Friday, 5 June 2026

Hitler and the Mufti

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/428129

The truth about the Mufti and Hitler



Part I: The Mufti and Hitler (Part II is at the end of this article)

Minimizing Haj Amin al-Husseini’s role in Holocaust history distorts the global reach of Axis collaboration. The Grand Mufti of Jerusalem was not the architect of the Final Solution, and serious history should not claim that he was. But neither was he a marginal spectator. He was an active Nazi collaborator who used his religious and political authority to incite antisemitism, actively promote the destruction of European Jewry, recruit Muslims for the Nazi war effort, block Jewish escape to Palestine, and help extend Hitler’s war against the Jews into the Arab and Muslim world.

That distinction matters. The truth does not require exaggeration. It also does not tolerate minimization.

The Mufti left a legacy of antisemitism and anti-Zionism, Robert Wistrich concludes that “remains an enduring element of Palestinian and Arab politics and ideas in the Middle East…"

The Mufti met Adolf Hitler on November 28, 1941, at the Reich Chancellery in Berlin. Robert Wistrich notes that the meeting formalized a relationship already developing ideologically and politically. The Mufti thanked Hitler for the sympathy he had shown to the Arab and especially Palestinian Arab cause. He told Hitler that Arabs and Germans shared the same enemies: the British, the Jews, and the Communists. He sought German support for Arab independence and for a political order that would include Palestine, Transjordan, Syria, and Iraq.

The Mufti wanted a public Axis declaration endorsing a unified Arab state against Britain and Zionism. As Klaus-Michael Mallmann and Martin Cüppers observe, Germany did not issue such a declaration until November 2, 1944-long after German forces had been pushed out of North Africa and the Caucasus, when the war was effectively lost.

Hitler had exploited Arab aspirations while pursuing his own imperial and antisemitic agenda.

Christopher R. Browning explains that Hitler made clear to the Mufti the fate he envisioned for the Jews. Germany, Hitler said, had resolved “step by step" to ask European nations to solve their Jewish problem, and at the proper time would make a similar appeal to non-European nations. Once Germany defeated Russia and advanced through the Caucasus toward the Middle East, Hitler said Germany’s objective would be the “destruction of the Jewish element residing in the Arab sphere under the protection of British power."

Browning also notes that Hitler “conveniently and deceptively" failed to tell the Mufti that he had already conceded to Mussolini influence over the final disposition of Arab-populated territories in the Mediterranean. Hitler encouraged the Mufti’s wishful thinking that assisting Germany would lead to Arab sovereignty. In reality, the Nazis intended to use him.

Yet the Mufti was not merely being used. Jeffrey Herf is right to describe the Nazi-Mufti relationship as both a matter of shared political interests and ideological agreement. The Mufti wanted Britain defeated, permanently thwart the establishment of a Jewish state, the Jewish people annihilated, and Jewish immigration to Palestine blocked. Hitler wanted Arab and Muslim support for Germany’s war and for the extension of anti-Jewish policy beyond Europe. Their interests converged.

It is also important to reject a false and distorted claim: the Mufti did not persuade Hitler to annihilate the Jews. That accusation is historically absurd and baseless. Christian Gerlach explains that Hitler made the decision in principle to murder the Jews of Europe on or around December 12, 1941, after mass shootings were already underway. On December 13, Joseph Goebbels recorded Hitler’s position: “Regarding the Jewish Question, the Führer has determined to clear the table." The destruction of the Jews, Goebbels said, was now the “necessary consequence."

The machinery of mass murder was already in motion. Operation Barbarossa had begun on June 22, 1941, and the Einsatzgruppen were already murdering Jews across Soviet territory. The Wannsee Conference, held on January 20, 1942, did not formulate or initiate the Final Solution; it coordinated a policy already underway.

The Mufti did not originate that policy. His guilt lies elsewhere: he supported it, amplified it, and worked to ensure that Jews could not escape it.

Herf identifies three central areas of Mufti-Nazi cooperation:

-Arabic-language propaganda against Britain, the Jews, and the Allies

-Recruitment of Muslim soldiers for Germany, including the Wehrmacht and Waffen-SS and

-Repeated intervention to prevent Jewish refugees, including children, from reaching Palestine.

