Sunday, April 5, 2026

As Iran war enters 6th week, escalation looks the most likely scenario


As Iran war enters 6th week, escalation looks the most likely scenario


The US-Israeli campaign against Iran reached its five-week mark on Saturday, with no clear mechanism to end the conflict in sight.

Five weeks of running to shelters and mass casualty events from Iranian missiles seems like an eternity to many Israelis, but it is still within the 4-6 week timeline offered by the White House early in the war.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, more disciplined than US President Donald Trump, has preferred not to give firm estimates on how long the war might last, but said last week it was “definitely beyond the halfway point” in terms of its missions.

Trump’s attempts to bring the conflict to a successful termination through direct talks with the Iranians seem to be leading nowhere, as expected.

Mediators told The Wall Street Journal on Friday that negotiations have hit a “dead end.” Trump, meanwhile, extended his deadline for Iran a second time, vowing to rain “hell” on the country if it fails to reach a ceasefire deal or open the Strait of Hormuz by Monday.

So, what happens next?

Two optimistic scenarios are unlikely to play out. Despite repeated assertions from Israel that there are “visible cracks” in the Iranian regime, it’s not about to fall. US intelligence assessments say that the regime is likely to remain in place, with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps holding even more control.

Nor are the Iranians going to run out of missiles or drones. Israel and the US have destroyed hundreds of Iranian missiles and launchers, but Israel believes that the country has over 1,000 left, according to an IAF intelligence officer, and will be able to keep firing for as long as the war goes on.

Iran is also proving able to quickly dig out launchers from underground sites that are hit by the US and Israel and put them back into use, The New York Times has reported.

The war looks to be headed toward an escalation, then, in what might be its final phase.

Unless Trump keeps extending his deadlines, he will have to make good on his promise to end America’s “lovely stay in Iran” by attacking electric plants, oil infrastructure, and Kharg Island.

He made an extremely explicit and specific threat on Sunday, saying that Tuesday “will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran. There will be nothing like it!!!”

Israel is champing at the bit to launch its own attacks on Iranian energy facilities as well, but is waiting for a green light from the US.

Trump — and most likely Netanyahu in that case — could unilaterally end the war after taking out key Iranian energy infrastructure, and paint a victory narrative by laying out the damage done to Iranian military and industrial capabilities.

There are still several major problems with that approach.

First of all, there is no guarantee that Iran will agree to stop fighting just because the US and Israel do. It might sense an opportunity to firm up the narrative that it defeated its enemies by continuing to target Israel and Arab states, undermining Trump’s victory claims.

More significantly, it’s hard to imagine Trump allowing the war to end with effective control over the Strait of Hormuz remaining in Iranian hands. Whereas the US had been the guarantor of safe passage through the chokepoint in the past, Iran would become the arbiter of who gets to transit — and would undoubtedly use that to its advantage, charging fees and pressuring other countries by threatening to keep them out.

Trump has thousands of ground troops ready for an operation to wrest control over the strait from Iran. They could grab islands in the passageway, seize parts of the Iranian coastline from which it threatens shipping, or land on Kharg Island to hold the crucial export site as a bargaining chip.

The use of ground troops could further escalate the war, as Iran would likely throw much of its firepower at an amphibious force. If it caused significant casualties, Trump could well choose to punish Iran even further.

And there remains the issue of Iran’s 440 kilograms of highly enriched uranium. It is believed to be buried under the rubble of Isfahan and Natanz, nuclear sites bombed by the US and Israel last year.

Leaving it inside Iran would potentially give the regime the opportunity to excavate it in the future and use it to create a nuclear weapon.

Trump claims that it isn’t a problem. In his address last week, he said that “we have it under intense satellite surveillance and control. If we see [the Iranians] make a move, even a move for it, we’ll hit them with missiles very hard again.”

Nonetheless, Trump won’t be in office forever, and he might not have the will to start another fight with Iran in the time that remains.

There are US plans to use ground troops to extract the uranium. However, such an operation would be dangerous and demand significant resources.

The US military would have to airlift hundreds or even thousands of troops behind enemy lines, along with heavy equipment, all while operating under Iranian fire, former defense officials told The Washington Post.

They would have to spend weeks blasting through the rubble to collect the uranium, while planes would need a purpose-built runway to carry the material away. And Iran would be sending whatever it could to harm troops involved in the effort.

At least for the coming weeks, the war against Iran looks to be headed for further escalation. That would hurt Iran more than Israel and the US, but it by no means points to an easy way out of the war.



