Archive | September 2025

Spain’s PM Sánchez Faces Backlash for Fueling Anti-Israel Hostility Amid Surge in Antisemitic Incidents


Spain’s PM Sánchez Faces Backlash for Fueling Anti-Israel Hostility Amid Surge in Antisemitic Incidents

Ailin Vilches Arguello


Cycling – Vuelta a Espana – Stage 21 – Alalpardo to Madrid – Madrid, Spain – Sept. 14, 2025: Barriers are smashed by anti-Israel protesters during Stage 21. Photo: REUTERS/Ana Beltran

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez is facing backlash from his country’s political leaders and Jewish community, who accuse him of fueling antisemitic hostility after incidents at the Vuelta a España disrupted the prestigious cycling race.

Amid a sharp rise in anti-Jewish hate crimes and anti-Israel sentiment, Lorenzo Rodríguez, mayor of Castrillo Mota de Judíos in northern Spain, accused the country’s leader of “fueling a discourse of hatred” against Israel and the Jewish people.

“The government is fostering antisemitism that will prove deeply damaging for Spain,” Rodríguez said in an interview with the local outlet El Español.

“Sánchez’s moves are less about serious foreign policy and more about deflecting attention from his trials and failures in governance,” he continued. “Spain isn’t leading anything — it’s merely whitewashing Hamas and other terrorist groups.”

On Sunday, anti-Israel protests forced the finale of the Vuelta a España cycle race to be abandoned as police tried to quell demonstrations against the participation of an Israeli team.

In his interview, Rodríguez blamed Sánchez for fostering a hostile climate in Spain, saying the country is witnessing “hatred toward an entire people.”

He also criticized the Spanish leader for failing to take a strong stand on other international crises, including those in Russia and Venezuela.

“We all recognize that the Palestinian people are suffering, but the solution cannot be to blame the Jewish people,” Rodríguez said.

“People are afraid. There’s growing concern because our town was recently targeted,” he continued. “We are being singled out and threatened even though we have nothing to do with this war.”

Before the incidents on Sunday that led to the race’s cancellation, Sánchez expressed “admiration for the Spanish people mobilizing for just causes like Palestine” through their protests.

Madrid’s Mayor José Luis Martínez-Almeida strongly condemned Sánchez’s statement, accusing him of encouraging hostility and fueling tensions.

“The prime minister is directly responsible for this violence, as his statements this morning helped instigate the protests,” Martinez-Almeida said after the race was canceled.

“Today is the saddest day since I took office as mayor of this great city,” he continued.

Santiago Abascal, leader of the far-right Vox party, also criticized Sánchez’s remarks, accusing him of stoking division to maintain his hold on power.

“The psychopath has taken his militias to the streets,” Abascal wrote in a post on X. “He doesn’t care about Gaza. He doesn’t care about Spain. He doesn’t care about anything. But he wants violence in the streets to maintain power.”

Shortly after the incidents, the Federation of Jewish Communities of Spain (FCJE) publicly denounced the violence, urging authorities to respond quickly and decisively.

“Violence and intimidation have no place in a democratic society and cannot be excused under the guise of freedom of expression,” FCJE said in a statement.

“These violent demonstrations fuel hatred and contribute to a concerning rise in antisemitism in Spain, which we have been warning about over the past two years,” the statement read. “It is unacceptable that violence is justified on ideological grounds and hostility is directed toward the Jewish community”

Since the start of the war in Gaza, Spain has become one of Israel’s fiercest critics, a stance that has only intensified in recent months, coinciding with a shocking rise in antisemitic incidents targeting the local Jewish community — from violent assaults and vandalism to protests and legal actions.

On Monday, Sánchez called for Israel to be barred from international sports events after pro-Palestinian activists disrupted the finale of the Vuelta cycling race in chaotic scenes in Madrid.

“The sports organizations should ask whether it’s ethical for Israel to continue participating in international competitions. Why was Russia expelled after invading Ukraine, yet Israel is not expelled after the invasion of Gaza?” Sánchez said while speaking to members of his Socialist Party.

“Until the barbarity ends, neither Russia nor Israel should be allowed to participate in any international competition,” the Spanish leader continued.

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar condemned Sánchez’s remarks, labeling him “an antisemite and a liar.”

“Did Israel invade Gaza on Oct. 7th or did the Hamas terror state invade Israel and commit the worst massacre against the Jews since the Holocaust?” the top Israeli diplomat wrote in a post on X.

The Palestinian terrorist group Hamas started the war in Gaza on Oct. 7, 2023, when it led an invasion of southern Israel, murdered 1,200 people, and kidnapped 251 hostages while perpetrating widespread sexual violence against the Israeli people.

Israel responded with an ongoing military campaign aimed at freeing the hostages and dismantling Hamas’s military capabilities and political rule in Gaza.

As part of its anti-Israel campaign, Spain announced on Tuesday that it will boycott next year’s Eurovision Song Contest if Israel participates, citing the country’s military offensive against Hamas in the war-torn enclave.

Last week, Sánchez also unveiled new policies targeting Israel over the war in Gaza, including an arms embargo and a ban on certain Israeli goods.

