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“He wishes to ‘liberate from the past and have a noble pursuit for his people and his country and to be a great ally to the United States of America,’” Rep. Brian Mast stated.
(JNS)
Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa met with U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday in the first time that a Syrian head of state has visited the White House.
Trump spoke to reporters about the oval office meeting with the Syrian leader later in the day during a swearing-in ceremony for the new U.S. ambassador to India.
“He’s a very strong leader. He comes from a very tough place. Tough guy. I like him,” Trump said. “I get along with the president, the new president in Syria, and we’ll do everything we can to make Syria successful, because that’s part of the Middle East.”
Trump said that he expects a forthcoming announcement that Syria will join the international coalition to defeat ISIS.
“You can expect an announcement on Syria. We want to see Syria become a country that’s very successful. And I think this leader can do it. I really do. I think this leader can do it,” Trump said. “We have to make Syria work. Syria is a big part of the Middle East, and I will tell you, I think it is working really well. We’re working also with Israel on, you know, getting along with Syria, getting along with everybody, and that’s working amazingly.”
Photos posted by the office of the Syrian president on social media appear to depict a warm welcome for al-Sharaa, who was previously a member of al-Qaeda before rising to lead the Syrian rebellion against the Assad regime and taking over the country in December.
The discussions between the two leaders “addressed the bilateral relations between the Syrian Arab Republic and the United States, as well as ways to strengthen and develop them, in addition to a number of regional and international issues of common interest,” according to a brief readout of the meeting from Syria.
The photos show that U.S. Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Special Envoy for Syria Tom Barrack and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine were also in attendance.
Rep. Brian Mast (R-Fla.), who lost two legs while serving in Afghanistan and is chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said on Monday that he “broke bread” with al-Sharaa on Sunday evening.
“We had a long and serious conversation about how to build a future for the people of Syria free of war, ISIS and extremism,” Mast stated.
“He and I are two former soldiers and two former enemies. I asked him directly ‘Why we are no longer enemies?’” Mast said. “His response was that he wishes to ‘liberate from the past and have a noble pursuit for his people and his country and to be a great ally to the United States of America.’”
During the White House meeting, which lasted nearly two hours, the State Department renewed a waiver on most U.S. sanctions on Syria for an additional 180 days.
Video on social media after al-Sharaa departed the West Wing showed the Syrian leader greeting supporters outside the White House on Pennsylvania Avenue to chants of “Allahu Akbar” as the Syrian president donned a scarf thrown from the crowd depicting the Syrian rebel flag.
Image: Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa met with U.S. President Donald Trump in the first time that a Syrian head of state has visited the White House, Nov. 10, 2025. Credit: Social media post by the Syrian presidency. | Syrian presidency
Published on Mon, 10 Nov 2025 16:39:52 -0500. Original article link
“I saw a young man brandish a flare on the balcony. I was really frightened,” an audience member said.
JNS Staff
(JNS)
French authorities arrested on Friday four suspects connected to the coercive disruption to a concert performed by the Israeli Philharmonic Orchestra in Paris the previous day.
Three women and a man were detained on charges of violence, destruction and organizing an unauthorized protest, Reuters cited the Paris Prosecutor’s Office as stating.
Activists were seen on videos posted on social media throwing flares and chanting pro-Palestinian slogans at the Philharmonie de Paris complex in the city’s northeastern 19th arrondissement, as audience members and security personnel tried to remove them.
VIDEO:
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Protesters disrupt Israeli orchestra’s performance in Paris
Footage captured by a spectator at the Philharmonie de Paris shows a protester holding a flare, disrupting a performance by Israel’s national orchestra. The orchestra’s visit to the French capital had drawn… pic.twitter.com/oUDYP4NlqC
— AFP News Agency (@AFP) November 7, 2025
At least one hooligan could be seen dodging individuals who tried to stop him or her. The incident apparently lasted a few minutes.
The concert went ahead despite three interruptions, the venue said.
“I strongly condemn the actions committed last night during a concert at the Philharmonie de Paris. Nothing can justify them,” French Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez said on X.
“I thank the personnel from the Paris police who enabled the rapid arrest of several perpetrators of serious disturbances inside the venue and contained the demonstrators outside. Four people have been placed in custody,” he added.
According to Le Monde, the disruptions began at around 8:40 p.m., when the Israeli orchestra, conducted by Lahav Shani, performed Ludwig van Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 5, also known as the “Emperor Concerto” in English-speaking countries.
A woman stood up, shouted, “Israel murders,” and hurled yellow leaflets into the crowd, which read, “Israel, you play the symphony of your genocidal army,” Le Monde reported.
