Tuesday, March 17, 2026

The US-Israeli strategy against Iran is working

Iranian leader killed by Israel today
There is little doubt that opinions about the war in Iran are shaped less by facts than by attitudes toward the leaders prosecuting it. While not universally true, it is hard to ignore the pattern: most opposition comes from liberal Democrats who are no fans of the president or the prime minister, while most support comes from conservative Republicans (aside from an isolationist faction whose loyalty appears to be waning.) There are of course other factors influencing public opinion. Like the war’s impact on the cost of living. Nonetheless, I think my point stands

To be sure, arguments exist on both sides. But the central question is straightforward: when all is said and done, is this war a net positive or a net negative? And how far does either outcome extend?

I have argued in favor of confronting Iran before, and I do not dismiss the concerns of those who disagree. But an honest look at the facts on the ground prior to U.S. and Israeli action compared to the facts on the ground now  is in my view,  a clear and significant net benefit.

Which brings me to a recent op-ed in the English-language edition of Al Jazeera, the Qatari-funded outlet widely cited by mainstream media during Israel’s war with Hamas. Coverage that was, unsurprisingly, far from sympathetic to Israel. The piece, by Muhanad Seloom, carried the following headline:

The US-Israeli strategy against Iran is working. Here is why

With a subheading that read:

Every aspect of Iran’s ability to project regional power is being successfully degraded.

In it, Seloom does a masterful job explaining why the war was necessary and why he believes it is succeeding. His analysis is brutally honest and does not mince words. He acknowledges the legitimate concerns of those who oppose the war, even as he lays out the case for why it was undertaken—and why, in his view, it is being won.

Rather than paraphrase, I will excerpt extensively from Seloom’s analysis, which, to my mind, is difficult to refute. Especially given his willingness to engage seriously with the strongest arguments on the other side.

He begins by acknowledging the following:

Two weeks into Operation Epic Fury, the dominant narrative has settled into a comfortable groove: The United States and Israel stumbled into a war without a plan. Iran is retaliating across the region. Oil prices are surging, and the world is facing another Middle Eastern quagmire. US senators have called it a blunder. Cable news has tallied the crises. Commentators have warned of a long war.

The chorus is loud and, in some respects, understandable. War is ugly, and this one has imposed real costs on millions of people across the Middle East, including the city I live in.

But this narrative is wrong...

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Monday, March 16, 2026

The Soft Antisemitism of Selective Facts

Law enforcement at the scene of the Temple attack (Spectrum)
It continues to amaze me how much of the mainstream media, in its effort to appear objective, ends up engaging in little more than Israel-bashing. Which, by association, often means Jew-bashing.

I’m tired of the claim that criticizing Israel does not make one antisemitic. In theory that may be true. In practice, it often isn’t. When a country defines itself as a Jewish state, constant denunciation of that country inevitably becomes denunciation of the people it represents.

The common defense is that critics aren’t attacking Jews, only Israel’s leaders. But in a democracy, that’s a distinction without much difference. Israel elects its leaders. When critics accuse Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of war crimes, they are not only condemning him but also millions of Israelis who voted for him. And opposition partieson both the right and left that openly support his policies.

Of course it is possible to criticize Israel without being antisemitic. Jews do it all the time. Anyone familiar with Israeli politics knows that some of the harshest critics of the Israeli government are Israelis themselves. Even the Charedi community, which often clashes with the government, expresses a level of venom toward it that sometimes exceeds the rhetoric heard from anti-Israel members of Congress.

But the source of the criticism matters. When I hear claims such as ‘Netanyahu dragged America into a forever war with Iran’ or that ‘Netanyahu has taken over the Pentagon’, I hear echoes of something much older and darker. These accusations draw on classic antisemitic tropes - the idea that Jews secretly control governments and manipulate world events. Those who use this language may deny it, even vehemently. But when they speak of Jews controlling American leaders, they are channeling ideas that long predate modern politics.

There is also a subtler problem. In the name of being ‘even-handed’. The media often feels compelled to ‘explain’ violence against Jews almost as soon as it occurs. As though the tragedy itself were incomplete without context...

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Sunday, March 15, 2026

Peace at Any Price?

Iran's founding Ayatollah Khomeini
The U.S. could have established diplomatic relations with Iran a long time ago. We might even have exchanged ambassadors. Imagine what the Middle East might have looked like had Washington simply accepted the new Iran guided by a religious leader instead of a monarch who was rapidly modernizing his country along Western lines.

