Monday, June 22, 2026

Dr Ruth Report 6-21-26

As always, Dr Ruth Ann Crystal has lots of medical information to tell you about.  Pass it on!

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Dr. Ruth Report, 6/21/26

COVID levels are mostly remaining very low according to WastewaterSCAN. The CDC did not post an update this week because of the Juneteenth holiday, but they should post new data tomorrow.

In other news: In the last 2 weeks, the Utah measles outbreak appears to be slowing down, while measles is now spreading in Virginia and in Pennsylvania. Ebola cases in the DRC are up almost 40% in one week. Midjourney and Butterfly are making an rapid total body ultrasound scanner. The U.S. government hid information on COVID and Shingles vaccine benefits, but 3 reports in JAMA this week show the benefits of the COVID booster vaccine. Tattoo ink in lymph nodes can masquerade as endometriosis. And much more.

COVID Variants

Yunlong Cao’s lab from Peking University has two recent articles: one shows how immune imprinting shapes which SARS-CoV-2 variants will succeed and the other introduces DeepCoV which can predict emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants before they take over.

Lack of ancestral SARS-CoV-2 imprinting promotes BA.3.2.2 infection in children | BioRxiV (Y. Cao lab) 6/9/26

  • Yunlong Cao’s lab found that the BA.3.2.2 variant disproportionately infects young children globally because they lack exposure from prior infection or vaccination to the ancestral Wuhan SARS-CoV-2 strain. The BA.3.2.2 variant evades Omicron specific antibodies dominating young immune repertoires, while mRNA imprinted adults retain cross reactive neutralizing antibodies. Ancestral immune memory paradoxically protects against this variant. We may need to rethink pediatric COVID vaccination for young children to include the ancestral Wuhan SARS-CoV-2 strain.

A deep mutational scanning-informed protein language model predicts SARS-CoV-2 evolution dynamics with spatiotemporal resolution | Nature Microbiology 5/27/26

  • Yunlong Cao’s lab also introduced DeepCoV, an AI model which can accurately forecast dominant SARS-CoV-2 variants a month ahead with 90% fewer false discoveries. DeepCoV’s framework combines mutation scanning, viral evolution, and surveillance data to track immune evasion and regional spread patterns in real time.

Acute COVID infections, General COVID info

Bilingualism predicts executive function resilience after COVID-19 in aging | PNAS 6/1/26

  • A study of 312 adults aged 18 to 80 found that being bilingual early in life may protect aging brains from COVID-related cognitive decline. Among older adults, task switching ability dropped more after COVID infection in those who learned a second language later in life, while early bilinguals showed minimal decline, suggesting bilingualism builds cognitive reserve to COVID.

Characterization of IgG N-glycan patterns in COVID-19, sepsis and healthy subjects

  • Researchers at the Université libre de Bruxelles in Belgium studied 86 participants and found that severe COVID infection was associated with measurable changes in the sugar structures attached to IgG antibodies. Fatal COVID cases specifically showed reduced galactosylation on those antibodies, a pattern linked to more pro-inflammatory immune signaling compared to non-fatal and healthy subjects.

Efferocytosis of apoptotic bodies drives SARS-CoV-2 infection and macrophage inflammation | Nature Communications 6/15/26

  • Researchers at La Trobe University and WEHI found that SARS-CoV-2 hijacks a normal cleanup process called efferocytosis to infect macrophages. Infected cells release apoptotic bodies that carry live SARS-CoV-2. Macrophages engulf these, which triggers inflammasome and NF-κB inflammation. Blocking T-type calcium channels prevented this, reducing viral spread and lung inflammation in models, pointing to a possible new drug target.

Pediatrics

A controlled longitudinal study clarifies the contours of pediatric long COVID | Pediatric Research 6/19/26

  • University of Pittsburgh pediatrician Thomas Hooven, commented on the PECOS study which tracked 852 children over 12 months, comparing 705 who had confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infections against 147 uninfected controls. Children who had been infected with COVID showed meaningfully higher rates of fatigue, post-exertional malaise, gastrointestinal symptoms, headaches, and cough compared to controls at the one year mark.

Chronic absenteeism in Canadian kindergarten classes, pre- and post-COVID-19, and its association with concurrent developmental vulnerability | PLOS One 6/15/26

  • McMaster University analyzed 513,159 Canadian kindergarteners and found chronic absenteeism more than doubled post-COVID (17.7% to 41.3%). The link between frequent absences and developmental vulnerability weakened, reflecting a broader and more socioeconomically diverse cohort of absent children.

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Vaccines

There are 3 new articles in JAMA showing that the 2024-2025 COVID vaccine boosters led to a reduction in major cardiovascular events, while being highly effective in older adults, and protection offering against emergency department visits and hospitalization for severe infection.

2024-2025 COVID-19 Vaccine and Major Adverse Cardiovascular Events Among US Veterans | JAMA Internal Medicine 6/15/26

  • The Al-Aly lab from the St. Louis Veterans Administration analyzed more than 1 million veterans and found that receiving the 2024 to 2025 COVID vaccine was linked to a 37.7% reduction in the risk of major cardiovascular events connected to COVID over an eight month follow up period. The protective effect was most pronounced in veterans over the age of 75.

COVID-19 Vaccine Effectiveness Among Older Adults | JAMA Open 6/15/26

  • A European multisite study of 2,046 older adults found 2024-2025 COVID vaccines provided 59% protection against symptomatic medically attended infection within 2 months of vaccination. Effectiveness ranged from 64% at 14-41 days to 52% at 42-83 days, though only 6% uptake was observed.

Estimated Effectiveness of 2024-2025 COVID-19 Vaccines in Adults | JAMA Internal Medicine 6/15/26

  • CDC analyzed 333,262 US emergency department/urgent care visits and 97,663 hospitalizations. The 2024-2025 vaccine showed 26% effectiveness against ED/UC visits, 35% against hospitalization, and 41% against critical illness across 7 to 299 days post-vaccination. Protection waned over time.

Long COVID

Central sensitization in long COVID: Associations with autonomic symptom burden, cerebral hypoperfusion, and neuroinflammation | J of Neurological Sciences 9/15/26 (posted online 6/17/26)

  • Researchers at Mass General Brigham examined 169 Long COVID patients and found that 81% met diagnostic criteria for central sensitization, a state in which the nervous system amplifies pain and sensory signals. Those who met this threshold also showed greater reductions in cerebral blood flow upon standing and elevated IL-6 levels, implicating both vascular dysfunction and systemic inflammation as contributors to the condition.

