IDF soldier steals Humvee for family trip

The soldier drove the Humvee from the base to his residence in Petah Tikva, where he loaded his family onto the vehicle to take on a trip.

By World Israel News Staff

An Israeli Defense Force (IDF) reservist illicitly took a High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle (Humvee) vehicle from his base, despite not possessing a military license, to take his family on a trip.

The unauthorized excursion resulted in minor damage to the vehicle.

Unbeknownst to his superiors, the soldier drove the Humvee from the base to his residence in Petah Tikva, where he loaded his family onto the vehicle, Israel National News reported.

During the course of the journey, the Humvee suffered damage to its rooftop strobe light. After a period of seven hours, the soldier returned the vehicle to the base, failing to report the incident.

In response to the occurrence, the brigade commander issued an order to secure the Humvees stationed at the base with locking chains.

In the U.S., stealing military Humvees happens with surprising frequency.

In January 2021, a military Humvee was stolen from a National Guard facility in a Los Angeles suburb.

In December 2022, a Humvee was stolen from an Army Reserve center in central Texas.

The four-door vehicle is worth about $120,000.

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Iraq ‘turning into a threat’ to Israel

In Iraq, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ Quds Force is the organizer and funder of the Shi’ite militias, giving Iran a significant role there.

By Yaakov Lappin, TPS

Last month, almost two years after the United States announced the end of combat missions in Iraq, the White House extended an emergency decree regarding the country due to what it called ongoing obstacles to its orderly reconstruction, peace and security.

The Biden administration said in its decree that “the development of political, administrative, and economic institutions in Iraq continue to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States.”

There are growing signs, however, that Iraq is also gradually posing an unusual—and more geographically immediate—threat to Israel.

The Iranian-backed Iraqi Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), which recently threatened the 2,500 U.S. forces stationed in the country, are a member of the Iranian-backed radical axis, and cooperate with Hezbollah, as well as with Shi’ite militias in Syria.

One PMF group, Golan Liberation Brigade, as its name suggests, was set up to fight Israel. Some of the Iraqi militias are also active in Syria, such as Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba, which is activated by the Iranian Quds Force.

In 2019, international media reports said Israeli aircraft or drones struck PMF bases in Iraq—a report that, if true, would suggest that Iran has transferred weapons to Iraq for future use against Israel.

Danny (Dennis) Citrinowicz, a senior research fellow at the Tel Aviv-based Institute for National Security Studies, assessed that the significant threat to Israel stemming from Iraq involves armed unmanned aerial vehicles.

“In the past, there was a claim of an attempted UAV launch from Iraq at Israel during ‘Operation Protective Edge’ [in 2014, against Hamas in Gaza],” said Citrinowicz, who served for 25 years in a variety of command positions in the Israel Defense Forces’ Military Intelligence Directorate.

He added that Shi’ite militias in Iraq have themselves said that they are building up UAV capabilities, noting that they attack American targets in Syria using UAVs on a regular basis.

Professor Eyal Zisser, vice rector of Tel Aviv University and chair in Contemporary History of the Middle East, told the Tazpit Press Service that Iraq is “slowly turning into a source of threat.”

He argued that since Hezbollah wants to maintain a quiet border with Israel, while in Syria the Assad regime, concerned about Israeli reprisals, does not wish to give Iran a free hand, Iraq becomes “a comfortable arena—from which one can fire missiles at Israel without entanglement, and without the finger of blame falling directly on Iran.”

According to Zisser, the missile threat from Iraq is small, and can’t be compared to that posed by Hezbollah’s enormous arsenal. However, he said, any projectile fire out of Iraq “would create a lot of noise— including media [coverage] in Israel.”

Citrinowicz noted that Iraqi militia leaders have stated—including during the recent May escalation between Israel and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, that “they would not hesitate to attack Israel,” adding that it is clear that they are part of the Iran-backed axis, and part of the trend of unifying multiple arenas.