Perhaps peaceful relations with a religious regime would have been possible. Would that not have been better than the open hostility that has now lasted 47 years? Hostility expressed in endless demonstrations of Iranians chanting “Death to America.”

Should the United States have taken that route?

Maybe. Except for one small detail: the State of Israel would have had to be sacrificed.

Iran’s religious ideology does not allow for a Jewish state in the region. Allowing Israel to exist violates a core belief of the regime. Had the United States abandoned Israel ‘for the sake of peace,’ Israel might never have developed the military capability it has today. Even with its ingenuity and military prowess, without American military support Israel might have had little ability to defend itself against an Iran determined to eradicate it.

In that scenario, Iran might well have achieved its primary goal: ‘Death to Israel.’ ‘Death to America’ has always been secondary, largely a response to American support for Israel.

As long as Israel exists with U.S. backing, Iran will remain a mortal enemy of both countries. And because Iran’s goals are rooted in religious ideology, they will be compromised. Pursuing them - even dying for them - is seen as a religious imperative rewarded in the next world.

Yet this is the regime much of the world has been willing to live with. While paying lip service to Israel’s right to exist, many nations appear largely indifferent to whether it actually survives.

If, God forbid, Iran had succeeded in destroying Israel, the world would have expressed regret, said Kaddish, and moved on. After all, Israel is already compared by some in Europe to the genocidal Nazi Germany. In that worldview, its disappearance would hardly be mourned.

No more conflict. It would be an all-Muslim region. Palestinians would then live in a new Palestine, and everything would supposedly be right with the world.

That mindset helps explain the opposition to the U.S. and Israeli war against Iran. Critics constantly point to Obama’s  JCPOA nuclear deal, which allowed Iran to keep building its ballistic missile arsenal while funding terrorist militias surrounding Israel. With money released to them by the United States. In return, Iran merely paused nuclear enrichment for ten years, a pause that would already be nearing expiration.

The deal only made sense if one believed Iran could somehow be moderated during that time. But that was never realistic unless the United States was willing to abandon Israel altogether.

I dislike sounding partisan. Until October 7th, I wasn’t. I voted for presidential candidates in both parties depending on what they were offering...

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Friday, March 13, 2026

The Islamophobia Red Herring

Muslim who drove his car into a a Jewish Temple (IBT)
Suspecting Muslims of violence is not Islamophobia. It is a legitimate suspicion. And I’m getting tired of hearing the word. Not because Islamophobia isn’t real. Irrational fear and suspicion of Muslims certainly exist. But because the term is almost always invoked when progressives discuss antisemitic incidents. As though the two were equal. They are not.

Antisemitic attacks far exceed attacks against Muslims. By nearly a factor of ten. FBI statistics report about 1,938 anti-Jewish hate crimes in 2024 compared with roughly 200–230 anti-Muslim hate crimes.

That makes the fear of a Jew being attacked a far more serious concern. And the perpetrators are often Muslims. As was the case yesterday at a Jewish temple in Michigan. Nor are Jews the only targets. Virginia’s Old Dominion University was recently attacked by a convicted Islamic State supporter. Yet when hate crimes are discussed, the media reflexively pairs Islamophobia with antisemitism - as though the threats were comparable. They aren’t.

To be clear, most Muslims have no interest in terrorism and wouldn’t harm anyone, even if they oppose Israel. Some Muslims even support the Jewish state. Including those living in Israel – some of whom serve in the IDF.

But that should not prevent legitimate concern over radicalization within parts of the Muslim world. Certain interpretations of Islam have repeatedly produced deadly extremists.

Defenders argue that extremists are the exception and that Islam is a religion of peace...

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Thursday, March 12, 2026

Antisemitism Among American Youth

Have to admit. I never thought it would come to this. But antisemitism has raised its ugly head in this country to an alarming degree. Far greater than I ever imagined it would.

Please do not misunderstand. I still believe that the vast majority of the American people do not have an antisemitic bone in their body. That is certainly true of all three branches of government. There has never been a more pro-Israel executive branch than there is right now. The majority of the legislative branch is clearly not antisemitic, and the same can be said about the judicial branch. Ev ten though here are exceptions. Some obvious and some not.

It is also clear to me that the religious tolerance embedded in the U.S. Constitution ensures that we will never experience the kind of hatred that permeated Europe during the Holocaust. The kind that led ordinary citizens to eagerly hand over their Jewish neighbors to the Gestapo to be gassed and cremated. That is not going to happen here.

