Good Thursday morning. In today's Daily Kickoff, we cover former White House senior official Brett McGurk's condemnation of Hamas' repeated refusals to reach a ceasefire agreement, and report on the anti-Israel group Jewish Voice for Peace's pivot to electoral politics. We report on Israel's strikes on Syria amid widespread attacks on the Syrian Druze community, and cover the departure of United Torah Judaism from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's ruling coalition. Also in today's Daily Kickoff: Wally Adeyemo, Ari Aster and Tali Cohen. Spread the word! Invite your friends to sign up.👇 |
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- This afternoon at the Aspen Security Forum, Adam Boehler, the Trump administration's special envoy for hostage affairs, is set to take the stage for a one-on-one conversation with CNN's Kaitlan Collins. Boehler's appearance comes amid the cancellation of a number of Pentagon officials who had been slated to address the annual Colorado gathering.
- Later in the afternoon, former National Security Advisor Stephen Hadley, The New York Times' David Sanger and Johns Hopkins' Vali Nasr will participate in a panel discussion on Iran. Immediately following that session, former Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker is slated to speak on a panel about international trade and economics.
- At a reception later in the evening, former Deputy National Security Advisor Dina Powell McCormick will speak about the book she co-authored with her husband, Sen. Dave McCormick (R-PA), Who Believed in You? How Purposeful Mentorship Changes the World.
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A QUICK WORD WITH JI'S JOSH KRAUSHAAR |
The latest round of fundraising reports for members of Congress paints a concerning picture about the future of the ideological center. Many lawmakers from both parties known for their pragmatism and moderation struggled to raise big bucks for their campaigns, while a number of insurgent candidates on the left and the right wings of their parties scored significant fundraising hauls. Some of the middling fundraising numbers from experienced, establishment-oriented lawmakers will lead to speculation they are considering retirement. On the GOP side, Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA), a senator deeply immersed in national security issues, only raised $723,000 in the last three months — barely inching past two of her Democratic opponents. That's an underwhelming sum for Ernst, who has typically been a strong fundraiser but has been taking heat from both the right and left. It will only raise speculation about her political future. Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), facing a primary challenge from right-wing Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, also didn't hit the $1 million mark in fundraising, bringing in just $804,000. Paxton, despite worries about his electability and scandals surrounding him, raised $2.9 million. In the House, Rep. Mike McCaul (R-TX), the respected former chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, raised just $93,000 for the quarter, with less than $100,000 in his campaign account. While he's not in a competitive district, that small sum has raised retirement speculation as well. On the Democratic side, there were some fresh signs that mainstream, pro-Israel candidates aren't getting quite the same fundraising traction as they have in the past. Read the rest of 'What You Should Know' here. |
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McGurk: History of Israel-Hamas talks is 'being rewritten by people that weren't involved' |
Former U.S. and Israeli officials speaking at the Aspen Security Forum on Wednesday emphasized that Hamas bears responsibility for the failure of hostage release and ceasefire talks, and discussed the possible paths to ending the war in Gaza, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports from the conference. Brett McGurk, the top National Security Council official responsible for the Middle East under the Biden administration, argued on Wednesday that the history of ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas "is being rewritten by people that weren't involved in this." Missed opportunities: McGurk emphasized that Hamas repeatedly ignored and rejected proposals that fulfilled many of its demands over the course of the last year, arguing that Israel's attacks on Hezbollah had helped force Hamas' hand to a temporary ceasefire deal that went into effect in early 2025. "The moral toll of this awful situation tears at the soul of anyone who's worked on this, anyone," McGurk said. "But this war could have stopped multiple times if Hamas stopped the war and released hostages — multiple, multiple times." Read the full story here. Looking ahead: Wally Adeyemo, the deputy secretary of the Treasury Department during the Biden administration, argued on an Aspen panel that postwar reconstruction of Gaza will require new tools, methods and partners. |
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Israel strikes Syria 'to halt the assaults against the Druze' |
ILIA YEFIMOVICH/PICTURE ALLIANCE VIA GETTY IMAGES |