The Spanish government announced it would bar entry to individuals involved in what it called a “genocide against Palestinians,” block Israel-bound ships and aircraft carrying weapons from Spanish ports and airspace, and enforce an embargo on products from Israeli communities in the West Bank.

In one of its latest attempts to curb Israel’s defensive campaign in Gaza, Spain has canceled a €700 million ($825 million) deal for Israeli-designed rocket launchers, as the government conducts a broader review to systematically phase out Israeli weapons and technology from its armed forces.

Saar has denounced Sánchez’s latest actions, accusing the government in Madrid of antisemitism and of pursuing an escalating anti-Israel campaign aimed at undermining the Jewish state on the international stage.

“The government of Spain is leading a hostile, anti-Israel line, marked by wild, hate-filled rhetoric,” Saar wrote in a post on X, accusing Sánchez’s “corrupt” administration of trying to “divert attention from grave corruption scandals.”

“The obsessive activism of the current Spanish government against Israel stands out in light of its ties with dark, tyrannical regimes — from Iran’s ayatollahs to [Nicolás] Maduro’s government in Venezuela,” the Israeli diplomat continued.


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The problem is the normalization of hate, not cancel culture


The problem is the normalization of hate, not cancel culture

Jonathan S. Tobin


Firing those who dissent is troubling. But progressive hate cheering for Hamas and the murder of Charlie Kirk, along with right-wing conspiracy theories, shouldn’t be platformed.

Karen Attiah, global opinions editor for “The Washington Post” (left) with Alexis Okeowo, staff writer for “The New Yorker,” a New America fellow and author of “A Moonless, Starless Sky: Ordinary Women and Men Fighting Extremism in Africa,” Oct. 11, 2017. Credit: New America via Wikimedia Commons.

For many readers of The Washington Post who care about the normalization of antisemitism, it was a case of good riddance. Karen Attiah was named the newspaper’s first Global Opinions editor in 2016 and has been a columnist since 2021. This week, she claimed that she was fired over what the newspaper said was a series of posts about the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, which the paper said were “unacceptable,” and constituted “gross misconduct” and “endangering the physical safety of colleagues.”

Are her posts about Kirk’s murder reason enough to lose her job?

Corrupted institutions

Her publishers’ excuses and disingenuous “safety” language notwithstanding, the real issue with Attiah or any other similar situation isn’t really about cancel culture.

It’s what it says about the PostThe New York Times and other corporate media institutions that employ many people like her. That they thought placing radical hate-mongers like Attiah in charge of influential platforms was a good idea in the first place is the problem.

We should be extremely wary of engaging in a culture war in which the goal is to silence, shame and even hound out of the public square people with whom we disagree. The question we should be asking in the wake of this latest example of political violence is not about how best to punish those who use their social-media accounts to say terrible things. It’s why we have allowed institutions that should be the bulwark of democracy, like journalism, to be so corrupted as to normalize the sort of public discourse from people like Attiah, whose goal is to tear down the foundations of the American republic and Western civilization.

Attiah has every right to say what she likes. And the same goes for anyone else who unfairly and insensitively defamed Kirk after his death. The same applies to those extremists on the far right who sought to exploit the assassination to promote their own brand of conspiracy theories, whether it was the libelous claim that Israel was responsible or other antisemitic insinuations about the crime.

No one should interfere with the ability of those who behave in this fashion to post on social media (so long as they are not directly advocating violence), stand on street corners or march in the streets while spouting their lies, whether about Kirk, other conservatives, or Israel and the Jews. Still, that doesn’t entitle them to a job at the top newspapers in the country, a tenured professorship at an Ivy League university or a position at a private company whose owners want no part of such madness. And it ought not to grant immunity from criticism or legal action when they violate the law or help fund radical groups like Antifa or Students for Justice in Palestine, both of which promote violence and hate.

What we want is not a nation that chills speech. We crave a culture of political discourse that doesn’t normalize hate and toxic extremist ideas—that doesn’t exacerbate racial divisions and promote antisemitism. Just as important, we should be actively discouraging a belief that political violence—whether against conservative activists, insurance company executives or politicians disliked by fashionable opinion on the left—is acceptable discourse.

Marginalizing hate-mongers

Our challenge isn’t how best to silence or punish ideologues who ran to TikTok to cheer for Kirk’s murderer or to mock those who mourned him. It’s recreating a political culture where such people are relegated to the fever swamps of the far left and right, where they belong, rather than featuring them in the mainstream media or allowing them to dominate our educational system.

Attiah was one among many being held up for opprobrium, even sometimes losing their jobs for their insensitive reactions to an act of political violence. But for those who have followed her career, her broadsides aimed at Kirk following his death were typical of her brand of journalism. She claimed that she was fired for “speaking out against political violence, racial double standards and America’s apathy toward guns.” The truth is that she is a typical of those self-styled progressives who have no problem with political violence so long as it is directed against people and groups that she thinks have no rights worthy of respect—for example, Israelis and Jews.