In light of their growing proximity to Hezbollah in recent years—particularly after the death of Quds Force Commander Qassem Soleimani in a January 2020 U.S. drone strike in Baghdad, Citrinowicz said it would be correct to assume that the threat from Iraq is taking shape, in practice, through the actions and declarations of the militia heads.

Zisser noted that in Iraq, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ Quds Force is the organizer and funder of the Shi’ite militias, giving the elite extraterritorial Iranian force a significant role there.

At the same time, he added, Iraq has not yet fully fallen “into Iran’s pocket, and there are various streams, including within the Shi’ite sect, some of which are hostile to Iran.”

PMF militias are upset over what they see as Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia’ al-Sudani’s cooperation with the United States, he said.

“Hence, the Iranian effort is first of all focused on the domestic Iraqi scene,” he explained. “The moment that Iraq is in their pocket—and it’s not certain that this will happen—then it would be easier for the Iranians to focus their efforts on Syria. But that isn’t the current situation.”

Citrinowicz said the Iraqi arena has a deep influence on eastern Syria, where Shi’ite militias have become the main military force active on the Syrian–Iraqi border.

The United States is facing a trap in Iraq, he said, since it “has to preserve its influence and work with Prime Minister Sudani – who is viewed negatively by the militias – and at the same time, the United States has to respond to every action by the militias, mainly in Syria. This is a very delicate balance, and it is expected to become even more delicate in future.”

U.S. influence in Iraq places checks on the Iranians, and also forces them to focus on the U.S. presence there, he said, adding, however, that it is unclear what will happen after U.S. forces leave.

“Iraq is in a transitional phase, and it is worth monitoring developments there, because it can go back to being a threatening arena to Israel,” he cautioned.

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Why Political Strategy Needs Karl Marx

Most of the academic left has long been silent on the topic of strategy. Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe’s Hegemony and Socialist Strategy marked a watershed moment for strategic thinking in the post-Marxist tradition upon its publication in 1985. The book, long a mainstay in many a graduate theory seminar, breaks with what Laclau and […]

U.S. Intelligence Has Amassed ‘Sensitive and Intimate’ Data on ‘Nearly Everyone’

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The Ignorance Illusion: A Wake-Up Call for Brits regarding Ukraine War. “The Spectre of Nuclear Escalation Looms”

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Austria’s Bernie Sanders Beat the Establishment and Became Party Leader

For years, Austria’s Social Democrats have embraced the values of the free market and lost ever more working-class votes. Now, left-winger Andreas Babler has surged to the party leadership — and promises to transform his country’s politics.

Andreas Babler has been elected chairman of Austria’s Social Democratic Party. (Georg Hochmuth / APA / AFP via Getty Images)

Andreas Babler’s bid to become chairman of Austria’s Social Democratic Party (SPÖ) appeared to be a familiar story of initial promise and inevitable disappointment. For ten weeks, the left-winger’s impassioned, insurgent campaign had surely kindled enthusiasm on the Left. Yet at the party congress on Saturday, June 3 in Linz, it looked as though it wasn’t enough. Once the slightly more than six hundred delegates had cast their ballots, it was announced that Babler had earned 47 percent of the vote, falling just short of the ultimate prize. His opponent, Hans Peter Doskozil, the face of the party’s right wing, was declared the winner.

Then, a bombshell. Shortly after the results were published, public TV anchorman Martin Thür pointed out on Twitter that the sum of the valid and invalid votes didn’t match the total number of ballots cast. On the Monday afternoon, SPÖ electoral commission director Michaela Grubesa announced that a recount had uncovered a far more egregious error: the vote totals of the candidates had been switched while being entered into an Excel spreadsheet.

On the following day, Grubesa — a member of the Styrian state parliament and the domestic partner of Max Lercher, the campaign manager of Babler’s opponent Doskozil — announced her resignation as the electoral commission director. The votes were then counted for a third time. Finally, the official confirmation arrived: Babler had in fact received 53 percent of the vote — and was elected chairman of his party.

A Socialist Head of the SPÖ

This story may sound incredible. But it is less unbelievable than the mere fact that a politician with Babler’s profile now stands at the helm of the SPÖ.

