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April 14, 2024

End the Iranian Islamic Regime, Now

The good news: Israel’s air defense systems—Iron Dome, David’s Sling, Arrow, and its vaunted fighter pilots—assisted by the United States, Jordan, England, France and Saudi Arabia, performed brilliantly in intercepting the 300 projectiles (100 of which were ballistic missiles) that Iran launched against Israel on Saturday. Except for an Israeli-Arab child seriously wounded by shrapnel, the nation didn’t suffer a scratch.

The bad news: What language does the Biden administration speak when it reassures Israel that it stands in solidarity with the Jewish state and warns Iran, repeatedly, “Don’t”? Because, here again, those expressions of support soon come to mean something less boldly protective and cautionary. Does anyone know of a diplomacy thesaurus that Israel, and the rest of us, can use to decrypt the mixed-messaging that emanates from Biden’s West Wing and State Department?

During those first days after October 7, President Biden unequivocally stated that Israel had a legal and moral right to self-defense in response to Hamas’ invasion and massacre in southern Israel. Hamas was deemed an ISIS clone, which needed to be completely vanquished. Any country in the same position would do the same thing.

Anticipating civilian causalities once Israel’s bombing campaign and ground troop incursion into Gaza commenced, Biden made clear that the responsibility for those Palestinian deaths would lie with Hamas. The terror group broke a ceasefire and started a war with a barbaric beginning. Worse still, it insisted on shielding itself with its own people.

A fair reading of Biden’s assessment of the situation was that Israel can’t be faulted for striking at the locations where Hamas and its weapons are located. Palestinian “civilians” elected a terrorist organization that grotesquely deployed its own people as the first line of defense. Tunnels were built to transport terrorists and hide weapons, and not as bomb shelters for the Palestinians.

Israel is not to blame for that sad state of affairs.

A few months later, however, a very different Biden showed up. He mumbled that Israel’s military operations were “over the top,” warning against any precipitous invasion of Rafah, the last stronghold of Hamas’ remaining battalions. He questioned whether the large Palestinian civilian death toll complied with international humanitarian law. And he hinted that future weapons assistance would have to be reevaluated. And the topper: The United States abstained when the U.N. Security Council called for a temporary ceasefire without the release of any Israeli and American hostages.

Yet, Doctor Jekyll returned to the Oval Office the other day. President Biden, having been apprised through intelligence communiques that Iran was about to launch a significant attack against America’s only democratic ally in the region, stated, repeatedly, that the United States’ commitment to Israel was “ironclad.” His message to Iran, repeated by both his Secretary of State and Defense Secretary: “Don’t!”

But Iran did! Biden gave the same “Don’t!” warning to Iran’s proxies in the early days of the war. Yet, Hezbollah and the Houthis did, as well—the Lebanese terrorists have been launching missiles at Israel nearly every day; and the Yemenite terrorists have wreaked havoc on Israel and commercial shipping lines in the Red Sea.

And then Biden revealed his inner Hyde, again. On Saturday night, not long after Iran’s arsenal of missiles and drones detonated in the sky, the president spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu and advised, “Take the win”—no need to escalate tensions further.

Really? If Mexico had launched 300 missiles aimed at New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles, the United States would have been satisfied with simply defending against them? I have news for the president: Texans wouldn’t take it, and the Rangers would be suiting up for duty (the special ops guys, and not the baseball team).

If Mexico had launched 300 missiles aimed at New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles, the United States would have been satisfied with simply defending against them?

The necessity for nationwide air raid sirens blaring across Israel, with incoming missiles aimed at major population centers, was not a proportional response to the killing of a few senior commanders in the Iranian Revolutionary Guards in Damascus. This was a major act of aggression, tantamount to a declaration of war.

Biden’s advice to Israel: just walk away. And one more thing: America will not take part in any further Israeli reprisal.

Obviously, “ironclad” is a misnomer, unless it means clad in appeasement and restraint. And “Don’t” apparently means, “Don’t . . . take us seriously.”

Obviously, “ironclad” is a misnomer, unless it means clad in appeasement and restraint. And “Don’t” apparently means “Don’t . . . take us seriously.”

