Friday, May 15, 2026

The Laughing Monsters

By Seth Mandel

Thursday, May 14, 2026

 

Hamas’s crimes were disturbing not only because of the crimes themselves but because of the manner in which they were carried out. When their defenders in the West refuse to watch video evidence from October 7, they are doing so in part because while they may be able to handle the gruesome details, they cannot handle hearing and seeing the laughter of the murderers.

 

The coddled “anti-colonialists” on university campuses have proved willing and able to defend any act, no matter how depraved, so long as it is for the cause. But even they cannot muster a defense of a rapist’s glee or a torturer’s joy.

 

That is the first of two under-discussed aspects of the report released this week on Gazans’ sexual violence. The other is the deeply sick obsession of the terrorists and “civilians” with the sex organs of Israeli women and men and with disfiguring, even after death, the faces of young women.

 

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What came forth from Gaza that day was a nightmare with few parallels in modern human history.

 

The report relies on video and photographic evidence plus witness accounts that were compared with other witness accounts of the same incidents, as well as other forms of corroboration. As an aside, it is an astonishing feeling to go from a New York Times evidence-free rumor-mill account of fantastical Israeli atrocities to such a careful, meticulous document as the report on Hamas’s crimes. To read the corroboration is to realize how deeply our own media has failed us and continues to do so on a daily basis.

 

And so we recoil as we read a document full of lines like “The torture continued for 45 minutes, while her captors laughed”; “The beating continued while they stood above me, and laughed”; “perpetrators laughing as the women screamed”; “One of them took out a knife and started laughing”; “they were laughing and the last one shot her in the head”; etc.

 

We read that “videos documented armed groups and Palestinian civilians appearing joyful and euphoric, as well as crowds in Gaza cheering or beating victims.” Regarding one of the more famous victims, videos show her “lying upside down on the back of the truck, half undressed, twisted, with her head hanging down, and they are pushing her down. We see the pickup driving, driving, and entering Gaza, into some city there, with lots of people around them, everyone celebrating and happy that they captured an innocent girl on a pickup truck.”

 

As for what had made these many Palestinian perpetrators and spectators so happy—well, it’s a dark document. But the patterns are worth pointing out.

 

Some of the images studied by medical experts and catalogued with the investigating committee:

 

“The body of a young man lying on a sidewalk outside a concrete public shelter on Route 232, with severe burn injuries concentrated in the groin area.”

 

“A young woman with her insides protruding out of the groin area.”

 

“The body of a female victim with what appears to be a gunshot wound to the groin area.”

 

“The bottom half of a female body with bleeding in the groin area.”

 

The report is full of such accounts. The above are from victims who were found at the site of the Nova music festival. The scenes were similar at kibbutzim. One typical example: “On October 13th, first responders discovered two abused bodies in a destroyed home, one of them naked. The rescue efforts are documented in several videos and images that are archived with the Civil Commission. One of the first bodies found was that of a female victim. The body appears to be completely naked. Her ankle had been tied with a thick black chord. According to witnesses who provided testimony to the Civil Commission, the body had several nails driven into her lower abdomen and groin area, as well as a metal or plastic object embedded in the groin area.”

 

Pages and pages and pages of this stuff. Children shot in the face, victims decapitated and dismembered with hoes and shovels.

 

One video shows a terrorist yelling “God is great” while standing over the dead body of a woman who is naked from the waste down.

 

In one disturbing crime scene, a man was found “with his genitals cut off, and next to him, the body of a woman, holding his cut-off genitals, in what appeared to be a staged display to humiliate the victims.”

 

Again, this report is nearly 300 pages long, and it is full of such documented atrocities.

 

Jew-hatred strips the humanity from whatever it touches. There is nothing else like it.

Israel Knows a Defamation Case Won’t Fly. That’s Not the Play

By Mark Goldfeder

Friday, May 15, 2026

 

When news broke that Israel was considering legal action against the New York Times over Nicholas Kristof’s column, the one that included an allegation that Israeli personnel used a dog to rape a Palestinian detainee, critics were quick to pounce. Sovereigns can’t sue for defamation, they said. The claim is dead on arrival. Israel doesn’t have standing. Move on.

 

They are right that a standard defamation suit would fail, but they are wrong in thinking that there is nothing here.

 

Israel isn’t stupid. No serious observer believes the Israeli government is going to march into federal court and argue that Nicholas Kristof hurt the country’s feelings. But the critics are knocking down a straw man while missing the actual legal architecture that could work and which, if properly structured, would put the Times in a genuinely uncomfortable position. The play here is not a sovereign defamation claim. It is a narrow Israeli tort theory paired with American discovery.

 

The Kristof column doesn’t make a vague claim about Israeli conduct in Gaza. It publishes a specific, granular, criminal allegation: that certain personnel used a dog to penetrate a bound and blindfolded prisoner, that a handler encouraged the animal in Hebrew, and that others photographed and laughed. It cites reports about specific prisons during specific times, all of which point to specific people. That is not a political opinion, or editorial commentary about Israeli military policy. That is a factual accusation of sexual torture, localized enough to implicate a finite, identifiable group: a unit, a facility, a handler, a dog.