The fifty-year-old mayor of Traiskirchen — a Vienna suburb with a population of just under nineteen thousand — Babler can be regarded as the Austrian Bernie Sanders or Jeremy Corbyn. A former secretary of Austria’s Socialist Youth and vice president of the International Union of Socialist Youth, Babler was socialized as a Marxist in his late teens and early twenties. Yet unlike many Social Democratic leaders today who were once young radicals before distancing themselves from their pasts, Babler has remained faithful to his ideological commitments.

Unlike many Social Democratic leaders today who were once young radicals before distancing themselves from their pasts, Babler has remained faithful to his youthful ideological commitments.

At least since the 1990s, the SPÖ has pursued a neoliberal course that offers no perspective for fundamental social transformation. But Babler still describes himself as a socialist and even refers on occasion to Marxism, which he described in a recent television appearance as “a good lens through which to view the world.” In speeches and interviews, he also emphasizes the SPÖ’s rich history as a workers’ party and his own biography as the child of a working-class family and a former machinist working in a factory. Experiences such as these contextualize his own political approach, which he portrays as a return to Social Democracy’s radical roots.

An Unprecedented Situation

This outcome is also unusual insofar as SPÖ chairpersons aren’t typically elected at party congresses at all. Instead, they are selected behind closed doors by other insiders and simply confirmed in functionally symbolic party congress elections where they don’t face any opposing candidates. Yet after the SPÖ suffered heavy losses in state elections in Lower Austria and Carinthia earlier this year, the party made a historically unprecedented decision: ahead of its June 3 congress in Linz, it would let its members vote on who they thought should lead the party.

Under normal circumstances, it would have been hard to imagine a figure such as Babler ever becoming chairperson of the Social Democrats.

This member survey had been conceived as a way to resolve the years-long and highly public factional dispute between party chairperson Pamela Rendi-Wagner and Doskozil, the governor of the state of Burgenland. But Babler seized the moment and announced his own campaign. Suddenly, the long-anticipated duel became a three-way contest — and the dark-horse candidate seemed to stand a decent chance. The simmering “directional dispute” between the epidemiology professor Rendi-Wagner and former state police chief Doskozil mainly boiled down to differences in electoral strategy, rather than political program. But it seemed that former factory worker Babler could offer dissatisfied members a genuine alternative.

For years, Rendi-Wagner has embodied the SPÖ’s attempt to appeal more to Austria’s urban, educated middle classes by adopting a liberal-technocratic demeanor. Doskozil has instead tried to use law-and-order politics and critical remarks on migration to win back the sections of the native-born working class that have rejected the SPÖ in favor of the far-right Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ).

Yet neither Rendi-Wagner nor Doskozil have opposed the party’s neoliberal course. In fact, on both economic policy and the issue of migration, there was little substantive policy difference between the two. Babler, however, stands in stark contrast to both Rendi-Wagner’s “left neoliberalism” and Doskozil’s “right neoliberalism” in terms of his demands as well as his insistence on an economic system change. “It’s high time to question the system. We need new rules for our economy and society,” his campaign website proclaimed.

For years, outgoing leader Pamela Rendi-Wagner has embodied the party’s attempt to appeal more to Austria’s urban, educated middle classes by adopting a liberal-technocratic demeanor.

In line with this vision of “politics from below,” Babler’s campaign focused on mobilizing the SPÖ’s base. In the few days between the announcement of the membership survey and the deadline for new member participation, nearly ten thousand people joined the SPÖ, presumably mostly due to the outsider candidate. While the survey ran in late April and early May, Babler traveled across Austria, delivering speeches to thousands of enthusiastic supporters about his goals of eliminating childhood poverty, shortening the work week while maintaining full pay, and removing the provision of basic needs such as housing and energy from the market. His campaign sparked a hopeful mood among Austrian leftists — both inside and outside of the SPÖ.