Victory Over Death


Victory Over Death - Easter is a revolutionary act



As Easter dawns this weekend, Christians across the globe will gather to celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ — a singular event that overthrew the dominion of death and offered instead the hope of salvation. It is the beating heart of a faith that has shaped the moral and cultural architecture of the West for two millennia.

The spiritual significance of Easter is its radical claim that Christ’s resurrection is the ultimate victory over our sin and mortality. This is not a mere metaphor or myth but an historical and metaphysical reality. The empty tomb testifies to a God who personally entered human suffering, conquered it, and continues to offer redemption to a fallen world. In our nihilistic age, when many replace real meaning with political activism and an idolization of the self, Easter’s message proclaims that our lives have purpose, that our sacrifices are not in vain, and that love triumphs over despair. It is a reorientation of the soul toward eternity.

Culturally, Easter has been a cornerstone of Western civilization, its themes of renewal and redemption woven into our art, literature, and moral imagination. From Dante’s Divine Comedy to Bach’s St. Matthew Passion, the resurrection infuses us with humility but has also inspired our highest aspirations. It has fueled the creation of hospitals, the abolition of slavery, the rise of charity, and the concept of inalienable human rights—ideas rooted in the revelation that every soul is made in God’s image, that all lives matter.

Yet, in our time, Easter’s message is threatened by enemies increasingly hostile to it. Christians are tested in a crucible of unprecedented persecution globally. Addressing diplomats and international officials gathered for a “Standing with Persecuted Christians: Defending the Faith and Christian Values” event at the United Nations in Geneva on March 3, Vatican representative Archbishop Ettore Balestrero said the scale of persecution of Christians was stark and ongoing, and required urgent attention from governments and international institutions responsible for protecting fundamental rights.

The numbers are staggering. “Almost 400 million Christians worldwide face persecution or violence, making them the most persecuted religious community in the world,” he said, noting that “one in seven Christians is affected.” Nearly 5,000 Christians were martyred in 2025 alone – roughly 13 deaths every day. The Open Doors organization notes that that number has already been surpassed so far in 2026. In Nigeria, Boko Haram and Fulani militants slaughter Christian villagers with impunity, their churches reduced to ash. In China, the Communist Party demolishes crosses and jails pastors, replacing the Gospel with state-sanctioned propaganda. In the Middle East, ancient Christian communities—descendants of the faith’s earliest witnesses—are being erased by jihadist violence and systemic discrimination.

This persecution is ideological as well as corporeal. In the West, cultural Marxists have waged a relentless and largely successful campaign to secularize the public square, purging Christian symbols and values from cultural institutions. The neo-Marxist aim is a society unmoored from transcendence, in which the State, not God, defines morality. The Left understands that to remake society, it must dismantle its spiritual foundations. By marginalizing Christianity, they aim to sever the West from this moral compass, leaving it adrift in a sea of relativism.

This secularizing zeal has birthed a culture of grievance and division, in which identity politics intentionally negates the universal brotherhood that Easter affirms. The result is a civilization in decline: spiritually hollow, culturally fragmented, and increasingly authoritarian. Schools, once grounded in Judeo-Christian ethics, now inculcate ideologies that promote moral relativism over the True, the Good, and the Beautiful. Universities, media, and even many churches have embraced a progressive orthodoxy that recasts Christian virtues as relics of oppression and intolerance. The rise of cancel culture, the suppression of free speech, and the weaponization of institutions against dissenters are symptoms of a society that has rejected Easter’s call to truth and grace.

Easter, with its humble yet glorious affirmation of divine authority, is an affront to the Left’s worldly designs. It reminds us that no earthly power can command our ultimate allegiance. The resurrection is both a personal promise and a cosmic one, a hope that has sustained the West through its darkest hours — Roman persecution, barbarian invasions, world wars. It is a rallying cry for those of us who refuse to submit to the spirit of our decadent age. It calls Christians to stand firm with the courage of conviction.

Easter assures us that no persecution, no ideology, no earthly power can extinguish the truth. This is not blind optimism; history is replete with examples of Christianity’s resilience, from the early martyrs to the medieval monks who nurtured civilization for a thousand years after the collapse of Rome, to the dissidents who defied communist tyranny with the cross. Today’s persecuted, from Nigerian villagers to Chinese house churches, embody this same indomitable spirit. Their witness shames the complacency of the comfortable West.

This weekend, as churches fill with hymns of triumph, let us remember what is at stake. Historically, spiritually, and civilizationally, Easter is a revolutionary act. It declares that death is not the end, that evil will not have the last word, and that a broken world can be made whole. In a time of chaos and re-paganizing decay, this is the message the West desperately needs. The question is whether we will have the courage to carry it. Will we return to the faith that birthed our greatness, or will we surrender to a secular dystopia where power, not principle, reigns?