The concert resumed after the woman was removed.
Standing ovation for the Israeli Philharmonic after their performance in France
The applause came after Hatikvah, the Israeli anthem.
Free Palestine tried to discriminate against these brave, talented musicians.
Our songs will never be drowned out by their hate
pic.twitter.com/2qFOk5ERxd
— Hen Mazzig (@HenMazzig) November 7, 2025
Another woman who attended the concert with her son told the newspaper that “five, maybe 10 minutes later, the orchestra stopped playing again. I saw a young man brandish a flare on the balcony. There were flames, it was striking. It could have been very dangerous. There were screams, an usher was in tears. I was really frightened.”
The Philharmonie de Paris said it had filed a police complaint, adding that it “deplores and strongly condemns the serious incidents that occurred,” France 24 reported.
The French branch of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, together with other anti-Israel organizations, had called on the hosting venue to cancel the concert.
The disruption joined a wave of anti-Israel actions throughout Europe over the past few months, pushing for a cultural boycott of the Jewish state.
In September, organizers of a classical music festival in Belgium canceled a concert by the Munich Philharmonic that was to be conducted by Shani, 36, the music director of Israel’s national orchestra.
In a statement announcing the concert cancellation, organizers said that the positions of Shani, the Munich Philharmonic’s Israeli conductor, “vis-à-vis the genocidal regime in Tel Aviv are unclear.”
Image: The Israel Philharmonic Orchestra with conductor Lahav Shani. Source: IPO/YouTube.
Mamdani wins NYC mayoral race, as Jewish leaders say historic civic engagement
“When the final numbers are in, we expect record Jewish voter turnout,” Sydney Altfield, of Teach Coalition, told JNS.
Anna Rahmanan, JNS Staff
(JNS)
Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic nominee who has a history of anti-Israel rhetoric, won the New York City mayoral race, the Associated Press reported shortly after 9:30 p.m.
At press time, with 75% of the votes counted, Mamdani had 860,327 votes (50.4%), followed by 704,866 (41.3%) for former Democratic state governor Andrew Cuomo running as an independent and 128,400 (7.5%) for the Republican, Curtis Sliwa.
The Republican Jewish Coalition stated that “it’s official. Zohran Mamdani is the face of the Democratic Party now.”
“Democratic ‘leaders,’ including House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Gov. Kathy Hochul, have handed their party over to what was once the radical left wing fringe,” the RJC said. “This is a deeply distressing result for New Yorkers, particularly Jewish New Yorkers, but in fact this election will affect all of us.”
The Democratic Party “owns this election and all its results, and voters across the country will hold them accountable when they vote in 2026 and 2028,” the RJC said.
It added that New Yorkers now have “a mayor who will ruin their economy, their education system and their transportation system with communist fantasy policies.”
“They will have a mayor who took money from terror-supporting Islamist organizations for his campaign, who is virulently anti-capitalism, anti-police and anti-Israel, and who will not lift a finger to protect Jewish New Yorkers from the ‘globalize the intifada’ crowd,” the RJC said. “This is a dark day for the City of New York, and the Democrats own all of it.”
“The exit poll shows Mamdani up by about 7. Roughly 47% of the vote. Sliwa dropped a lot, but not enough for Cuomo,” wrote Henry Olsen, senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center and host of the Beyond the Polls podcast, shortly before AP called the race.
“Mamdani wins every racial and ethnic group but really wins on the college-plus vote. He beats Cuomo among them by 20% while losing the non-college vote by only 5,” Olsen wrote. “He loses white non-college voters big, but carries non-white non-college voters by 7.” Olsen added that Cuomo “wins the Jewish vote by only 60-31.
Jewish community leaders told JNS that civic engagement among their constituencies have reached unprecedented levels.
Sydney Altfield, national director at Teach Coalition, an Orthodox Union program that pushes for government funding of nonpublic schools, told JNS that her sense, after visiting polling sites in Jewish neighborhoods in four boroughs on Tuesday, was that the election had “accelerated the progress of the last several years in the Jewish community understanding the importance of voting for our interests.”
“Tens of thousands of new Jewish voters have been registered, and we’ve seen engagement in all segments of the community,” Altfield said. “When the final numbers are in, we expect record Jewish voter turnout. The lasting impact transcends a single election. It’s a movement, not a moment.”
Scott Feldman, executive vice president of the One Israel Fund, which supports Israelis in Judea and Samaria, told JNS that Orthodox Jews in New York City have been motivated by concerns about a Mamdani victory.
Mamdani has accused Israel of “genocide” and said that he would have Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrested if the premier came to the Big Apple.