Astonishingly, when the results of the membership campaign were announced on May 22, all three candidates had almost exactly one-third of the vote. Babler was in second with 31.51 percent — two points behind Doskozil’s 33.68 percent, but slightly ahead of Rendi-Wagner’s 31.35 percent. As the latter had clearly lost her hegemony among the party rank and file, despite support from important parts of its bureaucracy, she emerged from the virtual draw as the only clear loser — and resigned. Babler, however, announced that he would continue his campaign and stand against Doskozil at the party congress.

Although a Babler victory was far from a foregone conclusion, he hoped to be able to benefit from the enthusiasm generated by his campaign but also to convince “pragmatic” delegates from Rendi-Wagner’s camp to vote against their archenemy, Doskozil. And indeed, this calculation paid off.

Bablers Base of Power

If Babler really wants to lead the SPÖ back to its roots as a workers’ party, his election as chairperson will be merely the beginning of a much longer struggle that could go on for years.

The SPÖ is a highly bureaucratic party with various levels of elected politicians and professional functionaries — and those who openly criticize the (neoliberal) party line don’t generally advance very far within its sprawling structures. Many higher-ranking SPÖ personalities are primarily concerned with maintaining their own power and share neither Babler’s understanding of social democracy nor his vision for the party. This is also apparent from Babler’s extremely narrow margin of victory at the party congress: he never would have even come close to winning 50 percent of the delegates had his opponent not been downright despised by sections of the party bureaucracy for interpersonal reasons.

Babler traveled across Austria, delivering speeches to thousands of enthusiastic supporters about his goals.

But the biggest hurdle for Babler’s attempt to transform the SPÖ may actually be the party’s rank and file. Although he won one-third of the membership, two variations of neoliberalism ultimately won a combined two-thirds. This surely does not mean that the majority of the rank and file supports neoliberalism; rather, the nearly perfect tripartite division of the votes signifies a general ideological disorientation. The party leadership has cultivated this disorientation for decades, by failing to represent a coherent political vision.

Now, the depoliticization of the rank and file poses a danger to Babler’s project. It will make it easier for his opponents within the party to drive a wedge through his base by boosting sensitive issues with the help of the bourgeois press — just as was done to Jeremy Corbyn with the Brexit dilemma. This strategy was already on display in the week before the party congress, when various media outlets suddenly reported on a podcast interview from 2020 in which Babler criticized the EU as the “most aggressive military alliance that has ever existed” and “worse than NATO.”

Although these remarks were arguably somewhat exaggerated, it’s crucial to grasp that the purpose of such media attacks is to deny all legitimacy to figures such as Babler who dare to contradict the neoliberal consensus. This much was obvious from the spate of outraged op-eds, which were less concerned with discussing the validity of Babler’s statements than whether they disqualified him as a potential chairperson of the SPÖ.

The depoliticization of the rank and file poses a danger to Babler’s project. It will make it easier for his opponents within the party to drive a wedge through his base by boosting sensitive issues with the help of the bourgeois press.

Given the undemocratic and market-liberal foundations of the EU, a critique of the institution is a basic necessity for all European political parties genuinely striving for progressive social transformation — regardless of the concrete demands these parties derive from their critiques. Although it is true that the EU is often targeted by forces of the extreme right in contemporary discourse, it does not follow that progressive parties should shy away from criticizing the EU from the left. On the contrary, it would be disastrous to leave this important issue to the Right.

When cynical actors attack Babler for his views on this and other sensitive issues, he mustn’t simply backtrack. This would embolden rather than pacify his opponents. Instead, he must be able to show backbone and explain his position in a calm, cool, and collected manner to his actual audience — the working-class majority of Austrian society. If he can do so, he might manage to re-politicize the SPÖ rank and file and cultivate a genuine base of power capable of serving as a counterweight to the hostile party bureaucracy and fourth estate.

A Chance to Turn the Tables

Babler’s election as SPÖ chairperson has come as a moment that is in many ways unique in Austrian political history. First, the far-right FPÖ is currently flying high in the polls, which it has been leading for months at just under 30 percent. In and of itself, this is not unusual by Austrian standards, yet in view of the coming parliamentary elections, which must be held by fall 2024, an FPÖ chancellorship has never been so likely.