Israel struck the Syrian Defense Ministry's headquarters in Damascus on Wednesday in response to violence against the country's Druze minority, a week after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke in the White House of the "opportunity for stability, security and eventually peace" with Syria. The strikes came after clashes between Druze and Bedouin groups that began on Sunday, leaving as many as 250 dead over four days in Sweida, some 25 miles from the border with Israel and in the area of Syria that Israel seeks to have demilitarized, Jewish Insider's Lahav Harkov reports. Developments: Syrian government forces entered the fray on Tuesday, saying they aimed to stop the fighting and bring about a ceasefire, which they said they had reached on Wednesday. Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa, formerly the head of the Syrian branch of Al-Qaida, seeks to disarm Druze and other militias and have them integrate under the new government. Israeli Druze called for Israel to intervene from the outset of the violence on Sunday, saying that their Syrian counterparts were being massacred, raped and tortured by forces aligned with al-Sharaa. In Israel, videos and images circulated of Druze religious figures' mustaches being forcibly shaved off by men in military fatigues. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Wednesday afternoon that Washington has "engaged all the parties involved in the clashes in Syria. We have agreed on specific steps that will bring this troubling and horrifying situation to an end tonight." Read the full story here. Heard at Aspen: "Israel is in such an extraordinary position. … Think about Israel being born, created May 14, 1948, besieged over decades by attacks and enmity from all of its Arab neighbors, now the strongest country in the Middle East," former U.S. Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns, a top foreign policy advisor to President Joe Biden, said in Aspen. "Israel's in the strongest geopolitical position it's ever been in, after the extraordinary events in Lebanon, in Gaza, in Iran, in Syria over the last two years." |
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Netanyahu's coalition is teetering – but his government is likely to last the year |
New Israeli elections are unlikely to happen this year, despite the departure on Wednesday of two parties from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government over disagreements over Haredi military exemption legislation, Jewish Insider's Lahav Harkov reports. After months of disagreements, Ashkenazi Haredi faction United Torah Judaism left Netanyahu's coalition in protest, leaving it with 61 out of the Knesset's 120 seats. Hanging on: On Wednesday, Sephardic Haredi party Shas' five Cabinet ministers quit the government, though party leader Aryeh Deri will remain an observer in the Security Cabinet. Shas only quit the government — meaning its Cabinet posts — and did not pull its 11 lawmakers out of the parliamentary coalition. Shas, whose voter base is right-wing and even more supportive of Netanyahu than the prime minister's own Likud party, said it will not vote with the opposition. This means that Netanyahu retains a majority in the Knesset, albeit a razor-thin one. Read the full story here. |
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Jewish Voice for Peace restructures, sets its sights on the ballot box |
TIERNEY L. CROSS/GETTY IMAGES |
Jewish Voice for Peace, a far-left anti-Israel advocacy group that has built a growing profile in the wake of Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, terror attacks, is pivoting to a new organizational structure that will soon allow it to engage more forcefully in electoral politics. The group recently began the process of consolidating its membership and organizing in an affiliated but lesser-known political nonprofit called Jewish Voice for Peace Action, devoting the bulk of its resources to lobbying and political activities, such as supporting and opposing candidates that had not traditionally been a part of its core focus. As a nonpartisan tax-exempt group, JVP, which has been at the forefront of campus anti-Israel protests and promotes efforts to divest from Israel, has been legally prohibited from taking sides in campaigns — a limitation the new structural change is designed to address, Jewish Insider's Matthew Kassel reports. Behind the decision: The shift comes as the activist left has felt newly emboldened by Zohran Mamdani's shocking victory in New York City's Democratic mayoral primary in June, fueling debates over the ideological direction of the party as it gears up for next year's midterms. JVP Action, which recently changed its public name to Jewish Voice for Peace to match its sister organization, was an early supporter of Mamdani and has cited his outspoken opposition to Israel as a sign of evolving voter attitudes about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. "There is unprecedented, mass support for Palestinians. Our movement has already grown larger, and more quickly, than many of us thought possible. But it's clear we have not begun to tap our full potential," JVP writes in a detailed new page on its website about the decision-making behind its shift. Read the full story here. | |