“Mamdani is very dangerous to the Jewish community,” Feldman said. “He is a wolf in sheep’s clothing. Unfortunately, there are plenty of Jews who have fallen for his rhetoric, but he is really an existential threat to our community.”
“Everybody that I talk to in my part of the city, in Far Rockaway, are very, very concerned,” he told JNS. “The turnout at our local precinct is almost at the point, and I think by the end of the night it will exceed the amount of votes that were cast last year in the presidential election.”
Jewish organizations have spent months registering voters and on get-out-the-vote campaigns.
“We all realize the potential problems of a Mamdani mayoral election,” he said. “It’s not just about the Jewish community. We all feel that he would be a terrible mayor for the city of New York, for quality of life, for safety and security, for the police, for the real estate and housing industry, for the stock market and everyone who works in the financial industry.”
Although Cuomo had a nearly 30 point lead on Mamdani in the Jewish vote, Jews are just 15% of the electorate, according to Olsen, the polling expert. “No religions are 23% and Mamdani won them by 52,” he wrote. “He also won the 14% who practice non-Judeo-Christian religions (14%) by 43%.”
“The only income group Mamdani loses are those making $200,000 or more, and that by only 11%,” he said. “He barely wins among straight voters by 43-42. But among the 14% who are LGBTQ he wins by 64.”
Image: Wikipedia CC – Zohran Mamdani at the Resist Fascism Rally in Bryant Park on Oct 27th 2024
“There is an environment of intellectual terrorism against Israel in the African Union,” said the Roman Catholic chaplain to the A.U.
Etgar Lefkovits
(JNS)
A delegation of 30 senior African Christian leaders from 10 countries across the continent was in Israel this past week on a joint religious and political mission, as Jerusalem increases its faith-based diplomatic outreach to tens of millions of Christian supporters in Africa following the two-year war against Hamas in Gaza.
The visit highlighted anew the growing diplomatic tug-of-war between supporters and opponents of the Jewish state in Africa. While South Africa has emerged as one of the fiercest critics of Israel worldwide, other African countries have pushed back and are now further strengthening ties rooted in a mix of shared interests and faith.
“We have a lot of haters and quite a lot of people who want to push us away, but they have one huge obstacle: they are going against the word of God,” Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar told the African Christian leaders in a Thursday evening address in Tel Aviv. “We need counter-pressure on governments to support Israel in the international arena, and as spiritual leaders connected to your communities, you can make a change.”
The delegation included representatives from Angola, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique and Uganda and included bishops, pastors and prominent church leaders whose congregations alone encompass millions of followers throughout the continent.
During their five-day visit, the group met with Israel’s President Isaac Herzog in Jerusalem, visited Hebron and Shiloh in the biblical heartland of Judea and Samaria and toured the site of the Supernova music festival in the northwestern Negev, which was targeted by Hamas-led terrorists during the Oct. 7, 2023, onslaught.
‘Strategic partners’
“The Christian religious leaders of Africa are strategic partners of the State of Israel,” said Deputy Foreign Minister Sharren Haskel, who has spearheaded the diplomatic outreach to the continent with more than half a dozen visits over the last two years.
“The Christian community across Africa is strongly supportive of Israel and serves as a vital force in countering the spread of radical Islam and jihadism. Strengthening our ties with these leaders reinforces Israel’s standing in Africa, founded on deep, shared values that will endure for generations,” she said.
Archbishop Justin Badi Arama from South Sudan said, “Thank you for reviving a vision which has been a bit dormant, as we never took a political side to talk about Israel, only the spiritual side. The vision you have come up with has revived us.”
‘Intellectual terrorism’ against Israel
“There is an environment of intellectual terrorism against Israel in the African Union,” said Father Louison Emerick Bissila Mbila, a Roman Catholic priest and chaplain to the African Union Commission in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, bemoaning the anti-Israel leadership of Algeria and Djibouti.
“At the same time, people individually in Africa want to come to Israel and pray for Israel. The moment they discover Israel, it will change their minds,” said Bissila Mbila, who is a citizen of the Republic of Congo and the Republic of the Seychelles.
Last year, Israel’s African allies thwarted an attempt by African countries, led by South Africa and Algeria, to strip Israel of its observer status at the 55-member African Union, a title held by other countries such as China, Greece, Kuwait, Mexico, “Palestine,” the United Arab Emirates and the United Kingdom.
“For quite a long time, Africa has been preoccupied with struggling to break away from the grip of colonialism,” said Pastor Robert Kayanja, who serves as an adviser to the president of Uganda. “Now the people of Africa are standing up to support Israel in a way we have never seen before.”
