Did President Joe Biden just seal his defeat to Trump by turning against Israel, the apple of God’s eye?

Reading time: 10 minutes

I’m doing a quick blog update on President Biden’s decision to withdraw US weapons aid to Israel following Prime Minister Netanyahu’s attack on the last Hamas base in Rafah, southern Gaza. Even if this action does not have a major impact on Israel’s military advance to achieve its goal of destroying Hamas and releasing hostages, it sends a strong signal to Hamas that the world’s most powerful military power is no longer standing by Israel, thereby emboldening the terrorists (or other enemies of the West) in their aggression against democratic nations. In the same way, the shameful US surrender to the Taliban on the 20th anniversary of September 11 terror attack when Biden withdrew from Afghanistan encouraged Putin to invade Ukraine just a few months later. A key question is also how it will affect the November presidential election in the US.

We can examine this from a completely secular perspective, as many Democrats who voted for Biden are still part of the more traditional older generation of Democrats who see Israel as the US’s most important ally in the Middle East and are appalled by the growing anti-Semitism on US college campuses. A good example of this crowd is the rabble-rousing Jewish actor Michael Rapaport, who used to slander Trump and his supporters with very vulgar language, but who has today turned against Biden over his Israel policy and says he is now ready to vote for Trump. Rapaport has admitted to being duped by the mainstream media in incidents like Charlottesville where Trump allegedly called neo-Nazis “very fine people”, which he didn’t.

In my blog in August 2017, I told how the Jewish leftist billionaire George Soros was funding both Marxist “anti-fascists” and the anti-Jewish far right in their riots and clashes in Charlottesville in the summer of 2017 . Today, the same man is now funding anti-Semitic protests in US universities in support of Hamas. Soros is not very loyal to his own people, as he admitted back in 1998 that in his youth in Hungary where he was born he helped the Nazis confiscate the property of his Jewish brothers and felt no remorse for it . It is therefore quite ironic that left-wing journalists in the media often label right-wing criticism of Soros as an anti-Semitic, even though the same man is now promoting a new anti-Semitism.

But regardless of how much Biden’s Israel policy will swing the votes of, for example, American Jews, who have traditionally been loyal to Democratic Party, towards Trump, I believe that President Biden’s Israel policy will affect the continuation of his presidency on a deeper level. I am an unapologetic Christian Zionist who subscribes to the Christian Zionist “creed” that God curses those who curse Israel and blesses those who bless Israel. This passage is found in Genesis 12 where God said to Abraham:

And I will bless those who bless you, And the one who curses you I will curse. And in you all the families of the earth will be blessed.

Here God was speaking not only of Abraham but of his heirs, those descended through Isaac and Jacob, through whom God was preparing salvation and blessing for all nations, as the whole Old Testament narrative tells us. Although Paul explained that God spoke of Christ Himself at that passage (Galatians 3:16), Paul was not a replacement theologian who believed that Christ or the church had replaced Israel and taken away its rightful inheritance. On the contrary, he said in Romans 11: ‘God has not rejected His people [Israel] whom He foreknew…  In relation to the gospel they are enemies on your account, but in relation to God’s choice they are beloved on account of the fathers; for the gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable.” So, according to Paul, the Jews were still a chosen people and God did not regret His choice even after they crucified their own Messiah on the cross and persecuted His followers.

God is blessing all nations through Israel and their messiah and therefore they will only receive these blessings if they bless Israel themselves, whereas by cursing Israel they will also curse themselves. Blessing and cursing in this context means any action or speech that is sympathetic or hostile to Israel. It does not mean that criticising individual Jews like George Soros or an individual prime minister of the Israeli government is cursing the chosen people. I would define cursing as an action or speech that denies the Jews the right to exist as a nation, the right to live on their historic land as a sovereign nation, and the right to defend the security of their citizens from those who seek their destruction. This includes the protesters’ slogans “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!”

We could say that President Biden is guilty of the latter when he denies Israel the right to defend its own country against terrorists whose ultimate aim is the destruction of all Jews. President Biden does this because he is essentially a coward who bows down to anti-Semitic left-wing protesters and believes that pandering to them will help him politically in the November presidential elections. But if we believe Genesis. 12:3 is also true for individual leaders, then Biden’s anti-Israel policies should not give him the spiritual blessing that would ensure his continued power next year. Of course, to counter this idea, one might say, why then did President Trump lose to Biden in November 2020, when he was perhaps the most pro-Israel president in American history?