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House Armed Services Committee Democrats criticize Pentagon for rogue moves on Ukraine |
Members of the House Armed Services Committee sparred on Tuesday at their annual meeting on the National Defense Authorization Act, the massive annual defense and national security policy legislation, over reportedly rogue actions by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and Under Secretary Elbridge Colby to pause U.S. aid to Ukraine without White House knowledge or support, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports. Other developments: The committee also approved a series of amendments on the Middle East and antisemitism during its markup, and voted on party lines to defeat amendments seeking to block the conversion of a Qatari jumbo jet to be Air Force One and to take the Pentagon to task over the Signalgate scandal. Read the full story here. |
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Global oil market pressures restrained Israeli, Iranian attacks on oil infrastructure, analyst says |
ANDREW HARNIK/GETTY IMAGES/TOM WILLIAMS/CQ-ROLL CALL, INC VIA GETTY IMAGES |
The pressures of the global oil market restrained Israel from bombing Iran's Kharg Island oil facilities and Iran from closing the Strait of Hormuz or attacking Saudi Arabia's Abqaiq oil facilities, an energy policy analyst argued at the Aspen Security Forum on Wednesday, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports. Explanation: "There was some measure of security that came from the fact that we're in a global oil market and we're all in this together," Jason Bordoff, the founding director of the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University, said on a panel on energy security. "If Iran had tried to do that, it would have imposed pain on itself, it would have imposed pain on China, it would have imposed pain on Gulf countries it was trying to keep on its side." Read the full story here. |
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Hamas' MO: In Newsweek, former White House Middle East envoy Jason Greenblatt suggests that Hamas has committed "dehumanicide" against the Palestinian people. "I define 'dehumanicide' as when a people's leadership condemns its population to death by treating them not as humans but as props. By camouflaging among civilians — placing weapons, tunnels, and command posts in and under hospitals, schools, mosques, and apartment buildings — Hamas has committed an act of dehumanicide. Hamas transformed civilian lives into strategic assets for international outrage. Hamas instrumentalized Gazans not as people to be protected, but as tools of their horrific, twisted, evil warfare. Hamas accepts these civilian deaths as the 'cost of doing business.' Indeed, Hamas welcomes the deaths because it knows the world will use them as cudgels against Israel so that Hamas can prolong its long war against the Jewish state." [Newsweek] MAGA Revisionism: In The Free Press, Rebeccah Heinrichs looks at the effort by "conspiracy theorists, cranks, and the craven" of the MAGA wing of the Republican Party to revise how Americans view their own history. "While Donald Trump reaffirms the principles that underpinned his first term — that America remains the leader of the world's most successful military alliance (NATO), a committed supporter of the Jewish State, lead defender of the global commons, and is willing to use military force when necessary — he is increasingly out of step with a critical constellation of right-wing influencers, podcasters, and contrarian intellectuals. For them, America's history as a global superpower is morally suspect, if not outright criminal. Our victories become losses, our alliances sinister entanglements, and our deterrence campaigns provocations. Why? Because they must revise the past to justify and satisfy their policy preferences in the present." [FreePress] Dear Zohran…: The New York Times' Tom Friedman raises concerns about New York City Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani's continued defense of the phrase "globalize the intifada," despite pushback from Democratic officials and the Jewish community. "First, if you are discussing a mantra — like 'globalize the intifada' — that takes 15 minutes to explain why it doesn't mean what it obviously means, I'd suggest that you distance yourself further from that mantra. … When I see someone running for mayor defending a useless, meaningless, far-left mantra that helps no one, and who prefers commenting at a distance and not convening energetically, it makes me wonder how he will deal with the really hard issues on the West Bank of the East River — not the West Bank of the Jordan — that most New York voters care most about." [NYTimes] A Grieving Mother's Plea: In The Hill, Leah Goldin, whose son Hadar was killed in 2014 by Hamas, which has held his body since, calls on Saudi Arabia and President Donald Trump to prioritize the release of the remaining 50 hostages in Gaza as Israel and Hamas work toward a ceasefire agreement and Trump looks to expand the Abraham Accords. "This week marks 4,000 days since Hadar's abduction. In that time, I have knocked on the doors of leaders and diplomats around the world. I have appealed not only as a grieving mother but as a citizen of a country that shares the United States's values of justice and humanity. … I beseech the president: use your influence to ensure that Saudi Arabia helps to bring them home. Peace and normalization will be your historic legacy in the Middle East, but they cannot come at the expense of the hostages. Their return is a critical confidence-building step toward the peace that you are building." [TheHill] |
