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Sec. Rubio: U.S. at War with Drug Traffickers, Not Venezuela
Sec. Noem Praises Trump for Maduro’s Capture, Calls It Justice for Victims
Somaliland Backs U.S. Operation in Venezuela, Maduro’s Arrest
Iran Protests Spread to 80+ Cities, 16 Killed by Regime Forces
Saudi-Backed Forces Strike STC Units in Yemen’s Al-Mahrah Following Hadramout Advances
IDF Destroys Two-Kilometer Hamas Tunnel Near Gaza Ceasefire Line
Trump: ‘Not Thrilled’ With Putin; ‘Killing Too Many People’
President Donald Trump said that bringing an end to the war between Russia and Ukraine has proven far more difficult than he anticipated, even as he reiterated his desire to halt the bloodshed and criticized multiple actors involved in the conflict.
Speaking at a press conference, Trump stressed that the war predates his return to office and again placed the responsibility for its outbreak on his predecessor. “And look, that’s former President Joe Biden’s war. That’s not my war,” he said. “But I want to stop the lives.”
Trump described the scale of the fighting in stark terms, citing what he said were devastating monthly casualty figures. “Did you see where last month 30,000. This last it was 27, 27,000 the month before; 30,000 mostly soldiers were killed. This last month. 30,000. I want to stop that,” he said.
He emphasized that the toll of the conflict extends beyond the battlefield and into Ukrainian cities, where civilians are also being killed. “Life is a big deal,” Trump said. “But if I can stop that war and stop 30,000 young people, in addition to the fact that people are being killed in Kyiv, people are being killed in other cities throughout, you know, a much smaller number, but they’re being killed, viciously killed.”
While acknowledging the complexity of the situation, Trump said he initially believed resolving the Russia-Ukraine war would be among the easier diplomatic challenges. “I thought the easiest one would be, one of the easier ones would be Russia, Ukraine. It’s not,” he said. “And they both have done some pretty bad things.”
Trump also addressed his recent conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin, saying the topic of Venezuela did not come up. At the same time, he voiced sharp criticism of Putin’s conduct in the war. He said he is “not thrilled” with the Russian leader, accusing him of “killing too many people,” and described the conflict overall as a “bloodbath” that he wants to see end.
Turning to NATO, Trump highlighted his efforts to push alliance members to increase defense spending and outlined ongoing American military assistance to Ukraine. “You know, I got NATO to pay 5% instead of the 2% that they weren’t paying. They weren’t paying two. Now they pay five, and we send them a lot of munitions,” he said. “We send them a lot of things, missiles and various other things a lot. And they pay.”
Trump said his administration is actively engaged in efforts to bring the war to a close, pointing to the involvement of U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff and suggesting that some progress is being made. “We have Mr. Witkoff here. I think that we’re making progress,” he said. “But that’s a war that should have never happened. If I were president, it would have never happened. Putin says it. Everybody says it.”
Summing up his view of the situation he inherited, Trump said the conflict was already entrenched by the time he took office. “I inherited that war,” he said. “That was Joe Biden, [Volodymyr] Zelenskyy, and Putin. I came into the situation, and it’s a mess.”
{Matzav.com}Strong Growth, Weak Hiring: 2025 Was An Unusual Year for the U.S. Economy
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Swiss Fire Tragedy: Jewish Sisters Identified Among The Victims
Twin Italian-Jewish sisters, both in their teens, were confirmed on Sunday to be among the 40 fatalities from a fire that broke out at a hotel in Switzerland at a New Year’s party just after midnight Friday.
Another Jewish teenage girl, Charlotte Niddam, who is an Israeli citizen, is still missing.
Sisters Alicia and Diana Gunst were initially considered missing in the ski town of Crans-Montana in the Swiss Alps, but their bodies were identified along with 16 others out of the known 40 dead, a spokesperson for the Swiss Federation of Jewish Communities (SIG) said.
Sparklers on bottles being carried too close to the ceiling are the likely cause of the fire during New Year’s celebrations at the bar, a preliminary investigation has found. In addition to the 40 slain, 119 others were injured in the fire. Many of the approximately 80 critically injured have also not yet been identified.
Many of the dead and missing are teenagers. The Le Constellation bar, where the fire broke out, was popular with teenagers and young adults in the ski resort town of Crans-Montana, where the drinking age is 16.
On Saturday, eight casualties were identified and their remains were returned to their families. All were aged between 16 and 24, Swiss authorities said. On Sunday, another 16 were identified, including the Gunst sisters.