Post-coronavirus inflammatory cerebral peduncle lesion presenting as painful tonic spasms | BMJ Case Reports 6/16/26

  • Stanford University researchers describe a case report of a patient who began experiencing severe painful tonic spasms approximately two weeks following a COVID infection, with MRI imaging revealing an inflammatory lesion in the cerebral peduncle, a critical motor pathway in the brain. Corticosteroid treatment resolved the spasms and the lesion showed gradual improvement over a two year follow up period.

A novel model demonstrating that human immune cells promote multiorgan SARS-CoV-2 dissemination and human T cells limit anti-viral innate immunity | BioRxiV 6/19/26

  • Columbia University researchers developed a human immune system mouse model showing how human immune cells promote multiorgan SARS-CoV-2 dissemination and persistence. Dysfunctional T cells paradoxically suppressed antiviral interferon responses, permitting chronic viral persistence and recapitulating features of Long COVID.

Muscle fatigue in patients with severe long COVID: A 2‐year follow‐up study | PM&R 6/16/26

  • University of Brasília researchers studied 40 individuals who had survived severe COVID infection and followed them for two years. Despite retaining normal muscle mass, these patients continued to show greater fatigue, reduced physical function, and slower force production compared to healthy controls, pointing toward persistent neuromuscular dysfunction rather than structural deficit.

Persistent Muscle Dysfunction and Symptom Burden in Post-COVID Syndrome: A Prospective Longitudinal Study | BMC Journal of Translational Medicine Preprint 6/15/26

  • Munich scientists studied 204 participants and found that Long COVID patients showed measurably weaker grip strength and greater muscle fatigability compared to fully recovered individuals, with these deficits remaining detectable across a six month follow up period. Notably, worse baseline muscle function served as a predictor of subsequent fatigue severity and overall symptom burden in those with post COVID syndrome.

Identification of Altered Potassium Channels for Drug Repurposing in Long COVID Patients | BioRxiv 6/19/26

  • Analysis of gene expression datasets from Long COVID patients identified 715 dysregulated genes, including seven altered potassium channels. Four of the potassium channels (KCNA6, KCNJ10, KCNN3, KCNH4) are targets of several FDA approved drugs, offering potential drug repurposing candidates for Long COVID. The data was studied in silico, thus animal and/or human trials are needed.

Figure 6: Human potassium channels and medications that affect them.

  • KCNN3 was observed to interact with dequalinium.

  • KCNJ10 interacted with mitiglinide, glipizide, tolazamide, and chlorpropamide.

  • KCNA6 and KCNH4 were found to interact with amifampridine, guanidine hydrochloride, dalfampridine, and amifampridine phosphate.

From: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.06.18.733062v1.full.pdf

Systems neuroendocrinology in ME/CFS and long COVID: a chronobiological framework for hormone-based research | Frontiers in Neuroendocrinology 6/19/26

  • A new review from the University of Melbourne discusses that decades of inconsistent hormone findings in ME/CFS and Long COVID stem from static, single timepoint sampling rather than absent biology. Researchers propose a chronobiological framework tracking circadian, menstrual, and stress-responsive hormone rhythms together, since timing and coordination across the hypothalamic-pituitary axes (HPA, HPG, HPT, HPS/GH) may matter more than hormone concentration alone.

What COVID is teaching doctors about the relationship between viruses and cancer | LA Times 6/15/26 https://archive.is/Gq2jB

  • Viral infections such as COVID and Influenza may reactivate dormant cancer cells as seen by recent mouse and human studies.

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ME/CFS

I recently came across A Quiet Storm, a collection of art and poems on ME/CFS like these from Mirthe van den Berg .

From: Mirthe van den Berg

Measles

CDC Measles Update

  • As of June 18, 2026, 2,104 confirmed measles cases were reported in the United States in 2026.

In the last 2 weeks, the Utah measles outbreak appears to be slowing down, while measles is now spreading in Virginia and in Pennsylvania.

From: https://publichealth.jhu.edu/ivac/resources/us-measles-tracker

Ebola in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)

Ebola outbreak zone cases up almost 40 percent in a week | The Hill 6/18/26

  • Africa CDC reported Thursday that confirmed Ebola cases in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) rose 38% in one week, reaching 894 confirmed Ebola cases across 32 health zones. More than 200 have died in the outbreak’s first month, three times worse at this stage than Uganda’s 2000 epidemic, with just 84 of 540 needed healthcare personnel deployed.

Ebola cases near 900 as officials say less than 10% of donations have made it to affected nations | CIDRAP 6/18/26

  • Less than 10% of the over $900 million pledged internationally has reached DRC and Uganda. The US CDC has committed $107 million in emergency funding as the Bundibugyo virus outbreak continues to expand.

Host–virus determinants of Ebola virus persistence in a human cerebral organoid model | Nature Microbiology 6/12/26

  • Researchers at the University of the Bundeswehr Munich used human brain organoids showing that the Ebola virus can sustain active infection for at least 120 days by infecting neurons, astrocytes, and microglia, and spreading directly from cell to cell. This prolonged viral presence triggered localized neuroinflammation.

Direct Relief Sending Over a Quarter Million Pieces of Protective Gear to DRC to Fight Ebola | 6/15/26 Direct Relief

  • Some good news: NGO Direct Relief is distributing over 263,000 N95 respirators donated by 3M to protect health workers battling Ebola in the DRC’s Ituri province. The largest announced N95 shipment to date in response to the outbreak also includes eye protection, coveralls, and essential medicines to support primary care during the crisis.

Government Health News

The OMB and the Politicization of Science | NEJM 6/15/26

  • NEJM editors warn that a White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) proposal would let political appointees to override the NIH peer review system that has guided federal grant funding for 70 years. “Political appointees would be able to make funding decisions and could ignore the advice of independent scientists. They could also stop funding midway through the promised grant period. And they would institute new rules, including rules severely limiting foreign interactions.”

  • The editors state that “the OMB proposal is currently open for public comment, and we urge our readers to express their concerns. When science becomes politicized, everyone loses.”

Nearly 160 sick with flu at US air force base after Hegseth ends mandatory vaccines | Guardian 6/18/26

  • Less than 2 months after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth made the Flu vaccine no longer mandatory for military personnel, an influenza outbreak has sickened at least 159 trainees at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas.

F.D.A. Blocked Publication of Research Finding Covid and Shingles Vaccines Were Safe | NY Times 5/5/26

  • “Officials at the Food and Drug Administration have blocked publication of several studies supporting the safety of widely used vaccines against Covid-19 and Shingles in recent months, a spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services confirmed.” The studies cost millions in U.S. public funds and “is the latest step by the administration to try to limit access to vaccines.”

