Monday, March 16, 2026

Turning Terror Into Context

By Abe Greenwald

Friday, March 13, 2026

 

Here’s a New York Times headline from yesterday on a story about the attempted terrorist attack on a Michigan synagogue and its pre-school: “Temple Israel was founded in 1941, dedicated to the formation of a Jewish state.”

 

Here’s another from today, also from the Times: “Lebanese Family Members of Synagogue Attacker Died in Airstrike.”

 

One could say that both headlines, and their accompanying stories, count as valid news. This is true, but it’s entirely beside the point. These stories are written and framed to blame Zionism and Israeli military action for an attempted mass-slaughter of American Jews.

 

If you check social media, you’ll find that’s precisely how they’re being used by Israel-haters and anti-Semites. One X user with close to half a million followers reposted a version of the “airstrike” story and added, “The part Fox News isn’t telling you.”

 

What about the part that the New York Times isn’t telling you—or at least not in bold type? Where’s the headline reading “More Than 100 Children in Temple Israel Pre-K at Time of Attack”? Or how about this for a story on the terrorist’s family back in Lebanon? “Synagogue Attacker’s Brothers Suspected of Being in Hezbollah”?

 

Not at the paper of record. The important thing for the Times, and many other outlets, is to bring everything back around to supposed Israeli crimes.

 

Even if we were to pretend that Israel is guilty of every invented charge hurled at it, what does that have to do with 100 Jewish American children sitting in classrooms in West Bloomfield, Michigan, on a Thursday afternoon? The only moral statement one need make about yesterday’s attack is that it’s right and just that the perpetrator is dead.

 

From October 7, 2023, to this day, every last bit of the psy-op against Israel and the Jews has relied on inverting both morality and truth. Hamas attempted a genocide, so Israel is accused of genocide. Zionism is, among other things, a means of preventing genocide, so Zionism itself is framed as a genocidal ideology. Hamas targeted innocents, slaughtered babies, and raped women, so Israel is accused of all three. Hamas kept food from Gazans, so Israel is accused of a starvation plot. Jews are indigenous to Israel, so Israel is accused of colonizing a native population. Jews are attacked across campuses and elsewhere in America, so we’re lectured on Islamophobia. The Iranian regime has been waging a half-century-long war to destroy Israel, so Israel is accused of starting a war with Iran.

 

Here's another regularly inverted truth: Children die in Israeli airstrikes for the simple reason that genocidal Jew-haters keep trying to rid the world of Jews. This is what liberals might call the “root cause.” If the family of the terrorist who carried out yesterday’s attack was killed in Lebanon, that’s entirely the fault of Hezbollah. That his brothers are suspected of being in Hezbollah perfectly encapsulates the larger pathological loop: In their effort to extinguish the Jews, Jew-haters kill their own—at which point they must go out and try to kill more Jews.

 

Whether they succeed or fail, the media will be sure to get their message out.

Take Your @#$%&! Hat Off, Mr. President

By Kevin D. Williamson

Monday, March 16, 2026

 

Perhaps the most grotesque image of the second Trump administration—so far!—has been the ghastly face of the commander in chief, slathered with apricot-colored makeup, hovering above the caskets as the draft-dodging coward saluted the corpses of dead American soldiers returning to Dover Air Force Base while he was wearing a Trump-branded “USA” baseball cap from his online souvenir shop.

 

I will get to the hat directly, but first, that salute.

 

It is always improper for a civilian to offer or return a salute, though the practice became universal among U.S. presidents from Ronald Reagan’s presidency onward. It is probably a little bit worse when Trump does it for the same reason it was gross to watch Bill Clinton do it: He is a draft-dodger. The salute is a courtesy offered by on-duty, uniformed members of the military service to other military personnel or by a member of the military to certain civilian leaders, notably to presidents in their role as commanders in chief but also, at certain times, governors in their role as commanders in chief of their respective National Guard forces. Earlier in our history, when military service was very common among presidents, they knew better than to return a salute while holding a civilian office and wearing civilian clothes: President Dwight Eisenhower, for example, had held the exalted rank of “General of the Army” when serving as supreme commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force in Europe, and he made a rule of not returning salutes while serving as president.

 

There is one notable recorded exception to this, when Eisenhower was presenting the Medal of Honor to Hiroshi Miyamura, who had been awarded the honor for his courageous service in the Korean War—an honor that was, in a unique development, immediately classified as top secret when his superiors learned that he had been taken prisoner. He was presented with the award after his release. One can imagine why Eisenhower might, in this instance, forget himself: Miyamura was simply one of the most impressive American soldiers—or Americans—to have lived. His citation reads:

 

Cpl. Miyamura, a member of Company H, distinguished himself by conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity above and beyond the call of duty in action against the enemy. On the night of 24 April, Company H was occupying a defensive position when the enemy fanatically attacked, threatening to overrun the position. Cpl. Miyamura, a machine-gun squad leader, aware of the imminent danger to his men, unhesitatingly jumped from his shelter wielding his bayonet in close hand-to-hand combat, killing approximately 10 of the enemy. Returning to his position, he administered first aid to the wounded and directed their evacuation. As another savage assault hit the line, he manned his machine gun and delivered withering fire until his ammunition was expended. He ordered the squad to withdraw while he stayed behind to render the gun inoperative. He then bayoneted his way through infiltrated enemy soldiers to a second gun emplacement and assisted in its operation. When the intensity of the attack necessitated the withdrawal of the company Cpl. Miyamura ordered his men to fall back while he remained to cover their movement. He killed more than 50 of the enemy before his ammunition was depleted and he was severely wounded. He maintained his magnificent stand despite his painful wounds, continuing to repel the attack until his position was overrun. When last seen he was fighting ferociously against an overwhelming number of enemy soldiers. Cpl. Miyamura’s indomitable heroism and consummate devotion to duty reflect the utmost glory on himself and uphold the illustrious traditions on the military service.

 

Hiroshi Miyamura was the son of Japanese immigrants who owned a diner in New Mexico, and he did his parents’ new country proud. Trump is the son of a mobbed-up Queens slumlord and the grandson of a Yukon whorehouse operator who has, in a perverse feat, managed to tarnish the already stained family name he inherited. Trump is no Hiroshi Miyamura: In his own infamously ungrateful words, he prefers the ones who didn’t get captured. Trump’s military record, if there were one, would convey only the information that his chiseling bigot of a father paid a crooked doctor to invent a phony diagnosis of “bone spurs” to keep the sniveling little coward out of service during the Vietnam War—and that those bone spurs magically disappeared, without treatment, vanishing alongside the danger that supposed tough guy Donald Trump might face the burden of service to his country in wartime.

 

That sort of contemptible shirker has no business saluting dead American soldiers, whatever his station in life. But if the casualties of Trump’s illegal war in Iran must endure the indignity of being saluted by such a lowlife as he, the least the commander in chief could do would be to comport himself like a man of almost 80 years rather than a boy of 8 years and take his @#$%&! baseball cap off.

 

Trump is both stupid and ignorant—those are not the same things—and maybe nobody ever told him that it is bad manners to wear a hat on such an occasion. We live in a world in which vulgarians far less consequential than the president of these United States insist on wearing hats in restaurants, in church, and in other settings where men’s headwear ought properly to be removed.

 

Or maybe he was just having a bad hair day—which, in Trump’s case, is another way of saying “a day.” Trump still has the dumbest hair in America, which is a hell of a thing to write about a man standing next to Pete Hegseth, the Brylcreem-addicted grandstanding dipsomaniac peacock who is so committed to the principle that our military must stop waging war like a bunch of teenaged girls that he apparently has decided to wage war against teenaged girls in Iran, though the supposedly fearless and plain-speaking Secretary of Don’t You Dare Call It “War” apparently lacks the moral courage to take any responsibility for what his Department of Don’t You Dare Call It “War” has done.