This point is essential. The Mufti was obsessed with stopping Jewish immigration. At a time when escape could mean life or death, he insisted the German government and the Axis and Axis-aligned governments not permit Jews to leave Europe for Palestine. That was not abstract political opposition to Zionism. In wartime Europe, blocking Jewish emigration meant helping trap Jews in the Nazi killing zone.

His collaboration also extended to military recruitment. In the Balkans, Heinrich Himmler and SS General Gottlob Berger used him to encourage Muslim enlistment in the Waffen-SS Handschar Division. Johannes Houwink ten Cate notes that the Mufti’s 1943 Balkan tour was designed to rebuild Muslim trust, endorse the new division, and give recruitment religious legitimacy. Thousands joined the Waffen-SS.

The Mufti told Muslims that only a German victory would give them independence from foreign rulers-British, American, French, and Russian. If Germany were defeated, he warned, the last hope for Muslim freedom would disappear. Houwink ten Cate describes this recruitment for the Wehrmacht-SS as among the most extreme forms of collaboration: unconditional collaboration.

Then there is the Mufti’s exposure to the Nazi camp system. Simon Wiesenthal revealed that the Mufti visited Auschwitz and Majdanek and praised the efficiency of the personnel.

This tour is the only known instance in the history of the Third Reich where foreigners and non-SS members were granted access to an active concentration camp, areas typically restricted even from German citizens. Officials from the Foreign Office’s Oriental Division and the "Germany" division dealing with Jewish affairs opposed the visit; specifically, Martin Luther, head of the Oriental Division who feared that the Arab delegation might leak information regarding the "death apparatus."

Members of the Mufti’s entourage and Iraq’s Rashid Ali al-Gaylani were allowed to attend SS courses and tour Sachsenhausen, near Oranienburg. Yigal Carmon of MEMRI has emphasized that the Mufti, as a Geheimnisträger-a person trusted with state secrets-had access well beyond ordinary foreign visitors. Wolfgang G. Schwanitz also published photographic evidence showing the Mufti and Rashid Ali al-Gaylani inspecting the Trebbin sub-camp in 1942.

According to Schwanitz, witnesses indicated that Arab leaders were interested in SS methods for “handling" enemies of the state and whether such methods could be applied against Jews in the Middle East. The direction of his travel is clear: the Mufti was not ignorant of Nazi brutality. He sought proximity to it.

The most powerful tool in the Mufti’s hands was propaganda. Matthias Küntzel notes that after having failed to unite Arab lands using European antisemitism because the Islamic narrative of Jewish subjugation resonated rather than a powerful conspiratorial one, he transformed a negotiable, geopolitical conflict over land and British colonial policy into an absolute spiritual war.

By framing Jewish immigration as a sacrilegious threat to holy sites like the Al-Aqsa Mosque and weaponizing religious decrees, he cast political adversaries as cosmic enemies of the faith. This ideological shift successfully mobilized the masses by turning opposition into a sacred commandment (Jihad). Ultimately, it permanently closed the door to diplomatic compromise, replaced negotiable political goals with uncompromising mandates, and branded any peaceful coexistence as a direct betrayal of divine law. , thus creating an “Islamic antisemitism".

The Germans established a special office for him in Berlin, and Arabic-language broadcasts were transmitted from Zeesen, south of Berlin, through one of the world’s most powerful shortwave systems. Matthias Küntzel calls these broadcasts the most effective vehicle of Nazi propaganda in the Arab world. Wistrich argues that they reveal a striking rapprochement between Islamic antisemitism and National Socialism.

The Oriental Service employed announcers, translators, and editors and received top priority. From 1939 to 1945, when radio was heard collectively in cafes, bazaars, and public squares, German Arabic broadcasts became highly influential. Küntzel notes that the propaganda was packaged with high-quality Arabic music and passages from the Qur’an. The message was crude but effective: the Allies were lackeys of the Jews; the Jews were the enemies of Islam; Zionism and Judaism were fused into a single demonic threat.

Herf explains that this fusion of antisemitism and anti-Zionism was a key ideological weapon of Nazi propaganda in North Africa and the Middle East. It allowed the Nazis and their Arab allies to present Germany’s war as liberation for Islam and the Arabs. The Mufti’s broadcasts gave that message religious and political authority.