US to end Pepfar funding of South Africa’s HIV programmes | BBC 6/19/26

  • The US is withdrawing Pepfar funding for South Africa’s HIV programs for political reasons. The Trump administration cited South Africa’s policies on Black Economic Empowerment and its stance on Israel and Iran as reasons for the phased drawdown. This will significantly reduce support for efforts against a virus affecting over 8 million South Africans and their families.

FDA approves Colorado’s plan to import cheaper drugs from Canada | STAT News 6/15/26

  • Florida became the first state to receive approval, in 2024, but has yet to start importing drugs.

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Other news

Cervical cancer mortality trends following HPV vaccination in England, 2001 to 2024: an analysis of population based mortality data | Lancet 6/17/26

  • London researchers analyzed national cervical cancer mortality data from England, 2001 to 2024. Women vaccinated against HPV at ages 12 to 13 had no recorded deaths between ages 20 and 24 from 2020 to 2024, versus 23.1 expected, and vaccination overall prevented roughly 200 cervical cancer deaths nationwide.

Nearly half of adults struggled to afford healthcare last year, survey finds | Stateline 6/11/26

  • In a December 2025 survey of 10,000 working age adults, the Urban Institute found 46% reported trouble affording healthcare last year, with uninsured adults hitting 60%. Adults with disabilities (69%), stroke survivors (over 70%), and Black and Hispanic adults were hit hardest, while 35% said a family member skipped needed care due to cost.

AI lab Midjourney investing over $74M to launch whole-body ultrasound screening business | Radiology Business 6/19/26

  • AI image company Midjourney Medical announced “Ultrasonic CT,” a full-body ultrasound scanner licensed from Butterfly Network. The device images the entire body in 60 seconds using ultrasound instead of radiation, magnets or iv contrast. While they do not have FDA diagnostic approval yet, the company aims for 50,000 scanners globally by 2031, with the first San Francisco location opening late 2027.

Epstein–Barr virus might protect against type 1 diabetes mellitus | Nature Reviews Endocrinology 6/19/26

  • The Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) has been linked to the development of autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS), lupus, and rheumatoid arthritis, and to cancers such as lymphoma. Surprisingly, a new study from the Université de Lille found that Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) may actually help to guard against Type 1 Diabetes by suppressing the autoreactive T cells responsible for destroying insulin-producing beta cells. In human participants, EBV infection was associated with slower disease progression and greater residual insulin output following anti-CD3 immunotherapy treatment.

Paternal cytokine administration alters sperm small ncRNAs and offspring brain and behavior | Molecular Psychiatry 6/19/26

  • Scientists from the Florey Institute in Australia studied 40 male mice and found that a single dose of the cytokine IL-1β before conception reprogrammed small noncoding RNAs in sperm and altered how offspring managed stress responses and fasting. A separate experiment using TNF-α before conception produced increased anxiety-like behavior in the offspring, suggesting that paternal immune signaling from cytokines before conception can shape the neurobehavioral development of the next generation.

Stem cells banish severe autoimmune disease for 15 years | Nature 6/19/26

  • Two patients with severe neuromyelitis optica, a condition that attacks the spinal cord and optic nerves, achieved full remission lasting more than 15 years following donor stem cell transplantation. The procedure worked by completely rebuilding each patient’s immune system and eliminating the disease associated antibodies responsible for driving the condition.

Cutaneous Tattoo Ink as a Mimicker of Endometriosis-Like Lesions on Diagnostic Laparoscopy | Cureus 2024

  • I recently learned in a forum that people with tattoos may have lesions on laparoscopy that look like endometriosis, but are actually lymph nodes filled with tattoo pigment. Here is one such case.

From: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11131970/

The 25-Year Evolution of Lithium as a Disease-Modifying Agent in Dementia: A Narrative Review | JAMA Psychiatry 6/10/26

  • A narrative review drawing on more than 75 years of accumulated evidence examined lithium‘s potential to protect brain cells through mechanisms involving mitochondrial support, the neurotrophic protein BDNF, the survival protein Bcl-2, and reduction of toxic tau signaling. The authors conclude that clinical trials using low doses of lithium in patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and early stage Alzheimer disease (AD) are now scientifically justified.

In 1975, a Cat Co-Authored a Physics Paper | Atlas Obscura

  • In 1975, Michigan State University physicist Jack Hetherington, unwilling to retype an entire paper to remove plural pronouns required for sole authorship, added his Siamese cat Chester as co-author under the name F.D.C. Willard. The “F.D.C.” stood for “Felix Domesticus, Chester” after the scientific name for the house cat (Felis domesticus) and Willard had been the name of Chester the cat’s father.

The article, signed by the 2 authors.

Have a great week,

Ruth Ann Crystal MD

Sunday, June 21, 2026

A Surge of COVID & Other Viruses in India

When I saw this headline about India, I assumed it was from 5 years ago. Unfortunately, it's now. Even though this is occurring in India, COVID is still here, so remain vigilant.

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Covid-19, swine flu and RSV cases rise in Mumbai as hospitals report surge in respiratory illnesses

FP News Desk • June 21, 2026, 14:07:19 IST

"Mumbai is witnessing a rise in Covid-19, H1N1, influenza A and RSV infections, with doctors attributing the surge partly to delayed monsoon conditions and warning vulnerable groups to remain cautious

"Hospitals and private clinics across Mumbai are reporting a sharp increase in respiratory illnesses, with Covid-19, H1N1 (swine flu), influenza A and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infections driving a growing number of patients to seek medical care for high fevers and severe upper respiratory symptoms.

"Doctors say H1N1 had dominated outpatient departments for nearly a month, but Covid-19 cases have risen suddenly over the past week. According to reports by the Times of India, laboratories at major facilities such as Breach Candy Hospital are identifying more than seven positive cases of Covid-19 or H1N1 each day.

"The infections are causing high fevers ranging from 102°F to 103°F, body aches and deep chest congestion, making it difficult to distinguish between the viruses without diagnostic PCR tests, according to reports

"Alongside respiratory illnesses, hospitals including Fortis Hospital in Mulund are also recording an increase in cases of viral gastroenteritis, commonly known as stomach flu.

Delayed monsoon linked to surge

"According to Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation Executive Health Officer Dr Daksha Shah and city epidemiologists, changing weather conditions have contributed to the sudden rise in cases.

