Feed aggregator

Israeli Police Investigating Officer Filmed Assuring Chareidi Protesters He “Doesn’t Deal With Draft Dodgers”

Matzav -

An Israeli traffic police officer is facing scrutiny after being filmed attempting to calm a group of chareidi protesters by repeatedly insisting that he does not deal with arresting draft dodgers and was only issuing a traffic citation.

The incident, which took place Wednesday in Modi’in during a spontaneous chareidi protest, sparked controversy because the officer’s remarks appeared to contradict standing directives issued by Israel Police Commissioner Danny Levy regarding the handling of draft dodgers.

According to current police policy, officers who encounter individuals classified as draft dodgers are instructed to detain them for up to 30 minutes while waiting for military police to arrive. If military police do not arrive within that timeframe, officers are supposed to issue an official summons directing the individual to report to military authorities.

The footage, first published by Israel Hayom, shows the officer repeatedly trying to reassure angry demonstrators that he had no intention of arresting the chareidi man involved.

According to journalist Yaakov Hershkowitz, the confrontation began after the traffic officer stopped a chareidi driver over a traffic violation.

Once word spread through chareidi news hotlines and extremist WhatsApp groups that a chareidi man had been detained, protesters rushed to the scene fearing he would be transferred to military authorities.

Dozens of demonstrators reportedly gathered at the location, launching an impromptu protest. Although the detained individual was eventually released, protesters remained at the scene and confronted the officer over recent arrests of yeshiva bochurim.

In the video, the officer can be heard repeatedly attempting to explain that he was not involved in draft enforcement.

“I didn’t deal with the draft dodging issue. I said to release him. Listen carefully to what I’m explaining to you — I did not deal with draft dodgers,” the officer told the crowd.

One protester responded skeptically: “Other police officers in other places do. How are we supposed to know the difference?”

The officer answered: “I know, no problem, I don’t care about anyone else. I know what I’m saying. Right now I’m not dealing with draft dodgers. He only received a traffic ticket, that’s the story. Is it allowed to give a traffic ticket? A traffic ticket — that’s the story.”

At another point in the exchange, when a protester shouted, “You don’t detain chareidim?” the officer raised his voice and replied: “There was nothing.”

Following publication of the footage, criticism mounted against what some described as the officer’s “capitulation” to protesters and failure to follow official police directives.

In response, the Israel Police issued a sharp statement distancing itself from the officer’s conduct.

“The commissioner views the officer’s conduct seriously, as it contradicts organizational directives. The matter will be examined accordingly,” the police statement said.

{Matzav.com}

Wizz Air Resumes Flights to Israel

Matzav -

Hungarian low-cost carrier Wizz Air on Thursday resumed flights to Israel, becoming the latest airline and first European budget carrier to restore service after the outbreak of war with Iran in February.

The Budapest-based no-frills airline is renewing service to Tel Aviv across major European cities, including London, Rome, Budapest, Athens, Larnaca, Warsaw and Milan, and plans to run a full schedule to and from Israel during the busy summer season.

The popular European budget airline, which was the largest foreign carrier operating in Israel by passenger volume before the war, had planned on opening a hub at Ben-Gurion International Airport this spring, but the Feb. 28 U.S.-Israeli attack on Iran led all international carriers to suspend service to the region anew.

Their much-anticipated return to Tel Aviv follows an updated safety recommendation from the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA), which softened its previous advisory against operating in Israeli airspace.

The airline’s resumption of service also comes against the backdrop of months-long negotiations to set up a hub in Israel, talks that were frozen by transportation officials angered over the airline’s repeated prior flight suspensions.

More than a dozen international airlines have resumed service to Tel Aviv, including two Emirati carriers, since the war against Iran began.

Major European carriers are currently planning to renew flights to Israel this summer. U.S. airlines, however, are scheduled to return to Israel starting in the fall.

Wizz Air, the third-largest low-cost carrier in Europe after the Dublin-based Ryanair and the London-based EasyJet, has kept European fares relatively low despite surging oil prices caused by the war.

Its long-planned hub would enable the Hungarian company to operate as many as 30 daily flights from Tel Aviv to destinations across Europe. JNS

{Matzav.com}

2.83: Shekel Surge Sends Dollar Crashing to 30-Year Low as Smotrich Demands Immediate Price Cuts

Matzav -

The U.S. dollar continued to weaken against the shekel on Thursday, falling to an exchange rate not seen since the early ’90s of 2.83 per greenback. The euro and pound also weakened against the shekel, dropping to NIS 3.28 and NIS 3.79, respectively.

According to broadcaster Channel 12, the Bank of Israel is weighing the possibility of acting to prevent the dollar from falling further.

The BoI intervened in the past in similar situations by purchasing large amounts of dollars to protect Israel’s exporters.

Although importers and consumers can purchase products from abroad at less expense in light of the shekel’s strengthening, Israel’s exporters and the high-tech industry are feeling pressure.

High-tech firms whose income is mostly in dollars are experiencing squeezes in profits due to the currency’s weakening, having to pay their employees in shekels.

Meanwhile, Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich sent a letter to local business leaders, asking them to lower prices “immediately so that the strengthening of the shekel is felt by consumers,” Channel 12 reported.

“It is unacceptable for you to turn to the government demanding assistance packages during times of crisis, yet when there is economic prosperity in the markets, withhold its benefits from citizens,” the letter read.

Smotrich urged them “to convene importers and businesses today in order to bring about immediate price reductions,” appealing directly to food importers, according to the report. JNS

{Matzav.com}

Report: US, Iran Reach Tentative Agreement On Ceasefire Extension

Matzav -

American and Iranian officials have reportedly drafted a provisional 60-day agreement that would preserve the current ceasefire and open formal negotiations over Tehran’s nuclear program, according to a report by Axios.

