Sunday, 12 April 2026

Iran's Islamic Republic Spent 47 Years Building an Influence Network Inside USA

https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/iran-news/article-892533

How Iran’s regime built a decades-long influence network inside the United States

IRAN AFFAIRS: The Islamic Republic has spent 47 years trying to root itself inside America, building a network of institutions designed to shape influence in Washington along the regime’s ideals.


     Islamic Center of America in Dearborn, Michigan

At a time when the niece and the grandniece of former IRGC Quds Force commander Qasem Soleimani were found to have been living in blasphemous Western luxury in the United States, a new report has documented something far more serious: the Islamic Republic’s patient and institutionalized influence network on American soil.

For years, discussion in the West about Iranian activity in America has tended to focus on the dramatic: sanctions busting, cyber operations, assassination plots, sleeper cells, and the occasional spy story that makes headlines and then disappears. That is only part of the picture.

According to a new report by the National Union for Democracy in Iran (NUFDI), Tehran has spent decades constructing what it describes as a durable, institution-based influence architecture across the United States – one built around properties, schools, mosques, clerical pipelines, youth programming, nonprofits, and community ecosystems designed to outlast administrations, sanctions cycles, and media scrutiny.

If the report even scratches the surface, then what it describes is not simply “influence” in the loose, modern sense of messaging or social media propaganda. It is something more deliberate and more recognizable to students of revolutionary regimes: ideological infrastructure.

In other words, the Islamic Republic has spent 47 years trying to root itself inside America – from Washington to Dearborn, from Potomac to Houston, from Virginia to Texas – building a network of institutions designed to shape influence in Washington along the Islamic regime’s ideological lines.

 A revolution exported

In truth, this should not surprise anyone who has paid attention to the Islamic Republic since 1979.

Revolutionary leader and the first supreme leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, did not conceive of the Iranian Revolution as a purely national event. From the outset, it was framed as civilizational and transnational, an Islamic awakening with a universal mission. The regime that emerged in Tehran has always believed that exporting its ideology is integral to its raison d’ĂȘtre. It was a belief carried on by his successor, the recently deceased Ali Khamenei, whose infatuation with the ummah – the concept of a global Muslim brotherhood – overrode his duties and concerns for Iranian citizens living under his rule.

Usually, that export took visible form through proxies and militias: Hezbollah in Lebanon, Shi’ite militias in Iraq, the Houthis in Yemen, and various armed and ideological affiliates across Syria, Latin America, and beyond.

But the American case is different.

You cannot build a Hezbollah in suburban Maryland. You cannot openly operate an IRGC command node in Michigan. What you can do, however, is something subtler: Establish institutions that appear on paper to be local, religious, educational, or charitable, while serving as long-term vessels for personnel, worldview, loyalty, and legitimacy.

That is NUFDI’s central argument.

At the center of this, it says, sits the Alavi Foundation, a New York-based nonprofit whose principal asset is a 36-story Fifth Avenue office tower that has helped fund affiliated institutions across the country. The report cites court filings and public reporting that describe Alavi as operating under the direction of Iranian officials and notes that the foundation’s own disclosures show support for more than 35 organizations in the United States.

This suggests that what may look like individual mosques, schools, youth centers, or community organizations are, in certain cases, not isolated at all. They are nodes.

A node can host a cleric. A cleric can shape a generation. A school can normalize a worldview. A youth group can provide belonging, identity, grievance, and ideological framing long before politics enters the conversation.

“A commonality across every region we examined is that the regime invests heavily in attempting to instill a pro-regime worldview in children and teenagers. That's a large part of what makes this network durable in a way that short-term enforcement alone can't easily address,” said NUFDI Senior Policy Analyst Tymahz Toumadje.

That is how regimes survive abroad. More by cultivation than coercion.

Washington, where it began

The report traces the earliest successful iteration of this network to the Washington, DC, metropolitan area. According to NUFDI, the roots of this network go back to the earliest years of the Islamic Revolution.