The last time that the FPÖ enjoyed similar polling numbers was in the spring of 2017 — shortly before the young, polished anti-migration hard-liner Sebastian Kurz took over as chairperson of the historically center-right Austrian People’s Party (ÖVP) and absorbed a large chunk of the FPÖ’s electorate. However, Kurz is now history, after being forced to resign two years ago following a series of corruption scandals. This time around, it’s unlikely that another uniquely popular figure is going to step in and save the stagnating ÖVP before the election.

For years, Herbert Kickl had been regarded as the leading ideologue of the FPÖ. If he were to become Austria’s chancellor, the results would be catastrophic for the working class, for the rights of women and migrants, and potentially also for Austrian democracy. However, Kickl and the FPÖ may have met their match in Babler, who addresses precisely the realities fueling the growing resentment toward the political establishment in an authentic and down-to-earth way.

To some, this resentment makes the bellicose FPÖ appear as a plausible alternative, yet the right-wing extremists have nothing to offer the vast majority in Austria by way of actual solutions to the current cost-of-living crisis, among other problems. This insight is often repeated by self-consciously ideological leftists. But it could become obvious to a much wider audience, if Babler shifts public debate to issues such as rising rent, food prices, and energy bills.

The right-wing extremists have nothing to offer the vast majority in Austria by way of actual solutions to the current cost-of-living crisis.

Heading one of Austria’s largest parties, Babler is in an optimal position to change the debate throughout the country. Important media outlets now have to discuss his policy proposals for far-reaching economic redistribution. Doubtless, the usual talking heads will belittle these proposals as pie-in-the-sky demands made by a naïve Red. But if Babler resists the pressure to water down his program, he could expand the political horizon of possibility for many. And that would benefit the broader left.

This is especially important given another novel development: the renaissance of the Communist Party of Austria (KPÖ) in recent years. Following its surprise victory in the 2021 city election in Graz and its astounding entry into the Salzburg state parliament in April of this year, the KPÖ now enjoys national relevance for the first time since it dropped out of the national parliament in 1959. The Communists’ profile and membership are increasing, and it is to be expected that they will make substantial gains in various city and state elections in 2024. Since the Salzburg state election, the KPÖ has also been polling between 3 and 7 percent in national polls, giving the party a realistic chance of surpassing the 4 percent threshold and returning to parliament after sixty-five years’ absence.

If Babler achieves an enduring victory against his party opponents and renews the SPÖ as a workers’ party, the KPÖ would have in him a suitable partner on the national level. But for the foreseeable future, the task of the KPÖ is still to build an independent, ideologically resolute force to the left of Social Democracy — a force that doesn’t just criticize capitalism in its neoliberal form, but advocates for a fundamentally different economic system based not on the pursuit of profit but the fulfillment of human needs.

If Babler’s SPÖ finishes in first in the election and then decides to enter into a coalition either with the Greens and the libertarian NEOS or even with the ÖVP to secure a governing majority — not entirely unimaginable scenarios, for mathematical reasons — the KPÖ will be needed in parliament more than ever to provide credible opposition from the Left. Otherwise, the FPÖ will be able to keep posturing as the sole alternative to the status quo and continue to gain strength.

According to mainstream analysis, it would have been better for the KPÖ if Doskozil and not Babler had been elected to lead the SPÖ: the ex-cop would have driven left-wing SPÖ voters into the arms of the KPÖ and assured their return to parliament, or so that was the assumption. Yet this case is less clear than it seems. Even though Doskozil is unpopular among SPÖ leftists, it is highly likely that many of them would have voted for their party anyway to block an FPÖ victory.

Who could have imagined a few years ago that in Austria — a vanguard of right-wing populism in Europe —a left-wing renewal of this sort would even enter the realm of possibility?