The report, citing two American officials and a regional figure involved in the mediation process, said President Donald Trump has not yet signed off on the proposed arrangement.

If finalized, the understanding would represent one of the most significant diplomatic breakthroughs since the war erupted, although major disputes tied to Iran’s nuclear ambitions would still need to be resolved in follow-up negotiations.

According to US officials quoted in the report, negotiators had largely completed the framework of the agreement by Tuesday, with final authorization still required from top decision-makers in Washington and Tehran.

Those officials said Iranian envoys later notified mediators that Tehran’s leadership had approved the proposal and was prepared to move forward with signing it. Iranian authorities have not publicly commented on the report.

American negotiators subsequently presented the details of the deal to President Trump, though he stopped short of immediately approving it. One US official said the President informed mediators that he wanted a few days to weigh the proposal before making a final decision.

Axios reported that Trump and senior aides had believed several times earlier in the conflict that a breakthrough was close, but each attempt ultimately collapsed before an agreement could be finalized.

Under the draft terms, maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz would continue uninterrupted. One US official said the deal would bar Iran from imposing shipping tolls or interfering with vessels and would obligate Tehran to clear all naval mines from the strategic waterway within 30 days.

The report said the American naval blockade would then be phased out gradually as commercial shipping operations resumed.

US officials also said the agreement would contain a pledge by Iran not to seek nuclear weapons. During the 60-day period, talks would initially center on the fate of Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium, as well as Tehran’s enrichment activities.

According to Axios, Washington would also agree to discuss easing sanctions and unlocking frozen Iranian assets during the negotiations. The proposed memorandum would further include talks aimed at establishing channels for humanitarian aid and the transfer of goods into Iran.

{Matzav.com}

Shas Blasts Religious Zionism: “They Joined Hands With Those Persecuting the Torah World”

Matzav -

The political battle surrounding Israel’s daycare subsidy legislation intensified Wednesday after the preliminary passage of the so-called “daycare law,” with the Aryeh Deri-led Shas party launching a fierce attack against both the attorney general and the Religious Zionism party over its absence from the vote.

In a sharply worded statement issued hours after the bill passed its preliminary reading in the Knesset, Shas declared that the vote represented a direct rebuke to Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara.

“The Knesset today delivered a clear and decisive message against the attorney general: enough cruelty toward toddlers in order to harm their Torah-learning parents,” the party stated.

Shas described the daycare legislation as a “moral and ethical statement” against the decision to revoke daycare subsidies from kollel families, arguing that the policy amounts to an attempt to pressure yeshiva and kollel families by targeting small children.

According to the party, the move to deny subsidies is “an attempt to pressure Torah learners through harming toddlers.”

Shas also praised coalition chairman Ofir Katz for successfully assembling the votes needed to pass the bill, while commending both the Likud party and Otzma Yehudit for what it called their “full partnership with Torah values.”

At the same time, the party launched an unusually harsh attack against the Religious Zionism faction for boycotting the vote.

“[They] chose to absent themselves from this moral vote and thereby joined hands with those persecuting the Torah world and the haters of Judaism. Those who constantly speak about the importance of the right-wing bloc are the very ones dismantling it through their actions,” the statement said.

{Matzav.com}

Matzav Inbox: Everyone Is Measuring Skirts While Marriages Burn

Matzav -

Dear Matzav Inbox,

I am writing this because I honestly cannot take the hypocrisy anymore.

We scream about tznius all day long. Every speech, every assembly, every school handbook, every parent meeting, every article. Sleeve lengths. Sock lengths. Necklines. Colors. Fabrics. Shoes. Tights. Pictures. Catalogs. The conversation never ends.

Tznius, tznius, tznius, tznius.

And yes, of course tznius matters. Nobody is questioning that.

But can we finally have the courage to talk about the giant elephant sitting in the middle of the frum world that everyone sees and nobody wants to acknowledge?

What is going on in frum offices between men and women is becoming a massive crisis.

Not every office. Not every person. But enough that people know exactly what I am talking about.

Men and women spending entire days together. Constant texting. Inside jokes. Emotional dependence. Friendly conversations that stopped being innocent a long time ago. Private meetings. Late-night communication that somehow gets justified because it’s “for work.” Married people sharing more emotional energy with coworkers than with their own spouses.

And everybody pretends not to notice because everyone needs parnassah.

So we keep screaming about a teenager’s sweater while ignoring environments that are literally destroying marriages, destroying shalom bayis, destroying emotional boundaries, and slowly eating away at people spiritually.

Where are the speeches about that?

Where are the emergency gatherings and kol korehs about that?

Where are the articles warning people that emotional closeness is not less dangerous because it happens in an office with fluorescent lighting and spreadsheets?

We have somehow created a world where a girl can be treated like a walking michshol because her socks slipped down half an inch, while a married man spending eight hours a day emotionally attached to another woman is called “professional.”

Since when?

And the saddest part is that many frum workplaces almost force this environment. Team bonding. Casual culture. Endless interaction. After-hours communication. People laughing and talking together all day in ways that previous generations would never have considered normal.

Then everyone acts shocked when marriages suffer, when people become emotionally confused, when lines get crossed, or when things spiral into places they should never have gone.

We are terrified of talking honestly because we are afraid people will accuse us of being extreme or unrealistic.

But pretending there is no problem is not righteousness. It is denial.

If we truly care about kedushah, then let us care about all of it, not only the parts that are easy to measure with a ruler.

Because right now, it feels like we are obsessing over the packaging while ignoring the fire burning inside the building.

Sincerely,

See It Every Day

To submit a letter to appear on Matzav.com, email MatzavInbox@gmail.com

DON’T MISS OUT! Join the Matzav Status by CLICKING HERE. Join the Matzav WhatsApp Groups by CLICKING HERE.