 

Under Israeli civil law, the tort of injurious falsehood, codified in section 58 of Israel’s Civil Wrongs Ordinance, doesn’t require a sovereign plaintiff at all. It requires identifiable professional actors harmed by a false statement concerning their trade, occupation, or professional conduct. The members of a specific canine or detention unit — a handler, a commander — are not Israel in the abstract. They are professionals whose careers, assignments, and livelihoods are directly implicated by the allegation. If even a small, identifiable cohort of personnel can plausibly say “this is necessarily about us,” then the plaintiff problem is solved.

 

Negligent publication runs alongside it. A global newspaper owes some duty of care before printing a claim this specific and this inflammatory. The more serious the allegation, the heavier the verification burden. The Times cannot hide behind the general importance of reporting on detainee abuse. Publishing that Israeli soldiers laughed while a dog raped a prisoner is not reporting on prison conditions. It is a factual claim that either happened or did not. If the Times has the evidence, production will vindicate them. If they do not, that is the story.

 

Which brings us to the real mechanism: 28 U.S.C. § 1782.

 

Once an Israeli proceeding is in reasonable contemplation, an interested person can apply in the Southern District of New York (where the New York Times is headquartered) to compel evidence production from a U.S. entity for use in foreign litigation. A properly framed § 1782 application does not ask the court to adjudicate the case; it simply asks the court to order the Times to produce the factual basis for one published allegation.

 

The subpoena categories write themselves: documents identifying the source and evidentiary basis for the dog allegation; fact-checking notes and editorial review records; communications with cited human rights organizations about this specific claim; internal discussions of reliability or corroboration. The Times will obviously raise reporter’s privilege. That is expected. But the answer here is a measured response: Nobody is asking for every source on every story. The request is for the factual foundation for one allegation the Times has publicly called corroborated and extensively fact-checked and “deeply reported.” Either show the corroboration or explain why you cannot. Both answers are informative.

 

None of this is a technical defamation case, but the critics declaring the claim dead on arrival are focusing on the colloquial use of the word “defamation” expressed in a spokesperson’s tweet and missing the tree for the forest. The real question is whether there exists a narrow, disciplined legal theory that forces the Times to produce the evidentiary basis for one of the most inflammatory factual allegations it has ever published. And there is.

 

The Times printed that Israeli soldiers summoned a dog, encouraged it in Hebrew, and used it to rape a bound prisoner while their colleagues took pictures. They called it corroborated. They called it fact-checked. So show us the facts. Produce the date, the location, the unit, the handler, the photographs, the medical records, the witnesses. All of it. Because if it exists, producing it ends this. And if it does not exist, then the New York Times published one of the vilest accusations ever leveled at a soldier, with nothing behind it, and called that reporting.

Time for the Times to Retract the Israeli-Rape Column

By Rachel O’Donoghue

Thursday, May 14, 2026

 

How long will it be before the New York Times issues some kind of correction or retraction of Nicholas Kristof’s column that alleges that Israel systematically sexually abuses Palestinians, including with trained “rape dogs”?

 

When the Gray Lady splashed the photograph of a supposedly “starving” child on its front page to accuse Israel of orchestrating a “famine” in Gaza — a child who was later revealed to be suffering from a preexisting medical condition, whereas his healthy sibling was conveniently cropped out of the photo — it took five days for a quiet editors’ note to appear online. That episode was embarrassing. This one is worse.

 

The backlash to Kristof’s column has been louder and could be more sustained. Perhaps that is because this is one anti-Israel editorial debacle too many. Or perhaps because, unlike the famine photo, which could be blamed on a freelancer in Gaza, the hodgepodge of sensational claims, dubious sourcing, and evolving witness accounts in Kristof’s piece feels less like a mistake and more like malice. In fact, the Israeli government announced its intention to bring a defamation lawsuit against the Times.

 

In a 1,500-word exercise in what the paper calls “opinion journalism,” an oxymoronic term deployed by spokesman Charlie Stadtlander in one of several defenses of the piece that the Times has released, Kristof alleges that Israeli security forces and civilians have systematically sexually abused Palestinian detainees. Not content with alleged human perpetrators, he adds a grotesque flourish: an absurd claim that Israeli authorities have trained dogs to rape prisoners.

 

The claim is as lurid as it is implausible. Veterinarians and animal-behavior experts have pointed out the obvious: training a dog to carry out sexual assault on command is practically and biologically impossible. Yet Kristof doubled down on social media, insisting that articles in some medical journals concede that dogs can rape humans. They do not. The material he cited describes cases of human-initiated bestiality and does not involve animals that have been trained to assault humans. The “rape dogs” exist only in the imaginations of Kristof and his sources.

 

And those sources are, to put it mildly, questionable. Chief among them is the Geneva-based Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor, which is cited repeatedly throughout Kristof’s column. The organization’s respectable-sounding name conceals a multitude of sins. Euro-Med has a history of promoting inflammatory and unfounded allegations against Israel, including claims of organ-harvesting and “mass field executions” in Gaza. It has also been shown to have ties to Hamas, with its founder and chairman, Ramy Abdu, being subject to an anti‑terror seizure order.