The columnist has written explicitly of her belief that the State of Israel had no right to exist. She falsely labels it a European-style colonial project, rather than an expression of Jewish self-determination in their ancient homeland. Even before the Oct. 7 Hamas-led Palestinian attacks on Israeli communities, she was cheerleading for the effort to defend the genocidal terrorists in Gaza from the consequences of their crimes, and delegitimizing Israel and its right of self-defense.

Her work illustrated how toxic left-wing myths like critical race theory, intersectionality and settler-colonialism are a method to normalize antisemitism. Indeed, as an alumnus of one of those institutions that have been a bastion of such terrible ideas—Attiah graduated from Columbia University’s School of International Affairs—there is no better example of the way the academy manufactures and then spreads Jew-hatred.

Many on the political left, like Attiah, thought the aftermath of Kirk’s murder was a license to not only vent their anger at his views, but to post misleading, if not downright false, information about the late activist. They now say that retribution for this is no different from something that the right has long decried: cancel culture.

That’s not a charge that can be dismissed out of hand. And it’s one that is also related to the assertions that President Donald Trump’s efforts to roll back the tide of woke antisemitism at colleges and universities are an infringement on free speech, academic freedom and a form of cancel culture.

Is the backlash against those who mocked Kirk’s death different from the moral panic about race that swept across the United States during the Black Lives Matter summer of 2020? That moment of peak progressive conquest of America’s media and culture led to cancellations of those who were deemed insufficiently sympathetic to BLM or otherwise denounced as “racists.” Most educational institutions, arts organizations, celebrities and even many corporations quavered in the face of this Jacobin-like attempt to purge conservatives or even moderates who wouldn’t bend their knees to BLM lies about race from the public square.

A failure to engage

Left-wingers who were happy to join the cancel culture mobs in 2020 or to cheer on the efforts of pro-Hamas activists to target Jews since Oct. 7 have suddenly discovered that being ostracized in this way isn’t a good thing. They assert that those who disagreed with Kirk—like Attiah and the countless others who have been attacking the victim of an assassination as someone who got what he deserved—are being unfairly punished.

As we saw in 2020, the impulse to persecute those who contradict the conventional wisdom of the moment and to seek to deprive them of their livelihoods is antithetical to how a free republic operates.

The real sickness afflicting American democracy is not primarily the fault of extreme speech that breeds angry arguments, but the unwillingness of so many people to engage with views differing from their own. The bifurcated political culture, in which much of the country reads, listens and watches two entirely different sets of media outlets, has created an almost unbridgeable gap between left and right. That has made many people uncomfortable with opinions or even facts that contradict their assumptions and prejudices. It also encourages them to engage in radical speech that demonizes their political foes.

Thus, it wasn’t enough for many people to state their disagreements with Kirk’s views about Trump, abortion, immigration, gun rights, gender ideology and even Israel (he was a strong and vocal supporter of the Jewish state). They also felt compelled to damn him as a racist, hate-monger, fascist or Nazi, and to double down on the same smears of Trump and his supporters.

That’s bad enough under normal circumstances. But those who did so after the object of their intemperate invective was murdered for exercising his right to free speech are understandably being criticized for what is, at best, insensitive behavior and, at worst, exactly the sort of hate speech that encourages more political violence.

Moving the Overton Window

So, what should our response be to this sort of speech? Should those who do so be held up to public outrage by being “ratioed” with a flood of critical comments on their social-media feeds—the 21st-century-version of the Medieval punishment of being put in the stocks in the public square for passersby to jeer at? Should they lose their livelihoods and be run out of town?

The answer to that question most often depends on whether the offending poster is situated on your side of the political aisle. We tend to be more forgiving of allies who misbehave online and demand the scalps of those whose opinions contradict our own.

Regardless of where you stand on the political spectrum, some basic truths need to be acknowledged. If you’re going to express opinions that are nasty, insensitive or extreme, then you don’t have standing to play the victim if other people who are offended respond in the same way. That doesn’t excuse foul language or threats, which platform providers have every right to moderate.

Yet we need to draw some distinctions here. Espousing opinions on a wide range of political issues, about which those who believe in democracy are compelled to agree to disagree, is not something that should be treated as a reason for shunning.

Supporting political violence, however, is not the same as backing a particular political candidate on the right or the left. Nor should we treat open racism—whether in the form of white nationalism or fashionable left-wing “anti-racism,” or antisemitism in all of its forms—as the same thing as just having a position on the best way to achieve racial harmony or how to bring about peace in the Middle East. What we’ve seen on the left is the growth of what can only be termed “assassination culture,” as some people laud those who murder their political foes or the terrorists of Hamas. Those who are part of this trend shouldn’t complain if their fellow citizens or their employers want nothing to do with them.

The problem is that the Overton window of acceptable discourse was deliberately shifted by progressives so as to treat their own extremist views about race, gender, American history, the Jews and Israel as normal, and to brand those who defended traditional values on religion, liberty and Jewish rights as hateful. Attiah is someone who despises the America to which her African parents immigrated, and who backs genocidal positions that deny Jewish history and rights. A political culture in which someone like her is treated as a respected voice rather than a marginal extremist is sick and in need of reform.

