When Threats Replace Diplomacy: Katz and the Death Sentence on a Grieving Son
Israel’s Defence Minister Israel Katz has confirmed what many suspected but few dared say aloud: Mojtaba Khamenei is “marked for death.” Not a battlefield combatant. Not a man holding a weapon. A son, still recovering from the strike that killed his mother and his wife, now told openly that he cannot even bury his father without risking assassination.
There is a threshold civilisations are meant to observe even in war — the sanctity of mourning, the dignity of the dead, the right of a child to grieve. Katz’s remark tramples all three in a single sentence, delivered almost casually, as though marking a man for death were a matter of routine statecraft rather than a profound moral transgression. Even animals have more honour than that.It only demonstrates the low level Israeli society has descended to.
Iran’s own Foreign Minister Araghchi called on Washington to restrain its “pets” in Tel Aviv — undiplomatic language, but one struggles to summon a gentler register for a threat this raw. This is not deterrence. This is not strategy. It is an attempt to deny a grieving son his most basic human obligation, and it will be remembered as such long after the tactical calculations behind it are forgotten.
History does not look kindly on those who mistake cruelty for strength.
When Threats Replace Diplomacy: Katz and the Death Sentence on a Grieving Son