 

A cursory reading of the June 2024 Euro-Med report from which the allegation of rape by dogs originates should have raised immediate red flags for any journalist. One interviewee claims that he was strapped to an electric chair and shocked so severely that he woke up to find his “foot had exploded.” Such fantastical assertions might have prompted a careful reporter to reconsider whether the report is reliable at all. Kristof appears not to have done so.

 

He writes that he interviewed 14 Palestinians who are alleging sexual abuse. Only a few are named. Among them is Sami al-Sai, introduced simply as a “freelance journalist.” Al-Sai recounts a horrific experience of rape in Israeli detention, claiming that he was anally assaulted with a rubber baton and even a carrot, after which he was returned to a cell where he found himself lying on “other people’s vomit, blood and broken teeth.” It is a shocking story. It is also not the same story al-Sai has told previously.

 

In testimony to B’Tselem, an Israeli NGO, in July 2025, al-Sai described a different sequence of events. According to that account, the alleged assault occurs weeks into his detention. He says he was examined by a doctor who accused him of affiliation with Hamas, then was beaten by prison officers who pushed “something hard” into him and poured liquid on his body. The vivid, cinematic details featured in the Times, such as the carrot and the vomit-covered cell, are absent. In the earlier account, al-Sai does not specify what object was used in his alleged rape.

 

Nor is this the first time al-Sai has alleged torture, only to change his claims later. In 2017, after he was arrested by Palestinian intelligence in Tulkarem on charges of incitement on social media, his mother emerged from a prison visit claiming that he had been brutally tortured — beaten, hung from door frames and windows, and injected with unknown drugs four times a day. The Palestinian Public Prosecution and the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate flatly denied those allegations. The syndicate said that when its representatives met al-Sai, he told them that reports of torture were only a “false rumor,” a statement he later retracted, saying he had been afraid to speak openly while under an apparent threat.

 

This history of dramatic, contested claims of torture makes Kristof’s uncritical treatment of al-Sai even more troubling. In the Times column, he presents al-Sai’s assertion that Israel detained him in 2024 to recruit him as an informant, a proposal that al-Sai heroically rebuffed because of his commitment to “journalistic professionalism.” What Kristof does not tell readers is that Israel actually arrested him for incitement of the very type exposed by media watchdog HonestReporting, where I work, which revealed that al-Sai had used social media to praise Palestinian terrorist organizations, including Hamas, and the October 7 massacre.

 

He is not the only source whose account appears to have evolved. Issa Amro, an activist who Kristof claims is sometimes referred to as the “Palestinian Gandhi,” told him in July 2024 that he had been sexually assaulted by Israeli soldiers. Yet in an interview with the Washington Post just months earlier, about the same arrest, Amro said he had been “threatened” with sexual assault, not subjected to it.

 

Even Kristof’s attempt to anchor his shocking piece with a respectable Israeli voice has unraveled. Former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert appears in Kristof’s column immediately after a particularly graphic allegation made by a Palestinian official, in a way that suggests that Olmert is lending weight to what precedes it. Within hours of publication, Olmert issued a statement clarifying that he had been misrepresented. He told the Free Press that he “did not validate these claims” and had “no knowledge supporting them,” adding that the placement of his quote “misrepresents my views.”

 

That is not a minor editorial dispute. It is a fundamental failure of journalistic integrity.

 

Which brings us back to the original question: How long can the New York Times pretend that this will simply blow over? This is about not just one columnist or column. It is about standards. Sensational claims that collapse under scrutiny do not merely damage the Times’ credibility. They trivialize real instances of sexual violence and undermine the credibility of real victims.

 

The longer the paper avoids confronting what went wrong, the more that damage compounds. At some point, even the New York Times will have to decide whether it can continue hiding behind “opinion journalism.”

Ukraine Has the Weapons That America Needs

By Micah Ables

Friday, May 15, 2026

 

In late March, at the height of active hostilities between the U.S. and Iran, an Iranian drone—likely using Russian targeting datadestroyed a U.S. Air Force E-3 AWACS radar aircraft in Saudi Arabia.

 

The loss of the $500 million airplane is bad enough, but the loss of capability is even worse. This aircraft is a command-and-control node critical for tracking airborne enemy threats and attacks and coordinating friendly operations across different platforms. There are now only 15 of these planes in service, and five are deployed to the Middle East. These aircraft range in age from 32 to 59 years old, and with many essential parts no longer being made, not all of them are serviceable. Despite the E-3’s age and critical role in modern operations, its replacement—the  E-7 Wedgetail jet—is still years away after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth tried (but failed) to cancel production last year before Congress overruled him.

 

Losing one of these systems to an Iranian strike is embarrassing, but it is also a major blow to operations around the world and at home. The loss is even more painful when you consider that it could have been prevented.

 

The AWACS is exactly the kind of high-value target our military planners should have anticipated Iran would strike. They could have used passive defenses like camouflage, hardened structures, and decoys, or more active measures like interceptors. What they needed—and didn’t have—are drone interceptors.

 

The loss of the AWACS represents a failure of planning and defense in an asymmetric fight, but our vulnerability wasn’t just a tactical problem unique to this conflict. Drones reshaping modern warfare is a permanent paradigm shift that we should be prepared for in future conflicts with Iran, Russia, China, or their proxies.