The French couple who own the bar—named by the media as Jacques and Jessica Moretti—are suspected of manslaughter by negligence, bodily harm by negligence and arson by negligence, the prosecutors’ office for the Valais region said.
Beatrice Pilloud, Valais canton lead prosecutor, said in a statement that investigators were looking into whether the acoustic foam on the venue’s ceiling was “the cause of the problem,” as well as “whether it complies with regulations,” the BBC reported. JNS
{Matzav.com}
At Lakewood Dinner, Orchos Chaim Founder Stands Up for Kavod HaTorah
At the annual dinner of Yeshiva Orchos Chaim of Lakewood, NJ, held last night at the Ateres Genendel/Fountain Ballroom Hall in Lakewood, the yeshiva’s founder, Rabbi Yaakov Mandelbaum, devoted a portion of his address to make what he called a public macha’ah on behalf of kavod haTorah.
Speaking before a massive gathering of rabbonim, rabbeim, parents, grandparents, and supporters, Rabbi Mandelbaum addressed events that took place several weeks ago during a visit to Lakewood by Hagaon Rav Moshe Hillel Hirsch, the Slabodka rosh yeshiva and one of the gedolei hador.
Rabbi Mandelbaum pointed out that the visit was marred by a blatant bizayon haTorah.
The bizayon he referred to included the public and widespread distribution of pashkevilin attacking Rav Hirsch and related actions that crossed clear red lines.
Rabbi Mandelbaum expressed particular pain over what followed. The response to the incident, he told the audience, was silence. There was no public outcry and no clear stand taken to denounce what had occurred. That silence, he said, was itself deeply troubling.
Using the platform of his own yeshiva’s annual dinner, Rabbi Mandelbaum explained that he felt a responsibility to speak openly and publicly, taking a principled stand – a “macha’ah” he called it – to stand up for kavod haTorah.
Those in attendance described the moment as powerful and moving. The public protest, delivered calmly but firmly, left a strong roshem on the audience, highlighting the point that bizayon of Torah leadership cannot be met with indifference and that silence in such moments carries its own weight.
{Matzav.com}
Appeals Court Strikes Down California Ban on Open Carry in Urban Counties
From Vision to Reality: North Miami Beach Kollel to Break Ground on Florida’s Home for Torah
Crans-Montana Fire Claims Two Jewish Sisters; Israeli Teen Still Missing
Reb Chaim Yaakov Naftali Zilberberg z”l
Grief spread through the community of the Pnei Menachem Rosh Yeshivah, Rav Shaul Alter, with the sudden passing of Reb Chaim Yaakov Naftali Zilberberg z”l, Friday night. He was 75 years old and collapsed just moments before beginning Kiddush.
Reb Chaim Yaakov Naftali was born on 29 Iyar 5710 to his father, Reb Yitzchak Yissachar Menachem, the publisher of the works of the Mahari”l of Tzintz and son of the renowned gaon Rav Avraham Binyamin, Av Beis Din of Pittsburgh. His mother, Rebbetzin Rivkah Hendel, was known as the “mother” of Yeshivas Yagdil Torah of Ger in Boro Park and was the daughter of the tzaddik Rav Avraham Binyamin Beinish Auerbach, known as the “Yerushalmi Rav,” a grandson of the Imrei Binah and Zais Raanan.
At the age of 14, he traveled alone to Eretz Yisroel to learn in the Ger Yeshivah, where he came under the guidance of the Beis Yisrael of Ger. Upon reaching marriageable age, he married into the family of the mashpia Rav Chaim Mandel of Antwerp, a close emissary of the Beis Yisrael.
For many years he lived on Rothschild Boulevard in Tel Aviv, where he became a trusted confidant of rebbes of the Ruzhiner dynasty. In what was once a vibrant spiritual Tel Aviv, his presence radiated warmth and light. Even as the area’s Torah life diminished, he remained steadfast, operating—devotedly and selflessly—the neighborhood’s only mehadrin kosher grocery, serving a community that had grown increasingly distant.
He later spent several years in Krakow, Poland, where he worked tirelessly to provide tens of thousands of Jews with kosher, nourishing food, coupling practical help with heartfelt warmth and kindness. He was close to the rebbes of Ger, who regarded him as a dignified and trusted figure. The Lev Simcha of Ger once referred to him simply as a “talmid chacham” in a letter to his father-in-law, Rav Mandel.
On one occasion, when Reb Chaim Yaakov went to be menachem avel the Rav Ovadia Yosef, zt”l, the Rav stood in his honor and told those present, “This is the man of chessed of Tel Aviv,” a reference to the quiet acts of righteousness Reb Chaim Yaakov performed through his store.
