"The 14-point text is unambiguous on the point the White House is most eager
to fog. It commits the United States, "with regional partners," to
develop a "plan with at least USD 300 billion for the reconstruction and
economic development of the Islamic Republic of Iran" -- $3 billion of
which has, according to the unsurpassed journalist, Lee Smith, already
been sent to Iran through by way of the United Arab Emirates. The
president has called reports of that figure "fake news" and insisted
nobody is putting up "ten cents." The clause nevertheless sits
prominently in the document he signed."
"Only one question really matters: what does the agreement, if honored by
Iran, deliver? It leaves enriched uranium inside Iran, concedes a right
to enrichment that was recently a red line, permits the Iranian
ballistic-missile program Trump now defends supposedly because other
countries have missiles too, and pours reconstruction money into an
economy whose ruling institution is the brutal Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps (IRGC)."
"The regime in Tehran, which has waited out many American presidents and
means to wait out another, is betting they are bluffing about everything
except the check."
Pierre Rehov, Gatestone Institute
 |
| A Fattah ballistic missile is displayed during the annual
military parade in Tehran. (Photo by AFP via
Getty Images) |
Interesting
how Canada-Israel relations have plunged into an icy bath in the past
decade coinciding with Liberal governments lauding their 'progressive',
DEI, Critical Race Theory values, and managing to impose them as
credit-worthy virtues to abide by. In their playbook terrorists are
'militants', or 'gunmen' and a small nation that displays its sovereign
right of response against existential threats represents an oppressive
regime over-reacting to mere hyperbolic threats of violence however
expressed in lavish bloodbaths.
Canada's
previous and its current prime ministers take pride in their declared
solidarity with the world's foremost victims whose claims to the
historic patrimony of another people's ancestral land strikes a
sympathetic chord with a government that hasn't hesitated to disown its
own history while bemoaning itself as colonialist imperialists guilty of
'genocide' of Canada's aboriginals. The warm friendship and trust
between Canada and the State of Israel exemplified most cordially by the
preceding Conservative-led government is no more.
Canada's
current prime minister, Mark Carney, finds much in common with the
Palestinian Authority's autocratic, corrupt President Mahmoud Abbas,
with the financially influential Emir of Qatar as exemplars of
democracy, while giving a cold shoulder to Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu of the sole democracy in the Middle East, a Jewish state that
governs a diverse religious, ethnic, cultural population seen nowhere
else in the geography. Mr. Carney maintains cordial relationships with
all but Mr. Netanyahu.
In
Mr. Carney's opinion, Israel is guilty of any number of offences,
primary among them its military responses to violent mass atrocities
committed against Jews, much less ongoing threats of annihilation by the
Islamic Republic of Iran, whose proxy militias, trained, funded and
armed by the al-Quds branch of the Islamic Republican Guard Corps attack
Israel from the south, from the north through Hamas and Hezbollah,
goading Israel to invade Gaza and Lebanon in defensive reaction to
never-ending attacks.
 |
| Montreal4Palestine
says the effigies displayed during the demonstration were directed at
political figures, Benjamin Netanyahu, Itamar Ben-Gvir and Donald Trump.
Montreal police’s hate crimes unit is investigating the incident. |
None
of which gave Canada's prime minister pause in declaring support for
Palestinian statehood, and issuing statements of condemnation against
Israel for its military pursuit of terrorists in Gaza and the West Bank,
as well as those in Lebanon. Praising Arab leadership for their peace
overtures, imagined tolerance and democratic values, all absent but for a
scant few Middle East countries, while slurring Israel for its presumed
lack of those virtues seems to satisfy something deep within Mr.
Carney's subconscious.
It
looks suspiciously akin to antisemitism. Denouncing Israel for "illegal
invasion" of Lebanon, with no nuanced acknowledgement that the
government of Lebanon has failed to exert its sovereignty and
responsibility to its population that suffers a malignant terror group
in Hezbollah to place the country in a vulnerable position by constant
rocket fire into northern Israel. Iran's regime, sworn to Israel's
destruction, has traditionally occupied Lebanon through Hezbollah, yet
no acknowledgement of that simple reality in understanding Israel's
dilemma is forthcoming.
When
Mr. Carney finally directly addressed the inflamed persecution of
Canadian Jews by organized foreign interests which has seen years of
'pro-Palestinian' and 'anti-Israel' processions throughout Canadian
streets, condemning Israel for 'genocide' against Palestinians, while
threatening Jews in Canada with 'Final Solution', 'Globalize the
Intifada', and 'From the river to the sea', codes well known to
represent incitement to violence, he spoke of rabid antisemitism as an
unforgivable social pathology.
One
which he had every intention, finally of addressing, after appearing to
nonchalantly fail to 'notice' the ubiquitous presence of Jew-hate
emanating from a flood of new immigrants, refugees and migrants whose
cultural traditions of that malady were carried with them into Canada to
augment already-existing, but quiescent suspicion of Jews to bring the
pathology to a crescendo of orchestrated taunts, threats and violence
including vandalism, gunshots and incendiary devices thrown at
synagogues, Jewish schools and private Jewish-owned businesses.
 |
| Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks against antisemitism
in front of members of the Jewish community and law enforcement leaders
at Holy Blossom Temple in Toronto on Monday, June 1, 2026. Photo by Peter Power/Postmedia |
His
grand solution, announced at a Toronto synagogue where he spoke
comfortingly and comfortably about his intentions to finally put an end
to the disorder, with the assignment of an advisory committee to study
the issue of rampant antisemitism in Canada, was to appoint none other
than Muslim and Arab known Jew-haters to the task of solving the problem
that they themselves are responsible for.
In
the end, it is interesting how two governments, one the United States
of America, the other Canada, neighbours in North America, have a
president and a prime minister thought to be quite unalike one another
in temperament, character and values. Yet there is more to meet the eye
than a cursory review of the behaviour of each, and in the end, summing
up their stated positions, their concerns and their democratic
declarations, along with the outcomes of their intentions, it becomes
clear they have much in common.