If “Don’t” actually means, “Don’t!,” why are any Houthis still alive? Back in October, the most powerful nation in the world warned them that taking an ancillary interest in Hamas’ escapades would come with consequences. The Houthis aren’t even Iran’s most dangerous proxy. Most people never even heard of them. Shouldn’t all of them have been killed by now?

On Saturday, Iran finally decided to get its own hands dirty, rather than direct its proxies to do the dirty work. For two decades, trash-talking mullahs threatened to “wipe Israel off the map!” Finally, rather than delegate skirmishes to its proxies, Iran’s maniacal Islamists mixed brinksmanship with the Rubicon and lit up the Middle East sky with missiles and drones. Israel can now, justifiably, retaliate. F-35 pilots can lock on Iran’s ostensibly civilian nuclear facilities—something the rest of the region has secretly been longing for.

Will President Biden stand for that? Last week he orchestrated Israel’s withdrawal from southern Gaza, leaving Hamas intact. Now he’s seeking further capitulation.

American foreign policy, these days, seems to be directed from Michigan and Minnesota. Are Muslims in battleground states actually dictating which battles America’s Jewish ally is permitted to fight? Foggy Bottom will soon be renting space from the Ford Motor Company, based in Dearborn. That would make sense. Its founder, Henry Ford, after all, was the leading antisemite of his day.

I realize there’s an election on the horizon and Biden is beholden to shrieking progressives and petulant, ignorant students. But perhaps now, more than ever, is the time for this president to exercise moral leadership, remain actually faithful to ironclad commitments, and eschew political calculations.

Iran is a world menace. Why else would Jordan and the Saudis have assisted in downing drones whizzing over their airspace? No one other than Bernie Sanders and the Squad is rooting for Iran.

Here’s a tip, Mr. President, stop the political schizophrenia. Demonstrate that America knows how to stand beside a friend, and won’t stand in the way of allowing the Jewish state to finish the job in Gaza, and, finally, take steps to bring a long-awaited end to the Iranian Islamic regime.


Thane Rosenbaum is a novelist, essayist, law professor and Distinguished University Professor at Touro University, where he directs the Forum on Life, Culture & Society. He is the legal analyst for CBS News Radio. His most recent book is titled “Saving Free Speech … From Itself,” and his forthcoming book is titled, “Beyond Proportionality: Is Israel Fighting a Just War in Gaza?”

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MENA States Respond to Iran’s Missile Strike on Israel

The world watched history in the making yesterday after Iran launched the first-ever direct assault from its soil against Israel. In response, the US, UK, and Jordan assisted Israel in collectively intercepting the drones and missiles as they headed toward the Jewish state.

Here, The Media Line takes a closer look at the responses of Turkey and several Arab countries to Iran’s attack, which was also reportedly the largest drone strike in military history.

Jordan

Jordan’s government, which signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1994, has shown support for Israel over the decades. However, since Oct. 7, the country’s civil society has engaged in prolonged pro-Palestinian public demonstrations.

Yesterday, Jordan was the only Arab country to assist Israel in eliminating Iran’s missiles and drones, which flew over its territory. Jordan’s Cabinet confirmed that objects entered the country’s airspace and were consequently intercepted by local military forces.

“Jordan intercepted missiles and drones directed toward Israel to protect its own citizens and avoid [the scenario] that many of them could fall by mistake in inhabited areas of the country,” said a Cabinet statement, adding: “The situation in Jordan is under control, and all the activities such as schools, hospitals, and private and public sectors are working as usual.”

Despite government efforts to protect its citizens, many tweets from Jordanian citizens appeared on social media platform X, claiming that “The Jordanian king dropped missiles on his citizens to protect Israel.”

Jordan is currently in a very precarious position. Both civil society and the government have been vocal regarding Israel’s war in Gaza and the need for a cease-fire. However, the kingdom’s decision to intercept the Iranian missiles and drones is a show of solidarity with Israel.

According to a post published on X, Jordanian Foreign Affairs Minister Ayman Safadi said: “The end of the aggression against Gaza will end the occupation, and this may lead to an end of the escalation in the region.”

United Arab Emirates

In 2020, the UAE signed the Abraham Accords, a positive example of exchange and cooperation between Israel and Arab countries in the region.