One of the most interesting episodes highlighted took place in October 1981, when supporters of Khomeini occupied the Islamic Center of Washington and attempted to seize control of the institution. The occupation ultimately failed after legal action, but the report argues that it marked an important turning point.

This, in essence, captures something essential about the Islamic Republic. It is often caricatured in the West as impulsive, fanatical, or purely destructive, yet one of the regime’s most underappreciated strengths has always been patience. It loses tactically and thinks strategically. It gets pushed out of one space and reappears in another, more embedded than before. One of the worries of Iran-watchers during the current war between Israel, the US, and Iran has been that Iran will somehow wait and outmaneuver US President Donald Trump in the long run and hang on to power.

The report’s account of the Washington-headquartered Muslim Student Association Persian-Speaking Group (MSA–PSG) is a case in point.

The group is described in the report as a longstanding pro-regime node that, according to FBI reporting and Senate testimony cited by NUFDI, functioned as an intelligence-gathering and transnational repression platform under the cover of a campus-recognized student organization. Its origins go back to figures who would later become senior officials in the Islamic Republic, including Mostafa Chamran and Ebrahim Yazdi (both of whom began as students in the sciences and went on to serve as deputy prime ministers of Iran for Revolutionary Affairs).

The Islamic Republic appears to have understood very early on that campuses and youth networks were fertile ground; a familiar pattern.

The school-mosque model

If Washington was the proving ground, nearby Maryland and Virginia appear in the report as the places where Tehran’s US model matured.

One of the report’s crucial observations is that the regime’s most effective footprint does not rest on sermons alone. It rests on ecosystems. Specifically, on what it describes as a replicable school-mosque model.

The Islamic Education Center in Potomac, Maryland (IEC-M) is presented as a foundational example. According to NUFDI, after the failed Washington takeover, members of the same Khomeinist network used Alavi Foundation resources to establish IEC-M in 1981. The center later re-registered as an independent nonprofit but continued to operate on Alavi-owned property. The report says that the center and its co-located K-12 school received at least $3.6 million from Alavi.

The report alleges that IEC-M repeatedly served as a venue for officials of the Islamic Republic, including for events tied to the Iranian Interest Section in Washington. It notes that as recently as May 2024, the center hosted senior Interest Section officials after the deaths of former Iranian president Ebrahim Raisi and foreign minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, prompting backlash from Iranian-American protesters.

“It’s an open secret,” said NUFDI Policy Analyst Nader Sadeghi. “The IEC-M encapsulates all aspects of the regime's influence operation under one roof. Childcare centers, youth clubs, a school, daily prayer services, all led by a Qom-educated cleric with close ties to Khamenei.” That episode is especially telling because it shows the problem in miniature.

Institutions like these are not controversial because they are Shia, Iranian, or religious. America, rightly, protects all of those things. They become controversial when they appear to function as platforms for a foreign revolutionary state and its official representatives, which is a very different issue.

It is also one that Western governments are often still reluctant to confront clearly, partly because they fear being accused of conflating state-linked ideological influence with religion itself. That caution can lead to paralysis and is something many European governments are dealing with today in the form of the Muslim Brotherhood, which follows a similar model.

Manassas and the memory of blood

If Potomac represents the polished institutional model, the report’s section on the Manassas Mosque in Virginia is where the story becomes darker and more difficult.

NUFDI identifies the mosque’s founder as Abolfazl Bahram Nahidian, a longtime Khomeinist organizer in the United States. According to the report, Nahidian’s history stretches back to the earliest revolutionary agitation in America, including the occupation of the Islamic Center of Washington and activism on behalf of Khomeini during the 1979 revolution.

But the truly explosive part of the report is the way it links Nahidian’s network to one of the most chilling episodes in the history of Iranian operations in America, the 1980 assassination of Ali Akbar Tabatabai in Bethesda, Maryland.

Tabatabai, a former Iranian diplomat and outspoken critic of Khomeini, was gunned down at his home by David Theodore Belfield, later known as Daoud Salahuddin, who fled to Iran and has remained there ever since.