 

The U.S. and Ukraine are now negotiating a deal to work together on developing and building attack drones—in exchange for much-needed drone expertise, Ukraine earns much-needed money to fund its existential fight with Russia. The deal is a step in the right direction, even if it is focused on offensive drones rather than addressing the defensive interceptor capability gap that cost us the AWACS.

 

But more than a tactical problem, this drone issue is a strategic and political one—and it is the predictable result of devaluing and burning the very alliances and relationships that could help us most. It raises an uncomfortable question: If we hadn’t spent the last year burning our relationship with Ukraine, how much better could our drone-related capabilities already be?

 

***

 

To understand this issue, we need to understand the asymmetry of the drone fight. While the United States has missile systems capable of intercepting drones, we lack the capability to mass-produce cheap, expendable interceptors.

 

Iran can produce one Shahed drone for somewhere between $4,000 and $50,000 and easily launch it from a truck. The regime had stockpiled thousands of drones before the war and was able to make about 10,000 more per month. Recent intelligence estimates assess that Iran still has “thousands” of drones available and, given the relatively low-tech facilities needed for production, they have likely maintained a healthy rate of production even after weeks of sustained bombing.

 

Meanwhile, it costs roughly $3.7 million for a Patriot missile battery to intercept a single drone. The 620 missiles produced last year was a record amount, with a goal of ramping up to making 2,000 missiles per year in 2030. A very finite number of aging Patriot interceptor batteries can protect only so many locations, and their ammunition is “worrisomely low.” While the U.S. is researching anti-drone capabilities, the military budget and acquisitions process is far behind the battlefield technology.

 

While the U.S. is prioritizing major defense programs like Golden Dome and space-based early-warning sensors, Ukraine has built an entire defense industry on cheap and effective anti-drone systems. Necessity is the mother of invention, and, thanks to the Russians, the Ukrainians have become the world's foremost experts in drone interception.

 

In a mission that impressed Trump, Ukraine took out one-third of Russia’s strategic bomber fleet with a series of drone attacks on four airfields in Russian territory in June 2025. When a high-value target sits undefended against a threat, it gets destroyed.

 

The Ukrainians have learned that lesson, too. Their expertise has been hard-earned from four years of defending against daily barrages of Russian ballistic missiles and Iranian-made drones. Despite thousands of attacks each month, Ukraine is able to intercept more than 90 percent of incoming threats.

 

As the war in Iran has shown, America needs Ukraine’s expertise and interceptors. With minimal anti-drone capabilities of its own, the Trump administration seems to have forgotten that this is precisely the purpose of alliances and friendly foreign relations.

 

***

 

The United States initiated its bombing campaign in Iran almost a year to the day after the infamous Oval Office meeting in which Trump and Vice President J.D. Vance openly sparred with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, wherein Vance badgered Zelensky to express gratitude for American aid and Trump chided him, “With us, you have the cards, but without us, you don't have any cards."

 

A year later, it was the U.S. looking for assistance. Some allies closed their airspace to us, and—much to Trump’s chagrin—no one seemed interested in helping reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Zelensky was far more willing to help.

 

Early in the war, amid Iranian retaliatory attacks with swarms of Shahed drones, the United States requested anti-drone assistance from Ukraine. Zelensky responded, "Yes, of course, we will send our experts," and a team left Ukraine for the Middle East the next day.

 

Within two weeks, Ukrainian teams were “already working with five countries on countering 'Shahed' drones,” Zelensky announced, “We have provided expert assessments and are helping build a defense system.” By the end of April, one American base in Saudi Arabia was already being protected by Ukrainian systems, with others in the works.

 

Of course, like any other alliance—especially in the age of Trump—this is not a purely altruistic arrangement for Zelensky. His interests and ours align: He needs Patriot missiles to defend against Russian ballistic missile attacks, and we need interceptors to defend against Iranian drone attacks. If we have anti-drone munitions, we can stop wasting Patriot missiles and leave more for Ukraine.

 

The remarkable part is that Zelensky didn’t wait for an agreement before sending help. Instead, he just said, “Of course, we can help.” That’s the difference between a leader who understands and builds alliances and one who squeezes and extorts them.

 

It’s not too late for the administration to learn the value of alliances. We should appreciate that there are leaders like Zelensky who are willing to send help without waiting for a quid pro quo agreement and who are willing to work out deals without holding grudges.  We should take advantage of Ukraine’s anti-drone expertise and capabilities, and commit to sending more military aid to them in return as soon as possible.

The Iran Disaster, Revisited

By Nick Catoggio

Thursday, May 14, 2026

 

I don’t know Mike Nelson, but I can tell that he enjoys a challenge.

 

Before he began contributing to The Dispatch, Nelson served in the Army Special Forces. Go figure that his latest piece for our publication would dial the degree of difficulty all the way up by trying to imagine a nondisastrous outcome to the war in Iran.

 

He’s not optimistic. Step one, he argues, is for the president to learn from the criticism he’s been taking, face reality, and accept that his “current approach makes him look foolish and weak.” But that would be “out of character” for Donald Trump, Nelson allows, putting it very mildly indeed.