The opinions expressed in letters on Matzav.com do not necessarily reflect the stance of the Matzav Media Network.

{Matzav.com}

Porush Calls on Police to Refuse Orders as Chareidi Leaders Compare Arrest Campaign to “Bolshevik Russia”

Matzav -

Israeli politicians Meir Porush and Yisrael Eichler launched blistering attacks Wednesday night against the Israeli government, police, and judiciary over the growing wave of arrests targeting chareidi yeshiva bochurim classified as draft dodgers.

Speaking in an interview on Radio Kol Berama, Porush broke his silence and sharply criticized everyone from Prime Minister Binyomin Netanyahu to coalition partners and Israel Police Commissioner Danny Levy over the recent enforcement operations.

At the start of the interview, Porush described the political calculations that guided the chareidi parties during negotiations over the draft law and related legislation.

“We were careful not to bring other laws because they told us it would create a huge uproar and we would not be able to pass the draft law,” Porush said. “When we realized there would be no draft law, we decided on a ‘give-and-take’ approach — you want help transferring powers from the Interior Ministry to the Prime Minister? Fine, give us the daycare law.”

Porush then escalated his rhetoric dramatically, comparing the arrest campaign against chareidi draft dodgers to Communist-era persecution and openly calling on police officers to refuse orders.

“We live in Israel but feel like we are living in Bolshevik Russia, which arrested Torah learners. The police commissioner found something to build his reputation on — harming yeshiva students? A police officer who has even a little faith and tradition should say: ‘I do not want to carry out this order.’”

Porush also blamed Israel’s Supreme Court for the ongoing crisis and argued that weakening the judiciary must become a central political objective.

“When you arrive at that mountain called the court system — that is where the power is, and that is where it must be struck and diminished. The power of the court must be eroded. That is what must be done in order to emerge from this crisis.”

The veteran chareidi lawmaker also directed criticism toward Netanyahu personally, accusing the prime minister of prioritizing his own political interests early in the coalition’s term while sidelining the needs of the chareidi public.

“Netanyahu speaks very nicely, he has that ability, but he should have done more. When he was busy at the beginning of the term arranging several personal laws for himself, we cried out that our laws needed to be passed. He told us, ‘Wait, I don’t have a majority.’ We waited and gave him time until we understood we weren’t getting anywhere.”

Porush additionally criticized the Religious Zionism party, warning that the policies now being directed at the chareidi world could one day be turned against their own yeshiva frameworks.

“This is a major disappointment. Religious Zionism does not understand that the day will come when they will lower the boom on them as well. One day they will ask why hesder yeshivos serve fewer months, and it will come back on them too. There is some kind of pettiness there — I don’t know from whom.”

Toward the end of the interview, Porush outlined what he described as a new strategy for future coalition negotiations, declaring that chareidi parties should refuse government positions until core issues affecting the chareidi community are resolved.

“After the elections we must not take positions — no ministers, nothing — until they settle our fundamental and critical needs. First the essential matters, and only afterward positions.”

At the same time, Deputy Minister Eichler delivered his own harsh criticism during an interview with Radio Kol Chai, accusing Israel’s High Court of Justice of conducting a campaign against chareidi Judaism and Torah study.

“What the High Court has done is dictatorship — stripping away the most basic human rights as an inseparable part of their war against the existence of chareidi Judaism and against Torah learning.”

Eichler also discussed delays surrounding legislation tied to daycare subsidies and said some officials warned him that advancing the bill would damage efforts to pass a draft law compromise.

“They argued to me that if I advance the daycare law, it would harm the draft law,” Eichler said. “Those imposing sanctions on Torah learners will not stop there, because the goal is not to save a few hundred shekels from that woman. The goal is to prevent Torah learning.”

The deputy minister also blasted Commissioner Levy over coordination between the Israel Police and military police in the arrest operations.

“When the police commissioner announces that he is subordinate to the High Court and not to the supervising minister and the law passed by the elected Knesset, that statement sends the most severe message since the establishment of the state,” Eichler said.

According to Eichler, “the police, which is responsible for public order, is becoming part of the revolutionaries who created this dictatorship.”

In a separate interview on Radio Kol Berama, Eichler intensified his criticism of the judiciary.

“The High Court committed an outrageous act that is completely illegitimate. The message that passed today in the preliminary reading is clear: you cannot turn the State of Israel into Sodom and Gomorrah.”

Eichler also accused anti-religious factions within the Knesset of driving the confrontation while influencing both the media and the courts.

“There is currently a dangerous atmosphere in the Knesset coming from anti-religious extremists, who are not many in number but are very loud, and all the media and judges are in their hands. They are leading the country toward chaos and are already speaking about war.”

Later in the interview, Eichler directly attacked the participation of the Israel Police in operations targeting draft dodgers, arguing that such enforcement falls entirely outside civilian police authority.

“According to the law, the civilian Israel Police has absolutely nothing to do with draft-related arrests. The very fact that the police are involved in this is part of the war against chareidi Judaism,” he said.

{Matzav.com}

IDF Preparing Large-Scale Arrest Operations Against Bnei Yeshiva Who Avoid the Army as Early as Next Week

Matzav -

The Israeli military is preparing to launch proactive arrest operations targeting bnei yeshiva who avoid the army in chareidi population centers as early as next week, according to a report aired Wednesday evening on Kan News.

As part of the planned operations, the IDF has requested extensive assistance from the Israel Police, both for security and for handling possible disturbances and protests expected in chareidi neighborhoods during the arrests.

In the coming days, police and military officials are expected to hold a series of joint assessments regarding the operation. Current estimates reportedly call for hundreds of police officers to be assigned to assist the effort.

The IDF Spokesperson’s Office said in a statement that “joint planning efforts are currently taking place with the Israel Police in order to coordinate enforcement actions by the military police in the public sphere.”