 

My theory is that these guys just don’t have the guts to put on the armbands and jackboots that their hearts desire. Trump and those around him are in the habit of inventing pseudo-uniforms for themselves—Trump with his caps, Hegseth with his American-flag pocket square carefully folded to look like a military decoration on his chest, Gregory Bovino’s seasonal Gestapo-chic look in Minneapolis. The MAGA cap is the swastika armband of America’s regnant national-socialist movement. Trump’s white-and-gold variation simply adds a note of imperialism to the affectation.

 

Seriously: Take your @#$%&! hat off.

 

Elizabeth Marvel’s short but winning turn as a grown-up Mattie at the end of the 2010 version of True Grit ends with her learning of Rooster’s death from Cole Younger, who stands to deliver the sad news, and the infamous outlaw Frank James, who remains conspicuously seated. Mattie nods and, as she withdraws, turns to Frank James, spitting: “Keep your seat, trash.” Some people need that scene explained to them, and some don’t.

 

Most of us will never be asked to serve our country in the way those dead Americans transiting through Dover Air Base did. Donald Trump was asked. He refused, and did so in a particularly dishonorable way—and then spent much of his life joking about how he had gotten one over on those poor dumb rubes who actually went to Vietnam to get killed and maimed. The least he could do is demonstrate some basic courtesy in the presence of the bodies of those Americans who had the honor and sense of duty to do what Trump would not.

 

Take your @#$%&! hat off.

 

Economics for English Majors

 

Tariffs, as I and others have argued at great length in these pages, are a dumb policy—a sales tax our government imposes on our own people in order to punish an overseas business for having the unspeakable temerity to provide Americans with goods and services they desire at prices they are willing to pay. But tariffs can change the transnational flow of goods, services, and money—provided you, meaning we, are willing to pay the price for doing so. The Trump administration has, in the main, not been willing to pay that price, intervening to suspend, reduce, or remove tariffs when it became too obvious to deny the fact that they were imposing specific costs on Americans unhappy about bearing that economic pain. The Supreme Court has partially relieved the Trump administration of the burden of managing its own economic illiteracy entirely on its own, but the stupidity and the political cowardice remain.

 

Like tariffs, economic sanctions are destructive as a matter of economics—but sanctions, properly understood, are not economic policy. In the case of U.S. sanctions against Moscow—enacted in response to Russia’s brutal and criminal war to exterminate Ukraine as a nation—those sanctions are foreign policy and national-defense policy. Like other efforts to interfere with the ordinary operation of global markets, they were always going to impose an economic price that would be paid, at least in part, by Americans, in this case mainly in the form of higher energy prices. Even after the recent run of destructive inflation in the post-COVID era—the result of a bipartisan spending mania affecting both Democrats under Joe Biden and Republicans under Donald Trump—Americans were reasonably well-suited to bear the costs associated with sanctions on Russian petroleum exports. Oil and gas are commodities with prices set in global markets, but the United States is home to the world’s most productive oil-and-gas industry, which is able to respond to higher prices the way you’d expect from that one chart you remember from Econ 101: with additional production.

 

Economic sanctions are like immigration restrictions: They end up looking like economic policy, and they may even be disguised as economic policy, but they are really only useful for non-economic concerns.

 

Economic concerns and national-security concerns are wrapped up in one another, but it is important to remember that they are not the same thing. We don’t need to send thank-you notes to the oil-and-gas companies for the development of the domestic energy industry—those guys are doing just fine, and they don’t mind your being ungrateful as long as they keep getting paid—but it is worth understanding that the existence of that industry is one of the things that allows the United States to enjoy that “strategic autonomy” the Europeans are always going on about wistfully.

 

We have the autonomy to make hard decisions and do hard things. But doing so requires political intelligence and political courage, which are in short supply right now, the United States being under the leadership of a dim and neurotic retired game-show host and his Republican sycophants in Congress.

 

The war in Iran—an illegal war with desirable aims—was always going to lead to higher energy costs for Americans. Even a more intelligently conceived policy perfectly executed by an administration not dominated by grifters, drunks, and imbeciles would have meant some big bumps in the energy trade. The United States can endure these. Removing sanctions on Russian oil exports in response to a short-term spike in consumer gasoline prices in the United States is the wrong policy. It is a cowardly policy, but it also weakens the United States’ long-term national security capacity by demonstrating to the world just how little discomfort Americans are willing to endure in pursuit of our national interests overseas. It is another example of Donald Trump’s shameful subservience to Vladimir Putin.

 

It is too much to wish for Congress to assert itself and do its constitutional duty, but sanctions on Russia should be put back into force immediately—indeed, they should be deepened and broadened.

 

Maybe it is the case that the American people are not willing to “bear any burden”—including rising gasoline prices—to do whatever it is the Trump administration means to do in Iran. Fair enough. That is the sort of thing we might have learned in the course of a debate about launching a war against Iran—if Congress would do its constitutional duty when it comes to the power to decide when and if to go to war, a power that is invested in Congress, not in the president.

 

And Furthermore

 

The Hungarian-born U.S. historian John Lukacs had some illuminating observations about presidential salutes during the George W. Bush era, which he wrote about in the New York Times in 2003. He is pretty hard on Reagan—but he also is prescient.

 

Sometimes, a very old column is worth re-reading:

 

In the past, even presidents who had once been generals employed civilian manners. They chose not to emphasize their military achievements during their presidential tenure—in accord with the American tradition of the primacy of civilian over military rule. Of their constitutional prerogatives these men were of course aware. Lincoln would dismiss and appoint generals, and Truman knew that he had the right to fire MacArthur. During World War II, while Churchill often wore a uniform or at least a military cap, Roosevelt remained determinedly in his civilian clothes. Indeed, none of the presidents who governed this country during its great wars defined themselves as commanders in chief—not Washington, not Lincoln, not Wilson, not Roosevelt.

 

Yes, Section 2 of Article II of the Constitution says: “The president shall be commander in chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the militia of the several states, when called into the actual service of the United States ...” Thereafter that very paragraph lists other presidential powers that have nothing to do with military matters. The brevity of the mention of a commander in chief—it is not even a full sentence—suggests that the country’s founders did not attach very great importance to this role.

 

... When the Roman republic gave way to empire, the new supreme ruler, Augustus, chose to name himself not “rex,” king, but “imperator,” from which our words emperor and empire derive, even though its original meaning was more like commander in chief. Thereafter Roman emperors came to depend increasingly on their military. Will our future presidents? Let us doubt it. And yet ...

 

Words About Words

 

About last week’s Hannibal-istic observations, a reader writes:

 

Speaking of “shameless pedantry” about Carthaginian generals, the Washington Nationals had two players named after Barcids during the previous decade, when they were excellent. Infielder Asdrubal Cabrera played for the NL East champions in 2014, and pitcher Anibal Sanchez starred for the World Series winners in 2019.

 

When the subject is baseball, we call it “historiography,” not “pedantry.”

 

Just so.

 

In Closing

 

The problem with Timothée Chalamet’s remarks about opera and ballet is not that he is wrong—the problem is that he is right. There has always been a distinction between high culture and popular culture, of course—the difference is that in our time the kind of social and intellectual elites who once sustained high culture have become hostages to popular culture, in part because they are hostages to popularity per se, dreaming of being influencers with big social-media followings, of being famous, and—above all—of being envied and admired. The desire to be envied and admired is the great widespread public psychosis of our time, warping everything from art and culture to politics and religion. When I wrote this week about George Carlin’s smarmy, “relevance”-obsessed cardinal in Kevin Smith’s Dogma, I did not mention—though I should have—that the characterization was prophetic.