“We know Israel stands falsely accused when trying to defend itself against terrorism,” he said. “And all we hear on the news is ‘Gaza, Gaza, Gaza’ and they never talk about the killings of Christians in Africa.”
600 million Christians and 54 UN votes
With 600 million Christians and 54 U.N. votes, including 30 Christian-majority countries, Israel has homed in on the strategic value of religious diplomacy on the continent at a time of international opprobrium over the fallout from the war in Gaza, and continued persecution of Christian in Africa.
“This is the first time that [representatives] of the Church of Africa are starting to meet with the State of Israel and their counterparts in faith to reaffirm our common shared heritage and chart a pathway forward in advancing the interests of our communities,” Bishop Dennis Nthumbi, Africa director of the Washington, D.C.-based Israel Allies Foundation, which organized the event, told JNS. “This is a game-changer.”
Bishop Monday Muyombo of the Democratic Republic of Congo, who is fighting against the boycott of Israel in the United Methodist Church, said it is only a matter of time for change to set in on the continent.
“I am praying that more people will get a chance to come to Israel like us and see for themselves, because what is being portrayed in the media is not accurate,” he said. “As we say, lies come off the elevator whereas the truth comes off the escalator.”
Image: A delegation of prominent African Christian leaders visiting the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron, Judea, Oct. 28, 2025. Credit: Courtesy of the Deputy Foreign Minister’s Office.
Come see the living story of our people. Then, return to your communities with faith renewed and hearts strengthened.
Yisrael Ganz
(JNS)
After years of war and heartbreak, the people of Israel stand resilient, hopeful, determined and full of faith. Despite the pain, our spirit is unbroken. We look toward the future with the same strength and optimism that have sustained the Jewish people through every trial in history.
Yet as we rise from the rubble and rebuild our lives, we must also open our eyes to the world around us. Once again, Jewish communities across the globe find themselves under attack, not only on social media but on the streets, in universities and during public discourse.
The surge of antisemitism that has swept across continents is not just a reaction to the conflict in Gaza. It is a reminder that our fate as Jews, in Israel and in the Diaspora, has always been intertwined. When Israel bleeds, the Jewish people everywhere feel the pain. When Jews abroad are targeted, the heart of Israel aches.
Now, more than ever, we must return to our shared mission: the Jewish mission to strengthen Israel. The way to do so is by reconnecting with it.
Our story did not begin in Tel Aviv or New York. It began in the hills of Judea and Samaria, in the places where Abraham walked, where Jacob dreamed, where Joshua crossed the Jordan. This land is not just geography; it is our spiritual DNA. Here, the idea of faith itself was born.
This is the moment to renew that bond, not only by defending Israel from afar but by coming to see the land. Every Jew, wherever they live, should come to the heart of our homeland, to walk the paths of our ancestors, to feel the pulse of history beneath their feet and to see with their own eyes what Israel truly is. Because there is no substitute for standing on the ground where prayer was first whispered, where kings ruled, prophets spoke and our people’s destiny took shape.
Strengthening Judea and Samaria is not merely a matter of politics or geography; it is a declaration of life, of belonging, of purpose. It is how we ensure that the covenant between the Jewish people and the Land of Israel remains alive, visible and unbreakable.
To our brothers and sisters in the Diaspora: Come see the living story of our people. Walk where Abraham walked. Stand where Joshua stood. Touch the stones that hold our shared past and our shared future.
Then, return to your communities with faith renewed and hearts strengthened. Tell the story of the real Israel, the story of hope, courage and destiny.
Because the Jewish mission has always been the same: to bring light into darkness, faith into doubt and life into the places others thought barren. Today, that mission continues in the heart of the land where it all began.
Image: Judea in late winter. Jan. 24, 2021. Credit: Davidbena via Wikimedia Commons.
The center features floors for hundreds of American-only and Israeli-only personnel, and an international floor for personnel from multiple countries.
Yaakov Lappin
(JNS)
A new joint command center established by the United States military’s Central Command (CENTCOM) in the Israeli city of Kiryat Gat in recent days to help manage the future of the Gaza Strip is described by former Israeli military officers as an “unprecedented” development in external involvement in the affairs of the Strip.
The Civil-Military Coordination Center (CMCC) houses hundreds of personnel. The three-story structure includes a first floor designated as for Israeli security personnel only (a secure area for officials from the IDF, Foreign Ministry, Mossad and Shin Bet).
While the third floor is for U.S. personnel only, the second floor is a joint working hub where Israelis, Americans and representatives from other partner nations work side-by-side. The partners include Germany, Spain, Denmark, Britain, Canada, Italy and France, alongside international bodies such as the United Nations and various humanitarian aid organizations.