After the Iranian attack, the UAE’s Foreign Ministry appealed for “the utmost restraint” to avoid dangerous repercussions and the region being dragged into new levels of instability.

A ministry statement further called for “resolving differences through dialogue and through diplomatic channels, and for adhering to the rule of law and respecting the United Nations Charter.”

The Foreign Ministry also called on the UN and the UN Security Council to carry out their responsibilities to enhance international peace and security by resolving recurring issues and conflicts in the region that threaten global security and stability.

Dr. Anwar Gargash, the diplomatic adviser to UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed, expressed the UAE’s concern over a potentially dangerous military escalation in the region, appealing to all sides to spare people the dangers of war.

“We have warned of the repercussions of the war in Gaza and the priority of an immediate cease-fire,” he wrote on X, adding that “Today, the need for peace emerges through diplomacy and within the foundations of stability, prosperity and justice. This is the only logical option.”

Turkey

Although Turkey normalized ties with Israel in 2022, relations between these two countries deeply changed after the war in Gaza began. Since then, Turkey has decided to stop exporting products to Israel.

According to Reuters, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan told his Iranian counterpart in a phone call today, after the drone and missile attack, that Turkey does not want any further escalation of tension in the region. During the call, Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian reportedly replied that the “retaliatory operation” against Israel had ended, and that Iran would not launch a new operation unless it was attacked, Turkish diplomatic sources said.

Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia was about to normalize ties with Israel before Oct. 7. However, ever since, relations between these two countries have been frozen.

After Iran’s attack, the Saudi Foreign Ministry published a statement on X, sharing its concern at the “military escalation” and calling on “all parties to exercise utmost restraint and spare the region and its people from the dangers of war. It is important for the kingdom to maintain peace and stability among the region, in order to avoid a bigger war.”

Meanwhile, during the coverage of yesterday’s attack, Saudi state-owned international Arabic news channel Al Arabiya focused more on covering the position of Israel’s allies, such as the US, UK, and Jordan. The television channel also invited Avichay Adraee, the head of the Arab media division of the IDF’s Spokesperson’s Unit, to speak publicly about the attack and Israel’s possible response.

Qatar

Qatar has long represented the voice of Palestinians through its state-funded news outlet Al Jazeera, and the country has never suggested normalizing ties with Israel.

Yesterday, post-Iranian attack, Qatar asked the international community to prevent a bigger conflict.

Its Foreign Ministry wrote on X: “We are very worried about the turnouts of the Iranian attack, and we ask for an immediate halt on this. The international community has to adopt immediate measures to stop the tension in the region.”

Al Jazeera Arabic, which was formally banned in Israel at the beginning of April, included in its coverage of the Iranian assault a view of the positive role of Iran as a symbol for the resistance against Israeli occupation. It also interviewed experts on the topic.

The coverage featured an ex-commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards, Hossein Kanani Moghaddam, who affirmed to Al Jazeera that “the Iranian operation has put an end to a Cold War between Tehran and Tel Aviv that has been going on for 45 years, and yesterday it was a pivotal episode that may lead to a different scenario in the region.”

Al Jazeera also reported statements by Hamas spokesperson Jihad Taha, who referred to the Iranian attack as “legitimate in order to end the Zionist perseverance and help the Palestinian resistance.”

Egypt

Egypt signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1979. However, as in the case of Jordan, its civil society has been very vocal in support of Palestinians since the breakout of Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza.

Egypt’s Foreign Ministry released a statement that said: “Egypt is deeply concerned about the announced attack from Iran against Israel, this is a dangerous escalation between these two countries that has been going on in the last months. We ask for moderation in order to spare the region and its people from instability and tension.”

The statement added: “We are in contact with all the parties involved in order to reach a solution and stop the escalation in the future.”

Kuwait

Like Qatar, Kuwait has been very active in advocating on behalf of Palestinians and is not interested in normalizing relations with Israel. Moreover, the country, as with Qatar, refused to allow the US to use its air space in retaliation against Iran.