The same applies to someone like Tucker Carlson, who may have been a much-needed tribune of conservative resistance to BLM and the far left in 2020, but has since descended into an antisemitic extremist rabbit hole since being fired from his prominent position at Fox News. Those on the right who may disagree with him but are still treating his views as worthy of platforming—unfortunately, that included Charlie Kirk—are wrong.

What happened at The Washington Post and Fox News was not the cancellation of independent voices. They were necessary corrections by companies that don’t wish to be identified with extremism, and to that end, they cleaned house.

The Post’s billionaire owner, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, may be a hypocrite who shows no sign of having much in the way of principles. And he has belatedly concluded that his money-losing sinkhole of a publication is better off with its editorials and columnists defending free markets and personal liberty, as opposed to partisan progressive extremism. He is trying to align himself with most Americans and actually doing something to defend the democracy that its banner warns will “die in darkness.”

Fox News owner Rupert Murdoch likely also feels himself well rid of Carlson’s particular brand of isolationism and hate for Israel, mixed in with kowtowing to tyrants in Russia and Qatar.

Attiah and Carlson may well prosper on Substack or podcasts on X, though they shouldn’t be silenced or interfered with by the government. Still, they have no place in mainstream media or discourse. Marginalizing them and other radicals aren’t examples of cancel culture to be decried. It’s just common sense. It’s also a sign: We need not despair that we are doomed to helplessly watch the polarization they represent send the American republic tumbling into a civil war between the left and the right.


Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of the Jewish News Syndicate, a senior contributor for The Federalist, a columnist for Newsweek and a contributor to many other publications. He covers the American political scene, foreign policy, the U.S.-Israel relationship, Middle East diplomacy, the Jewish world and the arts. He hosts the JNS “Think Twice” podcast, both the weekly video program and the “Jonathan Tobin Daily” program, which are available on all major audio platforms and YouTube. Previously, he was executive editor, then senior online editor and chief political blogger, for Commentary magazine. Before that, he was editor-in-chief of The Jewish Exponent in Philadelphia and editor of the Connecticut Jewish Ledger. He has won more than 60 awards for commentary, art criticism and other writing. He appears regularly on television, commenting on politics and foreign policy. Born in New York City, he studied history at Columbia University.


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Naziści też udawali ofiary

Joseph Goebbels


Naziści też udawali ofiary

Anonim


Podobnie jak dzisiejsza Gaza, w latach 30. i 40. XX wieku nazistowskie Niemcy napadały na swoich sąsiadów z zamiarem ich podboju i zawłaszczenia ich ziem. Podobnie jak Hamas, wierzyli, że ziemie ich sąsiadów należą im z urodzenia, a Niemcy są ofiarą żydowskich machinacji i że to Niemcy są uciskani przez żydowskich ciemiężycieli. Tak jak dzisiaj Izrael, sąsiedzi nazistowskich Niemiec nie chcieli zostać podbici – i dlatego walczyli z niemiecką inwazją. I tak jak dzisiaj Gaza, nazistowskie Niemcy twierdziły potem, że są ofiarą ludobójstwa ze strony krajów, które same wcześniej zaatakowały, i skarżyły się na ataki wymierzone w kobiety i dzieci. Goebbels, niesławny propagandzista Hitlera, wygłaszał opowieści niemal identyczne z tymi, które dziś pojawiają się w obronie Hamasu i Gazy.

Goebbels, apel o zemstę (5 czerwca 1943):

„Prowadzą wojnę przeciwko morale naszego narodu; zabijają cywilów, starców, kobiety i dzieci, i ledwo już próbują przykrywać swój haniebny, krwawy terror płaszczem humanitaryzmu… My, dzisiejsi Niemcy, nie jesteśmy ludźmi, którzy szukają litości u wroga nastawionego na nasze unicestwienie. Każdy angielski komentarz, który dziś uznaje bombardowanie niemieckich kobiet, starców i dzieci za całkowicie humanitarną, a nawet chrześcijańską metodę ujarzmienia Niemiec, stanie się w przyszłości dogodnym argumentem w naszej odpowiedzi na te podłości.”


Goebbels, Bitwa o Berlin
:

„Celem anglo-amerykańskiego kierownictwa wojennego jest niewątpliwie sproletaryzowanie dużej części narodu niemieckiego poprzez terror powietrzny, aby uczynić nas podatnymi na ich kłamliwą i obłudną propagandę. To niemal krwawa ironia, że zrzucając niewyobrażalne ilości bomb burzących i zapalających na gęsto zaludnione dzielnice naszych wielkich miast, wróg jednocześnie zrzuca grube stosy obłudnych ulotek. Wydaje się, że naprawdę wierzą, iż nasi mężczyźni i kobiety, którzy stracili wszystko w wyniku tego tchórzliwego i całkowicie nieżołnierskiego sposobu prowadzenia wojny, usiądą w blasku swoich płonących domów, być może obok zwłok swoich niewinnych dzieci, i przeczytają te bezwartościowe ulotki, dając się pouczać przez skorumpowaną brytyjską plutokrację… Gdy niebo nad Berlinem staje się krwiste w nocach ciężkich nalotów terrorystycznych, wszyscy z bólem i goryczą myślimy o ogromie cierpienia i żalu, który znów spada na tysiące naszych współobywateli.”