The goal of the CMCC is to provide solutions to rebuilding Gaza and ensuring its demilitarization, including that Hamas is disarmed. The Israeli section’s purpose is to ensure that Israeli military and diplomatic interests are factored into the considerations.
Israel reserves its right to take action to neutralize threats without any prior consultation, as it did on Saturday in an airstrike that eliminated a Palestinian Islamic Jihad terror operative in central Gaza who the IDF said was planning to conduct an attack.
The center’s work is divided into six main groups: humanitarian aid, security for forces operating in Gaza, physical infrastructure, including sewage systems, civil infrastructure, such as new health and education systems, joint intelligence, and the formation of an International Stabilization Force (ISF) intended to enter Gaza.
CENTCOM referred JNS to an Oct. 21 statement, which declared the formal opening of the center on Oct. 17, describing the headquarters as supporting “stabilization efforts,” while clarifying that American forces will not deploy to Gaza.
The statement described the CMCC as the “main coordination hub for Gaza assistance,” housing approximately 200 U.S. service members under Lt. Gen. Patrick Frank, commander of the U.S. Army in Central Command (U.S. Army Central).
The CMCC will “monitor implementation of the ceasefire agreement,” said CENTCOM. Its commander, Adm. Brad Cooper, stated that “bringing together stakeholders who share the goal of successful stabilization in Gaza is essential for a peaceful transition.”
Col. (res.) Moshe Elad, one of the founders of security coordination between the IDF and the P.A. and a former Israeli military governor in Jenin, Bethlehem and Tyre in Lebanon, described the center, formed in the context of Trump’s 20-point plan, as a “step of a unique and complex nature, strategically and operationally.”
Elad noted that the center does offer advantages to Israel. “Israel receives ‘part of the work’—implementation of a sequence of aid, infrastructure, international supervision—which reduces parts of the day-to-day management and infrastructure [demands] from it in the possible transformation of Gaza,” he stated.
Elad added that the center serves as a bridge to the international community and helps transition from active war to stabilization.
“This is an unusual step in that the center was established within Israel,” he said. “U.S.-Israel cooperation is usually within the framework of military coalitions, intelligence exchanges, training, assistance—but here we are talking about a regional monitoring and rehabilitation body located in Israel.”
However, Elad also highlighted risks, stating that such a center, which houses American and international teams in Israel and focuses operational-logistical decisions in relation to Gaza, may be perceived by the Israeli public as a certain waiver by Israel of its independence of action.
“There is a risk that the public or some of the parties in Israel will see it as an entry of an external factor into the decision-making process,” he cautioned.
If the center or the truce agreement do not lead to substantial results, like the release of all deceased captives, or a stable Gazan government, it will face substantial criticism in Israel, said Elad.”
Israel must ensure that during the time that the CMCC is active, it will not erode Israel’s own ability to act independently or to resume the combat if necessary,” he added. Doing so is critical for ensuring that the region does not come to view Israel as “less a strategic partner and more a player entering a maneuver coordinated with the U.S. this could harm the possibility of regional strengthening [of Israel’s status] or future normalization agreements.”
Col. (res.) Michael Milshtein, head of the Palestinian Studies Forum at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies at Tel Aviv University and a former head of the Department for Palestinian Affairs in IDF Military Intelligence, characterized the center as a watershed moment.
“The CMCC venture is an unprecedented event in the history of the conflict and one of the most dramatic expressions of the American administration’s involvement in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Nothing like this has ever happened,” Milshtein told JNS.
“Strategically, and here one must be honest, there is a pushing aside of Israel and a certain limitation of its room for action. The Americans are moving forward and serving as the strategic designers of the day after in Gaza, while controlling all military and civilian operations,” he said.
Milshtein assessed that the meaning for Israel is a “need for approval for every military move, which of course limits freedom of action,” noting that the U.S. has welcomed Qatari and Turkish influence, while deciding to continue transferring aid despite truce violations by Hamas.
Milstein argued that this trend, possibly in the near future, could lead to “some compromise regarding disarmament, even if it does not meet Israel’s criteria.”
He added that there are growing numbers of reports that the U.S. is also moving to take over the civilian aspects of Gaza management.
Image: US troops at the Civil-Military Coordination Center in Kiryat Gat during Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s visit on Oct. 24, 2025. Photo by Olivier Fitoussi/POOL.
The mainstream media is trying to help the Democrats’ mayoral candidate silence criticism of his antisemitism and attempts to rewrite the narrative of the 9/11 attacks.