The statement added: “We emphasize that this coordination is critical and directly impacts the areas in which the IDF can operate in carrying out arrests.”

In the past, Israel Police Commissioner Danny Levy had refused to allocate police forces for operations of this nature. However, a recent ruling by Israel’s High Court sharply criticized the police over what it described as insufficient enforcement.

Meanwhile, Moshe Gafni, chairman of the Degel HaTorah party, instructed party representatives throughout Israel on Wednesday to immediately halt cooperation with the Israel Police.

“Following the policy change by the Israel Police, and so that we should not, Heaven forbid, become partners in harming the holy Torah and its learners, I request that all cooperation with the Israel Police, including municipal policing, cease immediately until further notice,” Gafni wrote.

Following Gafni’s directive — and amid growing anger in the chareidi street over the intensified policy toward yeshiva bochurim classified as draft dodgers — Commissioner Levy held a special high-level assessment regarding relations between the police and the chareidi community.

During the meeting, Levy reportedly stressed that responsibility for handling draft dodgers rests primarily with the IDF and the military police, while the Israel Police merely provides assistance, just as it does for other law enforcement agencies.

Senior police officials also claimed that despite current tensions, cooperation with the chareidi public remains ongoing and that regular channels of communication continue between police commanders, rabbonim, and public figures within the chareidi sector.

During the discussion, Levy also announced plans to hold meetings in the near future with heads of chareidi municipalities.

In addition, the commissioner instructed police officials to examine complaints that chareidim arriving at police stations to file reports are being detained, emphasizing that members of the public should be able to enter police stations, report crimes, and receive police services without fear.

Earlier this week, reports surfaced that the IDF had formally requested police assistance for proactive operations aimed at arresting chareidi draft dodgers beginning already in early June.

The request is currently under review by the police operations division, with ongoing discussions regarding the manpower needed for such operations.

{Matzav.com}

Police Commissioner Reportedly Weighing Policy Change: Bnei Yeshiva Filing Complaints May No Longer Be Arrested

Matzav -

Following mounting backlash from the chareidi public over police conduct toward chareidi draft dodgers in recent weeks, Israel Police Commissioner Danny Levy appears to be signaling a significant shift in policy.

According to reports, Levy is considering issuing new instructions to police officers not to arrest chareidim obligated to enlist if they come to police stations in order to file complaints or receive police services.

The apparent reversal comes after sharp criticism from chareidi leaders and politicians, including recent decisions by chareidi Knesset members to suspend cooperation with the Israel Police over the handling of arrests involving yeshiva bochurim.

In what many viewed as a conciliatory statement released Wednesday evening, the Israel Police emphasized its longstanding relationship with the chareidi community and outlined a series of directives issued by the commissioner following a special assessment meeting regarding police cooperation with the sector.

According to the official statement, responsibility for handling draft dodgers belongs primarily to the IDF and the military police.

“The mission of handling draft dodgers rests with the IDF, through the military police, which determines arrest targets and is responsible for detention and adjudication, while the police merely provides assistance, just as it assists other enforcement agencies,” the statement said.

The practical implication, according to observers, is that the Israel Police may avoid independently initiating enforcement actions against chareidi draft dodgers, leaving such operations primarily in military hands.

The police statement further stressed that cooperation between law enforcement and the chareidi sector has existed for many years.

“The police has worked together with the chareidi sector in cooperative efforts for many years,” the statement said.

Officials also highlighted what they described as ongoing dialogue between police commanders and rabbonim throughout the country.

“There is continuous dialogue and communication through commanders at all levels, both routinely and during exceptional situations. In addition, ongoing communication exists between the police rabbinate and rabbis in the districts, Border Police, and various divisions, together with rabbonim from the chareidi sector.”

The statement added that the police has invested significant efforts in adapting police services to the chareidi public and plans to continue those efforts.

“The police acted to make police services more accessible to the chareidi sector and continues to adapt police stations to the sector.”

Levy also reportedly instructed the police rabbinate to hold more frequent meetings with rabbonim from across the chareidi spectrum.

“The commissioner instructed the police rabbi to hold frequent meetings with rabbonim from the chareidi sector, from all factions.”

In addition, Levy is expected to meet soon with heads of chareidi municipalities.

“The commissioner will soon hold a meeting with heads of chareidi local authorities.”

The statement further announced that the deputy commissioner will lead a special team together with the police rabbinate to strengthen ties and cooperation with the chareidi public.

“The commissioner instructed the deputy commissioner to lead a team together with the police rabbinate to strengthen relations and cooperation with the chareidi sector.”

The most closely watched portion of the announcement, however, involved complaints from yeshiva bochurim and other chareidim obligated to enlist who reportedly avoided entering police stations out of fear they would immediately be detained.

According to the police statement, Levy specifically ordered officials to examine the issue.

“The commissioner instructed that the issue of detaining complainants who arrive at police stations for the purpose of filing complaints be examined, in order to allow the chareidi public to come to police stations, expose crimes, and receive proper police services.”

The move comes after growing reports that crime victims classified as draft dodgers have avoided filing police complaints out of concern they could be arrested and transferred to military authorities upon entering police stations.

{Matzav.com}

Netanyahu Pushes Smotrich-Ben Gvir Merger to Prevent Right-Wing Votes From Going to Waste

Matzav -

Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu has been working behind the scenes in recent days to broker a renewed alliance between the Religious Zionism and Otzma Yehudit parties in an effort to prevent right-wing votes from being lost below the electoral threshold, according to a report Wednesday evening on Channel 14.

Under the proposal, Netanyahu is offering Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich two guaranteed reserved spots on the Likud list for the next Knesset election in exchange for agreeing to run on a joint slate led by National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.