 

It won’t surprise you to learn that I share his pessimism. His piece got me thinking about whether any argument remains that this conflict was a good idea for America. How has it made the United States stronger? In what way has it meaningfully improved our position in the world, either by weakening our enemies or increasing our deterrent leverage over them?

 

I can think of four possibilities.

 

One: The spectacular success of the decapitation strikes on Iran’s leadership at the start of the war will force Bond villains everywhere to think twice about tangling with America. Xi Jinping might be persuaded that his military can defeat ours, but that will be a cold comfort if he has reason to believe he won’t survive the conflict himself.

 

Two: We’ve done real damage to Iran’s conventional military capabilities. Navy, air force, missiles, launchers—Iranian assets have taken a beating, limiting the regime’s ability to make mischief in the region. There’s always some deterrent value in knocking down a bad guy.

 

Three: Iran’s attacks on American Gulf allies like Saudi Arabia and the UAE might draw those nations closer to Israel. A Middle East in which Jews and Sunnis unite to contain the Khomeinist menace might be a more stable Middle East long-term, which is good for the United States.

 

Four: A deal to end the war will likely include a complete freeze on uranium enrichment by Iran lasting well into the next decade. In April Axios reported that the two sides have been haggling over the time frame, with Iran proposing a five-year suspension and the U.S. countering with a 20-year demand. Three sources told the outlet they’re confident that a compromise will be reached of “at least 12 years,” with one guesstimating 15 as more likely.

 

That’s my best stab at optimism. How do each of those arguments hold up to scrutiny?

 

Benefits?

 

Only U.S. intelligence knows how feasible a decapitation strike on someone like Xi Jinping might be, but we can make a few safe assumptions.

 

First, China’s defenses are considerably more sophisticated than Iran’s were, especially after Israeli attacks degraded the latter. Second, America probably hasn’t penetrated the Chinese government to the phenomenal degree that Israeli intelligence penetrated Iran’s, making targeting more difficult. And third, after seeing Ali Khamenei liquidated on day one and Nicolás Maduro snatched from his bed, enemy leaders will take extreme precautions going forward to protect themselves when a fight with the U.S. is brewing. The leaders of Cuba’s regime are surely much harder to locate right now than they’ve ever been.

 

That’s the way war works. You learn from major tactical mistakes made in other conflicts and you adapt. Unless you’re the United States.

 

Meanwhile, America has done less damage to Iran’s capabilities than the president would have us believe. Leaks over the past week suggest that 70 percent or so of Iran’s pre-war missile stockpile remains intact and 70 percent of its missile launchers are still in the field. “Most alarming to some senior officials is evidence that Iran has restored operational access to 30 of the 33 missile sites it maintains along the Strait of Hormuz,” the New York Times reported on Tuesday. We’ve made a lot of things go “boom,” it seems, just not the things we were most hoping to destroy.

 

America’s naval blockade of the strait has also been less effective than hoped due to the regime’s tolerance for pain and its resilience in keeping its oil flowing. The blockade was supposed to strangle Iran’s economy in a matter of weeks, but the latest estimate is that the country can hang on for three to four months before serious hardship sets in. (One U.S. official told the Washington Post that it can endure for much longer than that.) Nor have the Iranians been forced—yet—to shut down wells due to lack of storage capacity, which could permanently damage their oil infrastructure. “It’s nowhere near as dire as some have claimed,” one source told the Post of Iran’s predicament.

 

Enemies like China already understood before the war that the United States would bring fearsome power to bear in a conflict. What they’re learning now is how ineffective that power can be in achieving core strategic goals—although I suppose that too was understood after Vietnam, Afghanistan, and, to a lesser extent, Iraq. If you doubt that “doing massive damage” and “being effective” are two different things, ask yourself whether you’re more impressed with Russia’s military capabilities now than you were before seeing them in action in Ukraine.

 

Sunni states drawing closer to Israel in common cause against Iran is a nice thought, and certainly one possible future. Conceivably, in fact, the worse the war goes for the United States, the more likely that future may be. If Iran comes through this with something like a “victory,” it will be more hubristic and menacing than it was before. What choice will its regional enemies have after Uncle Sam tried and failed to slay the beast but to band together in mutual defense?

 

There’s another possible future, though, one that Robert Kagan recently described in The Atlantic. Kagan is a longtime right-wing hawk, exactly the sort of person whom you’d expect to be enthusiastic about taking on Iran. Nope: The United States has been “checkmated” in this conflict, he observed, and that will have bad consequences for the Jewish state.

 

"Israel will find itself more isolated than ever, as Iran grows richer, rearms, and preserves its options to go nuclear in the future,” he predicted. “It may even find itself unable to go after Iran’s proxies: In a world where Iran wields influence over the energy supply of so many nations, Israel could face enormous international pressure not to provoke Tehran in Lebanon, Gaza, or anywhere else." If Sunni powers are forced to choose between good relations with a U.S.-Israeli alliance that can’t protect them and good relations with a radicalized Iranian regime that can and might do them severe damage, which should they choose?

 

As for the prospect of Iran freezing uranium enrichment for 15 years: Did we really need to go through all this to get that?