"Reports said the delayed arrival of the monsoon has led to prolonged periods of high humidity and stagnant atmospheric conditions, allowing respiratory viruses to remain suspended in the air for longer than usual.

"Health officials expect the number of cases to decline once steady and heavy rainfall sets in and helps clear the atmosphere.

Vulnerable groups face greater risk

"Doctors said the currently active strain of Covid-19 remains mild for most people and rarely requires intensive care on its own. However, senior pulmonologists have warned that elderly people, pregnant women and individuals with underlying conditions such as diabetes or chronic lung diseases are at a higher risk of complications.

"They added that overlapping viral infections can significantly weaken the lungs’ interstitial tissues and increase the likelihood of secondary infections.

"Health experts have cautioned against taking antibiotics or paracetamol without medical advice, warning that self-medication can mask serious conditions or contribute to drug resistance.

"Health departments have advised people to wear face masks in crowded public spaces, including local trains and markets, and to maintain proper hand and cough hygiene.

"People in high-risk groups have also been advised to regularly monitor oxygen levels and body temperature using a pulse oximeter and seek immediate medical attention if breathing becomes difficult.

"Reports said the classic symptoms of Covid-19, H1N1 and RSV overlap considerably, although each infection affects the respiratory system differently."

Another Reason Why Israel Has To Retaliate Against Hezbolleh

For the people who think Israel should stop firing back at terrorists who try to kill Israelis, here is just one of many reasons. This is what they have to deal with every day. Their enemies never quit.  If you think you can do better, have at it; if not, just keep your mouth shut.

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By Emanuel Fabian, The Times of Israel, 6-21-26

IDF captures Hezbollah drone factory and launch site hidden inside south Lebanon mountain; Troops raiding ‘airbase’ dozens of meters below village near border find cache of 50 Iranian-made explosive UAVs that would have been fired into Israel from secret hillside shafts 

"MAJDAL ZOUN, Lebanon — Buried beneath a hilltop village in southern Lebanon, just kilometers from the Israeli border, the Hezbollah terror group built an underground drone “airbase” from which it launched Iranian-made unmanned aerial vehicles at Israel.

"The subterranean facility, guarded by massive steel blast doors, was built in the past decade with direct Iranian assistance, including planning and funding, Israeli military officials told The Times of Israel during an organized media tour of the site last week.

"Journalists were brought into Lebanon at dusk, so that the visit to the tunnel would take place under the cover of darkness — an attempt by the military to mitigate the possibility of Hezbollah attacks on members of the press.

"As the sun set over the Mediterranean, reporters were driven in a convoy of Humvees along the Lebanese coast before heading east toward Majdal Zoun, some six kilometers (3.7 miles) from the Israeli frontier.

"With just the moonlight and glowsticks to illuminate the way, soldiers led the group to the tunnel’s main entrance, which was accessible from the ground level on the north side of the mountain.

"The tunnel and surrounding area, which was delineated as part of the southern Lebanon security zone buffer area in an updated IDF map Thursday, were captured this month by a reservist commando and paratroopers formation.

"The operation took place amid a porous ceasefire in which both Israel and Hezbollah have continued to attack each other.

"According to the Israel Defense Forces, the tunnel runs several hundred meters into the mountain, reaching depths of 29 meters (95 feet) under Majdal Zoun — including beneath a mosque.

"The IDF has uncovered similar Hezbollah tunnels in southern Lebanon in the past, but commanders said this one was built to a “much higher standard,” comparable with an underground Iranian missile factory in Syria that the military raided in September 2024.

"Soldiers and officers were made available to the tour on condition of anonymity, in line with military protocol.

Unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) parts in an underground Hezbollah drone facility in Majdal Zoun, southern Lebanon, on June 18, 2026. (Emanuel Fabian/Times of Israel)

"Inside the tunnel, which was wide enough for a standard vehicle to drive through, Hezbollah had assembled Iranian-made drones using parts smuggled into Lebanon, according to the army.

"Iran, which has invested heavily in drone development and production, has long been understood to supply its Lebanese proxy group with missiles and other arms meant to be used against Israel.

"After capturing the tunnel, soldiers found around 50 UAVs with warheads of around 30 kilograms (66 pounds) of explosives apiece, officers said.

"The drones appeared to be of the same type used in attacks on Israel, such as a deadly October 2024 strike on the Golani Brigade’s training base. They can typically fly 200 to 500 kilometers (125 to 310 miles), enough to reach all of Israel, according to IDF officials. Military analyst Fabian Hinz identified the UAVs as an Iranian drone design, known as the Qasef in the service of the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen.

"The capture of the tunnel marked the first time that the IDF had access to fully intact Iranian drones of this kind, providing the military with valuable intelligence, one officer told The Times of Israel.

"The drones, in various states of assembly, were placed on display along the tunnel’s concrete walls for journalists on the tour to see.

"In addition to the UAVs, the troops found around eight tons of explosive material in the underground site’s rooms, according to the army.

“These are drones that threatened the State of Israel throughout its length and breadth. We came here to deprive Hezbollah of these capabilities,” a squadron commander in the elite Yahalom combat engineering unit told reporters.

"On the southern side of the mountain were shafts from which Hezbollah would launch the UAVs at Israel.

“At the end of the tunnel, there are exits, four exits protected by blast doors on rails. They can be opened and allow launching of UAVs at Israel,” the Yahalom officer said.

"Military officials described the facility as a sort of UAV “airbase” and factory, saying it was built strategically in Majdal Zoun because of its relative proximity to Israel, but not too close to the border.

“Six kilometers from our territory, and it is also close to the coastline. It also enables launches [of UAVs] in those directions,” the Yahalom officer said.

"The drone-launching tunnel shafts were inaccessible during the tour. Some 100 meters from the entrance of the facility, journalists hit a dead end where the tunnel had collapsed, with a car buried beneath the rubble.

"According to the IDF, during the war with Hezbollah in 2024, the Israeli Air Force bombed the site to seal it off and put it out of use. However, military officials said the terror group had later attempted to restore the facility.

"As troops advanced into southern Lebanon following hostilities that erupted in early March in reaction to the Iran war, the military decided to push into Majdal Zoun on the ground to capture the site and demolish it.

Smoke rises from an Israeli airstrike on Majdal Zoun on October 24, 2024. (AP/Mohammed Zaatari)

"Hezbollah briefly attempted to defend the village, according to the IDF. Senior officers said the reservist commandos killed three Hezbollah gunmen in close-quarters combat and directed a drone strike on four other operatives in Majdal Zoun.