British intelligence understood the danger. An October 1939 report on Radio Zeesen’s impact in Palestine observed that Arab listeners enjoyed the aggressive attacks on British figures, but absorbed especially the anti-Jewish material. “This he wants to hear and to believe; and he does both," the report concluded.

Nazi propaganda did not create Arab antisemitism from nothing, but it radicalized, systematized, and weaponized it.

On July 2, 1942, as Rommel’s Afrika Korps threatened Egypt, the Mufti broadcast that German victories in North Africa filled Arabs throughout the Orient with joy. He described the English and the Jews as common enemies of the Arabs and the Axis. Joseph B. Schechtman writes that the Mufti urged Arabs and Muslims, even in the United States, to act as a fifth column, sabotage the Allies, and kill Jews. Helping the Axis, he argued, was a religious and national obligation, even if it required martyrdom.

Radio Zeesen stopped broadcasting in April 1945. But Küntzel argues that its ideological residue remained. Anti-Jewish themes drawn from Nazi propaganda, Islamic sources, and anti-Zionist agitation continued circulating after the Reich collapsed. On November 2, 1945, the anniversary of the Balfour Declaration, rioters in Cairo attacked the Jewish quarter, looted homes and shops, assaulted non-Muslims, and destroyed the Ashkenazi synagogue before setting it on fire. The Muslim Brotherhood, which had grown into a mass movement in Egypt, helped initiate the violence.

The lesson is straightforward.

It is false to say the Mufti caused the Holocaust. Hitler, Himmler, Heydrich, Eichmann, and the Nazi state conceived and executed the Final Solution.

But it is equally false to sanitize the Mufti as merely an anti-colonial Arab nationalist or a symbolic wartime figure. He was a committed collaborator who aligned himself with Nazi Germany, recruited for the SS, spread total destruction propaganda, obstructed Jewish rescue, and sought to bring the Nazi war against the Jews into the Middle East.

Holocaust education fails when it edits out politically inconvenient collaborators. The Mufti belongs in the story because he exposes the broader geography of wartime antisemitism. Küntzel argues that “Islamic antisemitism has nothing to do with ethnic characteristics or cultural peculiarities. In fact, what we are seeing is the revival of Nazi ideology in a new garb."

He quotes Bassam Tibi, a scholar of Islam, who declares: “only when the public takes an appropriate stand against the antisemitic dimension of Islamism, will it be possible to say that they have truly understood the lessons of the Holocaust."

Part II: The true background of Haj Amin al-Husseini, the agitator who Became Mufti

The story of Haj Amin al-Husseini is not merely the story of one radical cleric. It is the story of how a convicted agitator became the central political and religious authority of Palestinian Arab society-and how the ideology he imposed became the foundation of the Palestinian Arab posture toward Zionism and Israel.

Born in Jerusalem during the late 1890s (around 1895-1897), Haj Amin al-Husseini belonged to the distinguished al-Husayni clan, a prominent family claiming direct descent from the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson, Husayn ibn Ali.

Before he was the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin was a young radical activist. Before he held religious office, he helped inflame mobs. Before he spoke in the name of Palestinian Arab nationalism, he learned that violence, intimidation, and religious incitement could elevate him politically.

That lesson would define his career.

The decisive moment came during the Nabi Musa disturbances in April 1920 during which five Jews were murdered and 211 were injured. Nabi Musa was an annual Muslim pilgrimage to a mosque near Jericho, traditionally believed to be the burial site of Moses. According to historian Zvi Elpeleg, the custom originated with Saladin after his defeat of the Crusaders at the Battle of Hattin in 1187. While Christians were permitted to visit holy sites during Easter, Saladin established large Muslim processions at the same time to deter any renewed Crusader ambitions.

In 1920, the festival coincided with Passover and Easter. Thousands of pilgrims crowded into Jerusalem at a moment of intense political tension, following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, the Balfour Declaration, and the beginning of British control over Palestine.

What began as a religious procession quickly became an anti-Jewish eruption. Inflammatory speeches transformed the return from Nabi Musa into a violent demonstration. On April 4-5, five Jews were murdered and 211 were injured.