Although Babler addresses similar class issues to the KPÖ, the latter may benefit in the long term if the population becomes politicized around these issues: by comparison, it never hurt the far right for long when the conservatives appropriated their positions, as current polls show. In the coming national election campaign, the KPÖ must emphasize that they have been successfully representing the interests of working people for some time and have achieved numerous concrete victories — both as a governing party on the municipal level and as an oppositional force. By doing so, they may be able to win over many of the voters who for whatever reason are not prepared to trust the SPÖ — and thus even extend the left-wing camp in Austria.

Both the KPÖ and the SPÖ’s left wing now stand before difficult struggles that will not be decided overnight. But who could have imagined a few years ago that in Austria — a vanguard of right-wing populism in Europe — a left-wing renewal of this sort would even enter the realm of possibility?

Conservatives Say the Justice System Has Been Weaponized. Cop City Proves Them Right.

In the wake of the Trump indictments, conservatives are concerned that the justice system is being used to target political enemies. They’re right about that — but as the repression of Cop City protesters shows, they’re wrong about who the real targets are.

Cop City protester Manuel Terán was murdered by police in Atlanta. (CHENEY ORR / AFP via Getty Images)

When Donald Trump was indicted on seven charges related to his mishandling of classified documents and attempting to hide his possession of those materials from federal authorities, Republicans reacted precisely as you would expect.

Marco Rubio predicted the fall of the republic. Kari Lake delivered a “public service announcement” that attempts to hold the former president accountable would result in armed resistance. Kevin McCarthy seemingly forgot that the president doesn’t hand down federal indictments. And presidential hopeful Ron DeSantis sanctimoniously declared that “the weaponization of federal law enforcement represents a mortal threat to a free society.”

DeSantis and company are actually right to be concerned with the weaponization of law enforcement against political enemies. They are, however, completely wrong about who actually gets targeted and just how long this has been happening.

The justice system is a weapon by nature. It’s a tool whose main purpose is to inflict harm on those who have broken the law, and the law itself is politically constructed, with people who have power and resources able to shape it to their needs. If the Republican Party really wants to stop law enforcement from targeting citizens for political ends, they should turn their eyes from Mar-a-Lago to Atlanta.

A Mortal Threat

On the last day of May, Atlanta SWAT teams raided a small house with guns drawn and arrested three people. Any observer of the raid would likely assume that it was a drug bust of some sort. Instead, SWAT was sent to arrest three people on charges of financial crimes relating to a bail fund for protesters of Atlanta’s now infamous “Cop City.”

The Justice Department’s thirty-seven-page indictment of Donald Trump lays out damning evidence in support of its case, including audio of Trump admitting to the illegality of his actions. Meanwhile, a judge overseeing a bond hearing for the three activists charged in Atlanta noted that he didn’t find the state prosecutors’ case to be “real impressive.” This is what the targeted political weaponization of law enforcement looks like.

This raid was only the latest show of targeted police intimidation of activists and protesters trying to stop the construction of law enforcement’s new playground. There has been the usual aggression against protesters — batons, bean bags rounds, and tear gas. But police have also charged protesters as domestic terrorists using a constitutionally dubious statute that the ACLU characterizes as a suppression of free speech. And it appears they murdered a protester in cold blood.

Cop Country

The use of law enforcement to protect power is nothing new. When political pressure mounts to rein in police departments after acts of brutality, police have routinely responded by not doing their jobs in protest. To be precise, they are selectively deciding which laws to enforce in order to put pressure on city governments and protect their political power.

But that’s not all they do. Police are three times more likely to use violence against protesters for left-wing causes than they are against right-wing marchers. In 2020, police in North Carolina pepper-sprayed and violently dispersed what was planned as a peaceful march to a polling place. Then there was that time police tear-gassed peaceful protesters at the Capitol so that then president Trump could get a photo op.

Police are three times more likely to use violence against protesters for left-wing causes than they are against right-wing marchers.

Of course, this is standard for American policing. A major role of the police during the early industrial period was violently putting down labor actions and preventing unionization, a tradition that lives on to this day. Targeted law enforcement enabled the de facto continuation of slavery after the Civil War. The war on drugs that has fueled the prison industrial complex was an invention of political expediency. And we all know how the police reacted to black civil rights protesters in the ’60s.