In recent years he moved to Yerushalayim, where he became one of the pillars and adornments of Rav Shaul Alter’s kehillah and a dignified presence in the Pnei Menachem Beis Medrash. Healthy until his final day, he maintained his regular learning schedule and shiurim right up to the end.
Late Friday night, as he prepared to begin Kiddush, his great heart suddenly stopped, and he was niftar.
He is survived by his children, and many grandchildren and great-grandchildren, who continue along his distinguished path.
The levayah took place at the Pnei Menachem Beis Medrash on Yosef Ziv Street in Yerushalayim, proceeding to the Shamgar funeral home and then to Har HaMenuchos for kevurah.
Yehi zichro boruch.
{Matzav.com}
Bodies Of 2 Jewish Sisters Killed In Swiss Fire Identified; Israeli Teen Still Missing
Sen. Graham: If I Were The Leader of Iran, I Would Go Pray In the Mosque
President Nicolas Maduro arrived in the United States late Saturday, stepping off a plane at Stewart Air National Guard Base in New York under heavy guard. Dressed in grey clothing and wearing handcuffs, he was escorted by more than a dozen federal agents clad in black.
Authorities said Maduro is expected to be flown by helicopter to Manhattan and then transferred to the Metropolitan Detention Center, a federal facility that has previously held a number of high-profile defendants tied to major criminal cases.
Earlier in the day, US President Donald Trump addressed the nation in a press conference focused on the operation that led to Maduro’s capture. Trump said the United States intends to administer Venezuela for the time being, explaining that the US is “going to run the country until such time as we can do a safe, proper and judicious transition.”
He elaborated on that position, adding, “We don’t want to be involved with having someone else get in, and we have the same situation that we had for the last long period of years. So we are going to run the country.”
The military action has drawn strong support from US Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who said the events in Venezuela should resonate far beyond Caracas. In an interview with Axios reporter Barak Ravid, Graham said he had discussed the matter with President Trump on Thursday and said the President “has been very clear that he believes there is a drug caliphate in our back yard that need to be taken out. The operation has been formulating for the last couple of weeks.”
Graham warned that the leadership in Havana and Tehran should take note of the US posture. “There is a new sheriff in town. He has put life into the Monroe doctrine. If I were the leader of Iran, I would go pray in the mosque.”
Describing the next phase in Venezuela, Graham told Ravid that “the process of liberation” is now underway and emphasized that “it is in America’s interest to see it succeed. We need to help the people to start fresh.”
When asked whether additional US military action inside Venezuela could follow, Graham responded bluntly: “All options will be on the table.”
{Matzav.com}
Drivers Rescued From Flooded Cars as Storm Hits Northern California
Former Supreme Court President Aharon Barak Declares Israel No Longer a Liberal Democracy
Former Israeli Supreme Court President Aharon Barak delivered a sharply worded address overnight, declaring that Israel can no longer be described as a liberal democracy, three years after the launch of the judicial reform initiative.
Barak spoke at a demonstration held against the backdrop of upcoming elections, marking three years since the start of the judicial overhaul promoted by the political right. The rally was organized by left-wing groups, with Barak serving as the keynote speaker.
In his remarks, Barak argued that the erosion of Israel’s democratic character did not occur in a single dramatic moment, but rather through a prolonged process. “We are no longer a liberal democracy, and this did not happen in one dramatic, one-time event. It is a process in which essential components of democracy are under severe attack, and democracy is being weakened,” he said.
Barak went on to describe what he called an unprecedented concentration of power. “Our system of government today is rule by a single political authority that is effectively controlled by one person. That person controls the government and controls the Knesset. That person is the prime minister,” he stated.
Turning directly to the judicial reform, Barak said the effort was aimed at neutralizing the only institution capable of restraining governmental power. “For this control to be complete, it is necessary to take over the one body that can oversee the government — the court. It is no surprise that the first stage of the regime change focused on appointing judges and on their power to invalidate legislation and government actions. When the court is ‘ours,’ the rule of law will no longer exist in government. In its place will come rule by the government through law.”
Barak also leveled criticism at law enforcement authorities, accusing the police of improper conduct. “The police are exercising their power in an unequal and unrestrained manner,” he said.
Despite his bleak assessment, Barak concluded with a call to public action, emphasizing that the judiciary alone cannot halt what he described as democratic decline. “The court, on its own, will not be able over time to prevent our deterioration. Only the people — who stand at the center of liberal democracy — can stop it. Each of us must take hold of the flag of the state, raise it high, and thereby express loyalty to the state and not to its rulers, to the rule of law and not to the rule of the ruler.”
{Matzav.com}