The initiative is reportedly part of a broader political strategy by Netanyahu, who recently asked senior Likud officials and local party leaders to approve ten reserved slots on the party’s future Knesset list.

According to reports, Netanyahu explained in internal discussions that the reserved positions are necessary to maintain stability within the broader right-wing bloc. One of those slots has already reportedly been promised to Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar as part of political agreements reached with him.

Netanyahu also reportedly emphasized that another reserved position is intended specifically to avoid a repeat of past elections in which right-wing parties failed to cross the electoral threshold, resulting in significant losses for the bloc.

Sources familiar with the talks said Netanyahu described the two guaranteed spots for Smotrich as a political “incentive” aimed at persuading him to show greater flexibility and move toward reunification with Ben-Gvir.

According to the emerging framework being discussed, Ben-Gvir would head the united list, while Religious Zionism would receive roughly 40 percent of the slate through a “zipper-style” arrangement or another similar formula dividing representation between the two factions.

{Matzav.com}

Feds Seize $40M In Gold Bars, Cash, Rolexes From Former CIA Official Who Faked Being A Navy Pilot

Matzav -

A former senior U.S. intelligence official with top-level security clearance was arrested after federal agents raided his Virginia residence and allegedly uncovered an enormous cache of wealth that included roughly $40 million in gold bars, $2 million in cash, and dozens of high-end luxury watches, according to newly released court records.

Federal authorities arrested David J. Rush on May 19, charging him with theft of government funds after investigators accused him of fraudulently obtaining tens of millions of dollars from the federal government while falsely portraying himself as a decorated Navy Reserve captain and Air Force test pilot.

According to The New York Times, Rush until recently held a senior role within the Central Intelligence Agency.

Court filings and an FBI affidavit allege that the scheme began unraveling after Rush repeatedly requested massive quantities of foreign currency and gold from his agency between November 2025 and March 2026.

Investigators say Rush claimed the money and gold were needed for “work-related expenses.” But when the FBI searched his home on May 18, agents allegedly discovered approximately 303 one-kilogram gold bars, $2 million in American currency, and 35 luxury watches — many identified as Rolexes.

Federal investigators also concluded that Rush fabricated large portions of his military and academic background despite holding a Senior Executive Service rank and possessing Top Secret/SCI clearance.

According to court documents, Rush claimed on government applications that he graduated from the U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School and served as the “current director of test for a 145-person, 18-aircraft joint Army/Navy weapons test organization.”

Military records reviewed by investigators reportedly showed otherwise. Authorities say Rush was never a pilot, never possessed FAA pilot licenses, and instead served in the Navy as an information systems technician.

Prosecutors further allege that Rush falsely inflated his credentials by claiming to possess a bachelor’s degree from Clemson University and a master’s degree from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

According to the FBI, officials from both universities told investigators they could find no record that Rush had ever attended either institution.

Authorities additionally accuse Rush of improperly collecting approximately $77,000 in paid military leave benefits by falsely telling his employer he remained actively serving as a Navy Reserve captain, an O-6 rank, through September 2025.

Court filings state that Rush had actually been honorably discharged from military service a decade earlier, in February 2015, with the lower rank of lieutenant, or O-3.

Rush remains in federal custody under the supervision of the United States Marshals Service after a judge initially denied his request for release.

He has since waived his right to a preliminary hearing, and a federal magistrate judge ruled there is sufficient probable cause for the matter to proceed before a grand jury.

{Matzav.com}

Stay Out of the Mud

Matzav -

By Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz

Iran hung over Israel, the United States, and much of the Arab world like an albatross for nearly half a century following the Islamic Revolution of 1979. During those decades, successive American presidents promised to contain the regime, restrain its ambitions, or reform its behavior. None succeeded.

Instead, the ayatollahs grew steadily bolder. They financed and armed terror proxies across the Middle East, spread terror and instability through Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis, threatened shipping lanes and oil supplies, and relentlessly advanced toward nuclear capability. As time went on, Iran entrenched itself even further.

For years, Israeli Prime Minister Binyomin Netanyahu warned the world about Iran and the danger it represented. Most Western leaders treated his warnings with discomfort or irritation. Barack Obama openly despised him and viewed Netanyahu as an obstacle to diplomacy. Joe Biden was similarly distrustful of him and his confrontational approach.

The first American president willing to embrace Netanyahu’s view of Iran was Donald Trump. Together with Israel, the United States eventually crossed a line previous administrations feared to cross, striking Iranian nuclear facilities during last year’s 12-Day War. More recently, they undertook a joint operation to degrade Iran and permanently remove the threat it represented.

Iran suffered devastating blows. Military infrastructure was damaged. The Ayatollah Supreme Leader and senior commanders were eliminated. Yet, authoritarian regimes possess a grim advantage over democracies: They can absorb enormous suffering without changing course. Tyrannies do not answer to public exhaustion, economic pain, or mounting casualties in the same way elected governments do. So regardless of how hard they are hit and how much they suffer, they absorb the blows and continue forward.

The military success exposed an older and more difficult problem: It is relatively easy to begin a war. The hard part is ending it.

Democracies grow weary quickly. Citizens expect results, timelines, and exits. They measure wars in news cycles and election seasons. Dictatorships measure them in generations.

That is the dilemma now confronting Trump and Netanyahu. Bombing campaigns can weaken a regime, but unless the regime collapses or surrenders completely, the question becomes: What comes next?

Trump wants to be remembered not as a wartime president trapped in another endless Middle Eastern conflict, but as a dealmaker and peacemaker. Ceasefires are declared, promises are extracted, negotiations resume, and the cycle begins again.

Trump no longer allows Netanyahu to lead him. He wants a way out, and Netanyahu does not appear to have one. Trump declared a ceasefire many weeks ago. Iran promised to keep the Strait of Hormuz open and negotiate an end to its nuclear ambitions. Neither has happened, and now a new deal is being negotiated that allows the tyrants to remain in power while once again accepting their word regarding keeping the strait open and negotiating an end to their nuclear program.