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U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee made a brief appearance at Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's corruption trial in Jerusalem on Wednesday, telling reporters earlier in the day that the visit to court was "an act of friendship"; days prior, President Donald Trump had posted on his Truth Social site in support of Netanyahu, calling on the charges to be dropped or for the prime minister to be pardoned… The International Criminal Court denied a request from Israel to withdraw the arrest warrants issued against Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant while the court reviews Israeli challenges to the warrants… A new American intelligence assessment indicates that American strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities last month largely destroyed Fordow, but left Natanz and Isfahan largely intact, albeit somewhat degraded… New York City Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani met on Wednesday with House Democrats, including Reps. Jerry Nadler (D-NY), Ayanna Pressley (D-MA) and Melanie Stansbury (D-NM) at a breakfast in Washington hosted by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY)... New York Gov. Kathy Hochul told MSNBC that she had conveyed to Mamdani that he has "a lot of healing to do with the Jewish community" over his anti-Israel activism and support for rhetoric that is widely viewed by the Jewish community as incitement to antisemitic violence… Les Wexner purchased Norman Foster's Martha's Vineyard estate for $37 million… The New York Times profiles thriller filmmaker Ari Aster ahead of the theatrical release of his new film, "Eddington"... The Modern Orthodox organization Uri L'Zedek, which has brought lessons from the Torah into the social justice ecosystem for nearly 20 years, is expanding into advocacy work in Washington, hoping to "lower the temperature" of the country's partisan politics, eJewishPhilanthropy's Nira Dayanim reports… An Australian Muslim cleric, who was ordered by a court to cease giving inflammatory and antisemitic sermons, was ordered to prominently display notices detailing the court's findings across the social media platforms of the Islamic center he oversees… Tali Cohen is joining the Anti-Defamation League as the director of the group's Washington office, following more than two decades at FEMA and the Department of Homeland Security… |
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SERBIAN MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS MARKO DJURIC/X |
The inaugural meeting of the Belgrade Strategic Dialogue: Serbia-United States-Israel Partnership was hosted by the Serbian National Assembly this week, attended by Serbian parliamentarians, Israeli Ambassador to Serbia Avivit Bar-Ilan, members of the Jewish community, business leaders and policy experts from the American Foreign Policy Council, Atlantic Council and AIPAC. |
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CHRISTOPHER POLK/VARIETY VIA GETTY IMAGES |
Emmy Award-winning actor and comedian, Brett Goldstein turns 45... Chef and two-time James Beard Foundation Award winner, Joyce Goldstein turns 90... Professor emeritus at Tel Aviv University and former Israeli foreign minister, Shlomo Ben-Ami turns 82... Emmy Award-winning play-by-play announcer on radio and TV, currently with the Los Angeles Dodgers, Charley Steiner turns 76... Co-editor of The Big Book of Jewish Humor, Moshe Waldoks turns 76... Civil rights and criminal defense attorney, co-founder of the Innocence Project, Peter J. Neufeld turns 75... Rabbi emeritus at Reform Congregation Keneseth Israel in Elkins Park, Pa., Lance J. Sussman turns 71... Managing GP and co-founder of Pitango Venture Capital, Nechemia (Chemi) Peres turns 67... Television and film director, Joshua Seftel turns 57... Actress best known for playing Sharona on "Monk," Bitty Schram turns 57... Rabbi of the Young Israel of Woodmere, N.Y., Shalom Axelrod turns 56... Founder and CEO of Zeta Global, David A. Steinberg turns 55... Stand-up comedian, Gary Gulman turns 55... Treasurer of Australia until 2022, now chairman of the Future Fund, Josh Frydenberg turns 54... Blogger, journalist, and science fiction author, Cory Doctorow turns 54... Member of the Knesset for the Yesh Atid party, Boaz Toporovsky turns 45... Para table tennis player and Paralympic gold medalist, Ian Seidenfeld turns 24... Arabella Rose Kushner turns 14... |
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