"Several Hezbollah operatives attempted to approach the village after the IDF captured it, but were also struck before they were able to get close, military officials said.

"The IDF was expected to demolish the facility upon completing scans of the tunnels."

Saturday, June 20, 2026

Crime Does Pay..Very Well

Can somebody please explain to me how all these thieves manage to steal from Americans so easily? The Somali community in Minnesota is a prime example. I wouldn't have the slightest idea how to go about it, yet you have illegal aliens and other criminals stealing huge amounts of money for years, and in every state.

Not a day goes by where I don't read about someone being arrested for COVID relief fraud or food stamp fraud or identity theft in the millions of dollars.

Being able to commit fraud should be made harder, not easier. Or did Obama and Biden include multilingual instruction sheets in every welcome packet that was handed out with the free stuff? 

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11 Illegals Aliens Busted in $1.4M Welfare Heist: Stealing Food Stamps, Free Healthcare & Disability in Massachusetts

"BOSTON – Fifteen individuals — 11 illegal aliens and four U.S. citizens — have been charged and arrested in Massachusetts for defrauding taxpayer-funded benefit programs of more than $1.4 million. The charges include SNAP (food stamp), MassHealth (Medicaid), Social Security disability, unemployment, HUD, and identity theft violations.

"The defendants were charged over the past week. Several remain identified only as John Doe after allegedly using stolen identities.

"The following individuals have been charged over the past week. Several defendants’ names are currently unknown at this time, as they have been living under stolen identities: 

  1. Heriberto Rodriguez of Framingham, Mass., is charged with passport fraud, SNAP fraud, and aggravated identity theft in connection with $546,463 in total benefit fraud loss ($175,182 in MassHealth fraud; $146,944 in Social Security fraud; $185,194 in HUD fraud; and $39,000 in SNAP fraud);
  2. Mirian Chalas, 33, a U.S. Citizen living in Salem N.H., is charged with making false statements in connection with $266,000 in MassHealth fraud; $25,000 in Social Security Disability fraud; and $12,000 in SNAP fraud;
  3. Santo Escolastico Cuello, 56, a Dominican national unlawfully living in Worcester, Mass., is charged with aggravated identity theft and making false statements relating to a health care program in connection with $162,180 in MassHealth fraud; 
  4. John Doe, age unknown, suspected to be in the United States illegally, is charged with false representation of a Social Security number, aggravated identity theft and making false statements relating to a health care program in connection with MassHealth fraud totaling $75,000 and aggravated identity theft; 
  5. John Doe, age unknown, suspected to be in the United States illegally living in Quincy, Mass., is charged with illegal acquisition or use of SNAP benefits, theft of government funds and aggravated identity theft in connection with SNAP benefit fraud totaling $11,000;
  6. Mario Baez Romero, 45, a Dominican national unlawfully living in Somerville, Mass., is charged with aggravated identity theft and passport fraud in connection with $26,942 in SNAP fraud and $48,785 in MassHealth fraud. Baez Romero was allegedly encountered during an interdiction of a recreational vessel near Key Biscayne in Miami, Fla. in May 2026;
  7. Richard Odelis Vallegas Nunez, 35, a Dominican national unlawfully living in Allston, Mass., is charged with aggravated identity theft and unlawful production of an identification document in connection with $48,865 in MassHealth fraud;
  8. Miguel Diaz Matos, 54, a Dominican national living in Lynn, Mass., is charged with illegal acquisition or use of SNAP benefits, theft of government funds and aggravated identity theft in connection with $13,431 in SNAP fraud and $50,494 in MassHealth fraud;     
  9. John Doe, age unknown, suspected to be in the United States illegally, is charged with making false statements related to a health care program in connection with $32,717 in MassHealth fraud; 
  10. John Doe, age unknown, suspected to be in the United States illegally, living in Lynn, Mass., is charged with aggravated identity theft and making false statements relating to a health care program in connection with $38,776 in MassHealth fraud;
  11. Mitul Patel, 40, an Indian national unlawfully living in Worcester, Mass., is charged with conspiracy to commit visa fraud, in which co-conspirators staged a false armed robbery of a convenience store to allow “victims” such as Patel, to seek U Visas as victims of violent crimes; 
  12. Santo Tejada Sanchez, 48, a Dominican national unlawfully living in Haverhill, Mass., is charged with aggravated identity theft, theft of government funds and SNAP benefit fraud totaling $4,054;
  13. Jennifer Ferran, 48, a U.S. Citizen living in Haverhill, Mass., is charged with theft of government property, Social Security fraud and furnishing false information to Social Security in connection with over $29,000 in Social Security fraud;
  14. Owen Landry, a/k/a “Oski,” 24, a U.S. Citizen living in Haverhill, Mass., is charged with theft of government property, Social Security fraud and furnishing false information to Social Security in connection with over $29,000 in Social Security fraud; and
  15. Yahaira Diaz Gomez, 45, a Dominican national living in Mattapan, Mass., is charged with making false statements relating to a health care program in connection with $48,694 MassHealth fraud. 

"Some defendants face charges for MassHealth, SNAP, and identity theft fraud ranging from $4,000 to $75,000.

“This is just the beginning,” said U.S. Attorney Leah B. Foley. “These defendants allegedly stole from programs meant to help Americans in need. We will no longer tolerate illegal aliens and others exploiting Massachusetts benefits with impunity. Charges will continue on a rolling basis.”

"The operation involved the Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Document and Benefit Fraud Task Force, U.S. Department of Labor OIG, USDA OIG, and HHS OIG.

"Penalties for the charges range up to 20 years in prison, with mandatory consecutive sentences for aggravated identity theft.

"In March 2026, U.S. Attorney Foley created the Benefit & Voter Fraud Team to aggressively target misuse of taxpayer funds. The cases are also part of the Department of Justice’s new National Fraud Enforcement Division, supporting President Trump’s Task Force to Eliminate Fraud.

"Report suspected benefit fraud: Call 1-855-SCAM-MA-1 (855-722-6621).

"The charges are allegations. All defendants are presumed innocent unless proven guilty."

Criminals Win, Their Victims Lose

We already knew this, but it's good to keep pointing it out.  The crimes keep getting more vicious and random; the criminals keep getting more sympathy; and their victims just get short shrift. 

The voters are becoming more ignorant, voting in these radical Democrats who think even child rapists should roam free.

From Bill Glahn at Power Line 6-20-26. 

----------------------------------- 

Blue states (heart) illegals

"From the New York Post Editorial Board,

"Blue states are obsessed with protecting illegal-migrant criminals — and only voters can make it stop."