First of all, I would reply that I have never believed that Trump lost the election to Biden, just as Trump himself still claims to have been the legitimate winner of the election. I have been writing, presenting evidence, and sharing documentaries on this subject for well over three years. I was wrong, however, about the 2020 election result being overturned and Trump being returned to office before the November 2024 presidential election. I presented various scenarios whereby that could have happened in a fully constitutional way without the need for some kind of military coup, which Trump has been (falsely) accused of in connection with the events of 6 January. I publicly apologised for being wrong in January 2023.

But at the same time, I do acknowledge that Trump lost to Biden in the sense that Biden was elected to office in January 2021 as the 46th President of the United States. One theory as to why God allowed Trump to “lose” (i.e. the enemy to steal the election), despite his strong support for Israel, has been, for example, that Trump also sought to divide the land of Israel, which God forbids in Joel 3:2:

I will gather all the nations And bring them down to the valley of Jehoshaphat. Then I will enter into judgment with them there On behalf of My people and My inheritance, Israel, Whom they have scattered among the nations; And they have divided up My land.

A Palestinian state under Trump’s peace proposal in green.

Trump is known to have a big ego, which is why it was important for him to reach some kind of peace agreement between Israel and Palestine before the end of his first term (to be the “president Clinton of our time”). In January 2020, he presented the so-called “deal of the century”, which was also based on a two-state model where Israel would hand over the territories captured in the 1967 Six-Day War to the future Palestinian state. Trump’s peace model was, however, more favourable to Israel than the Oslo peace agreement of 1993 and did not require the handover of East Jerusalem as the capital of the Palestinian state since Trump recognised Jerusalem as the undivided capital of Israel in December 2017. Its conditions also included the disarmament of Hamas and Islamic Jihad in Gaza and the recognition of the state of Israel by the Palestinians. The Palestinian side rejected Trump’s peace initiative.

To return to Christian Zionism, as Christians we must not be against peace, of course, because as Jesus said, “Blessed are the peacemakers” (Matthew 5:9). But a Christian with a biblical worldview cannot support a false peace either, for as the prophet Isaiah said, “Your covenant with death will be canceled, And your pact with Sheol will not stand” (Isaiah 28:18). The two-state peace proposals have been just that, because it requires Israel to make a covenant with a country that loves death more than life – for whom martyrdom is the highest ideal of life – and which would not under any circumstances agree to live in brotherly peace with Israel. The events of 7 October have been the ultimate proof of this. It is mainly the West’s blindness to Islam and Islamist ideology that has led it to promote this false two-state model, which will never work unless the ‘Palestinians’ start following Christ and His teachings instead of the ‘prophet’ Muhammad.

An Israeli re-occupied Gaza will be a much better option for both Israelis and Gaza Arabs. But this will also require an ideological war where Israel will change the entire educational system in Gaza from one that incites hatred of Jews and glorifies death to one that loves life. It will require a similar process of “denazification” that took place in Germany after World War II. An Israeli occupation of the West Bank too, or Judea and Samaria, would bring so much economic opportunity to the Arabs of the region that, in time, it would remove their antipathy to the Jewish State and make them happy citizens of Israel. The problem for the Palestinians is therefore not the ‘occupation’ of Israel, but rather the lack of it. Below is an excellent argument on this subject by Yishai Fleisher, a Jew living in Israel. This man’s videos are worth watching on YouTube.

Even Trump himself is now waking up to the fact that the two-state model will never work. Jewish News Syndicate reported on 2 May:

Former U.S. President Donald Trump told TIME magazine in a wide-ranging interview published this week that he was no longer sure a two-state solution is viable.

“Most people thought it was going to be a two-state solution. I’m not sure a two-state solution anymore is gonna work,” the former president said.

“There was a time when I thought two states could work. Now I think two states is going to be very, very tough. I think it’s going to be much tougher to get. I also think you have fewer people that liked the idea. You had a lot of people that liked the idea four years ago. Today, you have far fewer people that like that idea,” he added.