The report says Nahidian’s world intersected with Salahuddin’s during the period leading up to the murder, citing press accounts and intelligence reporting that place the two in close proximity. It further notes that Nahidian later expressed satisfaction over Tabatabai’s killing.

It is a reminder that Tehran’s American story is one of human lives and bloodshed.

And yet the remarkable thing is not simply that these histories exist. It is that, according to the report, they were followed not by disappearance but by institutional reinvention.

Nahidian, NUFDI says, later founded the Manassas Mosque, which received Alavi Foundation funding in the mid-2000s.

The report also cites a long pattern of hardline rhetoric and symbolism at the mosque, including public praise for Soleimani, anti-Israel conspiracy rhetoric, open support for Hamas after October 7, and, most recently, social media condolences for Ali Khamenei after his death was reported in joint US-Israeli strikes in March 2026.

The Islamic Republic has thrived because it keeps producing these murky ecosystems in which names and institutions can become submerged in old cadres, new institutions, and ideological successors, sustaining one another.

Dearborn: the ecosystem effect

Michigan is where the report suggests Tehran’s American project has come closest to maturity.

The section on Dearborn, a majority-Muslim city, is one of the most revealing in the entire document.

NUFDI describes Michigan as the place where the Islamic Republic’s ideological model is “nearing completion on American soil.” In Dearborn, it argues, multiple institutions – mosques, schools, clerical lineages, youth programs, and media-facing initiatives – reinforce one another, creating an environment in which Tehran-aligned narratives can become part of ordinary communal life.

The report singles out the Islamic Center of America as a central anchor, describing it as an institution that has often projected moderation publicly while incubating clerics and networks that later advanced more explicit hardline positions elsewhere.

It cites a January 2020 vigil for Soleimani hosted at ICofA, at which senior imam Ibrahim Kazerooni reportedly praised the slain IRGC commander. It also notes later controversy surrounding Kazerooni’s appearance at Amherst College and points to regime-linked media coverage highlighting the Islamic center’s role.

Another institution highlighted is the Islamic House of Wisdom, founded by Mohammad Ali Elahi, described as a longtime regime insider who later cultivated relationships with senior American politicians while maintaining ties to Iranian political and ideological circles. NUFDI notes, for example, his attendance at Iranian events and his visibility in mainstream US political settings, including interactions with then-vice president Kamala Harris.

“It's quite alarming, both as an Iranian and American, that a former regime military officer was permitted to come to the United States and enjoy the same freedoms and opportunities that haven’t been afforded to the Iranian people in 47 years,” argued Sadeghi.

That juxtaposition suggests that one of Tehran’s greatest successes in America may not have been building hidden cells, but normalizing intermediaries; in getting figures and institutions to be able to move between regime-adjacent orbits and respectable public life with little scrutiny.

That is how influence deepens.

The American weakness Tehran understood

The real force of this report lies in what it reveals about the US as much as about the Islamic Republic.

America is built to catch spies. It is less comfortable confronting networks that speak the language of civil society, faith, education, anti-war activism, identity politics, or community representation while also serving the interests of an authoritarian foreign state, whether directly or indirectly.

That is not a uniquely Iranian tactic. Russia, China, Qatar, Turkey, and others have all exploited versions of the same vulnerability.

But Iran’s version is distinctive because, in addition to being geopolitical, it is theological and revolutionary.

The regime that imprisons women for showing their hair, hangs protesters from cranes, tortures dissidents, funds militias across the Middle East, and builds its regional strategy through violence has repeatedly managed to insert itself into Western discourse.

And it is one reason why institutions that would be treated as obvious foreign influence concerns if linked to Russia or China are so often underplayed when Iran is involved. It is how so many regime-linked people have been allowed to make their homes inside the US for years.

What this means now

Why does any of this matter more in 2026 than it did five or 10 years ago?

It appears that, now that the two countries are in open conflict, confronting Iranian influence within the US has become more urgent, following years of warnings from organizations such as NUFDI.

After years of proxy warfare, attempted assassinations, cyber campaigns, and regional escalation, the Islamic Republic is finally being understood not as a distant problem, but as a state whose conflict with the United States and Israel reaches far beyond the Middle East.