"The Board gives examples from Virginia, New York, Illinois and California where local authorities coddle violent criminals, lest they fall into the hands of federal immigration authorities. No regard is given to crime victims, or to the mayhem on the streets.

"I could give my own examples from Minnesota. In carrying out “sanctuary” polices Democratic-run states argue that they will not expend state or local-taxpayer resources in support of enforcing federal law.

"But the sanctuary polices go far beyond just nonaction. Authorities actively interfere with federal operations, to the point of active sabotage.

"In Minnesota, I can report that illegal aliens in the state enjoy higher levels of taxpayer-funded government benefits, and more lenient treatment of illegal alien criminals, than similarly situated American citizens within the state’s borders.

"The Post is correct. The situation will not change in any jurisdiction where Democrats have complete control."

Friday, June 19, 2026

Melanie Philllips on "Trump's Surrender"

Melanie Phillips is right again in her latest column.   I've been infuriated over Trump's conciliatory tone towards Iran while he insults Israel and treats our ally like it's the enemy!  I also read that JD Vance actually told Israel that they "can't kill your way out of your problems."  They are retaliating against attacks!

The only ones happy about this bad deal are Iran, Hamas, Hezbollah, and antisemites in general.  The Jew-haters must be thrilled with this turn of events and will pile on Israel even more.

Sadly, this administration has now practically given Iran and their terrorist proxies permission to commit further atrocities against Israel.

-----------------------------

Trump’s surrender; Something darker is at work here than just a concern over rising fuel prices.

Melanie Phillips, June 18, 2026 / JNS

"Responding to critics of his agreement with Iran, the U.S. president called them “fools,” and either “jealous or bad people,” because “the stock market just hit A RECORD HIGH, and oil prices are tumbling down.”

"So the economy is all that matters in a struggle to neutralize a fanatical Islamic revolutionary regime that puts its weapons where its mouth is when it screams “Death to America”?

"At the G7 meeting in France this week, Trump’s upbeat mood suggested that he really believed his own statements casting his Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) ceasefire terms as Tehran’s surrender.

"But the exact opposite is the case. He has surrendered America to Iran.

"He himself admitted that he stopped the war because of the threat of economic catastrophe if it continued. That was because of the oil shock caused by Iran seizing control of the Strait of Hormuz.

"Trump was therefore signaling that America was powerless to defeat the regime. At a stroke, he turned the United States into a paper tiger, seen to be unwilling to do what it takes to fight a war until victory.

"He thus ensured that Tehran will have the upper hand in everything that now follows in the negotiations for a final “deal.” It will be able to run rings round the Americans over the proposed “online blending” of the enriched uranium Trump once pledged to destroy, the destruction of centrifuges, disarmament verification or anything else.

"Rather than ushering in an economic nirvana, Trump has given Iran the ability to take the world economy permanently hostage. After the MoU’s 60-day negotiation period, there’s nothing to stop it from continuing its protection racket on the Strait of Hormuz by charging ships for selective safe transit.

"As U.S. intelligence agencies have concluded, Iran now retains the ability to close the Strait whenever it chooses, leaving the Islamic Republic with the capacity to trigger significant economic disruption at any time.

"The MoU makes zero reference to destroying Iran’s ballistic missiles or its support for terrorist proxies. On the all-important goal of destroying forever the regime’s ability to get the bomb, there’s only a vague statement that Iran “reaffirms that it shall not procure or develop nuclear weapons.”

"That’s precisely what it said for four decades while racing to develop them. It was shown to have repeatedly lied through its teeth. The idea that anyone should believe a word the regime ever says is an insult to the intelligence.

"Even more astoundingly, Tehran will receive vast financial benefits before it even starts discussing any substantive issues. The U.S. Treasury will immediately issue waivers for “the export of Iranian crude oil, petroleum products and derivatives and all associated services including banking, transactions, insurances, transportation, etc.”

"It will also immediately “make fully available for use the frozen or restricted funds and assets of the Islamic Republic of Iran.” And eventually, the regime will be handed at least $300 billion for “reconstruction and economic development.”

"All this money will go straight into financing Hezbollah, the Houthis, other proxy militias, global terrorism, missile production, a resumed nuclear program, the further oppression of the Iranian people, and a reinvigorated war to destroy Israel and America.

"This empowerment will drive the Gulf states back to making nice with Tehran. It will also hugely incentivize Hezbollah and Hamas to step up their attacks.

"Hamas is already openly calling to escalate against Israel, signaling that it will now move its war of extermination against the Jewish state from the Gaza Strip to the “West Bank”—in other words, another “intifada” targeting Israeli civilians.

"What’s so extraordinary is that the war Trump waged with Israel against the Islamic Republic clocked up unprecedented achievements. It liquidated Iran’s leadership, decimated its missile armory, sank its navy, destroyed its air defenses and put back the immediate nuclear threat it posed by several years.

"But now, he is putting all that into reverse. Moreover, his statements over the past few days have been absolutely bizarre.

"Trump claimed that Iran “must have missiles to some degree” because others, like Saudi Arabia, had them. But Saudi Arabia isn’t at war against America or Israel. Rather than firing at them, as Iran has been doing, it’s been assisting them against the Tehran war-mongers.

"The president’s most disturbing comments, however, concerned Israel, America’s close ally in the war. He accused the Jewish state of fighting for too long against Hezbollah in Lebanon and killing too many civilians in apartment blocks. He then suggested that Syria’s president, Ahmad al-Sharaa, should handle Hezbollah instead “if Israel can’t do the job without killing everyone else.”

"These were monstrous comments. As in Gaza, Israel has gone to great lengths to target Hezbollah in precision attacks that minimize civilian casualties as far as possible. And al-Sharaa, whom Trump seems to admire so much, is ISIS or Al-Qaeda in a suit.

"The reason for Trump’s comments was as obvious as it was appalling. Iran has threatened to scupper the deal with America unless Israel stops attacking Tehran’s key asset, Hezbollah, which is unrelenting in its attacks on northern Israel.

"Washington kept Israel out of the discussion leading up to the MoU, which so undermines Israel’s security. At the same time, Trump was genuflecting to Iran’s demand that Israel stop defending itself against the regime’s proxy army trying to wipe the Jewish state off the map.

"Trump signed the agreement because he found himself in a trap from which all escape options were bad. But that was because he had refused to accept Israel’s assessment that the Tehran regime needed to be brought down and that it would take a year of attrition to do so.

