Showing posts with label All Israel News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label All Israel News. Show all posts

Sunday, July 12, 2026

Sen. Lindsey Graham’s sudden death is a huge loss for Evangelicals, the pro-life & pro-Israel cause, and the US military – I’ve lost a friend, too. All Israel News


Lindsey Graham and Benjamin Netanyahu (Screenshot)

Joel Rosenberg, All Israel News

July 12, 2026

JERUSALEM, ISRAEL – I’m in absolute shock that my friend, Sen. Lindsey Graham, has died so suddenly and unexpectedly.

He was only 71. 

Fox News anchor Shannon Bream first connected us about 15 years ago at a little dinner party she and Sheldon hosted at The Monocle Restaurant on Capitol Hill for the release of one of my novels. 

The Senator had asked Shannon to introduce him to me and she graciously agreed. 

I was glad for the opportunity to get to know him, and thanked him for his passionate work to advance the pro-life cause and protect and strengthen the American military and care for American military personnel, their families, and veterans.

I also thanked him for his tremendous support for a strong U.S.-Israeli alliance. 

He was gracious, funny, charming, and easy to get to know.

But he was also a man on a mission.

What he really wanted to discuss was the gravity of the Iran nuclear threat and my research on “Apocalyptic Islamism,” the genocidal brand of eschatology or End Times theology embraced by senior Iranian leaders.

He wanted to know what it was and why I believed this eschatology was influencing Tehran’s foreign policy. 

He was already incredibly knowledgeable on the magnitude and seriousness of the Iranian threat.

But he was insatiable in his desire to learn more. 

He was an Evangelical Christian from South Carolina, the heart of the American “Bible Belt,” so he understood the importance and power of faith.

Yet he was not well-versed in the extremely dangerous End Times beliefs of our worst enemies in the Middle East and was determined to learn everything he could. 

That was one of the most interesting dinner parties I’ve ever attended, and through it we established a friendship and stayed in regular touch over the years. 

I would occasionally visit and chat with him when I was coming through Washington. 

Joel C. Rosenberg with U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham. (Credit: All Israel News staff) 

We would also talk by phone when he was wrapping up a visit to Israel or traveling to or through a Gulf country and he would brief me, sometimes on the record but usually off.

We talked about his sense of what needed to be done to strengthen or clarify U.S.-Israel relations, or about the latest nuances of the Iran threat, or about how best to build upon the Abraham Accords to expand Arab-Israeli peace in the region. 

When I was first invited to bring an Evangelical Delegation to Saudi Arabia to meet with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) in 2018, Senator Graham was one of the first experts I called to get his advice. 

Few American leaders spent more time with MBS than Graham.

They spoke often and candidly to each other.

The same was true with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Few Senators had a closer or more enduring friendship with Netanyahu than Senator Graham.

They, too, spoke often and directly with each other. 

It was Graham who was personally – and tirelessly – working to broker an Abraham Accords deal between Israel and Saudi Arabia.

When I was invited last year to meet with and interview Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Kyiv, Senator Graham was one of the experts I called for his advice. 

Over the years we talked about so many topics, including our Evangelical faith.

Yet more often than not we would discuss Iran. 

In July 2021, we published this interview I did with Graham, “Sen. Lindsey Graham warns ALL ISRAEL NEWS that IDF may have to launch preemptive strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities soon.

“The Iranians are progressing at a very dangerous pace” with their uranium enrichment and nuclear weapons development program,” he told me, adding that the Biden administration was not taking the situation seriously enough.

Joel C. Rosenberg interviews U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham. (Credit: All Israel News staff) 

“The [Iranian] enrichment program has gotten stronger during this period of time,” he explained. “They’re increasing their enrichment capability to 60%, in order to get to 90% which is bomb grade. This is well beyond what the JCPOA limits were. And it seems to me that their program has matured in a very dangerous way.”

As a result, he said, Israel was in a very difficult position and might need to take preemptive military action on its own.

“There are certain red lines that Israel will not allow Iran to cross,” Graham told me. “And I’ve never been more worried about those red lines being crossed than I am right now.” 

Graham added that if former U.S. President Donald Trump was still in office, and Tehran so brazenly pursued nuclear weapons in defiance of the international community, Trump would not have left the mess in Israel’s lap.

“I think President Trump unequivocally would have used military action to stop a nuclear armed Iran,” Graham told me. “And I think the Iranians knew that.”

In January of this year, we spoke again, though on deep background, and it was again about Iran.

I wrote this story for ALL ISRAEL NEWS, “Sen. Lindsey Graham lands in Tel Aviv with Israel on high alert against ‘ayatollah’s murderous regime’ – what’s his message to Bibi and the Iranian people?

“Thank God for friends like Lindsey Graham,” I wrote. “The senior senator from South Carolina is not just an Evangelical Christian. A principled conservative. And a champion of the Reagan/Trump doctrine of ‘peace through strength.’ Graham is also one of the staunchest supporters of the U.S.-Israel alliance, while also being a champion of America’s alliances with moderate Arab states, and a passionate advocate for liberating the suffering citizens of Iran from the cruel tyrants of Tehran.”

“With the possibility of a massive missile war erupting at any moment, the senator flew all night from the United States and has just landed in Tel Aviv – why?” I asked. 

“To meet with, encourage, and strategize with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. To show his solidarity with the Israeli people. To make it clear that ‘America First’ has never meant ‘America Alone.’ And to make it clear that President Donald J. Trump is not about to betray or abandon the hopes and dreams of the Iranian people.”

The last time that I saw and interviewed the Senator was on March 5, just one week after Operation Epic Fury began.