Jonathan S. Tobin
(JNS)
In electoral politics, as in war and sports, the best defense is always offense. And like any skillful politician, Zohran Mamdani has been on the offensive throughout the course of his run for mayor of New York City.
When faced with criticism of his longstanding affiliation with antisemitic groups like Students for Justice in Palestine and the Democratic Socialists of America as well as opposition to the existence of the one Jewish state on the planet, he has two standard responses.
One is to talk past the issue by blandly claiming that, as mayor, he would protect Jewish New Yorkers against antisemitism. The other is to question the morality and decency of anyone who dares to point out that his entire political career is rooted in support for Israel’s destruction and those working to achieve that genocidal goal.
The former is utterly disingenuous. He has been vocal in his encouragement of the mobs on college campuses and elsewhere who target Jews and chant for their genocide (“From the river to the sea”), as well as call for terrorism against Jews everywhere (“Globalize the intifada”), which he won’t disavow.
Breathtaking mendacity
Such breathtaking mendacity is enough to satisfy those who already support the Democratic Socialist candidate’s bid to lead the world’s largest Jewish city outside of Israel. The ploy is simple. Just accuse those who have the temerity to hold him accountable for his antisemitism of engaging in Islamophobia.
In a society founded on principles of equality, calling someone a bigot is a devastating attack. Doing so has become especially effective in an era when victimhood has become the greatest political prize. And few groups have been more skillful in claiming that status than American Muslims.
At the heart of this claim is a myth about the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Muslims have been speaking as if they, and not the nearly 3,000 persons murdered by Islamists on that awful day, were the real victims of Al Qaeda’s assault on America.
And that’s why the recent dustup between Vice President JD Vance and Mamdani about 9/11 victimhood is not a meaningless kerfuffle or, as many Democrats and liberal journalists seem to be asserting, one more piece of evidence of the Trump administration’s racism and insensitivity. To the contrary, it betrays exactly how Mamdani and other supporters or fellow travelers of Islamist extremism and antisemitism have been able to mainstream their particular form of hate by accusing their critics of being prejudiced.
Vance is being bashed in the legacy media for a post on X in which he pointed out that a recent speech by Mamdani centered on calling his critics Islamophobes rested on a particularly deceitful reference to 9/11. As Vance put it, “According to Zohran, the real victim of 9/11 was his auntie who got some (allegedly) bad looks.”
Mamdani said Vance’s comment was inappropriate. “This is all the Republican Party has to offer,” he retorted. Cheap jokes about Islamophobia so as to not have to recognize what people are living through, attempts to pit peoples’ humanity against each other.”
But Vance was exactly right.
For more than two decades, Muslim extremists and their apologists like Mamdani have been alleging that America was swept by a wave of Islamophobia after 9/11. That theme was enabled in part by a laudable concern on the part of then-President George W. Bush that the response to Islamic extremism should not turn into unfair targeting of American Muslims. Unfortunately, his attempts to claim that those Muslims who hate the West and support Islamists were a small minority that misrepresented their religion—and repeated insistence that “Islam is a religion of peace”—were inaccurate.
No evidence to back it up
But while people like Mamdani continue to float unverifiable allegations of prejudice against Muslims, the plain fact of the matter is that there has never been any empirical evidence of such a backlash against American Muslims. On the contrary, FBI hate-crime statistics over the last 24 years have consistently shown that anti-Muslim crimes have been relatively few and overwhelmingly outnumbered by those committed against Jews. Indeed, in the FBI’s latest report, nearly 70% of religion-based hate crimes committed in the United States were against Jews, despite the fact that they make up less than two percent of the population.
But that has never stopped those who purportedly represent Muslims, whether the openly antisemitic Council on America Islamic Relations (CAIR) or politicians like Mamdani, from asserting that Muslims are suffering disproportionate and widespread discrimination in the United States.
This started out as an attempt to flip the narrative about 9/11, such as when opposition to an attempt to build a mosque in the footprint of one of the buildings in the shadow of the World Trade Center that was destroyed by the attack was falsely portrayed as prejudice against Muslims. By claiming that Arabs and Muslims were suffering discrimination because of anger about the Islamist assault on America, the entire discussion shifted.
Rather than seeing the issue of the religion-based hatred of jihadist Muslims for the West, America and the Jews not as mere unkindness, but one that resulted in mass murder, liberal journalists—and apologists like CAIR, obsessed with anecdotal evidence of anti-Muslim discrimination—deemed anyone with a justified fear of Islamic terrorism after 9/11 to be a narrow-minded bigot.