And perhaps that is the larger lesson.

Human beings often rush into conflicts, relationships, policies, and wars driven by emotion, instinct, or necessity, without seriously considering how they will conclude if events do not unfold according to plan. Beginning something is easy. Ending it wisely is much harder.

Children grab for toys without thinking beyond the moment. They see a toy and want to play with it. If another child has it or wants it and resists, the struggle escalates instinctively. Neither child can yet speak, so they grab and fight.

Maturity means developing the ability to see beyond the immediate impulse, to anticipate consequences, to understand limits, and to recognize that force alone rarely resolves complex struggles.

Growing up means learning to live with insight instead of inclination.

Not every adult fully learns that lesson.

Some people move through life reacting emotionally to every frustration, temptation, and provocation. They begin conflicts without considering how difficult they may be to end. They make decisions based on momentary feelings instead of long-term consequences.

People often rush into things emotionally, impulsively, or reactively, without considering the consequences, the endings, the costs, or whether they even have a plan.

Nations are often not much different.

Military campaigns can begin with dramatic speeches and decisive action. But once events fail to unfold according to plan, leaders suddenly discover that there is no simple exit. Democracies grow impatient. New leaders replace old ones. Temporary victories create new complications; overwhelming power cannot always produce a clean or permanent solution.

And so the world finds itself trapped in cycles that nobody fully thought through from the beginning.

But this problem is not limited to governments and wars.

In truth, people do this every day in their private lives.

A person says something sharp in anger without thinking where the argument will lead. Someone makes a reckless purchase without considering the consequences.

Human beings are often captivated by the immediate moment. We want something, so we reach for it. We are hurt, so we strike back. We are angry, so we react.

But mature thinking involves the ability to pause and ask not only, “What do I want right now?” but also, “Where will this lead?”

Wisdom is not merely the ability to act. It is the ability to think ahead.

Before speaking, before fighting, before committing, before reacting, before investing time, money, or prestige into a project, a person must ask himself: What happens if this does not work out? Where will this step that I am taking lead me? And what will this decision demand of me tomorrow, next month, or years from now?

Anyone can start something. Intelligence and maturity mean understanding the cost of finishing it, and sometimes not getting involved in the first place.

The Brisker Rov would illustrate this idea with a moshol about a young baal agalah whose wagon veered off the road and became stuck in thick mud.

The driver strained with all his might to free the wagon. He whipped his poor horses repeatedly, pushed at the wheels, and tried every trick he knew, but the wagon only sank deeper. Exhausted and frustrated, he realized that he had no choice but to trudge into town to seek advice from the veteran wagon drivers gathered at the local inn.

Spotting one baal agalah who looked particularly seasoned and wise, the young man approached him and poured out his troubles.

“I’ve tried everything,” he said desperately. “Nothing works. Tell me, how do I get out of this mess?”

The older driver listened quietly and then replied: “My dear friend, you are right. Once a wagon sinks that deeply into the mud, it is impossible to get out. But an experienced baal agalah knows that the real wisdom is not in figuring out how to escape the mud afterward, it is knowing how not to get stuck in it.”

That lesson applies not only to wagon drivers, but to nations and individuals as well.

For decades, the world allowed Iran to become entrenched, believing that somehow the problem could always be managed later through diplomacy, sanctions, threats, or limited military action. Now leaders across the world are struggling to answer a question that should have been asked long ago: How do you get out of a situation that was permitted to grow unchecked for nearly half a century?

But the lesson is not only about Iran. It is about us.

In life, people often act first and think later. They speak in anger and only afterward wonder how to repair the damage. They enter conflicts, commitments, and situations without considering where they may lead. Emotion and impulse overpower judgment and foresight.

The wise person tries to think several steps ahead before acting.

Anyone can charge ahead impulsively. Wisdom lies in seeing the mud before the wagon sinks into it.

Chazal reinforce this lesson in this week’s parsha. Rashi (6:2), quoting the Gemara (Sotah 2a), asks why the parsha of nozir immediately follows the parsha of sotah. He explains, “Loma nismicha parshas nozir l’parshas sotah, lomar loch shekol haroeh sotah b’kilkulah yazir atzmo min hayayin — Whoever sees a sotah in her disgrace should forbid himself from drinking wine.”

At first glance, the lesson seems difficult to understand. The person we are referring to has just witnessed the terrible consequences of sin. He has seen humiliation, pain, and destruction. We would think that the experience would strengthen his resolve never to sin.

Yet, Chazal understood human nature differently.

Being exposed to sin, even while witnessing its consequences, can weaken a person’s natural revulsion toward aveirah. The very exposure creates familiarity. The boundaries become less absolute. What once seemed unthinkable slowly becomes imaginable.

Therefore, the Torah says that someone who witnessed the sotah in her disgrace must take protective action. He must reinforce himself before temptation arrives. He must become a nozir and distance himself from wine so that he will not be led to spiritual failure. Transgressing an aveirah begins with small compromises, lowered defenses, and the mistaken belief that “it could never happen to me.”

That is the deeper lesson the Torah is teaching.

A wise person does not merely react once he is trapped in the mud. He thinks ahead and protects himself before reaching dangerous ground.

And if this is true regarding a sotah, where the person who committed the aveirah is disgraced and suffering the consequences, how much more so must a person be careful when surrounded by sinners who appear successful, happy, and carefree. When an aveirah is packaged attractively, when wrongdoing appears glamorous or rewarding, the danger becomes far greater.

The Torah therefore teaches us that a person must always think several steps ahead. We must know where certain roads lead, even when the beginning appears harmless or pleasurable. We must understand that aveirah always leads to kilkul.

