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/

Wednesday, 8 April 2026

Stalking Iranian Missile Launch Crews

https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/defense-news/article-892258

Israeli Air Force now hunting Iranian ballistic missiles

IDF Hatzerim Air Force Base Chief Brig. Gen. "R" tells the Post about stalking Iranian ballistic missile crews and the dangers of air defenses, even with general air supremacy.


     F-35

Israel's F-15s were the aircraft which assassinated Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and Iran's top military leaders. They, along with the F-16s and F-35s, also were part of the key thrust on February 28 which broke the Islamic regime's ability to launch what would have been devastating large-scale ballistic missile salvos at Israel, and have continued hunting the missile teams down ever since.

IDF Hatzerim Air Force Base Chief Brig. Gen. 'R', who commands both F-15 and F-16 squadrons, in his first interview with an English-speaking publication recently spoke to The Jerusalem Post to tell the fuller story of the mission to stalk the ballistic missile teams.

He declined to discuss the still highly sensitive war-starting assassination operations, but did note that the "opening shots" of the war were massive and went far beyond those operations, saying, "the initial operational success was fantastic – it meant that we stopped a lot of the potential harm to our citizens."

The largest aerial assault in Israel's history

During the opening attack, which 'R' said was the largest aerial assault in Israel's history with around 250 aircraft (if support aircraft are included) his F-15s and F-16s attacked Iranian air defenses to reach air supremacy and attacked ballistic missiles to defend the home front.

From the third day of the war, the number of ballistic missiles Iran was firing already had fallen to militarily "manageable" numbers, and by the fourth day the volume of missiles fell to around 20, mostly staying below that and often falling even much lower since.

    Tehran Police
At almost every moment or day of the war, Israeli aircraft have been hunting and striking ballistic missile teams and targets. "The air force is hovering above Iran all the time," R told the Post.

He explained how this fight between the sides involves a mix of outcomes.

Sometimes Iran manages to spread out enough to fire off a small number of missiles, but other times either the air force destroys a missile team or it prevents the team from getting off its missiles while the team is distracted by trying to avoid being struck.

There is no goal of reaching zero Iranian ballistic missiles, said R, but he also stated, "When even one ballistic missile hits, we have seen what it does," causing massive civilian harm, such that he is committed to heavily reduce the fire with his F-15s and F-16s.

Despite the harm Iran has caused to Israel, R noted that, "The harm to the home front needs to be kept within proportions. We also have incredible air defense systems," which have saved countless lives.

This war was not the first time that Hatzerim's squadrons took a lead role, with them having been key also in the assassination of Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah in September 2024 and during the June 2025 war versus Iran.

The last-minute change to the war's parting shot

One question about the opening attacks of the war which 'R' was willing to discuss was the fact that Israel and the US made a last minute decision to postpone the initial attack from February 27 in the evening to February 28 in the morning.

"On the morning of the attack, it was a surprise [that the time of attack changed from Friday evening to Saturday morning], but we were so ready and at such an advanced stage of operational preparations, with a penetrating basis for the attack plan that we were able to easily and quickly adapt any change," said R.

He continued, "We were able to adapt to achieve the mission goals. These were very complex changes to the plan, but I am proud we succeeded in making them happen in a very short time period because of our top notch people."

Another challenge for R was keeping some of his own commanders in the dark to help convince the outside world and the Iranians to keep their guard down, while also maintaining a high level of mission readiness.

"The hardest part was maintaining the advantage of surprise. You need to strike a balance between secrecy and readiness, so many air force commanders didn't even know about the operation," until almost the last minute, he said.

But simultaneously, "We trained for every situation, even the hardest."

On March 31, the IDF Spokesperson said that 100% of "critical" and "essential" targets in Iran on the air force's list had been destroyed.

And in fact already in mid-March, IDF sources had said that over 75% of those targets had been destroyed.

If so, what has R and his F-15s and F-16s been bombing since then, and why have their attacks been necessary?

R answered by explaining the difference between his squadrons' strikes on Iran during the June 2025 war versus now. "The difference between Rising Lion and now is huge. If you take dentistry for example. Rising Lion was a targeted emergency tooth filling to remove an immediate threat," he said.

"This is a full root canal. There are no random or arbitrary attacks. There is always an order and a priority. We also want to pressure Iran further, so their commanders fall to being the third or fourth rate replacements. Intelligence tells us that they feel hunted," R asserted.

Next, he said, "We want to take away the entire military industry. We finished the critical and essential targets, but have not finished all of the targets. We are ready for a longer war if necessary and were also ready before. We have the spirit of fighters."