Toumadje added, “The Islamic Republic built this network specifically to outlast any presidential administration that might notice. What remains unanswered for Washington isn't whether this infrastructure exists, it's how it's been allowed to operate in plain sight for forty-seven years, and how to reverse over four decades of entrenchment.”

It has taken the US time to awaken to this.

The real question now is not whether every mosque, school, or cleric named in the report is a covert arm of Tehran. The question is whether Western democracies are finally prepared to distinguish between protected religious life and foreign-state ideological infrastructure.

The answer lies in following money, property, governance, institutional links, clerical pipelines, and official relationships. It means enforcing transparency laws. It means protecting civil liberties while refusing to let civil society become a shield for authoritarian state influence.

Above all, it means abandoning the fiction that the Islamic Republic’s footprint in the West is mostly accidental or symbolic. It is beyond dangerous.

The deeper hypocrisy

There is one final irony hanging over all this.

The same regime that has spent decades denouncing the West as corrupt, decadent, godless, and spiritually diseased has consistently sought access to its freedoms, institutions, property systems, universities, media space, and legal protections.

That hypocrisy was laid bare this week when US authorities said they had detained Hamideh Soleimani Afshar – identified as Qasem Soleimani’s niece – and her daughter after revoking their legal status, alleging that they promoted regime propaganda and support for the IRGC while enjoying a lavish American lifestyle and living in Los Angeles.

Reuters and the State Department reported the detentions; other reporting described a conspicuous contrast between the family’s online lifestyle and the regime they were accused of championing.

Again, it is a story familiar to Iran watchers who have pointed to the hypocrisy within a regime that promotes morality police to enforce women’s hijab laws in Iran, but allows family members to indulge in Western decadence that goes against everything the Iranian Revolution stands for. The same was recently reported when Mojtaba Khamenei, son of Ali, became Iran’s newest supreme leader, and millions of pounds worth of property were uncovered as under his ownership in London.

The Islamic Republic despises the West publicly, exploits it privately, and infiltrates it structurally.

That is why those sitting in Washington should take the NUFDI report seriously. The Iranian regime didn’t arrive in mobs on the streets, nor did it arrive as spies in trilbies and trench coats. It arrived through foundations, schools, sermons, nonprofits, youth programs, conference halls, and community legitimacy.

And that is precisely why it may have gone unnoticed for so long.

https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/iran-news/article-892533


Saturday, 11 April 2026

Importance of Having Farms on the Ground

 https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/425283

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/425251

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/425259

“It’s time to wean ourselves off the Oslo mindset and terminology"

During A tour in Binyamin, Minister Chikli called to abandon the A, B, and C divisions, emphasized the importance of farms on the ground, and expressed support for the settlers.


Minister of Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism, Amichai Chikli, held a tour of agricultural outposts in the Binyamin region as a guest of the Binyamin Regional Council. During the visit, he met with residents and heard about the challenges on the ground in recent times.

The tour was accompanied by Deputy Council Head Hanna Itach and teams from the Hilltop Youth Department and the Land Department, who presented to the minister the council’s activities with the youth, alongside the day-to-day challenges in the field and the responses developed in recent years.

During the tour, the minister visited the “Tel Talpiyot" farm and the “Tzur Levavi" farm, where he spoke directly with residents and heard about the situation on the ground in light of recent events in the area. He later also took part in a ceremony marking the establishment of the new community of “Ma’oz Tzur."

Chikli called for abandoning the approach based on the division into Areas A, B, and C, and said that practical action on the ground is what matters: “What wins is sheep and agriculture-not declarations and talk."

The minister also noted that the farms are a significant factor in changing the reality on the ground and emphasized the importance of focusing on strategic, controlling points to strengthen security and Israeli presence.

At the same time, Chikli warned against acts of violence and called to avoid them despite the provocations and violence from the other side. According to him, such incidents harm the settlement enterprise and serve as a tool in the hands of the enemy.

