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Is There a Difference Between Jewish Voice for Peace and Students for Justice in Palestine?
Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) members inside the Westlands administrative building at Sarah Lawrence College. Photo: Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP)/Screenshot
On April 20, 2024, during the semester of encampments, the group Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) posted perhaps its first ever factual statement on Instagram.
The full text reads: “Jewish Voice for Peace stands in solidarity with students as they establish the Popular University for Gaza on their campuses, including at Columbia, Yale, UNC Chapel Hill, and beyond. We are committed to supporting them in their actions and we will serve as an anchor to their cause. Within Universities and beyond, WE ARE ALL SJP!”
Indeed they are.
Both JVP and SJP — Students for Justice in Palestine — are part of the network of campus anti-Israel activism. Their goals are identical, their rhetoric nearly indistinguishable, and their messages often interchangeable.
Two Differences
There are only two tell-tale indications that a message comes from JVP versus SJP — how each group refers to Israel, and to itself. JVP generally refers to the Jewish State as Israel, whereas SJP uses “the Zionist entity.”
SJP members call themselves “the resistance” and other self-aggrandizing terms, whereas JVP members depend on an association with Judaism to justify their messages. Therefore, they almost always begin their denunciations of Israel with the phrase “As Jews” or “As anti-Zionist Jews.”
On November 26, 2025, National Students for Justice in Palestine (NSJP) posted this message on Instagram: “As the student movement in the imperial core, we vehemently oppose any further encroachment on Palestinian sovereignty.”
Compare this to a May 15, 2025, JVP Instagram post: “As anti-Zionist Jews, our solidarity with Palestinians is unshakable. We stand with Palestinians seeking freedom and affirm their right to return to their homes and to live in safety and dignity.”
Take away the “As anti-Zionist Jews” identifier, and it becomes impossible to distinguish JVP from SJP messaging.
To prove my assertion, compare JVP and SJP messages on the following topics. Which one is JVP and which is SJP?
October 7
The JVP and SJP commentary on October 7 could have been written by the same person. Maybe they were.
One group equivocated that, “Inevitably, oppressed people everywhere will seek – and gain – their freedom. We all deserve liberation, safety, and equality.”
The other group praised the “struggle for complete liberation and return,” claiming that October 7 had “disrupted the very foundation of Zionist settler society.”
The first passage is from one of two messages posted on October 7, 2023, on JVP’s Instagram page and the second is from SJP’s “Day of Resistance Toolkit.”
Genocide Accusations
Both groups regularly quote Hamas statistics to charge Israel with committing genocide and targeting civilians. Consider the following statements, one from 2021 and one from 2025.
“The Israeli military has devastated entire neighborhoods and cities, and has razed the centuries-old infrastructure of Palestinian life, decimating Gaza’s healthcare infrastructure, water supplies, electricity grid, schools, universities and cultural institutions.”
“Over the past week, Israel has stolen the lives of over 130 Palestinian parents and children and injured thousands … Severe shortages of life-saving medicines, food electricity, and clean water continue to make life unsafe and unbearable – a humanitarian catastrophe deliberately manufactured by a violent colonial project.”
The first passage comes from a recent article on the JVP website titled “Nearly two years of unspeakable loss. No more bombs,” and the second is from the May 18, 2021, Statement-12 on the NSJP website.
The Ceasefire
SJP and JVP have agreed since the October 10, 2025, ceasefire in Gaza was announced that there really is no ceasefire.
While Hamas has violated the ceasefire terms since the beginning, SJP and JVP ignore those violations and remain fixated on Israeli retaliations.
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Holiday Messages
For last year’s November 27 Thanksgiving message, the JVP and SJP Instagram messages are nearly identical, right down to the scare quotes around “Thanksgiving.”
One wrote: “This ‘Thanksgiving,’ we reject any attempt to obfuscate centuries of violence enacted by the American settler colonial project against the Indigenous nations of this land and peoples across the globe … From Turtle Island to Palestine, land back!”
The other wrote: “On this day, Indigenous people and allies confront the settler-colonial narratives of ‘Thanksgiving,’ observing it instead as a National Day of Mourning … Today and every day, we contemplate parallels between the colonization of Turtle Island and Palestine.”
Aside from the logos, it’s practically impossible to discern any differences between the messages from JVP and SJP.
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Likewise, both groups found a way to bring their mutual obsession to their Christmas messages.
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The Minneapolis Riots
Both JVP and SJP found ways to tie the anti-ICE riots in Minneapolis into statements on Gaza.
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The Maduro Arrest
Not surprisingly, both JVP and SJP object to the capture and arrest of Venezuelan strong man Nicholas Maduro. Both refer to the act as an “abduction” and “terrorism.” One compares the situation to Iran and one to Gaza. In the two Instagram posts below, one from JVP and the other from NSJP, I have removed the group logos, making it impossible to distinguish SJP’s message from JVP’s message.