Goebbels, Sylwester 1943
:

„Wróg popełnił wszelkie możliwe zbrodnie przeciwko ludzkości, kulturze i cywilizacji. Są duchowo tak zepsuci, że chwalą się tym publicznie. Rabują uczciwe i porządne narody, by napełnić kieszenie swoich baronów. Skazują miliony na głód i setki tysięcy na śmierć z głodu, by uczynić ich politycznie biernymi. Mordują ogromne liczby kobiet i dzieci, mając nadzieję, że ich niewyobrażalne barbarzyństwo osłabi wolę i zniszczy morale mężów i ojców. Bombardują i palą ponad dwa tysiące lat europejskiego dziedzictwa kulturowego.”


Goebbels, Młodzież i wojna
:

„Skoro nasz wróg prowadzi wojnę nawet przeciwko dzieciom, to dzieci także muszą odegrać swoją rolę. Podczas Wielkiej Wojny angielska blokada była szczególnie wymierzona w niemieckie kobiety i dzieci, i miała kluczowy wpływ na to, że w decydującym momencie zabrakło nam sił, by stawić czoła angielskiej i francuskiej groźbie.”


Goebbels – na pierwszej linii
:

„Oskarżam wroga o brutalny terror powietrzny, prowadzony jedynie po to, by torturować bezbronną ludność cywilną, by zadać jej cierpienie, grozę, ból i śmierć – wszystko po to, by zmusić ją do zdrady swojego narodu. Taka próba nigdy się nie powiedzie. Te tchórzliwe czyny przyniosą jedynie wieczną hańbę narodom, których rządy prowadzą tak podłą i zdradziecką wojnę przeciwko kobietom, starcom i dzieciom… Wróg wie, że wyrządza jedynie ograniczone szkody naszym zakładom zbrojeniowym i przemysłowi wojennemu. To nie jego cel. Jego celem jest torturowanie bezbronnych cywilów, przynoszenie śmierci do ich domów i próba złamania niemieckiego morale. To jego ostatnia próba ratowania beznadziejnej strategii wojennej. Niezliczone zamordowane kobiety, starcy i dzieci świadczą przeciwko anglo-amerykańskim plutokratom. Przyłączają się do mnie w oskarżeniu strategii wojskowej, która drwi ze wszelkich standardów ludzkiej przyzwoitości. Niezliczone zniszczone szkoły, szpitale, kościoły i zabytki kultury podnoszą ręce spośród ruin, by potępić taką strategię wojenną.”

„Anglo-amerykańskie dowództwo wojskowe różni się tylko tym, że nie tylko nie robi żadnych rozróżnień między mężczyznami, kobietami a dziećmi, ale nawet nie chce tego robić.”


Goebbels – Morale jako decydujący czynnik w wojnie
:

„Te działania są zgodne z naturą anglo-amerykańskich plutokratów. Podczas pierwszej wojny światowej próbowali zdemoralizować naród niemiecki poprzez bezwzględną kampanię głodową wymierzoną w kobiety i dzieci. Dziś próbują tego samego poprzez terror powietrzny. Nie zaprzeczam, że wrogie naloty kosztowały nas wiele majątku i krwi i powodują wszelkiego rodzaju trudności. Wróg wie o tym równie dobrze jak my, bo sam przez coś podobnego przeszedł latem i jesienią 1940 roku – choć wtedy niemiecka Luftwaffe atakowała wyłącznie cele militarne i przemysłowe – za to dzisiejsze ataki wroga są skierowane niemal wyłącznie przeciwko ludności cywilnej, a więc naszemu morale.”

Podobnie jak Gaza, naziści próbowali przepisać historię, by przedstawić się jako ofiary ataku, a nie agresorów – i twierdzili, że po prostu się bronią.


Hitler: Przemówienie w marcu 1941
:

„Gdy Anglia i Francja wypowiedziały tę wojnę, Anglia natychmiast rozpoczęła walkę przeciwko życiu cywilnemu. Do blokady z czasów Wielkiej Wojny – tej wojny przeciwko kobietom i dzieciom – dodała tym razem wojnę powietrzną i ognistą przeciwko spokojnym wioskom i miastom.”


Goebbels, „Opór za wszelką cenę”:

„Jeśli wróg zwycięży, Niemcy staną się cmentarzem. Nasz naród umrze z głodu i zginie, poza milionami deportowanych na Syberię jako niewolnicza siła robocza. W takiej sytuacji każdy środek jest uzasadniony.”


Goebbels – Żydzi są winni!

„Jeśli przegramy tę wojnę, ci niewinnie wyglądający Żydzi zamienią się w rozwścieczone wilki. Zaakceptują to jako przyzwolenie na zemstę – na naszych kobietach i dzieciach.”