Still, there is an element of Jew-hatred among some Americans that existed just below the radar until October 7. After that, Palestinian students and their progressive allies began protesting what they claimed was genocide against Gaza’s civilians. Those claims were fueled by images from Israel’s defensive war against Hamas terrorists who have openly declared genocidal intentions toward the State of Israel and the Jews who live there.

But regardless of the truth, images of war often speak louder than facts. That helps explain why many Americans opposed the war in Gaza. And why many Americans started questioning U.S. aid to Israel.

The country is divided largely along party lines. Most conservative Republicans support U.S. military aid to Israel, while many liberal Democrats have begun to question it. The political division reflects divide in the population.

Still, I chalk up most popular opposition to ignorance and the power of media images. Not antisemitism. I’m not so sure that’s true about the opposition by some members of Congress. They ought to know better. I suspect there is at least a hint of antisemitism. As for Jewish Democrats who oppose Israel, some may simply feel the need to prove their ‘objectivity’ and show that being Jewish does not mean offering knee-jerk support for the Jewish state.

Ironically, it is on the Republican side where antisemitism seems to be creeping into rhetoric critical of the US-Israel war against Iran. I hear claims like: Benjamin Netanyahu is calling all the shots; that he is somehow leading Donald Trump by the nose; and that America should not be dragged into a foreign war...

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Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Hard Questions for American Jewish Life

2 heterodox schools that are now merging
Walk through many non-Orthodox synagogues today and the effects become visible. Fewer young adults can comfortably read Hebrew or lead prayer without transliteration. Jewish identity often remains emotionally meaningful, yet it is increasingly detached from the literacy and confidence that once sustained communal leadership. Institutions rarely disappear overnight, but they become harder to reproduce.

Samuel J. Abrams made this observation in a recent Jewish Journal op-ed. He may not realize it yet, but he is a dying breed—something I very much lament. Because if there were ever a prototype of the American Jew determined to save American Jewry from near extinction, it is people like him.

Abrams is one of those rare individuals educated in a non-Orthodox Jewish day school and high school who actually took that education seriously. That much is clear from the sentiment above. Seeing the handwriting on the wall with respect to non-Orthodox Jewish education, he challenged fellow non-Orthodox leaders to ask “whether we believe that with equal seriousness and whether we are willing to invest, sacrifice, and build accordingly.”

Sadly, I think it is too late.

About ten years ago, an Orthodox Jewish philanthropist here in Chicago was honored by the Jewish Federation (of which he is a board member) for his generous contributions to Jewish education. When it was his turn to speak, he made a simple observation about where the growth of Chicago’s Jewish community was taking place—and where it wasn’t.

Many of the large Conservative and Reform synagogues so common in mid-20th-century Chicago, once filled every Friday night or Shabbos, have either closed their doors, merged with other struggling congregations, or been sold and converted into Orthodox shuls that are once again filling seats.

Conservative and Reform synagogues still exist, of course. But many now carry the long combined names of merged congregations—and even those continue to shrink.

The question is: why?

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Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Traveling

No new posts today.

Monday, March 09, 2026

The IDF and the Golden Calf

Satmar Rebbe of Kiryas Joel
I don’t know who is behind a blog entitled DUS IZ NIES, which is clearly a play on the popular Orthodox Jewish news site Vos Iz Neias, now known simply as VINnews.

I am occasionally forwarded the blog’s opinion pieces. Despite some “over-the-top” rhetoric, I often find myself agreeing with many of the points being made.

Today I was sent what appears to be a translation of a lecture delivered by the Satmar Rebbe of Kiryas Joel at the Shalosh Seudos meal this past Shabbos to his Chasidim.

If the translation is accurate, the remarks are not merely controversial—they represent a profound moral failure. When Jewish soldiers are risking their lives to defend fellow Jews, to portray their actions as a form of idolatry is not simply an ideological disagreement. It is a distortion of basic Jewish moral sensibilities.

Following in the footsteps of his uncle, R’ Yoel Teitelbaum—who published a scathing attack against Rav Kook, the spiritual progenitor of Religious Zionism, and who famously described the miracles of the Six-Day War as maaseh Satan (the work of the devil)—the Satmar Rebbe compared the IDF to the Egel HaZahav, the Golden Calf of last week’s Torah portion...