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With their long history of collaboration, identical agendas, and nearly identical rhetoric, Jewish Voice for Peace is nothing more than Students for Justice in Palestine with a dubious Kosher coating. Taking JVP’s “Jewishness” seriously means falling for SJP’s bait.
To use a term common among terrorism studies, JVP has become the Jewish “Wing” of SJP.
Chief Investigative Project on Terrorism (IPT) Political Correspondent A.J. Caschetta is a principal lecturer at the Rochester Institute of Technology and a fellow at Campus Watch, a project of the Middle East Forum where he is also a Milstein fellow. A version of this article was originally published by IPT.
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War with Iran puts the US-Israel alliance at grave risk
The Iran war is strategically sound yet politically unsupported — an unstable foundation for a gamble that could reshape the Middle East. That creates danger for Israel, which needs the support of an American public that is rapidly drifting away.
For decades, the country’s greatest strategic asset has not been its military technology or intelligence capabilities — spectacular as these are — but rather the political, diplomatic and military backing of the United States. That relationship has not been merely transactional. It was supposed to rest on shared values and deep public support across the American political spectrum.
If that support erodes or disappears, Israel’s strategic environment will fundamentally change. To be blunt: it will not be able to arm its military. This creates a paradox. A campaign that has so far demonstrated extraordinary value for the Jewish state also stands a risk of fundamentally weakening it.
An alliance at its strongest
The conflict has showcased the depth of the current U.S.–Israel alliance. To many observers, and critically to Israel’s enemies, the operation has underscored not only Israel’s capabilities but also the reality that it stands alongside the world’s most powerful state.
The strikes have projected deep into Iranian territory, revealed astonishing intelligence penetration, and destroyed or degraded key threats. Israel’s enemies across the region have already been weakened by previous rounds of fighting since Oct. 7, and the current operation has reinforced the impression that Israel can reach its adversaries wherever they operate.
Moreover, Iran’s regime has managed to isolate itself to the point where most Arab countries are in effect on the side of Israel and the U.S. That projection — of an unbreakable and strong alliance – may ultimately be the most important strategic element of this war.
But therein lies the rub.
The political foundations of American support for Israel are eroding, which means the very element that currently strengthens Israel’s deterrence — American participation — may also be the one most at risk.
A just war, unjustified
Americans do not understand why their country is at war.
A Reuters/Ipsos survey conducted at the start of the conflict found only 27% of Americans supported the U.S. action, while 43% opposed it. Other surveys show similar results, with roughly six in ten Americans against the military intervention.
In modern American history that is highly unusual. Most wars begin with a “rally around the flag” moment when public support surges. Even conflicts that later became controversial — from Afghanistan to Iraq — initially enjoyed majority backing.
This one did not — in part because the case for it has not been made clearly to the public.
That error is compounded by years of polarization in American politics; declining trust in institutions and leadership; and the record of President Donald Trump, who has spent years spreading conspiracy theories and demonstrating a remarkable indifference to factual truth. It is no exaggeration to say that many Americans do not believe a word he says – which is perhaps unprecedented.
When a president with that record launches a war, at least half the country assumes the worst. Even if the strategic logic is sound, the credibility deficit remains.
The tragedy is that the war is, in fact, eminently justifiable. The Islamic Republic has long since forfeited the moral legitimacy that normally shields states from outside force. It brutally suppresses its own population, jailing and killing protesters, policing women’s bodies, and crushing dissent with an apparatus of repression. Its foreign policy is not defensive but revolutionary. Through proxy militias it has destabilized Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen, as well as the Palestinian areas, in some cases for decades.
The regime has pursued nuclear weapons through a series of transparent machinations, deceptions and brinkmanship. Negotiations have repeatedly been used as delaying tactics while enrichment continued. Any deal that relieved sanctions would not simply reduce tensions; it would also inject new resources into a system dedicated both to repression at home and aggression abroad — one that is despised by the vast majority of its own people, as murderous dictatorships inevitably will be.
There is a doctrine in international law known as the Responsibility to Protect — the principle that when a state systematically brutalizes its own population, the international community may have the right, even the obligation, to act. By that standard, the Iranian regime has been skating on thin ice for years.
But with this clear rationale left uncommunicated, the politically dangerous perception has spread that the U.S. was reacting to Israel rather than acting on its own strategic judgment.
A perilous future
If Americans come to believe that Israel caused a costly war that they did not support in the first place, the backlash could be severe.
For centuries, one of the most persistent antisemitic tropes has been the accusation that Jews manipulate powerful states into fighting wars on their behalf. The suggestion that Israel can pull the U.S. into conflict feeds directly into that mythology. Once such perceptions take hold, they can be extremely difficult to reverse.