Kuwait has been a symbol of pro-Palestinian protests since Oct. 7 and has been neutral in its position toward neighboring Iran. Former Prime Minister, Defense Minister and Interior Minister Jaber Al-Mubarak Al-Hamad Al-Sabah has described relations with Iran as “friendly,” according to Reuters.

According to Jasem Mohamed AlBudaiwi, the secretary general of the Gulf Cooperation Committee, “stability must be maintained in the region. Both sides need to avoid dragging all the region into a war zone,” as reported by Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Anba.

Morocco

Morocco normalized relations with Israel in 2001. Ever since, the country has been considered a valuable partner for Israel in North Africa.

However, Morocco experienced many pro-Palestinian demonstrations, and recently one of the protesters was jailed for five years due to his criticism regarding the country’s ties with Israel.

Yesterday, Morocco expressed its concerns over the situation in Israel and asked for “an immediate suspension of violence, the return to tranquility, and the end of any act that may create an escalation in the region.”

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Oct. 7 and April 13: Old Jew vs. New Jew

The Hamas invasion and massacre of Jews on Oct. 7 shattered us because it brought back traumatic memories of defenseless Jews. This was not an assault on an army; it was an assault on helpless civilians who depended on that army to protect them. It was impossible not to think back to earlier times in Jewish history when Jews were indeed helpless, when there was no army to protect them.

The victims of Oct. 7, regardless of the aggressive response that followed, brought back disturbing memories of the Old Jew.

Six months later, on April 13, the images of hundreds of drones and cruise missiles being intercepted to protect Israeli civilians have instantly reconnected us with the New Jew.

The contrast cannot be sharper. Oct. 7 was a barbaric, low-tech invasion that relied on bulldozers crashing through fences and savages murdering, raping and mutilating Jews. The Israeli response on that day, which includes hundreds of brave Israelis coming to the rescue of their compatriots, was by necessity equally low-tech.

Compared to Oct. 7, April 13 was a high-tech extravaganza. It represented the incredible success of Israel’s strategy of investing in missile defense systems that ended up neutralizing, with the help of the U.S. and other allies, 99 percent of the more than 300 munitions Iran launched against the Jewish state.

Those munitions could have killed thousands of Israelis; they killed none. They were no match for the New Jew, the Jew of Start-Up Nation, the Jew of constant innovation who has the power to change the world.

That New Jew was caught napping on Oct. 7.

The miracle of technology has a way of dulling the senses. We assume it can do virtually anything. The very idea of the Iron Dome feels like science fiction: Developing a bullet that can hit another bullet at maximum speed? That sounds impossible.

The tens of thousands of missiles that have been intercepted in recent years to save countless Israeli lives, culminating in the latest Saturday Night Miracle, have redefined the impossible.

The tragic irony is that stopping terrorists from breaching a border to enter Jewish homes was hardly seen as an “impossible” task– just the opposite. Through a mix of low-tech and high-tech, Israel had become formidable at protecting its borders and its people.

If it managed to do the impossible on April 13, it failed monumentally to do the exceedingly possible on Oct. 7.

The key advantage of military success is that it gives you options. Had the missiles of April 13 gotten through and killed hundreds if not thousands of Israelis, Israel would have no options today. It would have been forced to launch a major attack on Iranian soil, and we’d be talking today about a possible regional war.

The failure of Oct. 7, which resulted in the murder of 1200 Israelis, left Israel with no choice. It had to launch a major war to regain its military deterrence, a justified war that is still far from being won.

We often forget that had Israel defended its Gaza border on Oct. 7 the way it knows how, there would have been no war in Gaza. For those who argue that “we had to go in there sooner or later,” I just hope that the result will be victory and the regaining of deterrence. At the moment, we’re not close to that outcome.

In any case, the point is that strong defense gives you options. When you don’t suffer casualties or keep them low, there’s no need to rush or panic. You can keep your enemy guessing. You can analyze the strategic options before deciding on payback. Right now, it is Iran that is on the defensive and is isolated internationally. It even looks surprisingly weak. Indeed, one way of looking at April 13 is that the big bad Persian bear finally showed its teeth and was humiliated by the Zionist enemy.

They couldn’t even kill one Jew.