“The farm enterprise is the spearhead of Zionism today-it is creating a revolution on the ground and must be continued with full force," he said, adding that it represents a continuation of the path of leaders such as Yigal Allon and Yitzhak Tabenkin.

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/425283

Covert cabinet decision: 34 new communities in Judea and Samaria

Israel’s Security Cabinet reportedly approved 34 new communities in Judea and Samaria in a confidential move aimed at avoiding US pressure during the Iran conflict.


     Construction in Judea and Samaria

Israel's Security Cabinet has covertly approved the establishment of 34 new communities in Judea and Samaria, i24NEWS reported on Thursday.

According to the report, the sweeping move was kept highly confidential to evade American pressure during the campaign against Iran.

According to the details, this would be the largest number of communities approved at once, with 69 communities having been approved in several different decisions so far. With the approval of the new plan, the total number is expected to increase to 103.

The locations of the approved communities are distant; some are deep in areas A and B, where the IDF seldom operates, and their defense would require significant security preparations.

Among the approved communities is Noa, south of Ganim and Kadim, near Qabatiya, an Emek Dotan, which will connect Sa-Nur, Homesh, and Shavei Shomron.

Sources who spoke with i24NEWS said that the IDF Chief of Staff, who was present at the cabinet session, did not outright oppose the move on the diplomatic level, but did express professional reservations due to personnel limitations.

The military requested that the decision's implementation be gradual and spread out over time to allow for the defense preparations, but this position was not accepted, and the decision passed.

The main reason the decision was kept under wraps was the desire to avoid heavy diplomatic pressure from the US administration, especially amid the conflict in Iran.

It was further reported that, as part of the decision, the cabinet approved the establishment of energy, water, and electric infrastructure even before the completion of land regulation procedures. This is a significant policy change designed to accelerate the establishment of the settlements and ensure their immediate survival in the area.

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/425251

History in Binyamin: New community 'Ma'oz Tzur' inaugurated

The new community overlooks Route 433, one of the main routes connecting Jerusalem and central Israel.



In a festive ceremony attended by senior officials, a new community in western Binyamin was inaugurated on Thursday.

Among those present were Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi, Diaspora Affairs Minister Amichai Chikli, Environmental Protection Minister Idit Silman, Energy and Infrastructure Minister Eli Cohen, Knesset Speaker Amir Ohana, Amana Chairman Ze’ev (Zambish) Hever, Settlement Division (WZO) Chairman Yishai Merling, Israel’s Ambassador to Panama Ezra Cohen, and additional Members of Knesset.

Defense Minister Israel Katz sent a recorded message, stating: “The establishment of a new community is a true day of celebration-not only for you, the pioneering families, but for all Israelis and all Zionists, for everyone whose love of the Land of Israel and the People of Israel runs deep. Every time I meet the residents of Judea and Samaria, I am reminded that building communities is the clearest expression of the beauty of the Land of Israel. Here, the concept of developing the land takes on a deeply tangible meaning."

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said: “We are in Binyamin-thirty communities in Binyamin alone have been advanced since this government took office. What is remarkable is that they do not remain on paper or in cabinet decisions; through full partnership, they become roads, temporary housing, permanent homes, families, and children. When you stand here, you understand how this ultimately contributes to the security of Modi’in, Rosh HaAyin, and Kfar Saba."

“We have a strong military arm with significant achievements, alongside a decisive political phase in Judea and Samaria that rejects the idea of dividing the land and establishing a terror state in the heart of the country. There will be a political component that completes the outcome in Gaza, one that expands our borders. There will be a political component in Lebanon that will extend our borders to the Litani River within defensible lines. There will also be a political dimension in Syria, at Mount Hermon and at least within the buffer zone. There is both a military and a political effort, and both reflect courage, faith, and love of the land."

Knesset Speaker Amir Ohana said: “What we are doing here today must be clearly stated: much of the world is not with us. Yet we have come, representing a broad cross-section of the government and the Knesset, to declare to the world-this is our land. We are not here as guests, nor are we here temporarily. When we are told to ‘go back to where you came from,’ we answer: we have returned to where we came from. The message from here is clear-we are here to stay for generations."

