In wars, bombs destroy buildings. But sometimes, it is paperwork that suffocates the living. On January 1, 2026, the government of formally revoked the operating licenses of 37 international humanitarian NGOs working in Gaza and the West Bank. The decision followed months of new regulatory requirements introduced in March 2025 — requirements that many aid organizations said they could not ethically comply with. The result? Some of the world’s most established humanitarian organizations suddenly found themselves locked out of one of the most devastated territories on earth. The Bureaucratic Trigger In March 2025, Israel introduced a new registration framework for foreign NGOs operating in Palestinian territories. The rules required: Full disclosure of local staff identities Detailed funding sources Internal operational structures Extensive vetting of Palestinian employees The supervising authority: Israel’s Ministry of Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism. ...
There was a time when rode into every Middle Eastern catastrophe like a TED Talk with a press pass. If there was a war to explain, a regime to modernize, or a “vital message” to send with cruise missiles, Tom was there — sleeves rolled up, metaphors polished. Back when the invasion of was sold as a democratic software update, Friedman wasn’t exactly storming the barricades. He was midwifing “creative destruction.” The region would be shocked into sanity. History would bend toward market reform. Fast forward. Now he’s discovered that might be bending something else entirely. When an Ex–Prime Minister Uses the Words “Ethnic Cleansing” What jolts Friedman’s latest column is not campus rhetoric. Not activist slogans. Not fringe NGOs. It’s — a former Israeli prime minister — using language that once would have detonated diplomatic careers. Olmert wrote in Haaretz that: “A violent and criminal effort is underway to ethnically cleanse territories in the West Bank.” Let...