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If you think America’s support for Israel was born from guilt after the Holocaust or pressure from a lobby, you don’t just have the story wrong—you don’t know the story at all.
It didn’t start with tears or speeches or aid packages. It started with Israel doing something that made the Americans stop and go, “Okay, these guys are the real deal.”
Let's rewind to 1956. The Cold War is heating up. The Soviets and the West are locked in this massive intelligence war. Nobody trusts anyone. And suddenly, something insane happens inside the USSR—Nikita Khrushchev, the new Soviet leader, gathered a bunch of Communist officials and dropped a nuke of a speech. He stood up and teared into Stalin, the guy who basically built modern Soviet power. He called him a tyrant. A killer. A paranoid maniac who cleansed his own people, imprisoned millions, and destroyed the country from within.
The thing is—this wasn’t meant to be public. The speech was closed-door, no press, no recordings. It wasn’t even printed openly. Just a few typed copies sent around under secrecy to party leadership in the Eastern Bloc. It was one of the most sensitive documents in the Soviet Union at the time. Embarrassing. Dangerous. If it leaked, it would shake the Communist world.
And that’s exactly what every Western intelligence agency wanted. The CIA was going nuts trying to find a way to obtain a copy of the speech. British intelligence was chasing every lead. Everyone knew the speech existed, but no one could get it. Months passed, with no breakthroughs.
Then, out of nowhere, Israel delivered a full, word-for-word copy to the Americans.
Let that sink in.
Israel. A tiny, ten-year-old country, surrounded by enemies, still rationing food, still taking in Holocaust survivors and war refugees—somehow beats every Western power. Through a contact in Poland—likely through Władysław Tykociński, a Polish diplomat and intelligence officer who defected to the West—it gets into the Mossad’s hands. The Mossad sees the value instantly. And instead of trying to use it as leverage or play politics with it, they hand it over to the United States. With no strings attached.
Think about that move. The big intelligence players had failed. Israel had succeeded. And then, instead of taking the win, they used it to build trust. To say: “We’re not just asking to sit at the table—we belong here.”
The Americans were stunned. They verified it, they triple-checked every page, and it was real. And a few months later, the full speech landed on the front page of The New York Times. It shook the Communist world. Communist parties across Europe lost many members. And uprisings started bubbling. The Soviet image cracked wide open. And Israel was the one that made it happen.
That moment didn’t just get America’s attention. It made Israel impossible to ignore.
From then on, U.S. intelligence didn’t look at Israel as some needy new ally in a tough neighborhood. They looked at them as equals. As people who could deliver under pressure. Who could outsmart, out-hustle, and out-risk almost anyone. It was the first real signal that Israel wasn’t going to play the role of the world’s charity case. It was going to be the country that steps up when others stand down, and that takes bold action without waiting for permission.
That’s how the relationship started. Not with tears. Not with money. But with respect. The kind you earn. The kind that lasts.
The truth about Shani Louk. It always bothered me that they claimed she had been raped and “paraded around naked” when she was obviously still clothed and was lying in a truck bed rather than being shown off in any way. This clears all that up.
Tea for not-antisemitic leftists: Israel is not the bad guy just because America allies with it.
Of course they did.
Renewed anti-Netanyahu protests in Israel.
Demonstrators join families of hostages in cities across country and vow to persist until he is ousted as PM
"The families of hostages have urged ministers, including Netanyahu's political rival and war cabinet minister Benny Gantz, to unite with other Knesset members in removing the prime minister from power, accusing him of deliberately sabotaging efforts to secure the release of their relatives"