 

It is good to bring great things—high art, music, even the Good News—to the people, but the people have to be willing and able to receive them. That which is true and beautiful, or even enviable, is true or beautiful or enviable irrespective of whether a few people know it or a great many. The people get a vote on their political representatives, but they do not get a vote on everything, because some things are not a matter of popular opinion—or of any other sort of opinion.

 

We can look at, listen to, or read anything we want on the internet. What we want, in no small part, is pornography and sports betting and rage-inducing social-media discourse. That is not the fault of the people who run the opera houses, as poorly as they often do their work, or the fault of Timothée Chalamet, callow as he is. It is not even the fault of the schools and the churches, though these should be doing a better job in their role as cultivators of human potential. You know whose fault it is. And, thinking about what I have read this year and what I haven’t, so do I.

 

 

Paul Ehrlich’s Disastrous Legacy

By Noah Rothman

Monday, March 16, 2026

 

“I was a college student when I read Mr. Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb,” wrote Wall Street Journal reader Kenneth Emde of “population scientist” Paul Ehrlich’s most famous work in a 2023 letter. “I took it to heart and now have no grandchildren, but 50 years later, the population has increased to eight billion without dire consequences. I was gullible and stupid.”

 

It’s cold comfort, but Emde was hardly alone in deferring to Ehrlich’s supposed expertise. The longtime professor of biology at Stanford University and advocate of an apocalyptic theory of human overpopulation, who passed away on Friday at the age of 93, was said by the New York Times to have been merely “premature” in his predictions. Maybe someday, Ehrlich’s catastrophism will seem prescient. Today, however, it would be more accurate to say that Ehrlich was just wrong.

 

Central to Ehrlich’s thesis in The Population Bomb was his contention that the Earth had a finite “carrying capacity,” and its limits were already being tested by the mid-20th century. Humanity would soon have to ration its resources and consign those for whom it could no longer care to triage.

 

Ehrlich’s modern Malthusianism fired the imaginations of the international environmental left, but he seemed compelled to forever up the ante on his dire predictions. He subsequently anticipated that, by 1980, the average American lifespan would decline to just 42. “Most of the people who are going to die in the greatest cataclysm in the history of man have already been born,” Ehrlich wrote in 1969. “The death rate will increase until at least 100-200 million people per year will be starving to death during the next ten years,” he declared the following year. By 1971, Ehrlich was willing to “take even money that England will not exist in the year 2000.” Roughly 100 to 200 million people, he assumed, would die of starvation between 1980 and 1989 in what he deemed “the Great Die-Off.”

 

Sure, he got some of the “details and timing” of the events he predicted wrong, his allies will concede. But, to them, the eschatological gist of his work still rang true. “Population growth, along with over-consumption per capita, is driving civilization over the edge,” Ehrlich told The Guardian as recently as 2018, “billions of people are now hungry or micronutrient malnourished, and climate disruption is killing people.” With the confidence of a Marxian economist, Ehrlich never questioned his faith in where humanity’s addiction to prosperity was taking it. “As I’ve said many times, ‘perpetual growth is the creed of the cancer cell,’” he said.

 

Ehrlich’s work left much misery in its wake. As even Ehrlich’s supporters will admit, his theories “lent support to racist attitudes to population control.” Population bombers encouraged the promotion of abortion in places like Sub-Saharan Africa and the Indian subcontinent. Overpopulation as a theory justified some of the worst eugenicist abuses of the human species since World War II — abuses in which the United States was very much a participant. “The large number of sterilizations began in earnest in 1966, when Medicaid came into existence and funded the operation for low-income people,” the author Angela Franks wrote. Indeed, by 1977, “up to one-quarter” of Native American women had undergone sterilization, she wrote. A program of “voluntary” sterilization of Puerto Rican women in the 1960s unfolded similarly. By 1965, about one-third of Puerto Rican women surveyed admitted to undergoing a sterilization procedure amid the efforts of the U.S. government and the International Planned Parenthood Federation to promote the practice.

 

Ehrlich’s primary contention — that the human race is, more or less, doomed — continues to inform the work of today’s Malthusians. The various United Nations appendages that routinely warn us of our species’ imminent collapse a decade or so on from whenever the last report was published lean on Ehrlich’s theories. The professor’s legacy inspired a 2018 initiative by a collection of bioethicists to rehabilitate The Population Bomb in the pages of the Washington Post. As recently as 2023, CBS’s 60 Minutes lent its platform to Ehrlich to promote groundless apocalypticism. “The next few decades will be the end of the kind of civilization we’re used to,” he told a credulous Scott Pelley.

 

Ehrlich never questioned his conclusions and refused to repent for the suffering they produced.

 

“For a species that named itself homo sapiens, the wise man, we’re being incredibly stupid,” Ehrlich told CNN at the end of the last decade. That seems to have been Ehrlich’s primary conceit — one that fatally undermined his work. Ehrlich and those who bought into the theory of overpopulation regularly underestimated mankind’s ability to engineer itself out of a challenge. Those who subscribed to that flawed outlook did what they could in their own ways to meet what they were told was the measure of a responsible citizen of the world: In CNN reporter Clint Watts’s summary, “consuming less, polluting less,” and “having fewer children.”

 

Kenneth Emde took Ehrlich’s advocacy to heart, and he regrets it. Emde was asked to make what he thought was a noble sacrifice to future generations, but he only deprived himself of one of life’s foremost joys. Millions more similarly immiserated themselves for what they were told was the greater good. They deserved, if not an apology, at least the truth. But Paul Ehrlich couldn’t bring himself to provide them with either.

‘Never Again’ Requires That We Remember Always

By Kathryn Jean Lopez

Monday, March 16, 2026

 

‘Men, women, and children cry out to us from the depths of the horror that they knew. How can we fail to heed their cry? No one can forget or ignore what happened. No one can diminish its scale.”

 

These were some of the words spoken by Pope John Paul II in March 2000 at Yad Vashem, the museum in Jerusalem dedicated to the memory of the victims of the Holocaust. Adolf Hitler had a particular genocidal hatred for Jews. I wish I could say that the recent increase in violence against Jews in the United States has to do exclusively with Islamists who want to send a message about U.S.–Israeli military action in Iran. But antisemites don’t need an excuse to prowl about the world seeking the ruin of the Jewish population.

 

When Pope Benedict XVI visited Yad Vashem in 2009, he said of those murdered during the Shoah: “They lost their lives, but they will never lose their names: these are indelibly etched in the hearts of their loved ones, their surviving fellow prisoners, and all those determined never to allow such an atrocity to disgrace mankind again. Most of all, their names are forever fixed in the memory of Almighty God.”

 

Without remembering their names and their faces — the Auschwitz memorial in Poland, for example, has an active and informative social media presence to ensure that we do — the Jewish men, women, and children who lost their lives in the Holocaust will fade into history. Online echo chambers and conspiracy theories will chip away at the event’s moral import. It is critical that we remember and not let lies have victory over truth.

 

“Grant us the grace to be ashamed of what we men have done, to be ashamed of this massive idolatry, of having despised and destroyed our own flesh which you formed from the earth, to which you gave life with your own breath of life,” Pope Francis said at Yad Vashem in May 2014. “Never again, Lord, never again!”