"Having embarked on a different, shorter war, he then proceeded to undermine Israel’s carefully thought-out plan for victory, calling off its most decisive attacks at the last moment.

"Looking for an off-ramp from the war to avoid political or economic collapse is rational, if regrettable. Dressing up a tactical retreat as victory to obscure the disaster caused by Trump’s own incompetence is also rational, if deplorable.

"But the enormity of his capitulation to Iran, the ludicrous absurdity of his remarks and the venom against his great ally, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, suggest that something else is at work here.

"It was always assumed that Trump would be careful never to go down in history as a second Barack Obama, replicating the former president’s disastrous 2015 Iran deal; nor would he ever tolerate being thought of as a sucker.

"But what if Trump’s chronic narcissism makes him unable to see that’s what he’s actually become? We know from long experience that he often frames events to correspond with what he wants them to be, rather than what they actually are. What if, accordingly, he really has turned surrender into victory against Iran in his mind? What if he really believes that America has won this war?

"There are possibly even darker explanations for this debacle. There are the financial connections between Iran’s ally Qatar and people in the Trump administration—not to mention the $1 trillion that Qatar has now pledged to invest in the United States, in addition to the vast sums with which it has already bought up America.

"And in Tablet last April, Lee Smith suggested that the Iranian regime’s “echo chamber” influence operation in Washington, D.C., to sell Obama’s 2015 nuclear deal was actively working once again during the current war to safeguard Iran’s nuclear program. This time, however, it had a man on the inside of the Trump administration: Vice President JD Vance.

"Israel now faces a hideous choice between abandoning its military defense against Hezbollah’s unceasing attacks—another Israeli soldier was killed in Lebanon this week, and several others were injured—or risking the vindictive wrath of Trump.

"The longtime opponents of this war may be gloating, but America’s national interest demanded—and still demands—that the Iranian regime be neutralized.

"Iran’s war against the West hasn’t ended. Trump’s surrender has produced a crisis not just for Israel but America as well."

Thursday, June 18, 2026

An Excellent Jonathan Tobin Column

Who will stand with Israel against a new Iran deal?
Back in 2015, the GOP and most Americans opposed Obama’s appeasement of Tehran. Now, Democrats are against Israel on any issue, and Republicans will not defy Trump.

Jonathan S. Tobin 

"In the never-ending churning of news cycles, commentators and the public alike are always ready to overreact to each aspect of every story as they roll out. Under these circumstances, historical perspective is rarely part of anyone’s understanding of events. This was amply illustrated by the discussion about the United States signing a Memorandum of Understanding with Iran.

"The deal, whose terms were at first kept secret and have since been revealed, will conclude, at least for the next 60 days, the war America and Israel waged on Tehran starting on Feb. 28.

"Hysteria about the implications of the deal for Israel, which was cut out of the negotiations over the agreement, is probably unwise. It’s not clear how much of the Jewish state’s freedom of action to defend itself against Iran, as well as its Hezbollah auxiliaries in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza, will be curtailed. Nor can we know for sure what President Donald Trump will do in the immediate future.

Trump’s priorities

"His desire to end the fighting and for the renewed flow of oil to lower gas prices at the pump appears to be his main priority. For the moment, that seems to outweigh concerns about his desperation to get a deal that will accomplish these goals, which led him to strike a bargain that bears a troubling resemblance to the one former President Barack Obama concluded with Tehran in 2015.

"Trump can always change his mind about that and order strikes once it becomes clear—as anyone who knows anything about the subject understands—that Iran’s leaders have no intention of keeping their word about not acquiring a nuclear weapon. Though his public comments about the agreement make that seem highly unlikely, given the president’s panic about his sinking poll numbers linked to the rise in gas prices. But it’s still theoretically possible. It’s also a dead certainty that it will continue its buildup of missiles and terrorism that threaten its neighbors and the West.

"There is one thing, however, that can be said with absolute certainty about the current situation. Now that we know the deal is as bad as many feared, those who speak up against it are not only in no position to stop or even slow the process down. They will also be far more isolated than those who opposed Obama’s deal.

"Simply put, unlike the situation 11 years ago—when a broad coalition of Democratic security hawks, Republicans and pro-Israel advocates spoke up against Obama’s disastrous Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action—critics of Trump’s Iran deal will be limited to the pro-Israel community. And they are likely to stand alone.

Unpersuasive advocates

"Trump and Vice President JD Vance have been doing their best to fend off criticism of their decision to end the war with what the former described as a “peace deal” with the Islamist terror regime. That effort was undermined by their initial unwillingness to reveal details of the agreement—something that Vance claimed was due to sensitivities in the Muslim world, an excuse that raised even more concerns about its implications.

"Trump’s supporters have been telling everyone who has criticized the deal in the days since it was announced to take a deep breath, and to wait and see what happens. There’s a certain logic to that. The structure of the accord appears to hinge on what will happen during a 60-day period when America lifts its blockade of Iranian ports so Tehran stops menacing shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. Yet now that the details are known—with unfrozen funds already flowing to Iran, no mention of Iranian missiles and terrorism in it, and no mechanism, other than a resumption of the war, to prevent a regime that can claim it forced Trump to back down from resuming its march to a nuclear weapon—optimism about it seems deeply unpersuasive.

"In theory, Trump could reverse his decision, and sensible observers should not abandon all hope that he will. Accepting a terrible deal—and the terms of the agreement make it clear that the United States is doing almost all of the giving and Iran nearly all of the taking—would be out of character for a man who thinks of himself as having mastered “the art of the deal.”

"With Trump’s characteristic hyperbole, he has characterized the results of the indirect negotiations conducted by Middle East special envoy Steve Witkoff and adviser/son-in-law Jared Kushner in flattering terms. He has even declared the Iranian negotiators to be “rational people” who are “nice to deal with,” even though the desperate-for-a-deal-at-any-price duo never actually sat down with them. But the man who spent the last decade rightly mocking Obama and his negotiators for their weakness and gullibility ought to be ashamed of accepting terms that seem to depend on Iran’s goodwill and trustworthiness.

"Trump’s critics should acknowledge that not only is the current president far preferable to his Democratic predecessors or to any Democratic Party alternative when it comes to his approach to the Middle East and Israel. They should be equally willing to speak of the damage done to Iran’s military, nuclear and missile programs, and other war-making infrastructure both as part of the 12-day war last June and from the fighting since Feb. 28. The ability of a government that has been at war with the United States, Israel and the West since 1979 to inflict terror on the region and the rest of the world has been set back, perhaps by years.