A persistent historical error is to assume that Haj Amin was already the Grand Mufti at the time. He was not. The Mufti of Jerusalem was his half-brother, Kamil al-Husseini, who generally sought cooperation with the British authorities. Haj Amin, by contrast, was one of the radicals who helped inflame the crowd. Together with journalist Arif al-Arif, editor of Suriyyah al-Janubiyyah, he fled to Transjordan and then Damascus to avoid arrest. A British military court sentenced both men in absentia to ten years in prison.

Yet this conviction did not end Haj Amin’s career. It launched it.

In Damascus, Palestinian Arab activists treated him not as a criminal but as a nationalist hero. On May 31, 1920, they founded the Arab Palestine Society, an umbrella body for Muslim-Christian associations. Haj Amin was appointed representative for foreign relations, a role Elpeleg suggests he received because of his reputation as one of the chief instigators of the Jerusalem riots.

From the beginning, the movement he helped shape opposed the Balfour Declaration, Jewish immigration, and British policy. Its political logic was not coexistence, compromise, or constitutional negotiation. Its logic was rejection.

Then came one of the great British blunders of the Mandate period.

Sir Herbert Samuel, the first British High Commissioner for Palestine, appointed Haj Amin Grand Mufti of Jerusalem on May 8, 1921. Samuel, a British Jew and committed Zionist, believed he could balance the obligations of the Balfour Declaration: support for a Jewish national home while protecting the civil and religious rights of the Arab population.

But in trying to pacify Arab nationalism, the British empowered one of its most dangerous figures.

Haj Amin’s appointment was pushed by pro-Arab British officials, including Ernest T. Richmond, a staunch anti-Zionist advisor and Jerusalem Governor Ronald Storrs, who believed the al-Husseini family could stabilize the country. Haj Amin promised cooperation. The British chose to believe him.

They also wanted to balance the rival Husseini and Nashashibi clans. In doing so, they handed the most important religious office in Jerusalem to a man barely in his mid-twenties, already convicted for incitement, and already committed to militant opposition to Zionism.

Haj Amin did not treat the office as merely religious. He used it to build a machine.

With the establishment of the Supreme Muslim Council in 1922, he gained control over Islamic courts, religious appointments, education, and the vast waqf endowments. These resources gave him political leverage, money, patronage, and the ability to reward allies and punish opponents. He turned the Mufti’s office into the nerve center of Palestinian Arab power.

Just as important, he systematically eliminated rivals. The Palestinian Arab public sphere did not develop into a pluralistic political culture. Opposition was marginalized, intimidated, and at times physically attacked. The result was devastating: one man’s rejectionist ideology became the dominant line, and alternative Arab voices were pushed aside.

That is why Haj Amin matters.

He was not an incidental figure in Palestinian Arab history. He became the architect of a political culture that treated Jewish sovereignty not as a dispute to be negotiated, but as an illegitimacy to be destroyed.

His later record followed the same pattern. During the Arab Revolt of 1936-1939, he directed strikes, boycotts, and violence against Jews and against Arab opponents. The British finally removed him in 1937. But by then the damage was done. He had trained Palestinian politics to see maximalism as principle, compromise as betrayal, and terror as a legitimate tool.

The legacy did not disappear with him. The same ideological architecture remains visible in the Palestinian Arab position toward Israel today:

-refusal to accept Jewish national legitimacy,

-the use of religious language to mobilize political violence, and

-the treatment of compromise as surrender.

The Nabi Musa riots were therefore more than an early Mandate disturbance. They were the opening act in a century-long pattern. The British thought they were co-opting a radical. In reality, they elevated him. They gave religious and political authority to a man whose worldview helped set Palestinian Arab nationalism on a course of rejection, intimidation, and perpetual confrontation.

Haj Amin al-Husseini did not merely become Mufti. He became the model. His collaboration with the Nazis in Berlin during World War II was not merely a “marriage of convenience" but a strategic alignment aimed at preventing the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine and accomplishing the total destruction of the Jewish people.

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/428129



Thursday, 4 June 2026

BBC Apologizes to Nigel Farage

Nigel Farage said Britons should respond with 'pure, cold rage' to the murder of Henry Nowak

Nigel Farage

https://www.dailymail.com/news/article-15871391/BBC-forced-grovelling-apology-Nigel-Farage-Newsnight-row-Reform-chief-accused-corporation-defamation-Henry-Nowak-murder.html

The BBC has been forced to issue a grovelling apology to Nigel Farage.

