🧵The claims that Israel uses "Human Shields" since the IDF HQ is located in Tel Aviv are stupid, meant to normalize attacking Israeli civilians. No one hides the Pentagon behind a shopping mall. The Kirya isn’t buried under a school. The Russian MoD isn’t in a hospital basement
1. The Pentagon (USA)
Location: Arlington, Virginia — essentially part of the Washington, D.C. metro area.
It’s adjacent to residential neighborhoods, shopping malls, highways, and national landmarks.
2. IDF Headquarters – The Kirya (Israel) Location: Central Tel Aviv It’s surrounded by civilian buildings, commercial offices, shopping centers, residential apartments, and busy roads.
3. Russia’s Ministry of Defense HQ Location: Moscow, Russia Positioned on the banks of the Moskva River, right in central Moscow, among civilian infrastructure and government buildings.
4. UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) Location: Whitehall, London Next to government ministries, tourist attractions, and dense civilian areas.
5. China’s Central Military Commission HQ Location: Zhongnanhai, Beijing Right next to the Forbidden City, mixed with civilian and administrative zones.
6. Indian Armed Forces Headquarters (South Block & Sena Bhawan) Location: New Delhi Integrated into central Delhi near parliament buildings, government offices, and civilian traffic.
7. French Ministry of the Armed Forces (Hôtel de Brienne) Location: Paris Situated in the 7th arrondissement—residential, diplomatic, and cultural heart of Paris.
8. NATO Headquarters Location: Brussels, Belgium Near residential areas and office parks on the outskirts, but still within the greater Brussels metro area.
9. Turkish General Staff HQ (Genelkurmay Başkanlığ) Location: Ankara Centrally located, close to parliament and civilian neighborhoods.
10. German Ministry of Defense Location: Berlin In the city center, near embassies, public parks, and other government offices.
Try googling where is the HQ's of Hamas. It is not marked.
This is Human Shields: Command centers in hospitals, Rockets launched from schools, Ammunition stored in mosques, HQs beneath residential buildings,
The IDF HQ is marked. Iran targets babies!
The claims are so stupid, they even claim air defense systems are "evidence" of "human shield" strategy. That is what those writing reports against Israel for the ICC, ICJ & UN claim.
🧵Every few years, Europe "rediscovers" the same idea: two-speed Europe, multi-speed Europe, variable geometry. The terminology changes, but the premise remains the same — some EU states should integrate deeper and faster, while others are pushed to "second class" States.
Two-speed Europe” is the idea that the EU should formally accept unequal integration. A core group would advance deeper integration, while others are left out—bound by Brussels’ rules but excluded from decision-making. Sold as flexibility, turns an informal imbalance into a permanent hierarchy
What’s new isn’t the idea, but the confidence behind it. Germany has revived it openly, France backs it, others quietly agree. Sold as realism, it dodges the truth: the problem isn’t tiers, it’s the EU itself. Multi-speed Europe isn’t reform—it’s an admission of failure.
🧵Almost no one is asking the most important question about Trump’s “Board of Peace”: Is it even constitutional? Here’s why Trump’s “Board of Peace” raises serious constitutional issues that no one is talking about.
“Minilateralism,” Non-Binding Commitments, and Why Labels Do Not End the Treaty Inquiry
Some describe the Board as a form of executive “minilateralism,” akin to informal contact groups created without Senate ratification.
The problem, U.S. constitutional law turns on substance, not labels. The Charter does not describe a temporary forum; it creates an enduring institution with legal personality—meaning the capacity to act as an independent legal entity under international law.
Legal personality is decisive because it transforms a diplomatic gathering into a standing organization capable of: Owning property, Entering contracts, Suing and being sued, Acting independently of its member states
Under U.S. law, such status cannot be self-declared. It requires either congressional authorization or designation under the International Organizations Immunities Act (IOIA). The Board satisfies neither. As a result, its claimed legal personality has no domestic legal grounding, even as the United States becomes politically and institutionally bound by creating, staffing, and chairing it.
“Non-binding” does not mean constitutionally irrelevant. As MedellĂn v. Texas makes clear, obligations may be non-self-executing in U.S. courts yet still bind the United States politically and diplomatically.