Goebbels twierdził, że nazistowskie Niemcy to „szlachetny i porządny naród, który nie pragnie niczego więcej niż uczciwego i wolnego życia”. Nie do odróżnienia od propagandystów z Gazy, którzy twierdzą, że celem Hamasu jest „wolność”.

Tak – również powoływali się na prawo międzynarodowe i żądali, by ich chroniono.


Goebbels, „Opór za wszelką cenę”:

„Tam gdzie prawo międzynarodowe dopuszcza torturowanie i gwałcenie dziesiątki tysięcy niemieckich kobiet torturowanych i gwałconych na Wschodzie, dziesiątki tysięcy niemieckich dzieci zamordowanych w tchórzliwy i okrutny sposób, ofiary barbarzyńskiego terroru bombowego wroga, wszystkie normalne zasady prowadzenia wojny już dawno zostały przez wroga odrzucone.”


Goebbels, Sylwester 1943:

„Pozwalają milionom głodować, setki tysięcy skazują na śmierć głodową, by uczynić ich politycznie biernymi. Mordują ogromne liczby kobiet i dzieci, mając nadzieję, że ich niewyobrażalne barbarzyństwo osłabi wolę i zniszczy zaufanie mężów i ojców. Bombardują i palą ponad dwa tysiące lat europejskiego dziedzictwa kulturowego. Jakich jeszcze zbrodni musieliby się dopuścić, by zasłużyć na obrzydzenie, nienawiść i głęboki pogardę całego świata? Kto ma prawo mówić o zbrodniach wojennych i sprawiedliwości historycznej – wróg, czy my?”

Ta retoryka nie różni się niczym od tej, jaką stosują zwolennicy Gazy. Korzystają z dokładnie tego samego podręcznika propagandy – przesuwają punkt ciężkości debaty z wojny sprawiedliwej przeciwko agresorowi, winnemu potwornych zbrodni przeciwko ludzkości, na rzekome masowe mordowanie niewinnych kobiet i dzieci bez powodu. Wszystkie działania, które doprowadziły do obecnej sytuacji, zostają całkowicie zapomniane. Jedyne, co zaskakuje, to jak niewiele ta retoryka się zmieniła – można by pomyśleć, że po 70 latach zdążyliby zaktualizować przekaz. Termin „ludobójstwo” nie istniał aż do 1944 roku – został stworzony właśnie po to, by opisać zbrodnie tych nazistów, którzy biadolili nad losem swojego narodu.

Wyobraźmy sobie, jak skuteczna mogłaby być ta propaganda, gdyby naziści mieli dostęp do smartfonów i internetu – choć i tak potrafili fabrykować materiały filmwe przy pomocy dostępnej im technologii.

Troska o cywilów w Gazie – jeśli jest szczera – jest oczywiście zrozumiała, ale nie ulega wątpliwości, że dla wielu zwolenników Hamasu cierpienie jej mieszkańców Gazy to tylko narzędzie do wybielania Hamasu i zmiany narracji, dokładnie tak jak próbował to robić Goebbels. Jemu się to nie udało – i ja również mam nadzieję, że im się też nie uda.


Link do oryginału: https://elderofziyon.blogspot.com/2025/09/the-nazis-played-victim-too-guest-post.html

Elder of Ziyon, 14 września 2025


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Katz: ‘Gaza is burning’ as IDF expands operation in Gaza City


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Katz: ‘Gaza is burning’ as IDF expands operation in Gaza City

update desk 


“The IDF strikes with an iron fist at the terror infrastructure,” said the Israeli defense minister.

Smoke rises from the Hamas-controlled Al-Ghafri Tower in Gaza City after it was hit by an Israeli airstrike, Sept. 15, 2025. Photo by Omar Mohammed/Flash90.

Defense Minister Israel Katz said on Tuesday that “Gaza is burning” as the Israel Defense Forces confirmed that it had started broader operations to destroy Hamas terror infrastructure in Gaza City.

Jerusalem “will not relent and we will not turn back until the mission is complete,” the defense minister declared.

“Gaza is burning,” Katz said. “The IDF strikes with an iron fist at the terror infrastructure, and IDF soldiers fight with courage to create the conditions for the release of the hostages and the defeat of Hamas.”

Col. Avichay Adraee, the head of the Arab media division of the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit, subsequently confirmed on X that the army “began destroying Hamas’s infrastructure in Gaza City.”

“Gaza City is considered a dangerous combat zone, and staying in the area puts you at risk,” Adraee added, urging Palestinians to join “the more than 40% of the city’s residents” who have already evacuated.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, speaking as he departed Israel for Doha on Tuesday morning, also suggested that the IDF offensive to capture Gaza City had already started.

“The Israelis have begun to take operations there,” Rubio stated. “So we think we have a very short window of time in which a deal can happen.

“We don’t have months anymore, and we probably have days and maybe a few weeks to go,” Washington’s top diplomat continued.

“Our preference, our No. 1 choice, is that this ends through a negotiated settlement,” he added. “At some point, this has to end. At some point, Hamas has to be defanged, and we hope it can happen through a negotiation. But I think time, unfortunately, is running out.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu weighed in later on Tuesday, saying the military had launched an ” intense operation” in Gaza.