Amana Secretary-General Ze’ev (Zambish) Hever said: “It is a great privilege to stand here and witness this significant achievement-a dream of many years realized. We are strengthening the communities along Route 443, closing the gap between Modi’in and Beit Horon, and in the coming months, with G-d’s help, we will connect to the Talmonim and Dolev bloc."

Settlement Division Chairman Yishai Merling said: “Our mission now is to provide the tools to transform this caravan neighborhood into a thriving community of hundreds of families. I thank the Government of Israel for taking this historic step, and our partners-especially Binyamin Regional Council Governor Yisrael Ganz-for their leadership and dedication."

Israel’s Ambassador to Panama, Ezra Cohen, said: “Especially in these challenging times, as the people of Israel continue to demonstrate extraordinary resilience, it is an honor to take part in the inauguration of Ma’oz Tzur. This moment reflects a powerful spirit of building, faith, and commitment to the future. Panama stands with Israel and deeply respects its determination to move forward, even in complex circumstances."

The community is situated in a strategic, elevated position overlooking Route 443, one of the main arteries connecting Jerusalem to central Israel. Officials emphasized its security and strategic significance, noting that its establishment is part of a broader effort to strengthen communities as a key component of national security in response to regional threats.

The site already includes full infrastructure, roads, water, and electricity-and the first families have begun moving in, as part of a wider initiative to strengthen the local presence and establish facts on the ground. Of the first 11 families, eight are reservist families, with wives and children settling in while the husbands serve on the front lines.

Binyamin Regional Council Governor Yisrael Ganz said at the ceremony: “We are standing here today in a new community, not an idea, not a plan, but a reality, with roads, electricity, water, and families. Our enemies build terror, while we build life. They seek to attack, and we strengthen our presence. This is a decisive moment. The families arriving now are the pioneers of this generation."

He added, “Anyone who believes the threat is distant should look at the surrounding area. If we are not here, agents of Iran and terrorist organizations will be. It is either us or them-and we are here to prevail."

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/425259


Friday, 10 April 2026

Analysis of New Book: The Road to October 7


https://www.jpost.com/history/article-891312

'The Road to October 7': The long centuries of hatred that led to Hamas’s attack - review

If anyone believed that the uninhibited bloodlust exhibited by Hamas in its attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, or the worldwide support the terrorist group immediately gained, or the condemnation Israel was soon receiving for its armed response were in any way inexplicable, then Rafael Medoff’s book The Road to October 7 sets the whole sequence in context.

Citing the example of Nazi Germany in the 1930s, he demonstrates how the Palestinian Authority and Hamas inculcated the hatred of Jews and Israel into the educational curriculum of generations of Palestinian children.

In his meticulously researched work, Medoff demonstrates how the visceral Jew-hatred embedded in Hamas philosophy fits into a centuries-long pattern of persecution inflicted by a succession of oppressors on the Jewish people.

The book recounts in some detail the persistent phenomenon of antisemitism, and from that history Medoff isolates a prime cause of its persistence – education.

He argues that it is not human nature to butcher innocent people, rape and sexually mutilate defenseless women, or behead children. “For thousands of human beings to perpetrate such atrocities, there has to be intensive indoctrination.”

“The road to October 7,” he writes, “wound its way through long centuries in which young people who were nurtured on hateful religious and nationalistic teachings grew up to become perpetrators of atrocities against Jews.”

Medoff also pursues the theme of education in a different direction. He discusses at some length the failure of a range of US academic institutions, post-October 7, to oppose blatant antisemitism among both academic staff and the student body, and not protect Jewish students from intimidation.

Medoff, who is in his mid-60s, was born in the US. A historian of the Holocaust, Zionism, and American Jewish history, he is the founding director of the David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies in Washington, DC. The institute focuses on America’s response to Nazism and the Holocaust, promulgating its message through both scholarly and more popular projects.