 

Pope Leo will have to address the dramatic resurgence of the evil of antisemitism in the coming months and years. It’s unrelenting. As Abe Greenwald recently wrote about the state of antisemitism in the West: “It’s miserable—and shows no sign of getting better. The Jew-hunts go on.” You could get whiplash today by trying to keep up with the antisemitic incidents that are taking place even in our own country. We could wonder if the latest attack on a synagogue or other Jewish target was inspired by what’s happening in Iran, but such incidents have been occurring well before the war started.

 

Eleven people were murdered in the shooting at the Tree of Life Congregation in Pittsburgh in 2018. Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Milgrim, both of whom worked at the Israeli Embassy in Washington, D.C., were killed last May. An act of arson at Beth Israel Congregation — Mississippi’s largest Jewish congregation and the only one in Jackson — left part of the synagogue in ruins earlier this year. And just last week a truck rammed into the Temple Israel synagogue outside Detroit. A shove or a foul word on the streets of Brooklyn is a routine occurrence for Hasidic Jews. Most instances of antisemitism go unreported and largely unnoticed. Before she became a Democratic member of the U.S. House, Ilhan Omar once tweeted: “Israel has hypnotized the world, may Allah awaken the people and help them see the evil doings of Israel.” Meanwhile, former Fox News host Tucker Carlson lends his platform to an antisemitic podcaster who is alarmingly influential with young men.

 

“Violent anti-Semitism is now coming from so many directions, and has been stoked in so many different ways, that Jews rightly feel surrounded by those who want to do them harm,” Greenwald writes. Moreover:

 

Anti-Semitism isn’t just the world’s oldest hatred. It’s also the most impervious to reason. Jew-hatred can take hold in the most technologically advanced and enlightened societies because it functions as a superstition, and modernity cannot eradicate the superstitious impulse. At best it can redirect it toward more benign fixations. At worst, the massive scope and breakneck pace of modern advances can leave people grasping for false gods, soothing delusions, and scapegoats. What all the anti-Semites share, no matter their particular camp, is an affinity for the primitive. Times are miserable because the savages are on the march.

 

Christians need to make their position clear. As I put it while moderating a panel last fall at a shrine in D.C. owned by the Knights of Columbus: “Antisemitism is evil. Period. Antisemitism is evil. Hating Jews is evil. Hating Jews is a sin. It is not Christian to hate Jews.” It is certainly not Catholic to hate Jews: More than 50 years ago, the church issued a document to make this clear. Also, since a disturbing number of young right-leaning men, some of whom are Christians and oppose abortion, seem to find antisemitism attractive, it bears repeating that it is not pro-life, either, to hate Jews. It is inconsistent and incoherent — and, yes, evil.

 

Benedict quoted from Lamentations 3:26 while he was in Jerusalem: “It is good to hope in silence for the saving help of the Lord.” The pope encouraged silence so that we may hear the cry that “still echoes in our hearts.” The cry “is a perpetual reproach against the spilling of innocent blood.”

 

Steadfastly rejecting and combating antisemitism is not foreign policy. It’s not another passing news story. It’s about our common humanity, about decency and contrition. It’s one of those things on which we will be judged. Lead with love. And have hope, for as John Paul emphasized, “Not even in the darkest hour is every light extinguished.”

The ‘Anti-Palestinian Racism’ Canard

By Tal Fortgang

Monday, March 16, 2026

 

In the ongoing battle against American Jews and supporters of the Jewish state, a clever polemical and legal strategy in Canada is now migrating south of the border. The developers of this new front claim it is a fight against “anti-Palestinian racism,” or APR. They aim to reorient how all of us in the West talk, and therefore think, about the Middle East. They argue that hostility toward “Palestinian identity” is a direct threat to Muslims and Arabs that needs to be identified and stamped out.

 

APR was first formally described in a 2022 Arab Canadian Lawyers Association (ACLA) report. The report declares APR a form of racism that “silences, excludes, erases, stereotypes, defames, or dehumanizes Palestinians or their narratives.” Combatting this supposed evil requires “naming and framing APR as a form of racism and understanding it through the lens [of] settler-colonialism.” They do not want there to be “a formal definition” of anti-Palestinian racism. Rather, institutions are to be directed to prohibit broad swaths of speech not currently covered by antidiscrimination regimes as part of “a fluid, contextual, and adaptable” framework. These include “the justification of violence against Palestinians, failing to recognize the indigeneity of Palestinians, erasing the human dignity of Palestinians, excluding Palestinians and allies, and attempting to defame them.”

 

An American nonprofit called the Institute for the Understanding of Anti-Palestinian Racism is now bringing this program to the United States, following in the footsteps of Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East (CJPME). The American group has elaborated on the list of unacceptable ideas to include “denying the settler-colonization of Palestine; appropriating the culture…of Palestinians without acknowledgment…and denying their right to return” to Israel.

 

In Canada, this language is already creeping into university policies and public-sector standards. In the U.S., acceptance of APR’s premises is emerging through nonprofits and unions demanding that schools, employers, and civil rights agencies adopt APR toolkits and treat “anti-Palestinian” expression as a form of discrimination.

 

The inspiration for this tactic could not be more ironic. For the past decade, Jewish advocacy groups have worked strenuously to come up with a clear and inarguable definition of anti-Semitism—especially as regards its relation to anti-Zionism—that is sensitive to free speech and civil rights concerns. Groups like the International Holocaust Remembrance Association (IHRA) have sought to put institutions on notice that anti-Semites seek to hide behind euphemisms and use false rhetorical fronts to engage in acts of anti-Jewish discrimination. In legislation and elsewhere, their work is designed to differentiate constitutionally protected political speech from legally prohibited harassment. Thus, IHRA explicitly distinguishes between criticism of Israel, which is political speech, and “denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination,” which is not.

 

The activists and groups whose methods and tactics are being questioned have tried to claim that the IHRA definition “risks chilling constitutionally protected speech by incorrectly equating criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism,” in the words of the American Civil Liberties Union. That can be correct only if the ACLU believes that the word “criticism” applies to any and all negative expression, which of course it does not. And even if it did, that’s no reason to oppose the IHRA definition in particular. It would seem to require opposing antidiscrimination laws in general. When it comes to universities, for example, existing civil rights law establishes consequences for institutions that allow students and faculty to use epithets in ways that create a severely hostile environment—even though doing so necessarily chills, or even prohibits, speech that our government cannot constitutionally punish. This is something the ACLU could stand against, but it doesn’t, and wouldn’t dare to. The only real question is whether a definition of anti-Semitism ends up functioning as a regulation on speech based on inaccurate analysis, in vague ways, or in an overbroad fashion. The IHRA language is crafted to chart a careful course through this constitutional thicket.

 

In the end, APR advocates oppose the IHRA definition even as they are seeking to promulgate their own bizarro version of it. For example, they are attempting to entrench the infamous equation that “Zionism is racism” by making it an inviolable orthodoxy.

 

Now, some APR provisions are justifiable, since they label speech as discriminatory that is arguably already protected by civil rights law, like “justifying violence against Palestinians.” (Of course, if justifying violence against a protected group is per se harassment, Israeli plaintiffs should have a field day against every group chanting “resistance is justified when people are occupied” and the like.)

 

But APR goes much further. It says that any effort at “denying the Nakba or Palestinian historical experiences”—“Nakba” being the term used by Palestinian advocates to describe the founding of Israel in 1948 and the flight from the territory by Palestinians to other lands in the region—is inherently discriminatory. So too would be speech or language that “erase[s] their human dignity” and “exclude[es] Palestinians and their allies from discourse.” Then there are provisions that incorporate contested political views, such as “refusing to recognize Palestinians as an Indigenous people with collective rights,” or even “defaming Palestinians and advocates as antisemitic, violent, or anti-democratic.” Chanting about Hamas coming to kill the Jews? That’s fine. Condemn the chants for lionizing anti-Semitic violence? Under APR, that’s a problem.

