The Latest From @MacTaskForce
A University of Arkansas professor, Dr. Shirin Saeidi, is facing dismissal after social media posts that were widely criticized for appearing to endorse violence against “Zionists.” University leadership has moved to terminate her after overruling a faculty committee that recommended against it.
According to local news outlets in Arkansas, last year, Dr. Saeidi was also accused of using official university letterhead to advocate for Hamid Nouri’s release from Swedish prison. Nouri, an Islamic Republic official, was arrested by swedish police in 2019, and sentenced to life in prison for the role he played in the mass execution of Iranian political prisoners in 1988.
This moment raises a serious question: when political rhetoric crosses into language that appears to justify violence, where should universities draw the line?
“Zionist” is not an abstract political label but closely tied to Jewish identity. When calls for harm are framed as an attack on “Zionists,” they risk being understood as targeting Jews more broadly.
After surviving Hamas captivity, Bar Kuperstein rewrote the journal he had kept during that nightmare from memory and published it under the name “Unbroken.” Then he sat down with President Isaac Herzog and shared the story behind it.
The title says everything. Unbroken.
Because even after all he endured, Bar chose to remember, to write, to speak, and to live. His voice is a testament to resilience, and his meeting with the president was a moving reminder that the stories of survivors matter, not only for what they reveal, but for the strength and resilience they exhibit.
Another senior figure in the Islamic Republic’s terror machine is gone. Following a targeted Israeli airstrike, Iranian state media announced the death of Majid Khademi, the head of the IRGC’s intelligence organization.
Khademi was part of the system that helps the regime surveil, control, and brutalize its enemies at home and abroad. Through the IRGC, that apparatus has helped perpetuate the oppression of Iranians and the export of material and ideological support to the regime’s terror proxies across the region.
Men like Khademi do not just serve one office or one branch of government. They help sustain the intelligence and command structure behind forces that threaten the entire region.
This is what antisemitism in the West looks like now: Jewish families celebrating Passover while tactical police stand guard outside.
Toronto Police announced increased and visible protection for Jewish communities over the holiday, and accounts from the ground described SWAT-style gear and officers with long guns stationed at key synagogues.
A free society should never normalize Jews needing this kind of protection to pray.
Kharg Island matters because it is where the regime’s money flows. Reuters reported that roughly 90% of Iran’s oil exports pass through Kharg, making it one of the most important pieces of infrastructure sustaining the Islamic Republic. Cut off Kharg, and you put real pressure on the regime’s ability to operate. 
That’s why the conversation around Kharg Island has intensified.
President Trump suggested the U.S. could seize the island, while AP noted that analysts see Kharg as a potentially powerful leverage point, though it could be dangerous and/or broaden the war. 
Kharg is a strategic site that sits at the center of the regime’s export economy, and any move against it would be aimed at choking off the resources that help fund the Islamic Republic, the IRGC, and its broader terror proxy network.
Wishing all who celebrate a blessed and happy Easter.
From everyone at Maccabee Task Force, may this season bring renewal, peace, and light to you and your family.
During times of such uncertainty, the importance of respecting faith, spreading unity, love, and awareness becomes even clearer.
A U.S. weapons systems officer who was stranded in Iranian territory for over a day after his F-15 was shot down has now been rescued in what Reuters described as a high-stakes special forces mission. President Trump called it one of the most daring rescue operations in U.S. military history. 
Behind that headline is a profound act of loyalty and bravery: Americans risking everything to recover one of their own from enemy territory. This mission underscores both the cost of confronting the Islamic Republic and the extraordinary professionalism of the U.S. military personnel who carried it out.
We are releaved that the Colonel was rescued successfully and is expected to recover.
After a U.S. fighter jet went down over Iran, the search is still underway for one missing crew member after the other was rescued alive, according to Axios. The report also says Iran is hunting for the crew and has offered rewards to civilians who find them.
American service-members are now directly in harm’s way in the fight against one of the world’s most dangerous regimes. We stand with the U.S. forces risking everything in the face of the Islamic Republic’s aggression.