Think about that: A ragtag bunch of terrorists killed 1200 Jews, and the world’s biggest sponsor of terror, the regime aiming to destroy Israel and dominate the whole region, failed to take down one Israeli when it finally decided to attack.

In a region where honor is everything, one cannot underestimate the emotional resonance of such failure.

Of course, it’d be equally foolish to underestimate the danger of Iran’s high-tech weaponry, which might, for example, take down crucial infrastructure like electrical grids, not to mention the obvious threat of nuclear weapons. Deterring Iran must and will remain a top priority, at a time and in a manner of Israel’s choosing.

The hard lesson of Oct. 7 is that Israel can never take anything for granted, high-tech or low-tech. The complacence and hubris that led to that day’s massacre are luxuries the state cannot afford if it wants to survive.

The success of Israel since its birth in 1948 is that it inherited the keen sense of danger from the Old Jew and married it to the military prowess of the New Jew.

The lesson of the past six months is that we need both.

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LA Jewish Symphony to Celebrate 30 Years with Anniversary Concert on April 14

This month, the Los Angeles Jewish Symphony (LAJS) is celebrating its 30th anniversary.

In honor of this milestone, LAJS is hosting a concert at the historic Wilshire Boulevard Temple — where it all began.

LAJS founder and conductor Dr. Noreen Green has been the force behind the orchestra’s success.

Dr Noreen Green. Photo by Axel Oliva

“We’re hosting a celebratory concert in the room where it all started,” Dr. Green told the Journal.

The concert, on Sunday, April 14th, 2024, holds great significance for LAJS — it falls during the same week as the orchestra’s debut performance on April 10, 1994. The 30th anniversary concert will feature a program featuring the repertoire from the symphony’s early years, including a selection by Shony Alex Braun, a Romanian Holocaust survivor and violinist.

“The violin basically saved [Braun’s] life,” Dr. Green explained. “And part of that was him thinking or hearing melodies in his head while he was in the camp, and basically staying alive by practicing those melodies in his head, and then also playing for the commandants. So after he was released and he survived many years later, he became a famous violinist in L.A.”

Braun was the subject of a recent documentary, “Symphony of the Holocaust,” which LAJS participated in.

Wilshire Boulevard Temple’s Cantor Lisa Peicott will be performing a piece by Israeli composer Sharon Farber. Cantor Ilan Davidson from Temple Beth El in San Pedro, who has performed with Green at Disney Hall for 20 years, will be performing some duets and solos. And the last 30 minutes of the will be honoring Israel and LAJS’ commitment to the music of Israel.

Looking back at the past 30 years, Dr. Green highlighted a few of her favorite LAJS milestones.

“I think we all need a reason to celebrate being Jewish, and music is a nonthreatening, non-controversial way to do it …And I think we all need to be in a room and feel good about being a Jew.” – Dr. Noreen Green

“In 2000, I premiered [Andrea Clearfield’s] ‘The Woman of Valor’ at Royce Hall, which has been a cantata that has stuck with me for many years,” Green said. “So that was a huge event to do this 60 minute oratorio commissioned by a woman composer about women of the Bible, and then to have it recorded and to be released on Albany Records. So that was huge. Also, the music of Eric Zeisel, who was a Holocaust survivor as well. And he was a lesser-known composer, and I was able to bring a lot of his music to life, and also did a CD of his music. Also, there’s our education program that has serviced over 20,000 kids using Sephardic music as a link between the Latinx community in L.A.”

Before the music, the evening will open with a prayer.

“It’s important to address the losses we’ve had, between the pandemic and the wars we’re experiencing, and just the loss of everything, so we’re starting with a prayer,” Green said. On a similar note, this year, LAJS is partnering with Israel Bonds. Green said that she’s proud to partner with Israel Bonds “happy to lend the money out for a year.”

Dr. Green has a message for anyone considering coming to celebrate the 30th anniversary of LAJS on Sunday.

“I think we all need a reason to celebrate being Jewish, and music is a nonthreatening, non-controversial way to do it,” Green said. “And I think we all need to be in a room and feel good about being a Jew.”

For more information and ticket details about attending, go to the Los Angeles Jewish Symphony website: https://lajs.org/30th-anniversary/

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