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Sunday, March 08, 2026

Putting Carlson in His Place

Once again, the president has risen to the occasion. And at his own political expense, I might add. In what has to be the most damning criticism of Tucker Carlson yet, the president said the following:

“Tucker has lost his way,” Trump told ABC News correspondent Jonathan Karl in an interview. “I knew that a long time ago, and he’s not MAGA. MAGA is saving our country. MAGA is making our country great again. MAGA is America First, and Tucker is none of those things. And Tucker is really not smart enough to understand that.”

I’m finding it harder and harder to criticize the president, even knowing all the ‘bad stuff’ about him accumulated since he first took office.

But as I have said in the past in his defense, the president does have a conscience. It isn’t always about ego. Or getting maximum support even it includes bigots and antisemites. Especially when it comes to Orthodox Jews, for whom it seems he has the highest regard. (Which is not the case for non-Orthodox Jews, most of whom despise him about which the feeling is mutual.)

What triggered this presidential response was yet another far-out conspiracy theory from Tucker Carlson about Chabad:

“You may know people who give money to Chabad or run Chabad—super nice people, engaged in all kinds of charitable activities,” Carlson told his followers about the global Hasidic sect in a video he posted Thursday. “But what is Chabad exactly?”

Carlson went on to claim, “Chabad has been pushing in a pretty subtle way, unless you look carefully, for the reconstruction of the Third Temple”—the fabled structure that, according to ancient Jewish teachings, heralds the arrival of the messiah. Building the temple, he says later in the video, “is considered so esoteric and weird and crypto-historical and religious and kind of culty. What’s Chabad? No one ever mentions it.”

He accused Chabad of sitting at the center of what he said was an effort to wage a holy war in the Middle East aimed at destroying the Dome of the Rock and Al-Aqsa Mosque—Muslim holy sites built on the remnants of the ancient Jewish Temple, known as the Temple Mount—in order to clear the way for its reconstruction.

Now, I certainly have issues with Chabad. Oddly enough, the primary one being their messianism... 

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Thursday, March 05, 2026

The YU Paradigm as the Model for Torah Jewry

It makes me so sad that the prevailing view of Judaism being taught in the vast majority of yeshivos is the Lakewood ‘Torah Only’ school of Jewish thought. This view holds that L’chatchila - the primary choice of every Jewish male should be to choose a life of full-time Torah study. Jewish women, in turn, are expected to seek such men as their preference and be willing to support them in that holy task, thus sharing in the heavenly reward their husbands receive for learning full time.

That is the paradigm. And that view has increasingly been perpetuated ever since Rav Aharon Kotler established his yeshiva, Beth Medrash Govoha, in Lakewood. The idea of working for a living - even while establishing regular times for Torah study - is considered to be B’dieved, - pursued only as a last resort. Women raised in this paradigm generally refuse to date men who choose that path.

I have always believed that the truth of Judaism is more closely represented by the Yeshiva University (YU) model, which sees working for a living as much of a L’chatchila as learning full time.

It doesn’t really make much difference to me whether the underlying philosophy of that model is Torah U’Madda, Torah im Derech Eretz, or Torah U’Parnassah. While there are clear ideological differences, the result is largely the same. YU is a yeshiva that produces learned baalei batim and, in some cases, gedolim who devote their lives to Torah study. Much the same as Lakewood students. YU reflects the idea that the God never intended His people to live exclusively in the warm cocoon of a Torah-only lifestyle.

I can hear the howl of laughter from friends to my religious right, who will claim  that the proof they are correct lies in the fact that the Lakewood view is the majority view of observant Jewry. Evidenced by the overwhelming number of religious schools that teach ‘Torah Only’ L’chatchila.. That those schools are the majority and growing exponentially speaks volumes about the primacy of their ‘Torah Only’ paradigm. To the extent that schools with other philosophies exist in relatively small numbers - is seen by them as B’dieved.

That attitude was made clear by one of the most revered talmidei chachamim of the 20th century, Rav Baruch Ber Leibovitz. He was asked by Rav Shimon Schwab whether his Hirschian philosophy of Torah im Derech Eretz was a L’chatchila. His answer was clear: No, it was not. He claimed that Samson Raphael Hirsch intended it only as a B’dieved for his community and his time. That is still how the Lakewood world tends to see it now, even though it is clear from Rav Hirsch’s writings that he meant it as a L’chatchila.

For me, it is a simple matter... 

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