 

APR therefore does exactly what opponents of IHRA claim its definition of anti-Semitism does. It uses exceptionally vague terminology to chill pro-Israel speech. It seeks to rig the game against the pro-Israel position by forcing institutions to ban speech about the history of Palestinian violence, anti-Semitism, and kleptocracy from discussions of the conflict, even though the story of the last century cannot be told without those elements. It further stacks the deck by smuggling in the Palestinian propaganda narrative as fact: that Arabs are the only people “indigenous” to the Levant and that they, not the Jews, have an exclusive “collective right” to be sovereign. It thereby criminalizes the pro-Israel position.

 

While IHRA and other good-faith attempts to define anti-Semitism try to distinguish between political speech and discriminatory harassment, APR is an exercise in collapsing those distinctions. That threatens the free exchange of ideas as IHRA never could, of course. Worse, it hijacks civil rights law for deployment in the global assault against Israel and the Jews.

 

Perhaps most galling of all, it seeks to exploit well-intentioned lawmakers who struggle to see why it could ever be a bad thing to expand the protection of civil rights law. APR benefits from a superficially appealing both-sidesism likely to sway decision-makers who fancy themselves both pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian. If some forms of speaking harshly about Israel constitute anti-Semitism, surely some forms of negative speech about the “other side” in the conflict are likewise discriminatory, right? And who are non-Palestinians to decide which forms rise to that level? Organized representatives of the Palestinian diaspora claim that APR traditionally takes the form of accusing Palestinians of violence and anti-Semitism. Who has standing to disagree?

 

Perhaps due to this appeal, APR has made quick inroads despite its novelty and overbreadth. Toronto’s school board adopted the definition. Canadian courts have legitimized APR by validating “each side” of the battle between “Jews and Palestinians,” each “feel[ing] that it is the victim of either antisemitism or anti-Palestinian racism.” The definition sneaks into the discourse with each use of the term—and each false equivalence between the massive spike in already-common anti-Semitic violence and small increases in already-rare attacks against Arabs and Muslims.

 

In the U.S., APR is infiltrating primarily through the education sector. The Massachusetts Teachers Association, which boasts 117,000 members, held a webinar on APR that devolved into Holocaust minimization and blaming Israel for the Hamas attack on October 7. The federal Department of Education has at least nine civil rights investigations ongoing in response to accusations of APR. Such claims are made alongside accusations of ethnic or national-origin discrimination, and under our laws and regulations, investigations are mandatory in the civil-rights-enforcement process. But the blithely asserted equivalence between anti-Zionist anti-Semitism and APR is becoming impossible to miss. In a recent settlement with students alleging pervasive anti-Semitism, for instance, Pomona College touted its “framework” for responding “to other types of shared-ancestry discrimination, such as anti-Palestinian racism.”

 

At San Diego State University, a University Senate resolution submitted by the DEI chair incorporated APR while in the same breath “reject[ing] the…IHRA definition of antisemitism” in the name of “academic freedom.” We will soon be told that our civil rights law cannot possibly distinguish between anti-Semitism and political speech—but that all speech about the Middle East that does not call for Israel’s elimination violates antidiscrimination law.

 

***

 

APR advocates are clear that they want this new category to serve as a kind of get-out-of-jail-free card. The prime example on the website of the chief American lobbying group for APR retells the story of the encampments at Columbia University. “Instead of supporting their students’ attempts to end violence and human rights abuses, Columbia University officials reacted with racism,” goes the case study. “They deemed peaceful protestors as inherently ‘threatening’ and called the police to arrest and forcibly remove students.” It considers this APR par excellence.

 

The revisionism says it all. In reality, Columbia dithered for more than a month when it came to removing the encampment—and allowed further takeovers of school buildings and destruction of property. It did not expel anyone involved in the debacle. And when it finally did get its act together, it removed the tents for violating school rules against encampments. There was not the slightest bit of discrimination against the anti-Israel demonstrators; if anything, they were treated with kid gloves. But continuing the tradition of Palestinian maximalism from Yassir Arafat to today, the activists behind APR condemn Columbia for “racism” because the school did not immediately capitulate to the rule-breakers’ demands. They met Columbia’s kindness with further hostility.

 

Analysts of terrorism will recognize the logic at play here. Break laws, make life miserable for the population you are looking to influence, and tell them you will only stop if your demands are met. If your target signals that they can be cowed—and Columbia and its peers have certainly sent that message—escalate the assault. In this case, that includes calling Columbia’s begrudging enforcement of its own rules “racist,” probably the worst thing for a university to be. The threats will continue until morale improves.

 

It’s no coincidence that the APR movement embraces the logic of terrorism while seeking to prohibit honest assessment of the centrality of terrorism to the Palestinian cause. Its stewards, especially in Canada, are inveterate terrorist sympathizers, glorifiers, and PR professionals. Established in 2002, Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East has a checkered history and leadership. Its president, Yara Shoufani, is the daughter of an elementary school teacher suspended from her job for giving a pro-terrorism speech in 2016. Shoufani is on record glorifying terrorism repeatedly, even in support of the October 7 massacres. She is a longtime organizer and media liaison for the Palestinian Youth Movement, which holds an annual terror-celebration conference and is under investigation for conspiring to disrupt the American military’s production of fighter jets.

 

CJPME has also been identified as a key Canadian front for Samidoun, which the Canadian government (in conjunction with the U.S. and some European states) deemed a sham charity raising funds for the designated terrorist organization Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP). After Samidoun was designated a terror-supporting entity, CJPME led a letter-writing campaign to Canadian lawmakers urging them to “retract the terror designation against Samidoun.”

 

Meanwhile, Samidoun’s “international coordinator,” Charlotte Kates, went to Tehran to accept the “Islamic Human Rights and Human Dignity Award.” Two other awardees included Hamas’s Ismail Haniyeh—who received the award posthumously—and the general secretary of Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Kates dedicated her award to six convicted Palestinian terrorists.

 

The other leader of Samidoun, Khaled Barakat, told Iranian state TV in 2022 that “Palestinian armed resistance in particular today represents Palestinians, and it is the legitimate representative of the Palestinian people.”

 

Alongside its APR efforts, CJPME continues to advocate the removal of Samidoun’s sanctions in Canada. In logic and aims, what presents itself as a civil rights movement is little more than another front in the terrorist war against Israel and global Jewry.

 

***

 

The great challenge in fending off APR as it gains momentum will be expressing why it is not simply an analogue to IHRA and similar attempts to define anti-Semitism. Pointing out that APR does all the bad things IHRA is accused of will have some legs, but that might take IHRA down with the ship. How to get IHRA into law and keep APR out? Lawmakers reluctant to scrutinize groups’ “lived experiences” of discrimination will likely throw up their hands and say that if Jews are going to get broad protections against anti-Israel speech, Palestinians deserve an equal and opposite protection. Ultimately the argument will boil down to a fundamental asymmetry between Jewish and Palestinian identity, as each pertains to the Holy Land.

 

The claim that anti-Zionism is tantamount to anti-Semitism rests on a few facts about Jews’ self-conception and history. It is the one movement dedicated to the elimination of an existing sovereign state—which just so happens to be Jewish. But more than that, contemporary anti-Zionism, as distinct from arguments that Israel should exist with different borders or different policies, holds that Jews have zero legitimate connection to the land and therefore no claim to sovereignty over even an inch of it.

