Daily Kickoff
Good Monday morning.
In today’s Daily Kickoff, we talk to Ambassador Deborah Lipstadt about her time as special envoy to monitor and combat antisemitism, and interview Shelley Berkley about her career in government service ahead of her swearing-in as mayor of Las Vegas. We also look at Rep. Mikie Sherrill’s plans to approach rising antisemitism as she mounts a bid for governor in New Jersey. Also in today’s Daily Kickoff: Charles Kushner, Patrick Collison and Ambassador Rahm Emanuel.
What We’re Watching
- Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer is in the U.S. this week for meetings with Biden administration officials as well as advisors from the incoming Trump administration in Washington and Florida.
- Former Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant is also in the U.S. this week. Over the weekend, Gallant visited Chabad-Lubavitch headquarters in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, during the group’s annual Kinus Hashluchim conference of emissaries.
- In Washington, the Embassy of the United Arab Emirates is holding its National Day celebration.
- French President Emmanuel Macron is in Saudi Arabia for a two-day state visit that will largely focus on arms sales and the ongoing conflicts in the region.
- We’re also keeping an eye on renewed hostage talks, following last week’s cease-fire between Israel and Hezbollah and a meeting last night of Israel’s security cabinet during which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that Israel had resumed conversations with international mediators to agree on a new framework for negotiations. This morning, the IDF announced that it determined that Israeli-American hostage Omer Neutra had been killed on Oct. 7 and his body brought to Gaza, where it remains. Meanwhile, Hamas released a new video of another Israeli-American hostage, Eden Alexander, on Saturday.
What You Should Know
For more than a decade, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad ruled his country with an iron grip as his troops engaged in a bloody civil war that saw hundreds of thousands killed and millions displaced, Jewish Insider Executive Editor Melissa Weiss writes.
Assad has long enjoyed the protection of Moscow and Tehran, in addition to Iranian proxy Hezbollah next door in Lebanon. Buttressed by those allies, Assad’s forces were largely able to operate with impunity as they cracked down on broad swaths of the Syrian population.
But Iran and Russia have been mired in their own conflicts — Iran with Israel, which destroyed the Islamic Republic’s aerial-defense systems in addition to military sites, and Russia with Ukraine, which recently began to deploy American-made long-range missiles against President Vladimir Putin’s army.
Iran has already thrown its support behind Assad — Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi traveled to Damascus to meet with Assad over the weekend — but is limited by the extent to which it can provide tangible support to the Assad regime following Israel’s blows to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and Tehran’s proxies.
Israel’s systematic decapitation of Hezbollah — including the killings of its top leadership and handicapping of thousands of operatives through coordinated sophisticated pager and walkie-talkie explosions — crippled the Iran-backed terror group’s ability to provide support for the Assad regime in Syria. Israeli defense officials told JI over the weekend that the blows dealt to Hezbollah in recent months were major factors in the rebels’ decision to pursue an offensive against Damascus.
But this isn’t a typical case of “the enemy of my enemy is my friend.” The rebel coalition that took over Aleppo, Syria’s second-largest city, is led by an Al-Qaida affiliate known previously as the Al-Nusra Front.
Israel now finds itself in a precarious situation, one in which the enemy of its enemy — in this case, the rebel forces — potentially poses a greater threat to the Jewish state than the Assad regime. For months, Israel has conducted strikes on Iran- and Hezbollah-affiliated targets in Syria, with Russian and Syrian officials largely turning a blind eye.
That an Al-Qaida offshoot is leading a coup attempt against Assad complicates the West’s approach to the conflict: In a situation in which both sides have committed grave crimes against humanity, who, if either, should it support?
Should Assad’s regime survive, there is a unique opportunity for Damascus to move away from the Axis of Evil that has defined the last decade and chart a new course for the country.
But how Assad might do that — and who could help him — remains an open question.
exit interview
How Deborah Lipstadt used diplomacy to fight antisemitism

When historian Deborah Lipstadt was nominated to be President Joe Biden’s special envoy to monitor and combat antisemitism in 2021, she faced headwinds from Senate Republicans who were unhappy with her social media posts criticizing their party. Against that backdrop, Lipstadt’s recent insistence that the incoming Trump administration will be well-equipped to handle antisemitism is a strong, if surprising, marker of the goodwill President-elect Donald Trump has generated on combating antisemitism. “I don’t know what the next administration’s policies will be. Nobody does, and I certainly can’t speak to that. But I have no doubt that they will take this issue very seriously,” Lipstadt told Jewish Insider’s Gabby Deutch in a recent interview looking back on her nearly three years at the State Department.
American power: Since taking office in the spring of 2022, Lipstadt has visited more than 30 countries, with the simple mission of communicating to other nations that combating antisemitism is an American priority. “I don’t know of a country, a democracy, that is not facing this issue on some level and struggling with how to respond, including our own,” she said. “I’ve been entrusted with an opportunity to use the levers of government to fight this horrible scourge. How can I do that? Sometimes it’s not by getting blazing headlines, but it’s by having my team go and lobby [different] countries.”