Kelly Anne Wolfe
987 posts


JUST IN: 🇮🇱🇮🇷 Israeli National Security Minister Ben Gvir says "Tehran must burn tonight."



Canada is deeply concerned by the resumption of conflict between Iran and Israel. We call on both parties to exercise maximum restraint, de-escalate tensions, and ensure that civilians are protected. A return to dialogue to advance a diplomatic solution is essential to resolving this conflict and to advancing lasting peace, regional stability, and indeed global security.







Former top soldier warns against pivot to China amid tensions with the U.S. ctvnews.ca/politics/artic…






🚨 A person screamed out !! “Erika supports Pedophiles??” Omg 😳







AIPAC applauds the House Armed Services Committee for including Section 224, the United States‑Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative, and other pro‑Israel provisions in its National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2027. Section 224 helps give America a strategic advantage by expanding our partnership with Israel in key arenas that will define 21st century warfare. This provision helps ensure our military is working together with another innovation and technology leader to give our troops the critical edge they need to keep America safe. The provision builds on decades of existing U.S.-Israel defense cooperation and on the bipartisan U.S.-Israel FUTURES Act introduced earlier this year by Representatives Ronny Jackson (R-TX) and Don Davis (D-NC), making existing cooperation efforts more efficient and effective. The committee also approved $750 million for U.S.–Israel cooperative programs—a $65 million increase over FY26—including $500 million for missile defense, $100 million for counter-unmanned systems, $100 million for subterranean operations, and $50 million for emerging technologies. The bill also extends the War Reserves Stockpile Authority–Israel. AIPAC thanks House Armed Services Committee Chairman @RepMikeRogersAL, Ranking Member @RepAdamSmith, and other bipartisan leaders for advancing these important provisions that support American jobs, enhance troop safety, and keep the United States at the forefront of defense innovation by leveraging the enduring special relationship the United States shares with Israel. We now encourage the full House to maintain these pro-Israel measures as the NDAA moves toward final passage.


🚨🇮🇱🇺🇸 BOMBSHELL: The Pentagon raised Israel's counterintelligence threat level to "critical," the highest possible designation, over concerns Israel is aggressively spying on top U.S. officials. According to U.S. officials, the Defense Intelligence Agency issued the assessment in recent weeks because Israel is making "a particular effort to surveil top U.S. officials to get information on the Trump administration's internal deliberations and decision-making" on Iran and Lebanon. Yep, read that again. America's "closest ally" is now rated a critical counterintelligence threat, the same tier as hostile foreign powers, because it's spying on the President's inner circle to find out whether he'll resume bombing Iran or sign the deal. The details are stunning. U.S. officials already use burner phones and avoid speaking in hotel rooms when visiting Israel. A CSIS expert calls Israeli intelligence "hyper-aggressive" and "exceedingly interested in what we are up to." Now stack the timeline. Trump screams at Netanyahu, "you're f***ing crazy." The Axios leak that enraged Levin. Netanyahu's letter designing permanent military integration. Section 224 linking the two countries' military systems and data. And now the Pentagon formally designating Israel a critical espionage threat, in the same weeks Congress moves to wire Israel directly into America's defense industrial base. The two stories are happening simultaneously and almost nobody has connected them. The Pentagon says Israel is spying on America at a critical level. Congress is responding by giving Israel deeper access to American military systems than ever before. At what point does Washington admit this relationship is not what Americans were told it is? Source: NBC