Similarly, Chazal teach us in Pirkei Avos, “Hevei mechasheiv hefsed mitzvah keneged sechorah, usechar aveirah keneged hefseidah.

When it feels difficult or costly to do a mitzvah, Chazal recommend thinking about the eternal reward it brings and recognizing that the temporary sacrifice is insignificant compared to the everlasting gain. And when an aveirah appears profitable, enjoyable, or enticing, think ahead to the spiritual damage, the loss, and the consequences it will inevitably bring.

The Torah is teaching us to live not by impulse, but by thought.

Sinners and fools live only in the moment, swept along by temptation, emotion, and desire. Bnei Torah are meant to live differently. A ben Torah thinks before he acts. He looks beyond the excitement of the moment and considers where a path ultimately leads before taking the first step down the road.

And no person should imagine themself immune to influence.

People often assume that they can read whatever they wish, expose themselves to questionable ideas and lifestyles, and remain untouched by them. They convince themselves that seeing improper behavior, hearing distorted attitudes, or consuming foolishness — and worse — will not affect their thinking or weaken their values.

But the Torah teaches otherwise.

Chazal understood that exposure itself changes a person. What once shocked him slowly becomes normal. What was unacceptable gradually loses its ugliness. The yeitzer hora rarely succeeds through sudden collapse. It works slowly, eroding sensitivities little by little until a person no longer recognizes how far he has drifted.

When the Second World War ended, many of the refugees of the Mir Yeshiva who had survived the war years in Shanghai emigrated to the United States. Among them was the great mashgiach, Rav Yechezkel Levenstein. Yet, he found himself unable to remain here for long.

He explained that when he first arrived in America, the sight of public chillul Shabbos horrified him. Seeing cars driving on Shabbos caused him deep pain. But as time passed, he noticed that he was becoming accustomed to it. The shock was fading. That realization frightened him so deeply that he left America and moved to Eretz Yisroel.

Today, many of us are fortunate to live in neighborhoods where Shabbos is publicly honored and cherished. The streets are quiet, the stores are closed, and the atmosphere itself reflects kedushas Shabbos. But no person should believe that he is beyond influence. Even if our streets are sheltered, our minds and hearts are constantly exposed to a world filled with temptations, distractions, and values profoundly at odds with Torah.

The lesson of the nozir is as relevant today as ever. We must think ahead. We must protect ourselves before the struggle begins. We must recognize which influences strengthen us and which slowly weaken us, even when the damage is not immediately visible.

After having just experienced the beautiful Yom Tov of Shavuos, we should carry this message with us. “Loma nismicha chag Shavuos l’parshas nozir.” At Har Sinai, on Shavuos, we were given a way of life through the Torah that teaches us to live thoughtfully, carefully, and deliberately. We need to ask ourselves where what we are doing will lead, what type of person it will make us, and whether it will bring us closer to Hashem or further away.

The world often glorifies spontaneity and living for the moment. Torah teaches responsibility, foresight, and self-awareness. It teaches us to see the mud before the wagon sinks into it. It teaches us to be a mamleches kohanim v’goy kadosh.

May we all merit living lives of Torah and mitzvos and merit the coming of Moshiach very soon.

Trump Administration Restores Crushing Sanctions on Anti-Israel UN Official Francesca Albanese

Matzav -

The Trump administration has officially reinstated broad financial sanctions against Francesca Albanese, the controversial United Nations official overseeing Palestinian Arab territories, after a federal appeals court cleared the way for the penalties to return.

According to Agence France-Presse, the renewed sanctions came after an appellate court effectively overturned an earlier judicial ruling that had temporarily blocked enforcement against Albanese.

An updated notice posted Wednesday on the website of the United States Department of the Treasury confirmed that Albanese’s sanctions status has once again been activated.

The designation freezes any assets tied to the American financial system and effectively cuts Albanese off from major global banking networks, severely restricting her ability to conduct ordinary financial transactions or use major credit card services.

Washington first imposed sanctions on Albanese in July 2025, accusing her of spearheading efforts to push the International Criminal Court toward prosecuting American and Israeli officials, corporations, and business leaders.

Earlier this month, however, the sanctions were temporarily halted after a federal judge issued an injunction, ruling that the administration had likely violated Albanese’s free speech protections by penalizing her following her outspoken criticism of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.

The United States Department of State later emphasized that the suspension of sanctions reflected only a temporary legal development and did not represent any change in U.S. policy toward Albanese.

Albanese has long faced criticism from Israel and its allies over what opponents describe as persistent anti-Israel bias.

Most recently, several European Union foreign ministers condemned comments she delivered during an Al Jazeera conference, where Albanese stated: “The fact that instead of stopping Israel, most of the world has armed, given Israel political excuses, political sheltering, economic and financial support … We who do not control large amounts of financial capitals, algorithms and weapons, we now see that we as a humanity have a common enemy.”

Albanese later denied that she had referred to Israel itself as humanity’s enemy.

She insisted in a subsequent interview that she “never, ever, ever said ‘Israel is the common enemy of humanity,'” dismissing the accusations as “completely false accusations.”

Criticism surrounding Albanese stretches back years. In 2022, old social media posts resurfaced in which she alleged that the “Jewish lobby” controls the United States.

At the time, Albanese rejected claims that the comments were antisemitic, arguing instead that her remarks had been “mischaracterized.” Nevertheless, scrutiny over her rhetoric and conduct has continued to intensify.

Her attacks on Israel escalated sharply following the October 7, 2023 Hamas massacre in Israel, which Albanese described as an event that must be viewed in “context” and as a response to alleged Israeli “aggression.”

In late March, Albanese accused Israel of receiving “a license to torture Palestinians” and claimed that “torture has effectively become state policy” in the Jewish state.