In the last decade, Islamophobia also became a talking point for those who sought to silence criticism of the way in which CAIR and other members of the red-green alliance of Marxists and Islamists engaged in open antisemitism in the course of their agitation against Israel. Jewish groups and individuals, as well as non-Jewish supporters of Israel and the Jews, were targeted and denounced as Islamophobes. But in almost every case, all they were actually guilty of was pointing out that Israel-bashers were engaged in Jew-hatred, as they advocated for Israel’s eradication, denied Jewish history and rights and appropriated the memory of the Holocaust in order to falsely demonize Jews.
Post-Oct. 7 tactics
This dishonesty became even more blatant after the Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. Many Muslims and their left-wing allies celebrated what was the largest mass slaughter of Jews since the Holocaust because they hated Israel. Echoing the language of toxic leftist ideas about race, falsely branded Jews as “white” oppressors and the Jewish state as a nation that had no right to exist.
It is no exaggeration to say that this fraudulent and hateful stand is at the core of Mamdani’s political identity. When he spreads blood libels about Jews committing “genocide”—as he did just last week in the final mayoral candidate debate— while opposing the right of the Jewish people to their own state in their historic homeland and won’t condemn calls for genocide and terrorism against Jews, he’s engaging in behavior that is intrinsically antisemitic. But instead of owning up to his prejudice and that of those who share his views, he bemoans the way Muslims are treated and says that anyone who notices his antisemitism is an Islamophobe.
This is enormously popular among Muslims and also appeals to the left-wing intersectional base of the Democratic Party—and its journalist cheerleaders—who believe the war that Islamists are waging against the West is a function of a racial conflict in which victimized people of color are “resisting” white oppressors. In this way, Islamist terrorism is justified, while Jewish and American victims are erased.
No one should be targeted for his or her religious faith or ethnic identity. And the only people who should be blamed for Islamist terrorism are those who commit and support it. But the idea that American Muslims are in the crosshairs of a vicious backlash based on religious prejudice is still a myth. And those “pro-Palestinian” activists like Mamdani who support a war against the Jews deserve to be identified and held accountable for it.
Gaslighting the Jews
The purpose of promoting the dubious claim that Islamophobia is spreading is clear. It is a perfect example of gaslighting, as it is almost only used when it concerns efforts to identify the hate for Jews that is mainstream in the Arab and Muslim communities. Through this endeavor, the real hatemongers get to play the victims of prejudice, while the victims of their hatred are wrongly accused of being bigots.
The phenomenon is particularly egregious as Jews confront the likelihood of Mamdani—whose public career has revolved around antisemitism—becoming the mayor of New York City. The message they are getting from media outlets like The New York Times that are promoting this false narrative about Mamdani is that to raise the question of Muslim antisemitism is to be an Islamophobe.
If New York is to elect an antisemite as the city’s mayor, let’s be clear about what those seeking to clear the path for such an outcome are doing. Their goal is much like the tone that has characterized coverage of the post-Oct. 7 war against Hamas, in which terrorist propaganda and lies are treated as truth, and the truth about the genocidal goals of Israel’s opponents is sent down the Orwellian “memory hole.”
Image: A poster in support of Zohran Mamdani’s run for mayor of New York City, Manhattan, July 22, 2025. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of JNS (Jewish News Syndicate). Follow him: @jonathans_tobin.
Israel vetoed the inclusion of Turkish soldiers, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates declined to participate.
Ariel Kahana
(Israel Hayom via JNS)
Troops from Azerbaijan and Indonesia are expected to form the core of the International Stabilization Force (ISF) to be deployed in Gaza.
This has emerged from recent discussions between U.S. Vice President JD Vance, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and their respective teams. The force is anticipated to consist of tens of thousands of soldiers.
Indonesia has a long history of contributing troops to international policing missions under the United Nations, including to the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL). Israel has maintained close and longstanding relations with Azerbaijan across various fields, including security cooperation.
The move to deploy troops from these two Muslim-majority countries comes after Israel blocked Turkey’s participation in the Gaza force. Israel Hayom has learned that the US accepted Israel’s position, and Turkish forces will not take part in military operations in Gaza.
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates declined to participate in the mission. Additionally, President Donald Trump has made clear that U.S. troops will not enter Gaza. The idea of deploying Qatari soldiers to demilitarize Gaza was never considered, leaving Azerbaijan and Indonesia as the only viable options.
The process of coordinating the deployment of troops from Indonesia and Azerbaijan is underway but still in its early stages. One obstacle is Indonesia’s insistence that any international force must be authorized by a U.N. Security Council resolution.
Talks toward securing such a resolution have begun. However, Israel remains wary of Security Council resolutions, citing bitter experience and the inability to enforce decisions.
