force One. But what exactly is Qatar getting in return? Qatar is an insanely wealthy country. Its citizenry is estimated to be 330,000 (with another 1.7 million foreigners serving as hired help on the peninsula). And yet the country controls more than 10 per cent of the world's energy. In other words, money is no object for Doha. Influence is the name of the game.
![]() Latest Article from Asaf RomirowskyScratch the Surface of His Story, You Won't Like What You FindMay 12, 2025 • Newsweek Two weeks ago, a judge ordered the release of a 34-year-old named Mohsen Mahdawi, a graduate student detained weeks earlier by Department of Homeland Security agents in Vermont. The usual suspects, including pundits, professors, and our self-appointed intellectual and moral betters, celebrated Mahdawi's newfound freedom, arguing that detaining him—during his naturalization interview, no less—was an egregious overreach and that the Trump administration had no good case to make against Mahdawi. It was such a perfect storm of virtue signaling, complete with Mahdawi himself delivering a defiant speech from the courthouse steps, that the facts, as they usually do in such cases, were drowned out by the sound and fury.
![]() Latest Article from Judith MillerCan NATO Survive Without America?May 2025 • Newsmax Magazine President Donald J. Trump failed to achieve his often repeated preelection vow to end Russia's war against Ukraine "in 24 hours," but the 47th president still accomplished something extraordinary. In less than three months, he called into question the security architecture that not only has deterred Russian aggression, but also kept Europe relatively peaceful and prosperous for over 75 years through 14 different administrations, including his own first term. The U.S.-led North Atlantic Treaty Organization, an alliance of 31 European nations plus Canada, has been the backbone of Europe's defense since its creation in the ashes of World War II 80 years ago.
![]() Latest Article from Soeren KernIs Israel Too Dependent on the United States?September/October 2024 • Israel My Glory The Biden administration's decision to cut off weapons supplies to Israel during the war in Gaza has raised concerns that the Jewish state is overly dependent on the United States for its security. Washington has supplied Israel with more than 10,000 tons of munitions since October 7, 2023, when Hamas murdered more than 1,200 Israelis. However, the White House has threatened to suspend further arms transfers to restrain the Israeli military by conditioning how American armaments can be used against Hamas and Hezbollah, the Iranian- backed terrorist proxy in Lebanon.
![]() Latest Article from Henry I. Miller M.D.Mask Up Again? As COVID Cases Rise, Look To Science And Not Pundits or Politicians
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