Submit your comments on this article | |||||||||||
Israel-Palestine-Jordan | |||||||||||
A billion for 'Maidan'. Mass protests in Israel were paid for by Americans | |||||||||||
2025-07-23 | |||||||||||
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited. by Leonid Tsukanov [REGNUM] American auditors from the House Judiciary Committee have published the results of a preliminary investigation into the financial activities of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID, recognized as an undesirable organization in Russia)
![]() As a result of the audit, a number of Israeli non-profit organizations were accused of destabilizing the situation in the Jewish state. And with the money of American taxpayers. These accusations could well cost the Israeli opposition its seats in the upcoming elections, especially if it turns out that much of their “popular support” was orchestrated. However, Tel Aviv is currently focused on other threats. But they also come from non-profit organizations. "UNDERMINING" UNDER THE PREMIERE The investigation, initiated by the House Judiciary and Foreign Affairs Committees, began in March and was part of Donald Trump's campaign to audit USAID. A review of 380 financial statements found that six non-profit organizations (NPOs) registered in Israel or indirectly affiliated with it were involved in the accumulation and redistribution of government loans and grants. The money was then used to finance destabilizing actions in the Jewish state. In addition to USAID, funds were allocated from the Ministry of Labor, the Ministry of Agriculture,
One of the central links in the shadow scheme, according to the auditors' findings, is PEF Israel Endowment Funds, which served as the main channel for collecting and distributing donations to Israeli NGOs in the United States. Other heavyweights of non-profit activity were implicated in the scandal: Blue White Future, which promotes the idea of peaceful coexistence between Israel and Palestine, the consulting company Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors, the public funds Jewish Communal Fund and Middle East Peace Dialogue Network, as well as the youth movement Movement for Quality Government in Israel, which is considered a “forge of civil activists” working in the interests of Israel.
The report notes that a promising area of USAID funding was to stir up protest sentiments among the ultra-Orthodox ("haredim") after the Israeli Supreme Court's July 2024 ruling on the admissibility of their conscription into military service. However, at the last moment, for unknown reasons, this idea was abandoned.
Although most of the findings in the auditors' report were labeled as "possible" and "highly likely," they were enough to slam the outgoing presidential administration. For example, the Republican Jewish Coalition, which unites lobbyists of Jewish origin, considered the investigation’s findings “outrageous” and demanded “immediate comments” from former White House officials.
Netanyahu's supporters also considered the accusatory basis sufficient for criticizing the "fifth column" inside the country. True, so far it is mainly along the lines of loyal opinion leaders - the politicians themselves remain silent. But only for the time being.
For example, the NGO Bayader Association for Environment and Development, which maintained close contacts with a number of “moderate” Hamas representatives, received a generous contribution from USAID just a week before the start of the anti-Israeli Operation Al-Aqsa Flood. Another socio-political NGO, Tides Network, which is affiliated with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, received loans totaling more than $2.6 million in the first year of the Gaza operation. It is noteworthy that some of the tranches passed through the scandalous “PEF Israel Endowment Funds” and were sometimes supplemented by donations from other sources. The auditors were unable to track what exactly the grants were spent on. As a result, the Netanyahu cabinet can, if necessary, easily shift the blame for “strengthening the position of Hamas” to the American Democrats, who have provided support to Tel Aviv’s opponents not only within Israel, but also on its “sensitive borders.” HELP FOR HAMAS However, for now Tel Aviv has no need to fully play the card of American Democrats interfering in the country's internal affairs. Especially since its own similar scandal is brewing under its nose. It recently became known that the local non-profit organization “AID48”, associated with the “Joint Arab List” (RAAM), was involved in funding organizations and NGOs that are considered terrorist in Israel. The driving force behind the indictment is ultra-conservative MK Zvi Sukkot (Religious Zionism Party). According to him, “billions of dollars” flowed through NGO accounts, feeding the coffers of Hamas and other Palestinian forces that control the Gaza Strip. Also, according to parliamentary prosecutors, part of the funds went through third parties to the Judea and Samaria region under the guise of tranches for the purchase of weapons for Jewish settlers developing the West Bank. And from there, through shadow channels, these weapons got to Gaza.
Many Knesset members do not like their proximity to the Joint Arab List, which they traditionally tend to see as “hidden lobbyists” for the interests of the Palestinian population.
Netanyahu and his entourage are not interfering in the conflict, seeing it as a chance to redirect the anger of ultra-conservative forces from the “haredi” issue (which previously put the government on the brink of illegitimacy) to the Arab minority. The potential loss of the alliance with Raam, which has about five mandates, looks like the lesser of two evils for Netanyahu’s coalition, since a final break with the Orthodox parties would entail the loss of at least fifteen seats, and in the long term, early elections.
Netanyahu and his supporters will most likely play this trump card in full closer to the Knesset elections, pressing the point that the “popular support” of the opposition leaders was just a fiction, and his main critics are themselves involved in scandals and intrigues, including shadow financing of Hamas. And this movement serves as the main trigger for Israeli society after 2023. If such a combination is successful, the far-right government will not only retain control over the country, but will also increase its mandates. Related: Raam 06/28/2024 Golly. Raam 07/14/2023 Democrats in Massachusetts Look to Give Voting Rights to Foreign Nationals Raam 04/03/2023 Palestinian killed after West Bank car ramming Related: Muslim Brotherhood in Israel: 2025-03-21 Ra’am party leader presents Herzog with plan to end Gaza war, free hostages Muslim Brotherhood in Israel: 2025-03-06 Ra’am chief Mansour Abbas says he won’t run for Knesset beyond the next election Muslim Brotherhood in Israel: 2025-01-29 Israel outlaws, shuts offices of Arab reconciliation body led by radical cleric | |||||||||||
Posted by:badanov |
#1 Yup, those protests didnt feel organic. Rent a mob. |
Posted by: mossomo 2025-07-23 13:05 |