Joel C. Rosenberg interviews U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham on the Rosenberg Report (Credit: All Israel News staff) 

The meeting took place in the Senator’s office on Capitol Hill. 

It was arranged and attended by my good friend, Chad Connelly, a former chairman of the South Carolina Republican Party, a friend and ally of the Senator, and a man who runs a network of 14,000-plus pastors called FAITH WINS.

It was a great meeting – the most encouraging I’d had with him in years – and involved and intriguing interview that we published on ALL ISRAEL NEWS and aired on THE ROSENBERG REPORT, my weekly prime time show on TBN.

I wrote two columns based on our conversation that I’ll share with you here. 

The first was, “APOCALYPTIC ISLAMISTS: Iran’s ayatollahs are ‘religious Nazis’ ready to build 11 nuclear bombs, Sen. Lindsey Graham tells ALL ISRAEL NEWS – they must be stopped.

“These are religious Nazis,” Graham said of the Iranian high command, “and they must be stopped.”

The Senator praised President Trump for having the courage to attempt diplomacy with Iran.

He also praised Trump for realizing that the Nazi-esque regime in Tehran had no intention of negotiating in good faith and deciding he had to use military force to end the Iranian nuclear and missile threat before it was too late. 

“We have decapitated the mothership of terrorism,” Graham told me. 

“Iran is sinking and the captain is dead.”

Now, Graham insisted, “we have got to finish the job.”

Lindsey Graham was a great Senator.

He was a serious Evangelical Christian. 

A true American patriot. 

And a true friend of Israel.

A true friend of the Arab and Iranian people. 

Because he was a true champion of freedom and America First but never America Alone.

He will be missed. 

But I look forward to catching up one day when we walk the streets of glory. 

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

The disturbing numbers behind America's growing shift away from Israel


ALL ISRAEL NEWS ​David Brody

Published: July 7, 2026 

Polls showing overall disapproval of Israel are nothing new, but the latest AP-NORC survey is different. It paints an even more alarming picture of where Americans now stand on Israel.  

Perhaps the most striking finding is this: 31% of Americans now believe Israel has committed genocide against Palestinians in Gaza. Only 20% reject that accusation, while an astonishing 49% say they don't know enough to have an opinion. That means only one in five Americans is willing to definitively say Israel has not committed genocide. 

Think about that. Just a few years ago, accusations of genocide against Israel were largely confined to activist circles. Today, the charge has entered mainstream American opinion.

Even among Jewish Americans, opinion has become fractured. The survey finds 30% of Jewish respondents believe Israel has committed genocide, compared to 49% who reject the charge and 21% who remain unsure. That’s an extraordinary shift in the conversation.

The poll also shows Americans increasingly believe the United States favors Israel too much. Today, 40% of Americans say America is too supportive of Israel, while only 18% believe the U.S. is not supportive enough. Another 37% say current support is about right. 

Compare that with just a few years ago. In August 2023 – before Hamas’ Oct. 7 massacre – only 27% thought America was too supportive of Israel. Today it’s 40%. That’s a 13-point increase in less than three years.  

At the same time, sympathy toward the Palestinians has grown. Nearly four in ten Americans (39%) now say the United States is not supportive enough of Palestinians, while only 18% believe America is too supportive of them. 

That represents another significant shift from 2023, when only 30% believed America wasn’t supportive enough of Palestinians.

Here’s the reality and it’s not good news for Israel: public opinion isn’t simply becoming more balanced. It is moving.

Another troubling statistic involves Israel’s military campaign itself. Only 22% of Americans say Israel’s ongoing military operations in Gaza are justified. Meanwhile, 35% say they are not justified, and an enormous 43% say they don’t know enough to say. 

Contrast that with Israel’s initial response immediately after Oct. 7. There, 43% said Israel’s immediate military response was justified, while only 16% disagreed.  

Even support for a Palestinian state has nudged upward. Today, 24% favor establishing an independent Palestinian state including the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem. Only 16% oppose such a state, while a majority – 58% – remain somewhere in the middle, neither supporting nor opposing the idea.  

Another revealing finding involves what Americans consider important. Only 35% describe Israel as an extremely or very important issue personally. Meanwhile, 38% say it is only somewhat important, and 26% say it is not very important or not important at all.  

That means Israel simply isn’t a defining issue for most Americans. For Israel’s supporters, that’s perhaps the most dangerous statistic of all.

My biggest takeaway, however, lies inside Christianity. For decades, one of Israel’s greatest political assets in America hasn’t been a president or a political party. It has been evangelical Christians.

Historically, evangelical Christians have been Israel’s strongest and most reliable supporters. That support has been rooted less in politics than in biblical conviction – beliefs about God’s covenant with Israel, biblical prophecy, and the Jewish roots of Christianity.

While support for Israel has steadily eroded among Democrats, younger Americans, and religiously unaffiliated voters, evangelical Christians largely held the line. 

However, new polling suggests the broader cultural tide is becoming so powerful that even the evangelical movement may not be immune much longer. Younger evangelicals are growing up in an entirely different information environment.

They consume news through TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, podcasts, and influencers far more than through churches, Christian television, or traditional ministries. Their worldview is increasingly shaped by images of humanitarian suffering rather than decades of teaching about Israel’s biblical significance or security challenges. 

This poll doesn’t specifically break out younger evangelicals, but it documents a broader cultural movement that inevitably places pressure on every institution – including churches. 

That’s why this moment feels different.

Israel has survived military invasions, terrorist campaigns, and diplomatic crises before but the larger battle today may not be fought primarily in Jerusalem. It may be fought inside American churches. That should concern every single Evangelical Christian in America.