Points of Agreement

It’s an easy thing to note Republicans’ convenient ignorance of just how much law enforcement has always been politically deployed against left-wing challenges to power. However, their hypocrisy should not overshadow the true observation that law enforcement bodies are political actors. The justice system as a whole enforces laws that are politically constructed — and often grants a pass to those who finance that construction.

During a recent city council meeting in Atlanta to reaffirm the city’s commitment to building Cop City, over three hundred people packed themselves into the city hall to give public comment on the plan, and they were overwhelmingly against it. The city council still approved the construction, and revealed that the cost to the public was going to be much more than initially communicated.

The reason why this is happening despite the objection of local citizens is that wealthy interests and powerful corporations want it to happen. These are the same corporations that have fought with their employees over unionization and unsafe working conditions. They’re the same corporations that claim they can’t pay their employees a living wage and that use child labor, but can nevertheless find the money to donate millions to building a police amusement park to boost morale. These corporations have the resources and influence to make the political process work for them — in this case, making sure there are enough police to manage the human externalities of capital accumulation.

In service to this political goal, the police have been unleashed on protesters, state prosecutors have been given license to use the law in a blatant show of intimidation, and a few cops will most likely get away with murder.

It’s important to note that Atlanta is a Democrat-controlled city in a state that just elected two Democratic senators and helped swing the election for Joe Biden. For their part, Senators Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff have offered tepid statements on what is happening to Cop City protesters, making sure to lecture them for their destruction of property before expressing mild concern for obvious abuses of the First Amendment.

The weaponization of law enforcement is ultimately not so much a matter of partisanship, as the Right is claiming in the wake of the Trump indictments. At base, it’s about the wealthy using the police and the justice system to silence those who would challenge their power.

Leak: EU Commission Wants Digital Euro Accessible to Everyone

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Syriacs Signal Hope on this 108th Genocide Anniversary

Today, June 15, marks the 108th anniversary of the Syriac Genocide.  Often referred to as “Sayfo” (Syriac for “the sword”), the Syriac Genocide is considered among the darkest episodes of the twentieth century—a grim demonstration of man’s worst proclivities, driven by destructive ideology, which resulted in the slaughter of 750,000 defenseless Syriac Christians from 1915 to 1923.  

Sayfo indeed remains a defining element of Syriac collective historical memory. However, historically speaking, it represents just one episode in the long arc of Syriac Christian persecution.  Even the century following Sayfo was characterized by a series of triumphs and tragedies for the Christians of the Levant and Mesopotamia, Christians who have been denied human rights, freedom of faith and conscience, and the opportunity to participate in the political process.  When spared from the sword, they are treated as subjects, or dhimmi, in their indigenous homes.

In recent years, however, Syriac Christians—the descendants of Sayfo survivors—living in a small corner of northeast Syria have secured their place in all levels of governance and public service, and even played an active and pivotal role in defeating the Islamic State.  How the Syriacs arrived at this point, however, was not a straight and unimpeded path.  This progress was hard-earned through the blood of a dwindling community.

Following their post-genocide exodus from what would later become Turkey, the Syriacs’ surviving ancestors did not assume the role or mindset of hapless refugees.  Following WWI, during the French Mandate in Syria in the first half of the twentieth century, these genocide survivors established and built the unassuming metropolitan centers of northeast Syria, including Qamishli and Hassakah.  They developed Syria’s agricultural industry, the largest sector of the Syrian economy, driving its gross domestic product throughout the twentieth century.  Syriac Christians turned the Syrian desert, previously inhabited only by nomadic tribes, into the breadbasket, upon which Syria depends even today.

During this period, Syriac Christians also sparked a cultural, linguistic and intellectual renaissance following centuries of repression.  The Syriac language, a dialect of Aramaic, the lingua franca of the ancient Near East, and the native tongue of Jesus, was culturally and intellectually revived.  This renaissance was accomplished through the establishment of academic institutions of higher learning and a flourishing of the arts in the permissive landscape of mandatory French rule.