The Reform UK leader's lawyers sent a furious letter to the broadcaster's director-general this morning, demanding the apology and issuing other demands after Mr Farage had been defamed by the programme's host

Newsnight presenter Matt Chorley repeatedly misquoted Mr Farage's response to the Henry Nowak murder, claiming three times that the Reform leader said it should spark 'white cold rage' from the British public. 

But Mr Farage actually said 'pure, cold rage' in his emergency broadcast yesterday morning.

This afternoon, the broadcasting behemoth said it had issued a private apology to Mr Farage directly and published a public version on its website. 

The corporation also promised to broadcast a further apology at the start of tonight's episode of Newsnight. 

In addition, last night's episode has been removed from the BBC iPlayer and BBC Sounds. 

Mr Farage's counsel accused the show's host of 'racialising' the politician's response to the tragic murder.

It blasted: 'It converts a criticism of discriminatory conduct by the authorities into an apparent appeal to race.

'It suggests that Mr Farage, far from condemning racialised treatment, was himself invoking race as a basis for public anger.

'In a national debate in which his opponents are already accusing him of inflaming racial tension, that alteration is not inaccuracy at the margins.

'It is seriously defamatory, and on the material available it was deliberate.'

The four-page letter also cited evidence that the misquote had been 'delivered from notes', suggesting it was scripted before the question was put to Mrs Badenoch.

They argue: 'That raises an obvious and serious question as to how those words entered the programme's production materials, and why no one checked them'.

Mr Chorley posted his own apology on X this morning, but the lawyer said this was not enough.  

The lawyer letter issued three key demands, which Reform branded 'non-negotiable'.

These were that, firstly, the BBC publish a full written apology to Mr Farage on the BBC website and pin the apology to the top of its relevant social media accounts for seven days.

Secondly, the corporation must broadcast 'a full apology on air on Newsnight' with 'due prominence', then share the on-air apology on the programme's social media accounts.

Thirdly, Reform is demanding a 'proper investigation' into how the false quotation came to be said three times during the broadcast, and how they entered production materials without being checked.

The BBC has been given until 4pm on Friday to issue a substantive response to Mr Farage's lawyer

The BBC has been given until 4pm on Friday to issue a substantive response to Mr Farage's lawyer

Mr Farage's counsel also included a stark warning that, given the row is now subject to potential legal proceedings, all documents and materials relating to the broadcast 'must not be deleted, overwritten or otherwise destroyed'.

Reform's lawyer said that until all three demands are met, neither Mr Farage nor any representative from Reform UK will appear on any BBC programme or platform.

The letter included a threat that Mr Farage may sue the BBC for damages should the party not be satisfied with the BBC's response to his demands.

The lawyer has given the BBC until 4pm on Friday to provide their substantive response.

The letter comes just days after The Mail on Sunday reported claims that the BBC's flagship radio programme, Desert Island Discs, has 'banned' Mr Farage on the grounds that his presence would make woke staff 'feel unsafe'.

On Sunday, Mr Farage warned: 'I have come to expect nothing less from the BBC - their blatant bias has been obvious for years.

'The BBC will have a rude awakening under a Reform government.'

https://www.dailymail.com/news/article-15871391/BBC-forced-grovelling-apology-Nigel-Farage-Newsnight-row-Reform-chief-accused-corporation-defamation-Henry-Nowak-murder.html



Wednesday, 3 June 2026

Radical Islamist Immigrants Should Be Banned

https://www.dailymail.com/news/article-15866301/Pauline-Hanson-burqa-ban-migrant-radical-Islamist.html

Pauline Hanson has doubled down on her push to ban the burqa in Australia, declaring the religious garment is 'incompatible with our culture and our way of life.'

Appearing on Sky News on Sunday, the One Nation leader called for a nationwide ban on face-covering veils and stricter migration controls targeting countries she described as 'radical Islamist'.

'I do want to ban the burqa because it's incompatible with our culture and our way of life, and it should not be worn in Australia,' Hanson said.

She argued Australia should follow other nations that have introduced similar measures. 

'Twenty-four countries around the world have actually banned it, and we should be doing it here.'