Medoff received his PhD in Jewish history from Yeshiva University in New York City in 1991 and is a fellow of the Finkler Institute of Holocaust Research at Bar-Ilan University in Israel.​

In a recent media interview, he was asked about some research results that he includes in The Road to October 7, revealing how some American universities developed friendly relations with Nazi Germany in the 1930s. He was asked how those findings connected with pro-Hamas protests on campus.

“The common denominator,” he replied, “is their leaders’ indifference to antisemitism. In the 1930s, Harvard, Columbia, George Washington University, Wesleyan, and others ignored Nazi antisemitism as they built friendly ties with the Hitler regime, which included inviting Nazi representatives to speak on their campuses. In the aftermath of October 7, these same universities ignored the waves of antisemitism by some of their own students, including the genocidal calls for the annihilation of millions of Israeli Jews.”

Medoff divides his book into “The Present” and “The Past.”

In “The Present,” he documents Hamas’s rise, its invasion on October 7, and the systematic “hate education” in Palestinian society. He also lists the Western enablers that failed to respond adequately to Hamas’s atrocities, such as US universities, human rights NGOs, and some women’s organizations. ​

In “The Past,” he argues that Hamas’s methods and ideology echo medieval anti-Jewish persecution, czarist and Ukrainian pogroms, the Holocaust, and a century of Palestinian Arab terrorism. In the light of his historical survey, he explicitly frames October 7 as “1,500 years in the making,” linking current Islamist and Arab anti-Israel sentiment to an “eternal war against the Jews.”

Antisemitism is indeed a consistent phenomenon within the history of Western civilization. At different times, and under varying circumstances, outbursts of antisemitic violence have been motivated and justified by a wide variety of rationales – religious, political, racial, social. Medoff concentrates on the undeniable persistence of antisemitism over the centuries rather than on the distinct causes and dynamics of each episode.

In his media interview, Medoff highlighted one aspect of antisemitic violence linking the Hamas monstrosity with medieval practice – the parading of what he called “trophy victims.”

“Going back to medieval times,” Medoff said, “we find descriptions of pogromists parading the corpses of their Jewish victims. It’s a way of boasting of the killer’s achievement. And it’s also a way of inflicting a final indignity on the victims, by demonstrating complete physical supremacy, even in death. Parading victims has been a very common feature in the history of Palestinian Arab violence against Jews. Modern technology has given us a new twist on this old horror – perpetrators of the October 7 atrocities used their cellphones to livestream what they were doing to the Jews.”

Hamas October 7 attacks latest episode in ancient war against the Jews

Medoff’s central argument in The Road to October 7 is that the Hamas pogrom and hostage capture on that day are best understood not as an aberration, nor solely as a product of contemporary geopolitics, but as the latest episode in a “centuries-old international war against the Jewish people,” driven by enduring antisemitic ideology and indoctrination.

All the same, he ends his book on a positive note. Finding optimism in the existence of a Jewish state and a powerful Jewish army that constantly confounds Israel’s enemies, he writes: “The statelessness and helplessness that characterized Jewish existence through centuries of crusades, pogroms, and mass murder are phenomena of bygone eras. The war against the Jews may be eternal, but that does not mean that the Jews will lose that war.”

The Road to October 7 provides deeply researched context to a horrific event that can never be expunged from Israel’s history. To gain a deeper understanding of that event, this volume is indispensable.

https://www.jpost.com/history/article-891312


Thursday, 9 April 2026

Soleimani's Niece Locked up by ICE, Begs for Help


https://nypost.com/2026/04/07/us-news/hamideh-soleimani-afshar-qasem-soleimanis-niece-rejected-by-ex-in-ice-call/

Iranian terror mastermind’s niece launches shameless bid to escape hellhole ICE jail: ‘She scares me’

The disgraced relative of an Iranian warlord being deported from California has reached out to her former LA love interest from an ICE detention center to beg for help.

Married Hamideh Soleimani Afshar, 47, niece of terror mastermind Gen. Qasem Soleimani – former commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard who was taken out in a deadly 2020 U.S. air strike – frantically called Maziar Aflaki, 68, on Monday from the facility in Pearsall, Texas.

