Archive for 2024

UNEXPECTEDLY: The Iran Détente Did Not Age Well.

Chief Iran deal promoter Ben Rhodes, in a video commenting on last weekend’s attack, emphasized Israel’s recent strike on IRGC personnel in Syria, claiming that Iran could have, in response, escalated even further via Hezbollah rockets from Lebanon. What played out last Saturday, he said, was not the “worst-case outcome.”

Noah Rothman and Jim Geraghty both reject the idea that Iran’s attack was somehow “designed to fail.” Rather, Noah writes, “its aim was to kill as many Israelis as possible.” In hindsight, the idea of America striking a lasting deal with Iran was always fanciful; in recent months, Iran-backed militias’ drone attacks on U.S. outposts in Jordan, Iraq, and Syria, Iran-backed Houthi attacks on Red Sea vessels, and now this have made that conclusion inescapable.

To the contrary, as the Wall Street Journal reported, long-running outreach to Israel’s other Middle Eastern neighbors helped to minimize the damage from what could have been an overwhelming assault by Iran. Per the Journal’s timeline, this included efforts to build an air-defense system dating back decades, which at last gained steam following the Trump-era Abraham Accords between Israel and the UAE/Bahrain. Then, under Biden, “the Pentagon shifted Israel from its European Command to Central Command, which includes the rest of the Middle East, a move that enabled greater military cooperation with Arab governments under U.S. auspices.” The top U.S. commander in the region at the time reportedly convened a meeting of Israeli and Arab military officials “to explore how they could coordinate against Iran’s growing missile and drone capabilities.”

Fast-forward two years, and with Iran vowing to respond to the strike in Syria, the U.S. was able to put a plan into action, coaxing the UAE and even Saudi Arabia to share intel, according to the WSJ, while Jordan allowed the U.S. and others to use its airspace. The result was an incredible success, and demonstrated unmistakably which Middle Eastern governments are willing to partner with the West — and which one never will.

Noah, without getting his hopes up, writes that Biden should push to restore conventional-arms embargoes at the U.N. level, apart from unilateral sanctions imposed when they expired and now being expanded. Doing so would force a confrontation with Iran’s enablers there, communicate that the White House takes the threat from Tehran seriously, and reflect a stark reality: “The JCPOA is dead and gone.” Few mourn the loss.

Meanwhile: Satellite pics show Iran air base damage after IAF strike.

The New York Times reported on Saturday that a high-tech missile hit a Russian-made S-300 air defense system at Shikari, citing two Iranian officials. Western officials told the newspaper that the strike was intended to show Tehran that Israel could break through Iran’s defense systems undetected and paralyze them.

According to the Times report, the missile was from a warplane fired “far from Israeli or Iranian airspace” and did not enter Jordanian airspace so as to not to involve Amman after it assisted in shooting down hundreds of Iranian aerial threats launched at Israel last weekend.

An Israeli official told The Washington Post that the assault “was intended to signal to Iran that Israel had the ability to strike inside the country.”

Report: New Images Show Base Of Iranian-Backed Group In Iraq Was Completely Destroyed In Strike.

HIGHER EDUCATION BUBBLE UPDATE: Northwestern U. dean joins anti-Israel rally organized by far-left student groups.

UPDATE: Eugene Volokh queried the Dean in question and received this response:

As Dean of Students, I regularly attend student demonstrations on campus, to ensure the safety of our community. I been to dozens of demonstrations on a variety of topics over the years, as have other members of our Student Affairs team.
My role at these demonstrations is not as a participant or supporter, but as an observer to ensure safety and well-being of the entire community, including those who might be targeted by the protest.
When asked by the student newspaper why I was there I told them this as well, but that part of my quote was not included in the article.
Monday’s demonstration was held by a number of student groups representing a variety of issues.
I, and the University, strongly supports Hillel, which is vital to the Northwestern community.
The University is investigating whether the statements about Hillel that were in the flyer distributed Monday violate our Code of Conduct or Northwestern’s discrimination and harassment policies.

So there you have her side of the story.

IS IT NOW A CRIME TO BE A JEW IN LONDON? PRETTY MUCH. “At a ‘pro-Palestine’ march on Saturday, a Jewish man was threatened with arrest, supposedly because his mere presence was ‘antagonising’ the protesters and breaching the peace.”

I remember 20 years ago when people like Melanie Phillips were talking about “Londonistan” they were treated as extremist alarmists. Have you noticed that the “extremist alarmists” keep turning out to be right?