France, Austria, Belgium, Denmark and Switzerland are among those that have implemented bans on face-covering veils.

Hanson framed the proposal as part of a broader debate about national identity, saying Australia is grounded in 'Judeo-Christian' values.

'This is a Judeo-Christian country or, you know, the values of that. We've got different religions here by all means,' Hanson said, while adding that limits were necessary.

She also called for tighter migration policies, arguing Australia should block entry from certain countries.

'So if you've got people coming from these countries that are radical Islamists and their ideology is not compatible with our country, yes I do,' she said. 

'So there are certain countries I probably would ban from coming into Australia.'

Hanson did not name specific countries she would target, but tied the burqa with extremist viewpoints. 

'But can you tell me, do you believe that Sharia law, do you believe that female circumcision, do you believe that multiple marriages that the taxpayer paying for, is any good?' she said.

Hanson also warned of potential security risks.

'Do you want to see terrorism on our streets, because this is the ideology that we've been bringing into this country,' she said.

The Queensland senator said she would not soften her stance despite criticism, revealing one of her biggest fears.

France and Denmark are among the countries that have banned burqas and face-covering veils

France and Denmark are among the countries that have banned burqas and face-covering veils

'I'm not gonna back away from this. I do not want Australia like Great Britain,' she said.

Hanson has consistently called for a ban on the burqa and other face coverings.

In her 2016 maiden Senate speech, she pushed for a ban on Muslim immigration and backed restrictions on Islamic dress, including the burqa.

In 2017 and again in 2025, Hanson wore a burqa into the Senate as a protest and used the stunt to demand a nationwide ban on face-covering veils on security grounds, a move which was widely condemned by Islamic community leaders.

https://www.dailymail.com/news/article-15866301/Pauline-Hanson-burqa-ban-migrant-radical-Islamist.html


Tuesday, 2 June 2026

New Book: Halevi and the Conceptica

https://www.jpost.com/opinion/article-897896

Fmr. IDF chief Herzi Halevi



No one on any end of the political spectrum will agree with this, but Herzi Halevi is a tragic unsung hero.

Tragic because he was the IDF chief of staff when the October 7 massacre took place in 2023. It happened on his watch, leading to the worst Israeli defeat since the 1973 Yom Kippur War. He resigned in March 2025, about a year earlier than the standard three-year term.

A hero because he was a senior special forces commando for years, then a commander of the special forces, then a frontline commander during the 2008-09 invasion who was prevented from dealing Hamas a larger blow in Rafah by political-diplomatic considerations, then head of the Military Intelligence Directorate and Southern Command, then deputy chief of staff,  and then the IDF chief of staff who beat Hamas in northern Gaza, Khan Yunis, and Rafah in three successive invasions from October 2023 until the summer of 2024.

During those periods, he played key roles when the IDF killed Yahya Sinwar and Mohammed Deif, bludgeoned Hezbollah from September-November 2024, killed Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, destroyed Iran’s most advanced Russian S-300 antiaircraft missile systems in October 2024, and planned the Rising Lion operation from October 2024-March 2025, including rebuilding much of the IAF’s strike capabilities prior to October 2023.

Unsung because that long list of accomplishments will forever – or at least for the coming years – be overshadowed by the horrible stain of the October 7 massacre.

All of this has been true for more than a year, but it is time to write about it now for a few reasons.

First, Halevi has now gone more than a year since resigning without making his own case publicly. This was probably an error on his part, but he has always been a better general than a public-relations manager.

    Ronen Bar and Halevi

'In The War Room' on shelves this September

Second, I have a new book coming out in September called In The War Room, with The Wall Street Journal’s Elliot Kaufman, in which a complex, detailed, and nuanced portrayal of Halevi and other top Israeli and US decision-makers is given.

But it has already become clear to me that various people and media outlets may cherry-pick portions of the book that are critical, while ignoring the larger portions that are positive, to present him in a selective negative light.

Some of those who will do this will do so because they will fail to read the whole book or understand all of the nuances that the book unpacks.

Others, and this is the third point, will do so because of the upcoming Israeli election.

Once election season starts, everything becomes black and white. A leader was a success or a failure. And anyone else who was around who shares in your success takes away from your credit, so better to label them a complete, unmitigated failure.