Prior to the current war, R noted that, "Iran's military industry was 50 times larger than Israel's before the IDF started to bomb it."

He added, "Iran is a major power. The 100 significant headquarters of the IRGC, Basij, and Internal Security Ministry are humongous, with each one of them being the size of Israel's main military headquarters."

Does Israel have air supremacy in Iran?

'R' has great pride in the air force having achieved general air supremacy in the Islamic Republic in only 24 hours during this conflict.

This meant that drones and other aircraft could fly lower to home in on and even hover over certain targets, especially mobile and dynamic targets.

But he added that "even air supremacy is not 100%. The Iranians learn and have gotten better."

R did not need the events of two US aircraft recently being shot down by Iran, including one of his brother F-15s, to understand the constant danger his squadrons remain in.

"Almost every wave of attacks gets fired upon" by Iranian air defenses, he said, opening to the public a picture which it generally does not see or hear about.

R himself has had to evade anti aircraft weapons fired at him by Iran.

Describing his experience, he said, "You're on the edge - 1,500 kilometers from home. It was after we had already struck our targets. I felt the need to focus on my professional skills."

"Some get nervous temporarily, in the moment [when evading Iranian air defenses]. I am very proud though that our pilots have overcome their fear. They have deep character and courage. All the pilots are still fighting to be in the next wave of attacks," when only so many pilots can fly in each wave and there is a rotation.

He added, "Flying to Iran is very complex. It is a long range flight and there are unusual dilemmas along the way. Many of the other countries and areas you must fly over or near are also enemy territory. Also, aircraft have a sort of soul and all kinds of physical needs and refueling and other upkeep issues" are much more challenging for the flight to Iran than for typical closer air force flights.

Moreover, he said, "We trained for this for a very long time, but seven hours in a cockpit is a lot. It's not business class and going to the bathroom is a challenge."

Pressed about whether it had been too risky for him, the commander of the entire Hatzerim base to fly off to Iran with his squadrons, R responded point-blank: "As the commander, you need to lead your soldiers into the 'field'. I get to feel the missiles, the enemy, the challenges in real time, all of the atmospherics, and what is it to refuel midair whether with an Israeli team or a US team."

Working with the US Air Force

Asked to describe relations with the US air force, he responded, "It is truly historic and unprecedented. Israel has never worked directly operationally with any other country's air force. The US also has never worked with another country like this – military relations are truly intimate."

"I was personally on the way to attack Iran, and was refueling over Iraq with US forces talking to them in English and telling the whole story of my mission," he said.

Moreover, R stated, "This isn't just me putting out some kind of approved official messaging. I have been truly proud and honored to fight shoulder to shoulder with CENTCOM. Each air force has its own advantages, but we are the two strongest air forces in the world."

"We won't stop. It's not over. We'll achieve our military goals. Iran will not be getting any discounts."

R said that he was also very proud of the diverse group of Israelis who run Hatzerim, including men, women, religious, secular, Ashkenazi, Sephardi, groups from all ethnic backgrounds – even a 67-year-old reservist -  this is how we will win!"

In addition, he said he was honored by the service of all of the logistics, maintenance, and engineering soldiers who make running Hatzerim possible, beyond the pilots in the cockpit.

These include potentially hundreds of soldiers, especially when Israeli intelligence command and operations command soldiers who help find and plan targets into account.

"The maintenance and logistics personnel work around the clock," he stated.

Are his pilots running low on energy after an unprecedented five weeks of long range bombing missions?

R said that his pilots will rise to the importance of this moment. Hatzerim won't stop. Even if we need to keep flying through Shavuot [on May 22] we are ready and have enough munitions."

On the night of the Passover Seder he said his pilots were over Iran to do all they could to reduce the regime's threat to the nation on one of its holidays of liberation.

He said that he always has in mind when he gets into a cockpit or sends pilots out to war that they are fighting for their children and grandchildren, with special reference to one of his own children who has special needs and a very hard time with missile sirens.

Emphasizing the unique danger of the regime, he noted that many Israeli adversaries have said they would like to eradicate Israel, but that only Iran is truly acting in a way that this could be possible (pursuing nuclear and mass scale ballistic missile weapons) and truly believes that it can accomplish its goal.

He concluded, "we need to get rid of this regime. Not just for the existence of Israel, but for humanity. We saw what they did to slaughter their own people during the recent protests. This is for the good, the side of 'light' of humanity."

https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/defense-news/article-892258