 

The price of getting the regime to back off on nukes for a while, according to Axios, is the U.S. “agreeing to lift its sanctions and release billions in frozen Iranian funds.” How many billions is up for negotiation, but the possibility of an astounding $20 billion payout has been floated. That’s another reason to feel underwhelmed by how much damage the war has done to Iran’s military arsenal: When this is over, we’re essentially going to end up paying them to rebuild it.

 

A cash-for-freeze trade would unmistakably resemble the deal that Barack Obama signed with Iran in 2015. The United States released $1.7 billion to the regime at the time in exchange for the Iranians’ promise to enrich uranium to no higher than 3.67 percent purity until 2030. Trump tore up that agreement during his first term, causing Iran to go on a spree of stockpiling uranium in which it accumulated nearly 11 tons in the years since. Now here we are, back at the same negotiating table, offering them a lot more money to give up a lot more radioactive material.

 

We could have bribed them into dialing back their nuclear program at any time before the war, without firing a shot. Why didn’t we? “There’s no dispute that it worked,” Obama said this week of the 2015 deal, “and we didn’t have to kill a whole bunch of people or shut down the Strait of Hormuz.” Why did the White House risk a global oil crisis, with all the economic misery that entails, just to inevitably arrive at “JCPOA, Except Bigger!”?

 

Costs.

 

So the alleged benefits of this war are dubious. The costs, on the other hand, are real.

 

Start with wealth. If you total up the consequences of higher inflation due to rising oil prices, slower economic growth, bearishness on Wall Street over a possible recession, and future outlays to replenish U.S. military stockpiles, you’re looking at a figure in the trillions.

 

Diplomatically? This has been one of the worst fiascos in the history of the United States.

 

Whatever was left of NATO is functionally gone. Europe resents the White House for having stuck them with soaring energy costs and an economic slowdown over a conflict they didn’t want and weren’t consulted on. The White House, including erstwhile hawk Marco Rubio, resents Europeans for denying the U.S. access to some of their military bases (although it’s not clear how that access would have affected the war) and is keen to scapegoat them for somehow not bailing Trump out of the mess he’s made in the strait. This marriage can’t be saved.

 

Sunni powers have also learned a hard lesson about the risks of allying with America, particularly when Iran broke the ceasefire earlier this month by firing at the UAE. After Trump declined to retaliate, one regional expert told the Wall Street Journal, “From the perspective of the Gulf states, it looks like the U.S. is not prioritizing their security and basically threw the Gulf states under the bus.” The same report claims that Iranian leaders have begun to say of their Sunni frenemies, “those who wrap themselves in America are naked.”

 

U.S. allies across the world have surely begun to wonder. A shining lesson of the Iran war is that the president has no stomach for lengthy conflict, grasping for excuses to avoid resuming hostilities despite Iranian provocations during the ceasefire. He “believed that the U.S. military was unstoppable” and that Iran would “be another Venezuela,” The Atlantic alleged of Trump’s pre-war thinking, and when he discovered otherwise he grew “bored” with the matter and began looking for a way out.

 

If your nation’s security depends on Donald Trump’s commitment to your defense, you’re in grave danger. And if your regime finds itself in conflict with him, you can probably survive simply by outlasting his unrealistic expectations for your demise.

 

America’s war has also helped China in numerous ways, not surprisingly.

 

For starters, we’ve burned through a meaningful part of our missile stockpile to repel Iranian attacks—not always successfully, either—including a majority of high-tech THAAD interceptors designed to neutralize enemy missiles in flight. Some of those missiles were moved to the Middle East from the Far East, where they were initially based to contain China. U.S. allies like Japan and South Korea greeted that development “with dread.”

 

It will reportedly take “years” for defense contractors to replace the missiles we’ve lost in the current war, and their ability to do so will require easy access to rare-earth minerals. Guess which country the United States depends on for that. If the president sounded like more of a supplicant than usual in praising Xi during today’s visit to Beijing, there’s a reason.

 

China has also seized opportunities to fill strategic vacuums created by America’s misadventure. Since the war began, it has sold weapons to U.S. allies in the Gulf to help them pick up our slack in repelling Iranian missiles, per the Washington Post. And it’s “reached out to Thailand, Australia, the Philippines, and other countries to help them manage their energy needs and is offering access to Chinese-produced green energy technology as a longer-term solution.” They see an empire in decline, and they’re taking advantage.

 

As for Israel, it’s a cinch that the war will further weaken the fragile relationship between our two countries. American opinion had turned against the Jewish state over Gaza before the first bombs fell in Iran; perceptions that Trump was somehow maneuvered into a new and unpopular Middle Eastern misadventure by Jerusalem will feed resentment that Israel wields too much influence over U.S. foreign policy. Benjamin Netanyahu has already begun preparing for the inevitable rupture, assuring 60 Minutes recently that he thinks ending American military aid to Israel is a fine idea.

 

And pity the poor Iranian people, who will probably pay the steepest price of anyone.

 

The war began with Trump vowing, sincerely or not, that all he wanted in the end was freedom for Iranians. Not only was that mission not accomplished, postwar Iran might plausibly be more oppressive than the pre-war version. A wounded regime led by Ali Khamenei’s fanatic son and Revolutionary Guard hardliners will move quickly and ruthlessly to suppress nascent uprisings. It will treat its survival amid a U.S.-Israeli onslaught as divine validation of the Khomeinist project. And it will resolve to take all necessary measures to ensure that it never again finds itself in a position as vulnerable as the one it’s in now.