Many participants in the upcoming election have been blaming Halevi for the October 7 massacre for years in no small part to avoid their own contributory responsibility.

Let there be no doubt: Halevi shares responsible for October 7 – along with all of the other senior defense chiefs, and all of the political chiefs, over a period of many years – some say going back a decade and some say two decades – in which there was a “conceptica” (conceptual framework) that incorrectly assumed Hamas as it was constituted could easily be contained and deterred and did not need to be treated as an invasion threat.

This conceptual framework also avoided even limited diplomatic initiatives for an extended period, hoping Hamas, and the Palestinians more broadly, could just be ignored.

And since I have gotten to know Halevi – military reporters get periodic group access to most of the IDF’s senior officers at one point or another – I know that he truly takes responsibility for his role regarding October 7. He does not just say he has contributory responsibility generically; he makes sure to add: “I personally am among those responsible” – which was why he resigned early.

But it is profoundly simplistic to think that one man, even the IDF chief of staff at the time, was solely or primarily responsible.

When Halevi assumed his role in January 2023, he did not just adopt everything that his predecessors had done; he certainly had new initiatives and ideas. But there were certain built-in limits and rules of the game.

Definitely during the terms of Gabi Ashkenazi (2007-2011), Benny Gantz (2011-2015), Gadi Eisenkot (2015-2019), and Aviv Kohavi (2019-2023), the determination by both the Israeli political – Ehud Olmert (2006-2009), Benjamin Netanyahu (for most of 2009-2021), Naftali Bennett (2021-2022), and Netanyahu again (since 2022) – and defense senior echelons, including the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency and the Mossad, was that larger conflict with Hamas was to be avoided in an effort to “manage” the conflict.

This misplaced thinking was so deep that mid-level Israeli intelligence officers never even passed on to Halevi and other IDF senior staff the Walls of Jericho plan that the IDF Intelligence Corps intercepted more than a year before the October 7 massacre.

It was so deep that in a moment of impressive and haunted honesty, Halevi has admitted that if he had been shown the plan, it might have made him a bit more concerned when he was warned about Hamas making trouble around 3-5 a.m. hours before the invasion.

But he probably would have made the same basic decisions. He has explained that this was because it was ingrained among all of Israel that Hamas simply would not dare to be crazy enough to invade. Any contrary information then was reflexively explained away.

Halevi was among the first to take public responsibility for October 7, when many Israeli officials delayed doing so, or did so with so many qualifications that it is hard to say whether they ever took responsibility.

Taking responsibility and resigning was a contribution in an age when public officials worldwide, not just in Israel, have started to treat taking responsibility as a disease and prefer to redirect, change the subject, or “double down” on blaming someone else.

And with all we know today, maybe he could have been more aggressive in calling up much larger reinforcements – a small number of reinforcements were called up – just in case there was some horror scenario that no one expected, instead of worrying so much about exposing the identity of Israeli intelligence assets to Hamas. That was one reason – it turned out to be grossly mistaken – why he wanted to avoid too many large Israeli moves.

And that is only part of Halevi’s legacy.

Those who criticize him personally the harshest for October 7 also seem to create a bizarre dichotomy in which he is only responsible for any IDF failures but not its successes.

This is not how responsibility works. He is responsible for the successes as well as the failures.

https://www.jpost.com/opinion/article-897896



Monday, 1 June 2026

Negotiating with Iran: The Art of the Non-Deal

https://www.jpost.com/opinion/article-897618

Using delaying tactics, Iran turns US negotiations into a prolonged waiting game


Diplomacy with Iran is a cycle of progress and delay, where clarity often gives way to calculated ambiguity.




When it comes to the highly skilled merchants of Persia, no one does it better.

Just listen to this mouthful by the Iranian Foreign Ministry: “The fact that we have reached a conclusion on a large portion of the topics under discussion is correct. However, to say that this means the signing of an agreement is imminent, no one can make such a claim.

“Policymaking and decision-making in the US are suffering from a kind of institutionalized vacillation. The repeated changes in positions – within a matter of hours, you are faced with different, often contradictory and conflicting viewpoints. This disrupts the process of any negotiation.”

It is that obtuse statement that tells you everything you need to know about how the Iranian regime is engaged in the art of the non-deal.

