Public Analysis โ March 24, 2026
In recent weeks, Europe has witnessed a sharp rise in antisemitic incidents targeting Jewish institutions. Belgian authorities have responded by deploying soldiers to protect synagogues and Jewish schools in Antwerp and Brussels, working alongside federal police. Defence Minister Theo Francken stated: โFrom today weโre putting soldiers back on the streets in Brussels and Antwerp because safety is a basic right.โ The deployment covers approximately 20 synagogues and several Jewish schools, particularly in Antwerp, home to Belgiumโs largest Jewish community (around 30,000 people, including Europeโs biggest Hasidic population outside Israel).
This is the second major deployment of troops for Jewish site protection in recent years and follows a series of attacks:
- March 9, 2026: Improvised explosive device detonated outside a synagogue in Liรจge, Belgium (minor damage, no injuries; classified as antisemitic).
- March 13: Arson attack on a synagogue in Rotterdam, Netherlands.
- March 14: Explosion at a Jewish school in Amsterdam.
- Additional incidents reported in Amsterdam and a car torched in a Jewish neighborhood in Antwerp on March 24 (two minors arrested in connection with the suspected antisemitic arson).
- A group claiming responsibility for several attacks also referenced an incident involving Jewish ambulances in London.
A previously unknown group calling itself Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamia (HAYI, โIslamic Movement of the Companions of the Rightโ) has claimed many of these incidents via videos disseminated on Telegram channels linked to pro-Iranian Shia militias (such as Asaib Ahl al-Haq). The claims began shortly after U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran in late February 2026. Western analysts, including the International Centre for Counter-Terrorism (ICCT), note hybrid-threat indicators and possible Iranian involvement, though direct state links remain under investigation. Attacks have so far caused property damage rather than casualties, but authorities treat them as intentional intimidation.
Ideological Context: Eliminationist Rhetoric
Iranian state media and public displays have long featured antisemitic content, including Holocaust denial and glorification of figures associated with Nazi ideology. Reports have highlighted billboards in Iran quoting Adolf Hitler in contexts justifying control or elimination of perceived enemies. While such propaganda is not new, its timing alongside the current wave of incidents raises questions about ideological influence on proxy actors.
Proxy Networks and the Crime-Terror Nexus
Security services have warned of increased Iranian-backed hybrid threats targeting Jewish and Israeli sites in Europe since the escalation with Iran. The IRGCโs Quds Force has historically coordinated with proxies such as Hezbollah. In Europe, a pattern has emerged of outsourcing lower-level attacks to local criminal networks or individuals (sometimes teenagers recruited via social media) rather than deploying trained operatives. This creates plausible deniability while amplifying fear through rapid online claims.
Hezbollah Financing Streams โ The Antwerp Diamond Connection
Antwerp has long been a global diamond trading hub with a history of opacity that has attracted scrutiny. Lebanese diaspora networks have been involved in the trade for decades. U.S. Treasury designations (notably in 2019 and 2023) targeted individuals and companies linked to Hezbollah financing, including Nazem Said Ahmad, a Belgian-Lebanese dual citizen accused of sanctions evasion through diamonds, gems, art, and luxury goods. Associated entities operated in Antwerp (e.g., companies like M.S.D. and Helics Gemb BVBA were flagged in sanctions actions). These networks allegedly moved funds benefiting Hezbollahโs operational capabilities. While many designations date to 2019โ2023, analysts note that such financing methods can persist or adapt through third countries and alternative assets.
The overlap of Antwerpโs diamond district with its prominent Jewish community creates a dual dynamic: historical financing routes and current security concerns.
Broader Implications
The return of armed soldiers to guard Jewish sites in European cities underscores the seriousness with which authorities view the threat. Belgian officials have emphasized that the measures protect a vulnerable community and uphold societal values against antisemitism. Similar concerns have been raised across Europe amid the Iran-related tensions.
This situation reflects longstanding challenges: state-sponsored propaganda, hybrid proxy operations, and illicit financing networks that can sustain militant activities. Independent verification of all links continues, and law enforcement in Belgium, the Netherlands, and the UK are actively investigating the incidents and claims.
For deeper source material, official statements, and ongoing monitoring, refer to reports from Reuters, ICCT, U.S. Treasury OFAC designations, and Belgian government announcements.
Note: This is a public summary drawn from open-source reporting as of March 24, 2026. Investigations are ongoing; readers should consult primary sources and official updates for the latest developments.
Stay informed. Antisemitism has no place in Europe or anywhere else.
Bernd Pulch โ Bio
Bernd Pulch (M.A.) is a forensic expert, founder of Aristotle AI, entrepreneur, political commentator, satirist, and investigative journalist covering lawfare, media control, investment, real estate, and geopolitics. His work examines how legal systems are weaponized, how capital flows shape policy, how artificial intelligence concentrates power, and what democracy loses when courts and markets become battlefields. Active in the German and international media landscape, his analyses appear regularly on this platform.
