Tag Archives: Iran

Middle East Part 1: Ancient Wisdom for a World at War -by Chaim Goldberg

A Single Verse, A Complete Moral Vision

In the book of Leviticus, a short commandment appears: “Do not place a stumbling block before the blind.”

On the surface, it is simple: don’t trip someone who cannot see. But Jewish legal tradition has understood this verse for centuries as something far larger — a comprehensive moral principle about knowledge, power, and responsibility.

The blind person in this verse is never the one at fault. He is the vulnerable party — the one who lacks information, lacks sight, lacks the ability to protect himself. The prohibition is directed entirely at the one who can see — and chooses nonetheless to place an obstacle in his path.

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Middle East Part 3: Why the American Chassis Doesn’t Fit the Israeli Soul – by Chaim Goldberg

A Meeting That Left Me With Questions

I did not expect the conversation to stay with me the way it did.

I sat with Jonathan Pollard in Jerusalem — a sharp, vital man, the kind you leave with more questions than you arrived with. The meeting was genuinely enriching. And at the same time, something in it placed before me a question I cannot put down:

Not a question about what he did, or what was done to him.

An architectural question.

What does it mean to live inside two states that are not the same kind of thing?

Because Pollard did not inhabit two countries. He inhabited two systems of reality — ones that sometimes use the same words and mean entirely different things. And under pressure, for one terrible moment, the structure cracked.

Continue reading Middle East Part 3: Why the American Chassis Doesn’t Fit the Israeli Soul – by Chaim Goldberg

Middle East Part 2: Between the Illusion of Death and the Engineering of Life – by Chaim Goldberg

I read the word three times before I understood it wasn’t a translation error.

“The subject demonstrated resistance… focused physical force was applied… she was later found without signs of life.”

The subject. That’s how she was described in the internal report of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards on Nika Shakarami, as exposed by BBC Persian. A sixteen-year-old girl who had gone out to protest the death of Mahsa Amini. A girl the same age as my granddaughter. The same age as the students who stood in front of me in the classroom for thirty years.

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Wartime Part4: Why the West Fails to Defeat Regimes – by Chaim Goldberg

The Secret Pharaoh Hides from the Pentagon

A. The Biblical Question We Never Solved

How does the most sophisticated military force of the ancient world — the army of Egypt, the greatest empire on earth — march deliberately into a split sea and drown?

Think about what had just happened. Ten plagues had systematically dismantled Egyptian civilization. The Nile turned to blood. Crops were destroyed. Livestock died. And just days before that final march, death had visited every Egyptian household in a single night — the firstborn of every family, from Pharaoh’s palace to the lowest servant. Egypt was on its knees.

Yet — Pharaoh’s army charged into the parted waters. Willingly. With full force. Where was their free will? Where was the most basic human instinct — survival?

Continue reading Wartime Part4: Why the West Fails to Defeat Regimes – by Chaim Goldberg