The main points Trump clearly outlined don’t seem to have changed:

• Iran would have to agree to never develop nuclear weapons. Consequently, they would not be permitted to retain the 60%-enriched uranium or the stored dust that is yet to be enriched.

• The Strait of Hormuz would have to be opened with free access to all vessels, without payment, essentially acknowledging that the waterway is not the property of any country but, rather, a passage which allows unfettered international commerce for all.

• All mines in the Strait of Hormuz would have to be cleared out, so that anyone using the waterway would be guaranteed safe passage. The American naval blockade wouldn’t be removed until that happens.

So where is the ambiguity? Where are the contradictions, vacillation, or conflicting viewpoints of Americans? These have always been the non-negotiable points.

What is clear is that this back-and-forth game is fooling no one – at least none of us here in the Middle East who understand the devious, cunning, and underhanded tactics being employed by experts skilled at not making deals.

They will feign ignorance, misunderstanding, and ambiguity, ad nauseam, all towards the goal of buying more time in order to position themselves favorably. It’s what they do best!

Just try buying one of their magnificent rugs. It’s never a simple, cut-and-dry process. The asking price is meant to be outrageous, but getting to the point where it will walk out the door with you is a lengthy, tedious, and painful process. Don’t even think about using the ploy of turning your back and walking away, because it will not sway them. I speak from much personal experience.

But rugs are nothing when it comes to high-stakes power plays. Iran is not about to give up the things that provide it with the potential of world dominance, their end goal.

It took the Islamic Revolution 47 years of hard work to illicitly procure centrifuge technology, along with nuclear blueprints they managed to take from the Pakistanis, allowing the extremist regime to develop uranium enrichment. It wasn’t until 2002 that an opposition group disclosed the nuclear sites that had been established.

Lying, as usual, they claimed the facilities were just for their civilian energy program, but no one was buying it. Knowing that they were suddenly being scrutinized, they feverishly worked hard to complete their ambitions. Once they reached 60% enrichment, the other 30% needed to make it weapons-grade became an urgent priority to stop them dead in their tracks.

That’s when the regime reverted to its stalling tactics. Pretending that they don’t understand or are confused, they have used every trick in the book known to man when it comes to slow-walking a deal that requires a simple yes or no.

Each time the negotiators claimed to be on the verge of a deal, there was always the proverbial sticking point that gummed up the process, requiring an extra 30-60 days to work out the complicated details.

But that’s where it all becomes so transparent. There are no real sticking points in this deal. There are only parties that want to appear to be moving in your direction while never actually doing it.

It is in the DNA of Persians to interminably stall for time, which is said to have “deal-making prowess, that’s been rooted in thousands of years of imperial administration, the strategic environment of the Silk Road and complex cultural traditions – theirs is a heritage cultivated on valuing patience, psychological awareness and strategic adaptability in negotiations.”

Iran proves hard to outmaneuver

How does anyone compete with that? The art of the non-deal has been honed and crafted in a way that exceeds the capability of others who dare to compete for that distinction. In short, there is no way to win and no way to outmaneuver these uber-skilled artisans – not even if your name is Donald J. Trump.

The only way to get the desired results is to abandon all negotiations, acknowledging that it will bear no fruit. Then, overpower this regime by brute force. Until that is internalized, we will be subjected to this protracted game, which will only stop once enough time has been bought by the ruling Iranian regime to accomplish its nuclear ambitions.

It’s what they’re counting on and what the American administration has to finally realize. They simply will not win if they continue down the losing path they have chosen.

They might have already come to that conclusion had they spent enough time in this area of the world, where marketplace haggling is an art form. Instead, they relied upon their default position of American logic, fair-bargaining practice, and the same tactics that worked well for them in the business world.

That explains why the Gaza deal, brokered by American businessman Steve Witkoff, sounded good but has never really gotten off the ground as intended.

It’s a hit-and-miss, testifying to a different sort of people who cannot be outmaneuvered. They’re in this to win, and if the rest of us are going to have a chance in this battle of good vs evil, it’s time that we attempt to do more than level a playing field that can never be evenly matched.

Stop haggling, forget about negotiations, and just attack!

https://www.jpost.com/opinion/article-897618