 

There’s one more cost from the war that the United States will need to bear.

 

That’s the civic cost, a subject I considered in a newsletter titled “The Iran Disaster” nine days before the conflict began. “Never has America fought a war this substantial without some form of buy-in from Congress and the general public,” I wrote. “In no real way is a country that functions like that a republic. It’s Caesarism, the total unmooring of executive accountability from law in matters of life and death.”

 

And so it is. We are adrift strategically in an unauthorized conflict that threatens the global economy, with no end in sight, having long ago blown past the 60-day deadline that the War Powers Act (supposedly) allows for unilateral presidential action, yet Congress remains quiescent. Republican quislings in the House and Senate have let an autocrat seize power from the legislature to wield military power without any meaningful limit whatsoever.

 

It’s one of the most consequential constitutional perversions in American history. How’s that as an epitaph for the war?

 

Optimism.

 

There are two ways in which this conflict might come to be seen as fortuitous for America. Call this optimism if you like, although both scenarios are dark enough that the word seems inapt.

 

One is that it causes a broad, durable, long-overdue backlash to Trump and Trumpism. That was my thesis in the February piece, in fact: By backburnering the cost of living yet again and moving forward with a war that voters clearly didn’t want, the president “could incinerate much of what’s left of his political capital.” Three months later, he’s at 38.5 percent approval and is telling reporters that he won’t let Americans’ financial pain push him into a bad deal with Iran.

 

The prime directive of postliberalism is to hurt Them, never Us. His base, the “Us,” is now hurting like everyone else. The aftershocks of that could be so ruinous economically that the president ends up losing the political capital he needs to justify further authoritarian power grabs. Does that count as optimism?

 

If not, try this: Maybe a comparatively minor disaster in Iran will inadvertently spare us from what would have been a major one against China.

 

Perhaps you’re confident that a plainly declining United States still has the smarts, will, industrial capability, and leadership to win a potentially long war against the Chinese in their own backyard. If so, that makes one of us. A confrontation over Taiwan increasingly feels like a calamity in the making for America; with Trump at the helm, my best guess at the outcome would be a hasty U.S. retreat after initial fighting proved far costlier than the White House expected.

 

Now, thanks to Iran, we have a ready excuse to avoid all that: We’re spent. We’ve depleted much of our missile arsenal, we’ve created war-related hardships for the American people, and we’ve reminded everyone—again—that the U.S. military, as impressive as it is, seldom achieves the too-ambitious strategic goals of its civilian commanders. All three of those things point straight at contriving some excuse to get out of China’s way in the Far East.

 

I think the president would relish doing so. His preoccupation with countries like Venezuela and Cuba in America’s near-abroad and distaste for defending Europe against Russia suggest that he’d rather focus on his “sphere of influence” and leave China to its own.

 

Abandoning Taiwan would mean the end of the United States’ reign as global hegemon. It would elevate China to the status of peer hyperpower, forcing countries across the planet to make their peace with Beijing. But at least it would spare many thousands of American service members from having to die in yet another operation that probably won’t accomplish what it set out to do.

 

Strategic defeat in Iran will quell any appetite for a worse strategic defeat in the Far East. National decline may at last force upon us a foreign policy of “restraint.” Call it “America First” if you like.

Another One

By Noah Rothman

Friday, May 15, 2026

 

For a while, it looked like the president was gearing up to engineer a resolution to his claim that the federal government under Joe Biden had been “weaponized” against him — specifically, that the IRS is implicated in the release of his personal tax returns to the New York Times in 2016 — in which the government would agree to a settlement. In short, the president would direct his Justice Department to concede to his lawyers’ claims, compelling his Treasury Department to shovel taxpayer-provided largess into his pockets.

 

That would have been hard for Republicans to defend (although they’d probably have given it their best shot), and Trump seems to have thought better of the scheme. That is not to say that the president’s preferred alternative resolution to this impasse is any better.

 

Reportedly, Trump will drop his $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS so long as that agency establishes a $1.7 billion fund to be disbursed to “anyone who alleges they were harmed by the Biden administration’s ‘weaponization’ of the legal system,” ABC News reported. Like whom? The January 6 convicts who were pardoned or received clemency from the president, “as well as potentially entities associated with President Trump himself.”

 

The settlement’s terms reportedly prohibit Trump himself from receiving direct payments from the IRS, but a statement from his camp suggests that those who are owed remuneration — the president’s family members and Trump organization officials — are not far removed from the president’s inner circle.

 

For all the good that the administration is doing in its effort to root out corruption, stories like these (and many, many other related allegations) are why the GOP will not be able to run on a record of unscrupulousness in government. Throw this graft allegation atop a growing pile of claims surrounding the president’s alleged efforts to use his position to enrich himself as well as his friends and relatives.