But on hearing her voice, retiree Aflaki declined to accept the call, claiming years of harassment and abuse at the hands of Afshar. He told the California Post: “I don’t want anything to do with her.

Married Hamideh Soleimani Afshar, 47, niece of terror mastermind Gen. Qasem Soleimani, reached out to a former lover to beg for help from an ICE detention center.hamideafshar/Instagram

“She scares me. I was so afraid of her. She knows how to make herself seem like an angel and you feel like the devil. I wanted someone to take her away – now it’s happened.”

The Post exclusively revealed Afshar, who flaunted her luxury lifestyle on social media, was detained at her Tujunga home on April 3, along with her daughter Sarinasadat Hosseiny, 25.

The pair have had their US permanent resident status revoked by Secretary of State Marco Rubio over alleged ties to the regime, according to a statement released on Saturday.

In a post on social media, Rubio described the two women as “green card holders living lavishly in the United States.”

Afshar entered the US in 2015 on a tourist visa – the year before she met Aflaki. She was granted asylum in 2019 then became a green card holder in 2021.

In a naturalisation application in 2025, Afshar revealed that she had visited Iran four times since receiving her green card. “Her trips to Iran illustrate her asylum claims were fraudulent,” the DHS said.

Maziar Aflaki, 68, is pictured here with Afshar in an undated photo.Courtesy Maziar Aflaki

The State Department said Afshar was an “outspoken supporter of the totalitarian, terrorist regime in Iran” and had promoted “Iranian regime propaganda” on her social media account.

Hosseiny came to the US in 2015 on a student visa then was granted asylum in 2019 and a green card in 2023.

Afshar’s husband, who lives in Iran, has also been banned from the US. Although the State Department would not name him, the Post can reveal his identity to be Hasan Hosseiny.

Aflaki said he met Afshar in 2016 and targeted him so he would date her despite him insisting that he wasn’t interested in romance. 

“I said please stay away and leave me alone,” he recalled, but “manipulative” Afshar refused to leave him alone. 

Afshar entered the US in 2015 on a tourist visa – the year before she met Aflaki. She was granted asylum in 2019 then became a green card holder in 2021.Hamideh Soleimani Afshar/ Facebook

But she was relentless and launched a campaign to woo him over which turned into an ordeal of harassment, stalking and physical violence. 

“She takes advantage of every man she knows,” said Aflaki. “She was saying ‘I love you’ but I was so afraid. She said I reminded her of her dad. All these years I was suffering. I wanted to have my life back.

“She’s very dangerous – a professional troublemaker.” He added that his tormentor even stole a $6,500 diamond ring from him that belonged to his mom. 

Today he said he was relieved that his former pursuer is being removed from the US and said of the Afshar’s recent notoriety that “she’s become more famous than Kim Kardashian.”

Aflaki is not the only man to be stalked by Afshar. 

LA hairdresser Zare Mandani, 54, previously revealed to the Post he was granted a five-year restraining order after she harassed him at his salon and home in 2024.

“Thank God,” he said after hearing of her arrest by ICE. “That’s good. She’s a stalker.”

In court filings, he said Afshar had subjected him to “emotional abuse, harassment” and that she “threatened to hurt herself.”

Aflaki believes anyone connected to the Iranian regime should be removed from the US. “They should all be deported,” he said. “These people are poison. They’re trash.”

Afshar, who flaunted her luxury lifestyle on social media, was detained at her Tujunga home on April 3, along with her daughter Sarinasadat Hosseiny, 25.Hamideh Soleimani Afshar/ Facebook
Hamideh Soleimani Afshar’s Daughter Sarinasadat Hosseiny is pictured.Sarinasadat Hosseiny/ Instagram

On Monday, the Post revealed that college professor Eissa Hashemi, 43, the son of a notorious Iranian regime leader, is also enjoying an affluent SoCal lifestyle, despite called for him to be removed from the country. 

https://nypost.com/2026/04/07/us-news/hamideh-soleimani-afshar-qasem-soleimanis-niece-rejected-by-ex-in-ice-call/