Israel’s diplomatic mission in Geneva responded forcefully to those remarks.

“Francesca Albanese is not a promoter of human rights; she is an agent of chaos… and any document she produces is nothing but a politically-charged, activist rant.”

The Israeli statement further accused Albanese of promoting extremist rhetoric designed to delegitimize Israel.

Albanese “advocates dangerous extremist narratives to undermine the very existence of the State of Israel”, the statement said.

{Matzav.com}

Man Threatens to Kill Jews at French Beach Resort: “Dirty Jews, I Will Kill All of You”

Matzav -

A disturbing antisemitic incident unfolded in the upscale French resort town of Deauville, where a young man allegedly threatened to murder Jews in front of beachgoers and families enjoying the shoreline.

According to reports, a 44-year-old Jewish father identified as Roman filed a police complaint after hearing the suspect shout violent antisemitic threats at people gathered on the beach.

Roman said he was sitting beneath a beach umbrella with his family when he suddenly heard yelling behind him. According to his complaint, the suspect walked among beachgoers attempting to identify Jews.

“The man shouted at the people around him and tried to identify Jews,” the complaint stated.

The father said he clearly heard the suspect scream phrases including “Dirty Jews,” “There are only Jews here,” and later escalate to direct threats, including “I’m going to beat them” and “In the name of Allah, I will kill them.”

The frightened father immediately approached police officers stationed at the beach and reported the incident.

In his complaint, he described the suspect as approximately 25 years old, between 5-foot-9 and 5-foot-11, shirtless, wearing a backwards cap, sunglasses, and shorts. According to the report, the man was accompanied by two friends.

The complainant’s attorney, Julien Bensimhon, said the incident reflects what he described as a dangerous rise in antisemitic rhetoric across France.

“We are witnessing a complete release of antisemitic speech, where people feel comfortable publicly shouting that they are ready to kill Jews,” the attorney said.

According to Bensimhon, the complainant’s 8-year-old daughter panicked during the confrontation, hid beneath the family’s umbrella, and later suffered nightmares overnight.

“She was afraid that people wanted to kill her and her family simply because they are Jews,” he said.

As of now, prosecutors in the nearby city of Lisieux, which oversees the region, have not issued an official public statement regarding the incident. However, video circulated online appears to show the suspect being detained by police and removed from the beach.

{Matzav.com}

Tali Gottlieb Slams Arrests of Chareidi Draft Dodgers, Offers Strategy to Avoid Detention

Matzav -

Knesset member Tali Gottlieb launched a sharp attack Wednesday against the arrest of chareidim connected to Israel’s military draft dispute, accusing authorities of discriminatory enforcement and offering chareidi draft candidates a legal strategy she claims could help them avoid future arrests.

In a strongly worded public statement, Gottlieb criticized what she described as unequal treatment between chareidi draft resisters and other Israelis who avoid military service for ideological reasons.

“I am horrified by the arrest of chareidim while there are zero arrests of pacifist draft dodgers from Tel Aviv and similar places,” Gottlieb wrote.

She continued, “The hatred toward chareidim and turning them into a societal disease disgusts me.”

Gottlieb also mocked what she said is the double standard applied to different forms of refusal to serve in the military.

“Well, apparently ideological draft evasion is wonderful, but avoiding the draft because of Torah study? That’s unacceptable. (And yes, I’m being sarcastic of course).”

The lawmaker called for an immediate halt to the arrests and compared the current atmosphere to dark periods in history.

“Enough!! Stop immediately the persecution of chareidim. It reminds me of very dark and frightening times.”

Alongside her criticism, Gottlieb also proposed what she described as a practical legal step for chareidi draft candidates seeking to avoid detention.

“And to the chareidim I suggest that every draft candidate immediately submit a personal request for a deferment of service. Filing the request itself will prevent arrest.”

According to Gottlieb, the move is intended to shift the battle into the legal arena rather than allowing authorities to carry out arrests.

“Defeat Miara’s persecution of you on her own playing field.”

{Matzav.com}

MK Merav Michaeli Demands Halt to Shas Food Voucher Program Ahead of Elections

Matzav -

Knesset member Merav Michaeli has called on Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara to immediately freeze a major food voucher initiative backed by the Shas party, arguing that the program amounts to politically motivated election influence disguised as welfare assistance.

The urgent appeal follows reports by journalist Ari Kalman that Shas chairman Aryeh Deri recently received preliminary approval from the Budget Commissioner of Israel’s Finance Ministry to revive the half-billion-shekel project, with the vouchers expected to be distributed shortly before national elections.

In her letter, Michaeli warned that the timing of the initiative represents a serious threat to the integrity of the election process.

“If the plan moves forward, the vouchers will be handed out to citizens in the days leading up to the elections,” Michaeli wrote.

She further argued that “the distribution of direct financial benefits, politically identified and branded as the ‘flagship project’ of a specific party immediately before voters head to the polls, raises substantial suspicion that the program is being tailored to the chareidi sector, which serves as Shas’s electoral base, while discriminating against needy populations outside that community.”

Michaeli said immediate legal intervention is necessary and outlined three specific demands in her appeal to the attorney general.

First, she called for an immediate suspension of both the budget allocation and the voucher distribution until after the election season concludes.

Second, she demanded that any food assistance program be administered exclusively through the professional channels of Israel’s Welfare Ministry, without political branding and at a time that would not influence voters.

Her third request focused on the Finance Ministry’s apparent reversal on the issue. Michaeli called for a formal investigation into the circumstances behind the ministry’s change of position after officials reportedly blocked the initiative last year.

At the same time, Knesset member Merav Cohen joined the criticism, posting a sharp jab on X.

“Hey Siri, define election bribery.”

{Matzav.com}

Pages

Subscribe to NativUSA Portal aggregator