Israel “is at a critical stage in this struggle and there are consequences,” Netanyahu said, according to a statement from his spokesman.

On Monday night, the IDF said it had eliminated 21 senior operatives of the Iranian-controlled Palestinian Islamic Jihad terror organization, which participated in the Oct. 7, 2023 massacre alongside Hamas.

The operation—led by the IDF’s Southern Command in coordination with its Military Intelligence Directorate, the Israeli Air Force and the Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet)—targeted commanders, weapons experts and field operatives.

Among those killed were key terrorists responsible for arms production, artillery, sniper and sector command positions, including Mohammad Radwan Ramadan Mushtaha, the head of military armament in Gaza’s north, and Amir al-Shaam Faiz Wadi, commander of the terror group’s sniper array in the Khan Younis Brigade, the IDF stated on Monday.

Other high-ranking commanders killed include Jamal Mahmoud Salem Ma’amar, who oversaw artillery operations in Rafah, as well as Fazel Zakariya Ahmad Abu al-Ata, a Gaza Brigade sector commander.

The IDF also eliminated five operatives with specialized knowledge of arms production, including Mansour Mahmoud Mohammad Salah and Ahmad Ziyad Qasem Qadi, as well as several field operatives who had executed direct attacks against Israeli forces. Ihab Bassam Yousef Abu al-Kheir, head of PIJ’s sniper squads, was among those killed.

“The IDF and the ISA will continue to act decisively against all terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip,” the IDF said.

According to Israel’s Channel 12 News, the military hit dozens of targets in Gaza City on Monday night, in a wave of aerial attacks described as “intense and significant.”

Residents in central Israel reported hearing the echoes of the intense explosions.

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar stressed last week that Jerusalem was still seeking to end the war based on U.S. President Donald Trump’s latest truce proposal and according to the principles set by Israel’s Cabinet.

Netanyahu on Aug. 14 outlined the Cabinet’s objectives as the disarmament of Hamas, the return of all 48 remaining hostages, the demilitarization of the Gaza Strip, Israeli security control and establishing an alternative civilian administration in the enclave.

Netanyahu on Monday evening expressed appreciation for the Trump administration’s “unflinching support for Israel’s battle against Hamas and the release of all our hostages.”

The prime minister was responding to Trump stating that he just read a news report that “Hamas has moved the hostages above ground to use them as human shields against Israel’s ground offensive” in Gaza City.

“I hope the leaders of Hamas know what they’re getting into if they do such a thing,” he had written on his Truth Social platform. “This is a human atrocity, the likes of which few people have ever seen before. Don’t let this happen or all bets are off. Release all hostages now.”

Forty-eight hostages remain in terror captivity in the Strip, 711 days after the Hamas-led Oct. 7 cross-border attack. According to Israeli estimates, up to 20 are believed to be alive.


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Abraham Accords Tested on 5th Anniversary as Arab Leaders Gather to Condemn Israel’s Strike on Hamas in Qatar


Abraham Accords Tested on 5th Anniversary as Arab Leaders Gather to Condemn Israel’s Strike on Hamas in Qatar

Debbie Weiss



Qatar’s Prime Minister and Minister for Foreign Affairs Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al-Thani, attends the preparatory ministerial meeting for emergency Arab-Islamic summit in Doha, Qatar, Sept. 14, 2025. Photo: Qatar Ministry of Foreign Affairs/Handout via REUTERS

The fifth anniversary of the Abraham Accords was overshadowed on Monday as top Arab diplomats gathered in Doha for an emergency summit after Israel’s strike on Hamas leaders in Qatar last week.

Five years on, experts say that, despite war and political shocks, the US-brokered deals that normalized relations between Israel and several Araba countries have endured, though not without setbacks, and many argue that strengthening them is the most effective way to defeating the hatred and terrorism that led to Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023, massacre across southern Israel.

Trade between Abraham Accord countries in 2025 increased from the year before, though it remained well below the levels seen before the Hamas-led attack. The UAE, Israel’s most significant new trading partner, has dominated the commerce generated by the accords, signed on the lawn of the White House on Sept. 15, 2020.

Hundreds of Israeli companies now operate in the UAE, with Emirati investors channeling capital into Israeli tech startups and sovereign funds taking stakes in gas and technology ventures, though a planned $2 billion acquisition was shelved after the outbreak of the Gaza war. Recent figures show trade between Israel and the UAE reached $293 million in July 2025, a 4 percent rise from the year before, while trade with Morocco grew 32 percent in the same month to $8.7 million, according to data published by the Washington DC-based Heritage Foundation. Over the first seven months of 2025, Israel–Morocco trade totaled $71 million, a 7 percent increase from the same period in 2024, the report said.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, then-US President Donald Trump, and United Arab Emirates (UAE) Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed display their copies of signed agreements as they participate in the signing ceremony of the Abraham Accords, normalizing relations between Israel and some of its Middle East neighbors, in a strategic realignment of Middle Eastern countries against Iran, on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, US, Sept. 15, 2020. Photo: REUTERS/Tom Brenner

Asher Fredman, a visiting fellow at the Heritage Foundation who also served as Israel director of the Abraham Accords Peace Institute — a nonprofit founded by former White House adviser and US President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner to promote and expand the accords — said the agreements had “proven their resilience.”