At the same time, France is pushing to include the establishment of a Palestinian state in the proposed resolution, a step to which Israel is firmly opposed. Intense negotiations are ongoing among the involved parties in an effort to reach a mutually acceptable formulation.
There is skepticism in Israel about whether such a resolution could pass, and whether an international force—if formed—would be capable of carrying out its mandate. For now, the political directive to the defense establishment is to give the U.S.-backed plan a chance. However, many believe that at some stage, Israeli military action will be necessary to achieve these goals.
Another unresolved issue under discussion is whether the IDF would retain operational freedom to act against Hamas threats in Gaza, similar to how it currently operates against Hezbollah in Southern Lebanon.
Originally published by Israel Hayom.
Image: Azerbaijani soldiers circle around U.S. Maj. Gen. Richard A. Huck, the commander of the 2nd Marine Division, during his visit to Camp Hadithah Dam, Al Anbar, Iraq, Jan. 2, 2006. Photo by Cpl. Adam C. Schnell/U.S. Marine Corps via Wikimedia Commons.
The point of the latest “New York Times” report was to spread a rumor that Trump and Netanyahu are on a collision course.
Ruthie Blum
(JNS)
The New York Times deserves an award for treating wishful thinking as news—and getting away with it.
The paper’s latest such feat was an article on Tuesday titled: “White House Works to Preserve Gaza Deal Amid Concerns About Netanyahu,” with the subhead, “The Trump administration strategy is to try to keep Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel from resuming an all-out assault against Hamas, U.S. officials said.”
According to the story, which ran a few hours before Vice President JD Vance landed in Israel, “Several Trump officials, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations, said there is concern within the administration that Mr. Netanyahu may vacate the deal.”
Referring to the presence of Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, a senior advisor during the first Trump administration, and U.S. special envoy to the Mideast Steve Witkoff, who had arrived in Jerusalem on Monday, the piece went on, “The strategy now, the officials say, is for Mr. Vance, Mr. Witkoff and Mr. Kushner to try to keep Mr. Netanyahu from resuming an all-out assault against Hamas.”
Really?
Given the statements from the aforementioned figures who have no problem revealing their identities, it’s no wonder that the sources cited by the Times—if they exist at all or are lowly bureaucrats without access to information of any value—wished to keep their names out of print.
Indeed, Trump has announced repeatedly, through every medium at his disposal, that if Hamas doesn’t disarm, the terrorist organization will face violent consequences. He even used the word “eradicate.”
Furthermore, in a post on Truth Social on Tuesday afternoon, he declared, “Numerous of our NOW GREAT ALLIES in the Middle East, and areas surrounding the Middle East, have explicitly and strongly, with great enthusiasm, informed me that they would welcome the opportunity, at my request, to go into GAZA with a heavy force and ‘straighten out Hamas’ if Hamas continues to act badly, in violation of their agreement with us. The love and spirit for the Middle East has not been seen like this in a thousand years! It is a beautiful thing to behold! I told these countries, and Israel, ‘NOT YET!’ There is still hope that Hamas will do what is right. If they do not, an end to Hamas will be FAST, FURIOUS, & BRUTAL!”
Less than two hours later, Vance, Witkoff and Kushner gave a joint press conference at the U.S. Army’s Civilian Military Coordination Center (CMSS) in Kiryat Gat in southern Israel. During the briefing, followed by questions from reporters, each presenter expressed optimism that the ceasefire/hostage-release/Gaza reconstruction plan will hold, albeit with ups and downs. And all three were upbeat about the Netanyahu-led government’s cooperation in implementing the plan.
But the Times doesn’t care and won’t retract its words since the point of the report wasn’t to present facts gleaned from reliable spokespeople. Rather, it was to highlight the ongoing false narrative about a simmering rift between Jerusalem and Washington—or more specifically, to spread a rumor that Netanyahu and Trump are on a collision course.
Naturally, Netanyahu’s naysayers at home and abroad are positively giddy at this prospect. That they keep facing disappointment on this score is not merely amusing; it helps explain the political implosion of the Israeli left.
Now, Trump and Netanyahu may well be headed for a dispute over the role of Qatar and Turkey in the rehabilitation and post-war governance of Gaza. So far, however, the U.S.-Israel relationship is as strong as ever. Ditto for the mutual respect between the two leaders who drive their detractors crazy.
Image: U.S. Vice President JD Vance delivers a statement to the media alongside U.S. Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, Kiryat Gat, Israel, Oct. 21, 2025. Photo by Chaim Goldberg/Flash90.
Protesters disrupt Israeli orchestra’s performance in Paris