 

The donors who allegedly paid seven-figure sums for access to the president at his golf club, the shady pardons dolled out to crypto entrepreneurs with links to his sons, the alleged foreign emoluments, the pay-to-play claims, and the overlooked conflicts of interest — all of it will likely be subject to the scrutiny of a far less lethargic Congress next year. A few months from now, we’re all going to have to learn the ins and outs of whatever scandal the (likely) Democrat-dominated House is fixated on that week. It’s not hard to envision a situation in which Republicans regret their permissiveness as the full scope of the president’s suspected rapacity comes into full view.

 

Thus, it would probably serve them well to make a few discontented noises now, if only to dissuade the president from inviting even the appearance of corruption. Irrespective of whether Trump’s claims against the Biden-era executive branch have merit, resolving them in a way that reinforces the impression close to a majority of American minds (as of February) that Trump is crooked will come back to bite the GOP.

 

If Trump cannot be convinced to observe civic propriety for its own sake, maybe he can be persuaded against setting fire to the GOP’s reputation — if only to preserve his political legacy.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

The Sexual Barbarism of October 7

National Review Online

Thursday, May 14, 2026

 

On October 7, 2023, the world watched as Hamas terrorists and their supporters spilled over Gaza’s borders into Israel, slaughtering and torturing anyone in their paths.

 

The enormity of the attack has always been clear, but a recently released report conducted by the Civil Commission, an independent Israeli women’s rights organization, recounts the barbarism of that day in excruciating, granular detail.

 

It is not for the faint-hearted. The Daily Mail was the first to report on the commission’s findings, which were compiled by researchers who interviewed over 400 witnesses, survivors, and experts, and who sifted through 10,000 photographs and 1,800 hours of “visual analysis.” The report’s authors detailed evidence of mass murder, systemic rape, mutilation, dismemberment, sexual torture, immolation, and medieval torments once consigned to history.

 

“There wasn’t a single body that just ‘died normally,’” one survivor told examiners. “Every single one had gone through torture.” One woman who was gang-raped by terrorists had her breasts cut off. Her attackers toyed with one, threw it in the street, and raped her before executing their victim while her assault was ongoing. Another woman was stabbed to death and posthumously raped in front of witnesses. “In parts of the body, in the intimate area, nails were embedded,” said one first responder of the bodies he encountered. Another emergency worker described “aluminum cans, grenades, nails, blunt objects, rods, household tools and spike-like instruments, inserted into genitals and other parts of the body” of the victims.

 

That practice was, apparently, systemic. In one room where bodies were discovered “completely mutilated,” a third witness found “knives, scalpels, a hammer, an axe, screwdrivers,” and other “tools from the household” inserted into corpses.

 

The torture was gleeful — filmed by its executors, in many cases — and there were no bounds of human decency. “Adults and children were bound and burned with wire around them,” said one witness. Hamas hostages were, “in some cases, sexually abused alongside or in front of family members.” More horrifying still, family members were “forced to commit sex acts on each other,” the Daily Mail reported, “an intentional, premeditated strategy of kinocide to destroy family units even after release from captivity.”

 

Although men “were also sexually abused and, in at least one case, gang raped,” the women who fell into Hamas’s clutches endured the worst tortures. They were “stripped, bound, stabbed, shot and burned,” and often “executed both during and after rape.” Some women’s heads “had been bashed in, with their brains spilling out.” Others were riddled with so many bullets their extremities disintegrated. Their genitals were disfigured, impaled, and burned, as were their faces. The attackers’ goal, the report concluded, was “to destroy their beauty and rob their loved ones of a final goodbye.”

 

The report concludes that the brutality on display on October 7 was so uniform that it was obviously “systemic, widespread, and integral” to the attack. In other words, it was all part of the plan. Hamas terrorists were not indulging a spontaneous reptilian impulse; they were following orders.

 

That’s the most crucial of the report’s implied findings. It comes at a conspicuous time, too.

 

This week, just in advance of this report’s release, New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof accused the State of Israel of a version of the same kind of savagery.

 

While Kristof’s piece dutifully acknowledges that there “is no evidence that Israeli leaders order rapes,” the columnist nevertheless accused Israel of deploying sexual abuse against Palestinian detainees as a matter of “organized state policy.” Among the many accusations is the claim that Israel has managed to train dogs to anally penetrate male prisoners.

 

It was a facially implausible accusation that is already falling apart upon scrutiny.

 

The thin and dubious sourcing for the allegation probably would not have survived the Times’ typically rigorous fact-checking regime had it not been too titillating — and too damaging to Israel — to check. And Kristof’s report had the practical utility — if not to him, certainly to his pro-Hamas sources — of preempting the Civil Commission’s report. If everyone’s guilty, who’s to say who the real malefactor is?

 

For tacit and explicit supporters of Israel’s terrorist enemies, the truth doesn’t matter. They need no evidence to support the notion that Israel is a genocidaire — even if it is an incompetent one that somehow allowed the Palestinian population expand. To the extent that they demand any proof that Israel is engineering famines in the Palestinian territories, the images of children (it’s always children) who suffer from unrelated genetic conditions will suffice. Anything to undermine the Jewish state and support the enemies of our civilization who are arrayed against it.

 

It is incumbent on the rest of us to be clear-eyed about the nature of the enemy that confronts us, which no one who reads the Civil Commission’s horrifying report in good faith can doubt.