"At the same time, Israel is far stronger vis-à-vis its Islamist foes than it was on Oct. 6, 2023, before the Iranians and their allies launched their cruel war on the Jewish state with the atrocities of Oct. 7.

"Still, it appears that Trump has kicked the can down the road with respect to ending the threat from Iran. And it is also almost certainly true that despite raising the hopes of Iran’s tortured people, he has nevertheless ensured the survival of a despotic regime that murdered tens of thousands of them in January. This means that the long war Iran has been waging on America, Israel and the West will continue. It will doom the world to years of more terrorism and the ever-present threat that it will be able to acquire the ability to inflict mass destruction on the Jewish state and moderate Arab countries that oppose it.

"As such, this agreement deserves to be vigorously debated. And, to his credit, Trump has offered to submit any deal to Congress for its approval.

"If so, that will make it equally clear that the political correlation of forces with respect to Iran is now very different from the situation in 2015 when Obama rammed his catastrophic JCPOA down the throats of an unwilling Congress and American people.

The JCPOA was unpopular

"It should be recalled that Obama’s Iran policy was deeply unpopular. A Pew Research Institute poll taken in September 2015 showed that the Iran deal was opposed by a large plurality of Americans, with 49% opposing it and only 21% in favor, with 30% saying they did not know (an unsurprising result given that most Americans pay little attention to most foreign-policy issues). And the more Americans knew about the agreement, the less they liked it, something indicated by the fact that opposition to the deal increased over the course of the year.

"Majorities in both Houses of Congress also opposed the JCPOA.

"It was only approved by a sleight-of-hand bargain in which Obama and Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), the feckless Republican who chaired the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, agreed that it would be put to a vote, which required a two-thirds majority to kill it. This was the opposite of the constitutional requirement for a two-thirds majority to pass a treaty. The House voted 269-162 (with 244 Republicans and 25 Democrats voting no) not to approve the JCPOA, with an equally large majority in the Senate also ready to vote against it. But since that fell short of a super-majority, Obama’s signature foreign-policy “achievement” that guaranteed that Iran would eventually get a nuclear weapon snuck through.

"Trump won’t have to resort to those kinds of legislative tricks.

"More to the point, the party opposed to the sitting president will play a very different role in 2026 than it did in 2015.

11 years makes a big difference

"A decade ago, Congressional Republicans were united against the Iran deal while Democrats were split on it. The GOP even went so far as to invite Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to address a joint meeting of Congress that year, during which he gave an unprecedented address in which he urged its members to oppose Obama’s effort to enrich and empower an Iranian regime that threatened the United States as much as Israel.

"It was only by making support for the measure a litmus test of loyalty to himself that Obama was able to rally most Democrats behind a policy of appeasement that all but the most hard-core left-wingers in the party had opposed only a couple of years earlier. In 2015, there were still pro-Israel Democrats willing to speak up against Obama, even though most of those who had once claimed that title, like Sens. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Corey Booker (D-N.J.), failed to maintain that stance when push came to shove.

"If anything, the current Democratic caucuses will be even more eager to terminate the war and appease Iran than they were then. While members of the opposition to the administration would seize on any pretext to thwart Trump, he can rely on them to support an end to the war. They will also be eager to do something that will be perceived as undermining Israel’s security.

"By contrast, the House and Senate GOP caucuses today are, as they were in 2015, almost uniformly pro-Israel and hawkish on Iran, with only outliers like lame-duck Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and his fellow libertarian Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), the rare exceptions to that rule.

What will Republicans do?

"That said, how many pro-Israel Republicans will vote against Trump on his Iran deal?

"Doing so will not only require the temerity to oppose a president who doesn’t lightly brook opposition and often gets even with those who do so, no matter how long it takes. It will also mean risking being portrayed as warmongers or advocates for a policy that would raise gas prices. It’s far from clear that even the most ardent supporters of a strong Israel and those most interested in stopping Iran would think it wise to try to thwart Trump from ending a deeply unpopular war, even if it is clearly in America’s best interests.

"Nor does it require much of an imagination to predict what Trump’s reaction would be to Netanyahu or any other Israeli or pro-Israel organization that advocated for Congress to turn down his version of Iran appeasement, as they did in 2015. It would make Obama’s spiteful attacks on those who opposed him on this issue seem quite tame by comparison.

"Thus, while Israel’s strategic position in the Middle East is far stronger than it was in 2015, in the United States, opposition to an appeasement of Iran on Trump’s part would be minimal. Those voices decrying a deal that trusted Iran to keep its word or which would depend on an unlikely decision by this president or one of his successors to resort to the use of force against the Islamist regime would find themselves largely alone, abandoned by Republican friends and mocked by Democratic foes.

Don’t blame Netanyahu

"There will be those who will blame this predicament on Netanyahu. His domestic opponents will claim that he depended too heavily on Trump’s friendship for Israel and that of the Republicans. And they will say he alienated Democrats.

"This is both untrue and deeply unfair. Whatever one might say about Netanyahu when it comes to navigating the political landscape of his country’s sole superpower ally, the current alignment has little or nothing to do with his unpopularity in the United States or his judgment.

"The drift by Democrats away from Israel is the result of the growing influence of toxic left-wing ideologies that falsely label it as a “white” oppressor state. Their willingness to accept and spread blood libels about Israel committing “genocide” in Gaza is not the product of Israeli behavior, but of the hijacking of the Democratic Party by antisemitic progressives. The prime minister had no chance of preserving a pro-Israel Democratic Party; the same would have been true of any Israeli leader.

"That means that Israel and its friends are in a position where they have no choice but to rely on pro-Israel Republicans to preserve the alliance. That worked wonderfully so long as Trump was behaving—as he has done during the first five-and-a-half years of his two terms—as the most pro-Israel president since the founding of the modern Jewish state. But with Trump adopting a more equivocal stand in which he may be waving the white flag on Iran and bristling with resentment at Netanyahu’s refusal to stop defending his citizens, that leaves supporters of Israel isolated in the United States on this issue.

"We must hope that it doesn’t come to that—and that Trump isn’t willing to go on deceiving himself and the American people about the dubious prospects for a policy that will preserve the despotic regime in Tehran and ensure that there will be more Middle East wars and bloodshed in the coming years.

"But if he is determined to stand by his own Iran deal, it won’t just signal that the aggressive presidency of the past 17 months is about to become a lame-duck administration, even before the outcome of the midterm elections is known. It will also mean that Israel and its friends will largely stand alone when it comes to the debate about this latest appeasement of the Islamist regime of Iran that Trump has given a new lease on life."

Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of JNS