He noted that the war had exposed how Hamas, with its ties to the Muslim Brotherhood, continues to threaten the region’s stability.

“Many regional leaders appreciate Israel’s efforts to remove Hamas, a terrorist group affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood, from power, even if they are critical of Israel’s tactics,” he told The Algemeiner.

But he went on to say that the war had resulted in diminishing many aspects of the “warm peace and people-to-people cooperation that made the accords so unique” and that restarting momentum will require “regional projects with tangible benefits,” with strong US backing, and ensuring Hamas can no longer undermine progress toward peace.

“Lasting regional integration will depend on removing Hamas as the dominant military and governing power in Gaza,” he said.

Defense trade has also expanded, with Abraham Accords countries accounting for 12 percent of Israel’s $15 billion in arms exports last year, and major defense projects, including the UAE’s co-production of Israeli drones, continuing in 2025 – though many are now under wraps.

Middle East experts Elie Podeh and Yoel Guzansky, from the Hebrew University and Tel Aviv University, respectively, noted in The Jerusalem Post that Washington’s 2021 decision to place Israel within US Central Command signaled Arab states’ readiness to work with Israel openly, not just behind closed doors. Israel had already taken part in joint drills with regional neighbors, but its integration into CENTCOM created what they described as a qualitative shift in collaboration — a shift that was evident during Iranian attacks on Israel in April and October 2024 and again in June 2025.

But the UAE’s decision to bar Israeli defense firms from a major global defense and aerospace expo in Dubai later this year – reportedly in response to Israel’s strike in Doha – highlighted the political strains now testing the accords.

Podeh and Guzansky agreed with Fredman that people-to-people ties have suffered during the war but emphasized the particular impact on younger Arabs. “The gap between elite positions and Arab public opinion – especially among younger generations – continues to widen across all countries, placing pressure on ruling elites to respond,” they said.

Earlier this month, the UAE also issued a rare public rebuke to Israel over reports of renewed annexation ambitions in the West Bank. A senior Emirati official, Lana Nusseibeh, warned that any Israeli move to apply sovereignty would constitute a “red line” for Abu Dhabi that “would severely undermine the vision and spirit of the Abraham Accords” – marking the Gulf country’s toughest criticism of Israel since the war began.

On Friday, the UAE said it had summoned Israel’s deputy ambassador over the strike on Hamas leaders in Qatar and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s subsequent “hostile and unacceptable” remarks, in another sign of strain between the two countries with close economic and defense ties. The Emirati foreign ministry said it told David Ohad Horsandi that “the continuation of such hostile and provocative rhetoric … solidifies a situation that is unacceptable and cannot be overlooked.”

Speaking from the emergency summit three days later, Egypt’s President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi addressed Israel, saying that its decision to strike in Doha harms “the future of peace, threatens your security and the security of the peoples in the region, and adds obstacles to chances for any new peace agreements and even aborts existing ones.”
A draft resolution from the Arab-Islamic summit in Doha, a day before Monday’s emergency summit, warned that Israel’s “brutal” strike in Qatar and other actions “threaten prospects of peace and coexistence in the region, and threaten everything that has been achieved on the path of normalizing ties with Israel, including current agreements and future ones.”

The text accused Israel of “genocide, ethnic cleansing, starvation, siege, and colonizing activities and expansion policies,” and said such conduct jeopardized efforts to expand normalization with Arab nations.

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman with Emir Of Qatar Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani and GCC representatives pose for a group photo ahead of an emergency Arab-Islamic leaders’ summit convened to discuss the Sept. 9 Israeli attack on Hamas on Qatari territory, in Doha, Qatar, Sept. 15, 2025. Photo: Saudi Press Agency/Handout via REUTERS

Podeh and Guzansky noted that Saudi Arabia, once seen as the most likely next signatory to the Abraham Accords, is “treading very carefully” since the outbreak of the Gaza war. As the guardian of Islam’s holiest sites and a leading voice in the Sunni world, Riyadh is reluctant to proceed without “significant progress on the Palestinian issue” or firm American commitments on security and civilian nuclear cooperation.

Fleur Hassan-Nahoum, Israel’s special envoy for trade and innovation and co-founder of the UAE-Israel Business Council, struck a more positive note, saying that the Abraham Accords have been “game changing for Israel and the Middle East,” and stressing that even after an extensive regional war they have “stood strong.” She noted that the signatory states have consistently condemned Hamas, blocked boycott efforts against Israel at the Arab League, and made no overtures toward unilateral recognition of a Palestinian state, unlike Canada, the UK, France and Australia.

“Even with the current tensions, it is the Abraham Accords countries who are clearly calling for the end of Hamas, as European countries remain silent,” Hassan-Nahoum told The Algemeiner.

“I am extremely optimistic about the long-term viability and even expansion of the Abraham Accords in the next ten years,” she concluded.


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