 

That is a very aggressive position. To buttress it, academics and activists have relied on two tools. The first is a manipulation of the idea of “indigeneity” to exclude the Jews. As the critic Adam Kirsch has explained, rather than assigning indigeneity to a group or groups who first possessed a territory, the term now refers to “a moral and spiritual status, associated with qualities such as authenticity, selflessness, and wisdom.” Assigning such status to Arabs is simply a form of ethno-religious supremacy laundered into highfalutin babble. APR does just that when its adherents describe their goals as reversing “the systemic oppression of Palestinians as an indigenous people whose lands have been taken and occupied by settlers.”

 

The second is to claim that Jews might have some historic claim to the land of Israel, but that today’s Jews are not the same Jews. When anti-Israel activists claim that Israel is a settler-colonial state, which is central to APR’s program, they assert that Jews originated in Europe, and that is where they should go “back.” Jews, in this anti-history, are white Europeans (or, bizarrely, descendants of a ninth-century group of Khazari converts to Judaism) who have either maliciously faked or exaggerated their connection to the ancient Israelites to displace Palestinians from their ancestral homeland. Perhaps the “real” Israelites disappeared—or converted to Islam. Whatever it is, the Jews aren’t who they claim they are.

 

These conspiratorial claims cut to the heart of Jewish identity. Ashkenazim, Sephardim, and other Jewish intra-ethnic groupings (such as the Jews who have lived in Greece and Rome since before the birth of Christ) have a shared history. Our annual ritual cry of “next year in Jerusalem” on the holiday of Passover does not simply assert the Jewish connection to Zion; it unites Jews around the world in a shared aspiration. Our languages may vary, our ethnicity too, and even our rituals may contain relatively large differences. What makes us all Jews is that we, like our Torah, came from Zion, and we hold a common aspiration to return. For Zionist Jews and unwitting anti-Zionist Jews alike, the Jewish connection to the Holy Land is integral to national identity. Denying our presence there millennia ago (and continuously to the present day) rips the heart out of the Jewish self-conception—and calls us malicious liars in the process. Indigeneity is a stupid concept in the best of circumstances; wielding it to deny Jews any claim to Israel is stupidity in service of discrimination.

 

Contrast this to Palestinian Arab identity, which crystallized only in the 1960s. The first formal claim of Palestinian national identity came in 1964, with the formation of the Palestine Liberation Organization—after Israel’s founding in 1948 but before its territorial expansion in 1967.

 

The timing raises eyebrows and further questions, some uncomfortable. What makes a person in or around the historic territory of Palestine a Palestinian? Jews, Jordanians, and Israeli Arabs are not Palestinians. The term does not refer to persons descended from people who lived in British Mandate Palestine; if it did, the necessary conclusion would be that there already is a Palestinian state—called Israel. It is not defined as a lack of Israeli citizenship; otherwise Jordanian Arabs would be Palestinians, too. Nor does it mean an Arab living in the territory once called Palestine; Israeli Arabs don’t count. Nor can it have anything to do with living in the territories Israel conquered from Jordan, Syria, and Egypt in 1967, since the term was invented before then and is used to demand a “right of return” for Arabs displaced in 1948-49 from present-day Israel.

 

What is it to be Palestinian, then? It is, as its early popularizers were happy to explain, an Arab whose identity is defined by wanting to destroy Israel. It is the ethno-political fusion of non-Jewish Levantine ancestry with anti-Zionism.

 

The Egyptian-American analyst Hussein Aboubakr Mansour has been one of few scholars willing to state this conclusion plainly. That it takes an Arab to articulate what is clear to see is unsurprising. Polite Westerners and Jews consider the notion of discussing constitutive elements of foreign national identities daunting and rarely worth the payoff. Doing so to legitimize Jewish civil rights while eschewing the universalist mentality of protection for all, further, is quite distasteful. It appears to be a violation of profound liberal commitments, including the equal treatment of all people before law. But it appears that way, as Mansour deftly explains, only because the concept of “identity” obscures crucial differences between the Jewish connection to Zion and the Palestinian connection to Palestine. “The most central problem of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict,” he writes, is that “the absolute and final negation of Zionism, by any means necessary, [i]s the central ideological content of the Palestinian identity and its symbols.”

 

There is a stark asymmetry between Zionism and anti-Zionism. Zionism holds that a Jewish state should exist in the Levant, though not to the exclusion of a non-Jewish state—clearly. It is minimalist and rooted in shlilat hagolah, negating the exile, by granting Jews self-determination within their ancestral lands. Anti-Zionism, by contrast, is definitionally opposed to the existence of a Jewish state. It is maximalist and rooted in reversing the Nakba, the failed Arab attempt to destroy Israel in 1948. This is why Jewish Israelis continue to offer two-state solutions and peace plans, and why Palestinians cannot accept them. And it is precisely that honest assessment that APR seeks to prohibit.

 

Yet it is neither compassionate nor intellectually honest to give APR an inch. Rather, as Mansour argues, “perhaps the most merciful and responsible course is for the Palestinian identity—as a state-bound ambition—to be gently laid to rest.… The cost of perpetuating a vision that repeatedly descends into cruelty is too high.” It does so not out of boiling frustration or the inequities of uneven Western civil rights regimes, but because it is an identity “written in blood,” as the old PFLP slogan goes. Those who “genuinely care about the lives of Palestinians, Israelis, and their neighbors,” writes Mansour, should let Palestinians be Arabs again: “Walk away from the fantasy of ‘Palestine’ and offer every real opportunity for inclusion and a dignified future elsewhere.”

 

The inapt comparison between IHRA and APR reveals an even greater irony: While Zionism is called a political movement and Palestinianism an ethnic heritage, the opposite is closer to the case. The Jewish relation to the Holy Land is essential and ethno-religious; the ethnic story of the Jews makes no sense without the land. Palestinians’ relationship to the land is essentially political; what makes them Palestinian is that they need all the land. Perhaps that is why APR advocates describe what they seek to prohibit as anything that “defames…Palestinians or their narratives” or even its “allies.” They are trying to erect a force field around a political view—the very accusation they level against Zionists—that just so happens to have ethnic bigotry at its core.

 

We may wish there were a rough parallelism rooted in “nobody’s perfect” that leaves room for moderation and outward signs of empathy. But the truth is that, in this conflict, there are not two equivalent sides. There are two people with claims to the land; one has control, right of first possession, and has been willing to compromise nonetheless. The other has neither the right of might nor the might of right, yet defines itself by its very identity as eliminationist.

 

The charade of false equivalence helps no one and nothing except the Western liberal conscience, the terrorists waging a long war against the Jewish state, and sham NGOs that exploit the former to support the latter. And the growing specter of APR, the evil approaching stealthily from the north, makes explicating the charade an urgent and unavoidable task.

Iran Finds Its Leverage

National Review Online

Monday, March 16, 2026

 

‘You start something,” Napoleon said, “then see what happens.”

 

Our improvisational commander in chief is often inclined the same way, as we are witnessing in the Iran war. There is a lively debate over critical pieces in the media (although that’s a redundancy) reporting that the administration didn’t plan for the possibility of an Iranian closure of the Strait of Hormuz. The administration and its defenders counter that of course there was planning around this well-known and much-feared contingency. Indeed, Secretary of State Marco Rubio warned Iran last June against a possible effort to close the strait, and the administration has cited as a war aim the degradation of Iran’s capacity to do so. But there has been a notable scramble for options as the strait has been effectively closed since the war began, and the Wall Street Journal is reporting that Trump was extensively briefed about the possibility, but thought the Iranians would capitulate before it became an issue and the U.S. military could handle it regardless.

 

Now, the effective closure of the strait is threatening the world economy and giving the Iranians leverage it was hard to imagine when they lost their top leaders in the war’s initial strike. The result is an object lesson in why geography still matters, why it was always folly to treat Iran as some distant place unconnected to our national interests, and why control of the seas is as important as it ever was.