With the end of the French mandate in 1946, and the subsequent takeover by Arab nationalist regimes, the Syriacs were once again treated as protected subjects, denied cultural and national rights.  This trend intensified in the 1950s and 60s during the advance of Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser’s Pan-Arabist pipedream project to unify Egypt and the Levantine states under the United Arab Republic.  Beginning in this period, Syriac private schools were either nationalized or closed, heavy restrictions were placed on the use and instruction of the Syriac language, and the Syriac-run agricultural industry was nationalized.

Successive Syrian Arab governments perpetually reminded the Syriacs that their ancestors were refugees in the benevolent Arab state, and that the authoritarian regime was their only salvation from perennial massacre.  This weaponized pity became state policy, and intensified with the regime of Hafez al-Assad, who appointed Christians to nominal positions to demonstrate his tolerance—a classic manifestation of “Arab Christian” tokenism.

Arabist regimes have tacitly blackmailed Syriac Christians.  Christians are reminded that, if they value their safety, the apex of their community’s aspirations shouldn’t exceed the bounds of their ghettoized neighborhoods, safe from massacre—an implicit threat that the Arab dictator would readily inflict upon them the same carnage visited upon their ancestors decades earlier.

Following the 2011 Syrian uprising, Syrian society descended into one of the bloodiest civil wars in modern history.  Islamist groups came out of hiding, coalesced into what became the Islamic State, and visited carnage upon large swaths of Syria and Iraq.  Thousands of Christians and other ethno-religious minorities were killed, taken as sex slaves, or kidnapped for ransom.  This barbarity drove the mass westward migration of hundreds of thousands of Christians.  Others sought refuge in cities controlled by the Syrian regime, including Damascus and Latakia, for their relative safety.

As the Syrian Civil War intensified, the Autonomous Administration of Northeast Syria (AANES) was forged through the cooperation of various ethno-religious communities, namely Syriacs, Kurds, and Arabs.  In close partnership with the United States, this newly constructed coalition of freedom-minded communities (who built the Syrian Democratic Forces as its defense apparatus) led the fight against the Islamic State.  The territorial defeat of ISIS by the international joint task force—Operation Inherent Resolve—can be credited in large part to the Syriac Military Council, the Christian branch of the Syrian Democratic Forces, which punched far above its weight.

In the last century, Syriac Christians beat the odds, survived multiple genocides, accomplished herculean feats in northeast Syria, and enriched Syrian society at large.  Having resisted the Arabist-propagated, weaponized narrative of protected victimhood, Syriacs in northeast Syria continue to show promise as the hope for Christians and other minority communities in the greater Middle East, as a unique model for a vibrant and empowered Christian community.

Indeed, Syriac Christians benefit from the egalitarian principles that characterize the AANES project.  Together with their Kurdish and Arab partners, they’ve built institutions for pluralist self-governance, and instituted the Syriac language as an official language in northeast Syria, enabling Syriac students, once again, to learn the Syriac language in school.  The progress made in recent years in the AANES is monumental.

To preserve and build upon these historic achievements and secure the fate of Christians and other ethno-religious minorities in the Middle East, the U.S. must maintain and develop its partnership with this promising Christian community.  Through continued American presence in northeast Syria and a sustained partnership with the Syriac Military Council, the United States will maintain critical, results-yielding engagement in Syria—a region previously inaccessible to the West.  In so doing, the United States can readily support programs that enable Christians and other minorities to return to, and remain in, their native land.  This can be augmented through support for Syriac academic institutions.  Empowered by the United States, Syriacs will be better positioned to reinvest in the societies they built in the wake of the Sayfo Genocide a century ago, thereby supporting American interests in the greater region.

This success story of pluralism and self-governance unfolding in northeast Syria is organic and natively-generated—almost unheard of in this part of the world.  The United States should not miss this rare opportunity to facilitate the full fruition of this unfolding success story.  If this positive momentum is forsaken, the westward migration of the Middle East’s final Christians will continue to accelerate with regional extinction as the inevitable conclusion.

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