The tomb is empty. Christ is risen. And the future belongs to those who dare to believe it.


Blast hits pro-Israel Christian center in Netherlands; Iranian-linked terror network suspected


Blast hits pro-Israel Christian center in Netherlands; Iranian-linked terror network suspected


A bomb exploded outside the Israel Centre of Christians for Israel in Nijkerk, Netherlands, late Friday night, the eve of Easter, in a calculated act of intimidation targeting one of Europe’s most visible Christian Zionist organizations. No one was injured, as the building was empty at the time, but the message was unmistakable: Jewish and pro-Israel targets across Europe are under coordinated attack.

Israel’s Ambassador to the Netherlands, Zvi Aviner Vapni, said plainly on X that the bombing was not a one-off event. A Dutch police spokeswoman confirmed to AFP that investigators had determined “a person dressed in black placed the explosive device” outside the organization’s gate, and an investigation is now underway. No arrests have been made.

Christians for Israel, a non-profit whose mission is to promote biblical understanding of God’s purposes for Israel and to mobilize Christian support for the Jewish people, called the attack part of “a worrying pattern” targeting Jewish and pro-Israeli sites across the Netherlands and neighboring Belgium. “The damage was limited,” the group said, “but the impact is significant.”


Striking a Christian Zionist center on the eve of Easter is a message aimed at Christians who stand with Israel, not only at Jews. Israel’s Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism Ministry has identified a group calling itself Ashab al-Yamin, believed to be linked to Iranian terror networks, as responsible for a series of explosions and arson attacks targeting Jewish sites across Belgium, Amsterdam, and Rotterdam. The group claimed responsibility for the torching of four Hatzola ambulances belonging to the Jewish volunteer emergency medical service, outside a north London synagogue in March. UK media reported it also claimed an attack on a Jewish site in Greece.

The attacks are accelerating. An explosion struck a synagogue in Liège, Belgium, in March. Another bomb hit Amsterdam’s only Orthodox Jewish school, a building already surrounded by a pointed metal security wall due to prior threats, damaging a rain pipe and scorching an outer wall. In Rotterdam, Dutch police arrested four young men on suspicion of setting off an explosion outside a synagogue that caused a fire and structural damage.

Belgium has already deployed military troops to guard synagogues and Jewish schools.

What is unfolding across Europe is a coordinated, Iran-backed terror campaign targeting Jews and their allies on European soil in broad daylight, or in this case, in the dark of Easter eve. Europe’s Jewish communities are living under siege, and the organizations standing alongside them are now in the crosshairs as well. The question is whether European governments will finally call it what it is.



Germany preparing for all-out war by rehearsing mass evacuations


Germany preparing for all-out war by rehearsing mass evacuations


This week, for the first time in decades, Germany carried out its largest medical exercise in decades as Russia's threat to Europe increases the possibility of large‑scale war.

The NATO "Quadriga 2026" exercise took place in Lithuania and simulated evacuating wounded soldiers from the country and transporting them to hospitals across Germany.

In a worst-case scenario of full-scale war, experts believe the system could face up to 1,000 casualties a day. Meanwhile, new drone‑related injuries and attacks on medics add further risks. By performing this exercise, the army can identify gaps in the plan and prepare for the real deal.

These gaps have already been detected. A report from the German Hospital Association last year concluded, "Hospitals are poorly equipped for a crisis such as a NATO alliance or defense emergency," based on a survey of 165 hospitals across Germany.

The full-scale training exercise is designed to be as realistic as possible. Since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, the security situation in Europe has become less secure.

In response to the heightened situation, Germany has deployed permanent troops abroad for the first time since world war 2. According to DW, Lithuania's forces tripled from 500 to 1,800 this year, and it's expected to reach 4,800 by 2027.

The prospect of a large-scale war is not being taken lightly by Europe. General Carsten Breuer, head of Germany's armed forces, spoke to the BBC last week.

"I've never experienced a situation which is as dangerous, as urgent, as it is today. So what we are seeing, what we are facing, is a threat from Russia," Breuer said.

We can clearly see that Russia is building up its military to a strength which is nearly double the size of what they had before the war against Ukraine… In 2029, it will be possible for Russia to conduct a major war against NATO. And as a soldier, I have to say 'okay, we have to be prepared for this'."

Syria: Massive crowds scream ‘All of Syria is Hamas."


Syria: Massive crowds scream ‘All of Syria is Hamas. Let’s attack the Jews.’