 

About 20 percent of the world’s oil passes through the strait. With traffic slowing to a trickle, the price of oil is up about 40 percent since the beginning of the war. The oil that transits the strait overwhelmingly goes to Asia, but there is obviously a global price that affects the U.S. regardless. The average price of a gallon of gasoline has increased to about $3.70, whereas it was about $2.90 weeks ago. None of this is catastrophic. The price of Brent crude settled above $100 a barrel on Friday. That’s the highest in four years, not in, say, 60 years. But the clock is ticking. If the strait were to remain effectively closed for months rather than a few more weeks, the economic damage could become truly disastrous.

 

This is an enormous strategic advantage to Iran. If the war ends with the regime still in power, which seems likely, and in de facto control of the strait, that will give it a major deterrent to ward off future attacks on its nuclear and missile programs. It will be seen to have fought the Great Satan and not just survived but imposed a significant cost on its more powerful enemy. Trump’s biggest and riskiest military operation as president might end up eroding American deterrent power rather than enhancing it.

 

All of this means that there has to be urgency about reopening the strait, and the administration clearly feels it. Trump is threatening Iran’s crucial oil facilities on Kharg Island as a way to try to scare the regime out of menacing shipping in the strait, and he’s talking about a multinational naval escort force. Escorts worked during the “tanker war” between Iran and Iraq in the 1980s and would be effective again, assuming that military vessels themselves wouldn’t be vulnerable to missile and drone attack. The U.S. military is hoping to keep degrading the ability of Iran to launch attacks and to create the conditions for escorts. We’ve had considerable success in diminishing the regime’s capabilities already, but the Iranians only need to hit the occasional tanker to disrupt traffic, and geography in and around the strait favors the attackers.

 

Much of the press wants to preemptively declare Operation Epic Fury a fiasco. We are well on the way, though, to fundamentally weakening a dangerous, long-standing enemy of the United States — provided that the tankers soon again begin to sail.

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Dominance as Strategy

By Nick Catoggio

Friday, March 13, 2026

 

When I think of the Iran war years from now, I’ll remember Pete Hegseth as the face of it.

 

Not the president. Not Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Not Joint Chiefs Chairman Dan Caine, who could have played the same reassuring role for Americans that Colin Powell did during the Gulf War if only the White House had outsourced its daily briefings on the conflict entirely to him.

 

The Iran war is Hegseth’s war despite the high probability that our defense secretary wields no actual influence over operations. That’s because, more so than even Donald Trump, he personifies the postliberal lust to dominate one’s opponents. It’s why Hegseth, like all right-wing populists, seems to have only two facial expressions anymore: scowling and smirking.

 

Dominance is so urgent a priority in postliberal conflict that it functions as an end in itself. The more dominant one is, the less important it becomes to achieve anything strategically useful by it. Every time we see the president torment some Republican lawmaker who’s crossed him, we’re reminded of it.

 

We were reminded again this morning when Hegseth held another of his unbearable press conferences to discuss the state of the war. At one point he paused to relish the thought of Iranian regime goons looking up to see the stars and stripes and Star of David flying overhead; elsewhere he vowed “no quarter, no mercy for our enemies” amid a made-for-Newsmax whine about CNN’s bias. His message to the American people was that we’re pounding the bad guys, we’ll continue to do so, and we’ll enjoy every second of it.

 

As for why that pounding has failed to prevent an economic catastrophe unfolding in the Strait of Hormuz, Hegseth assured reporters that the Pentagon has a plan and downplayed the crisis. “The only thing prohibiting transit in the straits right now is Iran shooting at shipping,” he observed smartly. “It is open for transit should Iran not do that.”

 

By the same logic, I suppose, the only thing preventing regime change in Iran right now is that the regime insists on remaining in power. It will fall should it decide not to do that.

 

I’m not surprised that Hegseth would treat the impasse in the strait as a footnote in a story about America conducting a turkey shoot of Iranian military targets. Tactically, we’re not just winning this war, we’re dominating it. We’re imposing our will on every Iranian plane, ship, and missile we detect. The enemy is helpless against our attacks, completely at our mercy. To a postliberal, that’s the very picture of what victory in conflict looks like.

 

It’s also why pointing out that Iran is obviously winning the war strategically seems like churlish nitpicking, something only the tendentious libs at CNN looking to score a point on Trump would stoop to.

 

Pete Hegseth’s preference for dominance over strategy explains his attitude about events in the Gulf. It also explains the West Wing’s latest innovation in “mean tweets.”

 

Meme war, literally.

 

Posting hype videos about America’s military success at a moment when Iran has the global oil supply in a chokehold is like doing an end-zone dance after a first down when you’re two scores behind.

 

That hasn’t stopped the White House, though, which gave new meaning to the term “sizzle reel” this week by posting clips to social media of bombs going off in Iran intercut with footage from video games, movies and TV shows, and sports. (“Pure American dominance,” reads the caption on one.) Multiple former U.S. military commanders told NBC News they’re mortified by the videos, with one calling the gimmick “absolutely disrespectful to everyone involved, including the Iranians themselves who are at war and disrespectful to the Americans who risked their lives.”

 

I don’t think the White House comms team means to frame the war as a joke. This seems to me like an earnest attempt by postliberal chuds to process military conflict through the morally enfeebled heuristics about politics that their movement has equipped them with.

 

In the first place, meme-ifying the war detaches the president’s supporters from the consequences of his viciousness. That’s always been a secret ingredient of Trump’s appeal: Because he treats politics like pro wrestling, frequently sounds like an insult comic, and generally behaves like an online troll, even his sinister impulses carry a disarming air of performance that can make them seem less threatening than they are. The phrase “mean tweets” has become shorthand for the phenomenon, a way for his apologists to dismiss his menacing insanity as harmless outbursts from an overgrown edgelord that aren’t worth bothering about.

 

The Iran sizzle reels are a wartime version of that. The conflict is a game and a spectacle, not quite real or worth freaking out about even if we blow up a school occasionally.

 

They’re also a case of the president and his team believing they can create their own reality by insisting upon it strenuously enough, another Trump specialty. He convinced more than two-thirds of his party that the 2020 presidential election was illegitimate despite lacking a single solid piece of evidence, and he’s still hard at work trying to win that argument six years later. He’s spent the last few months preparing to run the same playbook in the midterms by treating the SAVE Act that’s languishing in the Senate as the only way to rescue American democracy from blatant election-rigging by blue states.

 

A country that’s overflowing with credulous hyperpartisan dopes desperate to believe that their politics is infallible is an obvious target for the White House’s Iran sizzle reels. If the president is confident enough in victory to be putting out clips equating what’s happening in Iran to brutal tackles in the NFL, America must be winning, right? Only CNN could think otherwise.

 

More than anything, though, I think the clips are about communicating the administration’s unapologetic belief in ruthlessness as a moral ethic. Postliberalism reduces all political problems to failures of will: From crime to trade to immigration to war, America would have far fewer challenges if only its leaders were less timid about using force to neutralize its enemies, foreign and domestic. Hegseth, the government’s foremost war-crimes aficionado, is the epitome of that attitude. If you find yourself at an impasse in some policy matter, you aren’t hitting hard enough.

 

That’s why his big answer to the standoff in Hormuz is to bomb Iran harder and why the White House’s answer to public anxiety about the war and its economic fallout is to post what’s essentially combat porn. When morale falters, when progress seems stalled, the only sensible thing to do is to double down on ruthlessness by, say, mocking the enemy with footage of an NBA defender getting posterized via a savage dunk.