Israeli Finance Minister Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, an ardent opponent of Palestinian statehood, tweeted in response to the interview, “I congratulate the former U.S. president and presidential candidate, a clear supporter of Israel, Donald Trump, for his clear words and his return from his support for the establishment of a Palestinian state.

“A Palestinian state would be a terrorist state that would endanger the existence of Israel and the international pressure to establish it is an injustice on a historical scale of the Western countries who are willing to endanger the only Jewish state due to internal political interests.”

He went on to state that, “I hope and pray that more leaders in the world will discover the courage and integrity shown by presidential candidate Trump to change their position, will withdraw from turning their backs on the State of Israel and will resolutely join hands with us in the fight we are leading in the name of the free world against radical Islam that threatens the peace of the entire world.”

In the same interview, Trump strongly criticized Benjamin Netanyahu and indirectly blamed him for the October 7 terrorist attack, but also said that in his position he would act the same way as Netanyahu is now acting to destroy Hamas. As I said, cursing Israel does not mean criticising any individual Israeli Prime Minister (although I have always held Netanyahu in high regard). Netanyahu and Trump are, after all, very similar unrelenting leaders who do not bow down to their enemies. Despite his personal criticism, Netanyahu would much rather have Trump than Biden in power, because Trump is a much better option for the security of the Jewish state than Biden, who panders to the anti-Semitic far-left.

Conclusion

Perhaps Trump also needs to return to power because Israel would have then the support of its strongest ally if the Jews start to build their prophecied third temple soon. The Third Temple could only be built at such a time when Jerusalem is ruled by the most right-wing government in its history. But at the same time, Biden’s anti-Israel government now stands in the way of such a project. Another reason why I believe in Trump’s return to the White House is that I still hold in high regard some of the Trump prophecies I used to promote on my blog in 2020-22. In particular, the Kim Clement prophecies I still hold in high regard. Clement predicted in 2008 that America would elect Donald Trump as president for two terms. I shared this in my July 2020 video: “Did Kim Clement predict President Donald Trump’s first and second terms?

Of course, I thought at the time that Trump would be elected for a second term in November 2020, which was one of the reasons why I so relentlessly promoted my claims that the 2020 election would be annulled and Biden would be removed from office before his first term ends. But Clement’s prophecy only said that Trump would be elected to two terms, it did not claim they would be consecutive terms. Trump would not in fact be the first US president to serve two terms as president after four years out of the White House. His historical predecessor would be Grover Cleveland, who served as both the 22nd and 24th US president in 1885-89 and 1893-97.

Perhaps President Trump also had to experience a humiliating defeat and eviction from the White House – followed by numerous legal battles by America’s politicised judiciary – in order for God to humble him through this. Since humility and modesty have not been his best traits. So if I were asked at the moment who I think America will elect as the 47th President of the United States in the November elections, I would lean strongly towards President Trump. But the past few years have also taught me to be a little more humble and cautious in my predictions, and so I could be as wrong this time as I was in October 2020 when I said I was more than 99% sure of Trump’s re-election and Biden’s defeat.

After November 7, when the media had declared Biden the winner of the election, my confidence in continuation of Trump’s presidency was still 97%. After the January 6, 2021 Capitol debacle, I had to bow to the fact that Biden would become the 46th president of the country, but I still held out hope and belief that his term would be suspended until the end of 2022, and I also promoted false prophecies up to that point that did not come true. But some of the Trump prophecies I promoted also came true, such as Kevin Zadai’s prediction in 2020 of Trump’s second impeachment, which came true two months later, and the overturning of Roe v. Wade by the US Supreme Court, which came true two years later.

Many people tend to focus only on criticizing false prophecies, while ignoring all the prophecies that have come true, including all of those things that Kim Clement predicted correctly on Trump’s first term as the president of the United States. I myself was very much criticised and mocked by some people, without any attempt being made to challenge the prophecies that have come true. But I certainly regret for promoting the “prophecies” that didn’t come to pass and have already apologised to my readers for doing so.

Donald Trump: ‘President Biden hates Israel and the Jews’. Typical Trump hyberbole, but I’d say it’s more about Biden’s weakness as a leader and his attempt to curry favour with the anti-Israel far left in order to win votes. The same far left also calls Biden ‘Genocide Joe’ for standing up for Israel against Hamas after October 7.

Share this:

Leave a comment