Expiration clauses do not cure this problem when renewal authority rests solely with the Chairman, enabling conditional perpetuity outside democratic oversight.
Immunities, Domestic Law, and the Limits of Executive Authority
The Charter goes further by asserting that the Board itself shall “ensure” privileges and immunities through agreements negotiated by its own officials. While defenders argue this merely contemplates host-state agreements subject to domestic law, the post explains that this misunderstands how immunity works in the United States.
Under U.S. law, immunity is derivative, not inherent. It can arise only through: Congressional authorization (via statute or treaty), or Presidential designation under the IOIA, which itself presupposes lawful U.S. participation
An organization created unilaterally by the President cannot bootstrap itself into immunity. Executive agreements cannot displace Congress’s control over jurisdiction, courts, liability, or regulatory enforcement. Even if no immunity is ultimately granted, the constitutional problem arises from constructing a framework that treats immunity as an expected institutional attribute, negotiated by executive authority and potentially administered by a self-perpetuating Chairman.
Invocations of UN practice or Security Council resolutions do not resolve this. UN immunities in the U.S. exist because Congress enacted implementing statutes. International endorsement cannot override domestic separation of powers.
🧵Thanksgiving wasn’t born in a peaceful colonial feast—it was created by Lincoln in 1863 as a wartime ritual to hold a fractured nation together. Today’s polarized America faces its own internal divide and foreign adversaries eager to exploit it. The holiday’s lesson is clear: unity is national security and the only way to save a divided nation.
The myth most people imagine Thanksgiving as a colonial harvest ritual. But the holiday we celebrate today—this national pause for unity—was invented during the Civil War. Yes, Plymouth had a 1621 meal, but it wasn’t called Thanksgiving, wasn’t a tradition and it wasn't repeated.
The first real national Thanksgiving was proclaimed on November 26, 1863, in the middle of the Civil War. Lincoln issued it four months after Gettysburg, as the Union was still burying its dead. Thanksgiving wasn’t born from abundance. It was born from national desperation.
🧵Israel is passing a new law to “cut water & electricity” to UNRWA. This amendment enforces the 2024 law banning UNRWA from operating in East Jerusalem, clarifying that utilities to its offices—which the agency refuses to close—count as prohibited contact.
If you read the headlines about the Knesset voting to cut water and electricity to UNRWA, you would think Israel suddenly woke up one morning and passed new “draconian” legislation targeting the UN agency. In reality, that narrative is not just misleading—it is factually wrong.
This isn’t about cutting water or electricity to homes or refugee camps—those aren’t supplied by Israeli companies. The amendment targets UNRWA’s East Jerusalem offices, which the agency refused to vacate. It simply enforces the law.
🧵Trump selling the F-3, the world’s most advanced stealth fighter to a regime that doesn’t even recognizes Israel’s existence is not only reckless, it’s potentially illegal. U.S. law requires any defense sale to the Middle East preserves Israel’s Qualitative Military Edge. (QME)
Since 2008, U.S. law has required presidents to ensure Israel keeps a clear military edge. Under the Arms Export Control Act, any Middle East arms sale must be certified as not harming Israel’s QME—a mandate reaffirmed in later defense laws. It isn’t custom. It’s statutory.
Even downgraded export F-35s alters the balance. QME law requires that no sale diminish Israel’s edge—and stealth can’t be partially exported. Once Saudi Arabia has the F-35, the gap collapses. Israel’s superiority is gone—precisely what the law forbids.
🧵Many believe only Security Council resolutions “under Chapter VII” are binding. That’s a myth. The UN Charter makes clear that legal force comes from the Council’s authority and the resolutions' operative language—not from magic words.
Article 25 of the Charter, obligates UN members to carry out Security Council decisions. Chapter VII adds enforcement tools like sanctions or force, but doesn’t limit the resolution's binding authority.
Operative verbs determine whether a UN Security Council resolution is binding: “Decides” & “Demands” bind states; “Calls upon,” “Urges,” “Recommends,” & “Welcomes” do not. Binding force comes from wording, not Chapter VII.