 

Or vowing to kill more of them, of course, as the president did when he also doubled down on ruthlessness in a Truth Social post last night. “We have unparalleled firepower, unlimited ammunition, and plenty of time - Watch what happens to these deranged scumbags today,” Trump warned. “They’ve been killing innocent people all over the world for 47 years, and now I, as the 47th President of the United States of America, am killing them. What a great honor it is to do so!”

 

We might not be able to stop our enemies from achieving their goals but we can and will kill more of them and exult in their deaths. Dominance without strategy: This war is getting more postliberal by the day.

 

Anti-strategy.

 

As anyone old enough to remember the Before Times knows, this isn’t the first war America has fought in the Middle East that failed strategically. And in fairness to the president, it’s a near-lock that his misadventure in Iran will involve vastly fewer dead Americans than George W. Bush’s misadventure in Iraq did.

 

Although, given the latest deployment news, maybe we should revisit that prediction in six months.

 

What’s distinctive about Trump’s Iran campaign isn’t that his strategy was flawed. It’s that, as far as I can tell, he had no strategy.

 

Bush thought the U.S. could depose Saddam Hussein, dissolve Iraq’s security forces, seize and dismantle an Iraqi WMD arsenal that didn’t actually exist, and stand up a democratically elected government in Baghdad that would inspire other Arab states to liberalize—all without triggering a sectarian Thunderdome or empowering a new Shiite regime that would end up under Iran’s thumb. Not a good strategy, it turned out, but a strategy. And it involved a display of American power commensurate with the task: Regime change in Iraq would be carried out by an enormous occupying infantry force.

 

By contrast, and without exaggeration, Trump’s “strategy” in Iran appears to have been a variation of a famous South Park joke. Phase one: Launch a decapitating strike on Iran’s leadership. Phase two: ???? Phase three: Peace on America’s terms.

 

Phase two seems to have consisted entirely of wishful thinking. The president reportedly believed that the regime would either crumble after Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was killed or surrender immediately to the U.S., placing itself at America’s service like Delcy Rodríguez in Venezuela. When that didn’t happen, the administration began sniffing around for a regional proxy force that might be willing to battle Iranian regime forces. When that didn’t happen, Washington and its Israeli partners crossed their fingers and waited for an uprising among Iranian civilians.

 

That’s not happening either. Despite having been one of the two highest priorities of the war for American and Israeli officials, regime change already seems off the table after two weeks of conflict. Once the initial strike failed to collapse the government, there was no Plan B.

 

The other high priority for the two allies was to further degrade Iran’s ability to build nuclear weapons, either by seizing the country’s enriched uranium or rendering it useless. It occurred to me this morning that that might have been a lot easier, ironically, if not for the first U.S.-Israeli attack on Iran last year.

 

That attack successfully entombed the material under the rubble left by American strikes on Iran’s enrichment facilities but didn’t destroy it completely, as far as anyone can tell. Had those strikes never happened, the uranium might still be stored today in some structure that would be comparatively easy for U.S. special forces to breach. Instead, getting to it will be an ordeal. “Nuclear-handling equipment, diggers to move earth and rubble from tunnel entrances and other heavy machinery” will be needed, according to The Economist. So will hundreds of American boots on the ground and constant air cover to repel attempts by Iranian forces to advance on the site as excavation takes place.

 

And even if the U.S. managed to secure the uranium, it could explode in transit if it isn’t handled properly.

 

Regime change could have solved the uranium dilemma, as the White House would be less anxious about leaving the buried material behind once a government that’s better disposed toward America and Israel was in place. As it is, we’re stuck. Either we risk a deadly fiasco by inserting U.S. troops for a dangerous mission that might not succeed, or we withdraw and leave the uranium under the soil of wounded fundamentalist lunatics who bear the United States more of a grudge than ever. A strategic master stroke.

 

Still, the singular strategic debacle for which this war will be remembered is the closing of the Strait of Hormuz.

 

Administration officials have reportedly admitted in briefings to Congress that they didn’t plan for it even though a crisis in the strait has factored into U.S. wargaming involving Iran for ages. “Planning around preventing this exact scenario—impossible as it has long seemed—has been a bedrock principle of U.S. national security policy for decades,” one former U.S. official told CNN of the strait’s closure. “I’m dumbfounded.”

 

Holding the world’s oil supply hostage is the next best thing to an actual nuclear weapon that Iran has, yet somehow the White House is surprised that the regime would resort to it in a war that threatens its survival. Bad enough that administration officials believed closing the strait would “hurt Iran more than the U.S.,” according to CNN, but what’s the excuse for not having a solution ready to go just in case the Iranians did execute their economic doomsday plan?

 

Two weeks in, oil tankers are burning and America’s Arab Gulf allies are disgruntled about Washington’s impotence in keeping the strait open and protecting their airspace from Iranian attack. When the U.S. finally calls off the dogs and goes home, those allies will be left with an Iranian neighbor that’s either still intact and out for revenge or in full collapse and dissolving into anarchy. “Analysts say the war has left Gulf states reassessing both their security dependence on Washington and the prospect of eventually engaging Tehran on new regional security arrangements,” Reuters reported.

 

There was no “Phase two” in the White House war strategy, as hard as that is to believe. And to the extent that there was, I think it wasn’t much more complicated than “dominate.”

 

A failure of will.

 

It would be quintessentially Trumpian for the president and his aides to have assumed that any wrinkles during the war could and would be ironed out by simply ramping up the firepower.

 

I repeat: Postliberalism reduces all political problems to failures of will. And so if Iran closed the strait or defiantly fought on after its leader was killed, solving those problems would logically seem to our leaders to be a straightforward matter of breaking the regime’s will with more explosives. That may explain why the administration stupidly declined Volodymyr Zelensky’s help with drone warfare last year even though it was completely predictable that drones would figure heavily into Iranian battle plans against the U.S. in any future conflict.

 

Team Trump probably expected that it didn’t need to worry about repelling puny weapons when it commands the most awesome military arsenal on Earth. In the event that Iran began harassing our ships and bases with drones, we’d just bomb them harder until they stopped. If you can muster enough dominance, you don’t need strategy. In theory.

 

That attitude does often work for postliberals. Corporate America has repeatedly allowed itself to be extorted by Trump since he returned to office last year; Delcy Rodríguez and the Maduro remnant in Venezuela also opted to play ball when he positioned the U.S. military off their coast. Many political standoffs really are a contest of wills, and Trump’s taste for ruthlessness serves him well in those cases. Intimidation is the One Neat Trick of postliberalism and it’s a pretty neat one as fascist political tricks go.

 

It’s just not foolproof. In Iran, no doubt to his great surprise, Trump finds himself facing an opponent that won’t be intimidated. Fanaticism, existential panic, megalomania, national pride—take your pick of motives that might explain why “bomb harder” hasn’t caused the regime’s will to fail. Whatever the reason, the president has suddenly run up against the limits of dominance as a strategy in a conflict with supremely high stakes.

 

“When past presidents balked at the possibility of war with Iran, they weren’t just dodging a hard choice,” Franklin Foer alleged at The Atlantic a few days ago. “They were deterred by all of the obvious reasons a conflict could perilously spiral.” That’s the problem in a nutshell. An administration of postliberals will inevitably understand the failure of Trump’s predecessors to confront Iran as due to insufficient nerve when, really, it was due to insufficient hubris and stupidity.

 

A politics that treats every problem as a failure of will is destined to be recklessly willful when it should be cautious. Trump sold himself to Republican voters in 2016 as an alternative to neoconservative incaution. Ten years later, “bomb harder” is what’s left.