EVERYTHING IS GOING SWIMMINGLY: Niger’s Eviction of U.S. Commandos, Drones Derails America’s Counterterror Strategy: Washington eyes contingency plan to shift forces to defensive ring around West African countries hardest hit by al Qaeda, Islamic State.

The Biden Administration has allowed our enemies to steal a march on us in many parts of Africa.

Flashback: “But the truth is, when we’re engaged with the Chinese, we get an airport. And when we’re engaged with you guys, we get a lecture.”

HARVARD NEEDS A RON DESANTIS, BUT A MITT ROMNEY WOULD BE AN IMPROVEMENT OVER WHAT THEY’VE GOT NOW: Harvard needs a new president. I suggest Mitt Romney.

As the grandson of Holocaust survivors and president of the American Jewish Congress, I find it devastating that Harvard has failed to vigorously address the unchecked antisemitism on campus. Anyone who has studied there can attest that Harvard is not an antisemitic institution. I never for a moment felt oppressed or marginalized as a student on the Harvard campus. But to my dismay, recent years have seen an unconscionable spike in — and even worse, an administrative tolerance of — hate speech directed at Jews, including targeting Jewish students. The university’s response has thus far been ramshackle and unproductive, to put it mildly.

Harvard has problems, and Harvard is a problem.

OPEN THREAD: All these worlds are yours, except Europa. Attempt no threading there.

ROGER KIMBALL: At Columbia… that’s all, folx!

Undoubtedly the best moment in the testimony of Minouche Shafik, the President Columbia University, before the House Committee on Education and the Workforce last week was elicited by Representative Jim Banks. Why, he wanted to know, was the word “folks” spelled “folx” throughout an official guidebook for the School of Social Work?

Shafik coyly suggested that perhaps the authors did not know how to spell, which might well be the case. But you cannot watch her squirming response without feeling the hot, sticky, and slightly nauseating air of disingenuousness wash over the proceeding.

“Folx,” as Shafik must be aware, is just the latest instance of weaponized orthography disseminated by the academic left. Think “Latinx” and you are on the right track. “Folx” is the certified preferred term for the LGBTQWERTY+ “community,” something Shafik, the leader of an Ivy League outpost of “wokeness,” must surely know.

And she very, very likely does:

Hey, you know who else has used “folx?”

But when in doubt, deploy a little academic taqiyya to keep the red state represenatives guessing:

At this point, I’d be adding the usual “update Newspeak Dictionaries accordingly” line, but our betters in Silicon Valley are already on the case: I just noticed that my spellchecker in both Outlook and Word doesn’t redline “folx,” so at some point, it became an approved word at Microsoft. (But oddly, at least for the moment, not on my devices built by those reactionary neanderthals at Apple. I assume that will be fine-tuned in the next iOS update, if not sooner.)

TODAY IN HISTORY:  It’s Hitler’s birthday today.  May he rot in hell along with his fellow gangster dictators.  ¡No Pasarán! shares excerpts from Paul Johnson’s Modern Times to show that the notion that Hitler was on the “right” while Marx, Lenin and Stalin were on the “left” makes no sense.  They were cut from the same mold.

DISPATCHES FROM PATIENT ZERO IN THE DISSEMINATION OF FAKE NEWS: Netflix’s Rather Celebrates Disgraced CBS News Anchor.

This is the perfect time for a documentary honoring Dan Rather. Really.

We’re watching the collapse of NPR as a trusted news source in real time thanks to Uri Berliner’s withering expose on the far-Left platform. Most mainstream journalists are covering up the fact that the U.S. President is in obvious mental decline.

Media outlets have yet to account for promoting the Russian Collusion hoax, one of many Fake News stories that eroded trust in the Fourth Estate.

Reporters now all but cheer on free speech repression, burying scandals like The Twitter Files.

What better moment to honor an anchor who still won’t cop to getting a massive story wrong?

The Washington Examiner, citing an internal CBS investigation into the scandal, sums up Rather’s work:

“an attempt by a prominent organ of the mainstream media to influence the outcome of a presidential election with a false and fraudulent story just two months before Election Day.”

Today, Rather might be given a promotion.

We’re still waiting for a single media outlet to apologize for burying the Hunter Biden laptop story. In the 2000s, the media was both left-leaning and willing to criticize itself.

Flashback to then-Washington Post-owned Slate in September of 2004: Dan Rather: The anchor as madman.

In an era where the DNC-MSM have fixated on their hatred of Bad Orange Man and their supporters as the cause of everything wrong in America, it’s difficult to see anyone in the guild attack their own in 2024.