Even people who reject antisemitism outright can absorb a softer version of the same idea: that American interests are being subordinated to Israeli ones. In a political environment already marked by growing skepticism toward Israel, that perception risks deepening the erosion of support that has been underway for years.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio seemed to inadvertently feed such notions by suggesting in recent days that the U.S. had to attack Iran because Israel was going to do so “anyway,” and then America would have been a target. It was a short path from that to conspiracy theorists like Tucker Carlson blaming Chabad for the war.
A future Democratic president, facing a base that appears to have abandoned Israel, may feel far less obligation to defend it diplomatically or militarily. Even a Republican successor could prove unreliable if the party continues its drift toward isolationism.
That likelihood is compounded by studies showing that a large part of the U.S. Jewish community itself no longer backs Zionism. That process is driven by Israel’s own policies, including the West Bank occupation and the deadly brutality of the war in Gaza.
So the very war that is showcasing the best the U.S.-Israel alliance has to offer is also at risk of fundamentally damaging that partnership. Particularly if Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — the rightful object of much American ire — manipulates the Iran campaign into an electoral victory this year, the alliance’s greatest success could also be its undoing.
The post War with Iran puts the US-Israel alliance at grave risk appeared first on The Forward.
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Report: Iran’s New Military Plan Is Regime Survival Through Regional Escalation
Members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) attend an IRGC ground forces military drill in the Aras area, East Azerbaijan province, Iran, Oct. 17, 2022. Photo: IRGC/WANA (West Asia News Agency)/Handout via REUTERS
i24 News – After last year’s devastating conflict with the United States and Israel, Iranian leaders have reportedly adopted a major strategic shift aimed at expanding the war across the Middle East to secure the regime’s survival, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Previously, Iran responded to foreign strikes with limited, targeted reprisals. The new doctrine abandons that approach, aiming instead to escalate the conflict regionally, particularly against Gulf Arab states and critical economic infrastructure. The goal is to disrupt the global economy and pressure Washington into shortening the war.
This decision followed the twelve-day war with Israel in June 2025, during which Israeli and US strikes eliminated senior Iranian military leaders, destroyed key air defense systems, and severely damaged nuclear facilities. In response, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei—before his elimination early in the current conflict—activated a strategy designed to maintain continuity even if top commanders were neutralized.
Central to this approach is the so-called “mosaic defense” doctrine: a decentralized military structure in which the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) operates through multiple regional command centers. Each center can conduct operations independently, allowing local commanders to continue fighting even if national leadership is incapacitated. This makes the military apparatus more resilient to targeted strikes.
Analysts cited by the Wall Street Journal suggest that Tehran’s calculation is to make the conflict costly enough for all parties to force the US and its allies into a diplomatic resolution.
However, the plan carries enormous risks. By escalating attacks on regional states and international economic interests, Iran could provoke a broader coalition against itself. Despite prior military losses, Iranian forces retain the capability to launch drone and missile strikes, maintaining their influence over the ongoing conflict.
For Iranian leaders, the immediate priority remains unchanged: the survival of the regime, even if it requires a major regional escalation.
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Katz Warns Lebanon to Disarm Hezbollah or ‘Pay a Heavy Price’
Israel’s Defense Minister Israel Katz and his Greek counterpart Nikos Dendias make statements to the press, at the Ministry of Defense in Athens Greece, Jan. 20, 2026. Photo: REUTERS/Louisa Gouliamaki
i24 News – Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz on Saturday warned Lebanon’s leadership that it must act to disarm Hezbollah and enforce existing agreements, cautioning that failure to do so could lead to severe consequences for the Lebanese state.
Speaking after a high-level security assessment with senior military officials, Katz directed a message to Lebanese President Joseph Aoun, saying Beirut had committed to enforcing an agreement requiring Hezbollah’s disarmament but had failed to follow through.
“You pledged to uphold the agreement and disarm Hezbollah — and this is not happening,” Katz said. “Act and enforce it before we do even more.”
The meeting took place in Israel’s military command center and included Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir and other senior defense officials, as Israel continues operations on multiple fronts.
Katz emphasized that Israel would not tolerate attacks on its communities or soldiers from Lebanese territory.
“We will not allow harm to our communities or to our soldiers,” he said. “If the choice is between protecting our citizens and soldiers or protecting the State of Lebanon, we will choose our citizens and soldiers — and the Lebanese government and Lebanon will pay a very heavy price.”
The defense minister also referenced Hezbollah’s leadership, warning that the group’s current chief could lead Lebanon into further destruction.
“If Hassan Nasrallah destroyed Lebanon, then Naim Qassem will destroy it as well,” Katz said.
Katz stressed that Israel has no territorial ambitions in Lebanon but said it would not accept a return to the years in which Hezbollah launched repeated attacks on Israel from Lebanese territory.
“We have no territorial claims against Lebanon,” he said. “But we will not allow Lebanese territory to again become a platform for attacks against the State of Israel.”
He concluded with a warning to Lebanese authorities to take action against Hezbollah before Israel escalates its response.
“Do and act before we do even more,” Katz said.





