Not long ago, the Economist ran
an unsigned editorial called the “Auschwitz Complex.” The unnamed author blamed
serial Middle East tensions on both Israel’s unwarranted sense of victimhood,
accrued from the Holocaust, and its unwillingness to “to give up its
empire.” As far as Israel’s paranoid obsessions with the specter of a nuclear
Iran, the author dismissed any real threat by announcing that “Iran makes an
appealing enemy for Israelis,” and that “Israelis have psychologically
displaced the source of their anxiety onto a more distant target: Iran.”
It is hard to fathom how a
democracy of seven million people by any stretch of the imagination is an
“empire.” Israel, after all, fought three existential wars over its 1947
borders, when the issue at hand was not manifest destiny, but the efforts of
its many enemies to exterminate or deport its population. I would not otherwise
know how to characterize the Arab promise of more than a half-century of
“pushing the Jews into Mediterranean.”
While it is true that Israeli
forces stayed put on neighboring lands after the 1967 war, subsequent
governments eventually withdrew from the Sinai, southern Lebanon, and
Gaza—areas from which attacks were and are still staged against it. The Economist’s
choice of “appealing” is an odd modifying adjective of the noun “enemy,”
particularly for Iran, which has both promised to wipe out Israel and is
desperately attempting to find the nuclear means to reify that boast.
The Economist article
is fairly representative of European anger at Israel, a country that is
despised by most of the nations that make up the UN roster. Or as Nicky Larkin,
an Irish documentary filmmaker and once vehement anti-Israel activist, recently
confessed, “An Irish artist is supposed to sign boycotts, wear a PLO scarf, and
remonstrate loudly about The Occupation. But it’s not just artists who are
supposed to hate Israel. Being anti-Israel is supposed to be part of our Irish
identity, the same way we are supposed to resent the English.”
What then are the sources for
widespread hatred of Israel? Such venom cannot be explained just by political
differences with its Arab and Islamic neighbors. After all, take any major
issue of contention—occupied land, refugees, a divided Jerusalem, cross border
incursions—and then ask why the world focuses disproportionately on Israel when
similar such disputes are commonplace throughout the globe.
Does the world much care about
the principle of occupation? Not really. Consider land that has been “occupied”
in the fashion of the West Bank since World War II. Russia won’t give up the
southern Kurile Islands it took from Japan. Tibet ceased to exist as a
sovereign country—well before the 1967 Middle East War—when it was absorbed by
Communist China. Turkish forces since their 1974 invasion have occupied large
swaths of Cyprus. East Prussia ceased to exist in 1945, after 13 million German
refugees were displaced from ancestral homelands that dated back 500 years.
The 112-mile green line that
runs through downtown Nicosia to divide Cyprus makes Jerusalem look united in
comparison. Over 500,000 Jews have been ethnically-cleansed from Arab capitals
since 1947, in waves of pogroms that come every few decades. Why are they not
considered refugees the way the Palestinians are?
The point is not that the
world community should not focus on Israel’s disputes with its neighbors, but
that it singles Israel out for its purported transgressions in a fashion that
it does not for nearly identical disagreements elsewhere. Over 75 percent of
recent United Nations resolutions target Israel, which has been cited for human
rights violations far more than the Sudan, Congo, or Rwanda, where millions have
perished in little-noticed genocides. Why is the international community so
anti-Israel?
A new sort of fashionable and
socially acceptable anti-Semitism looms large. For much of the past two
millennia in the West, hatred of the Jews was a crude prejudice, rich with
state-sanctioned religious, economic, and social biases. By the same token,
dissidents, leftists, and anti-establishmentarians once took up the cause of
decrying anti-Semitism, an Enlightenment theme until well after World War II.
No more—with the establishment
of Israel, anti-Semitism metamorphosized in two unforeseen ways. First, it
became a near obsession of the modern Left, which associated the creation of
the Jewish state with a sort of Western hegemonic impulse. That Israel was
democratic and protected human rights in a way unlike its autocratic neighbors
mattered nothing. To the international Left, Israel was a religious,
imperialistic, and surrogate West in the Middle East.
After the 1967 war, when a
once vulnerable Israel emerged victorious and apparently unstoppable, Jews lost
any lingering sympathy from the horrors of World War II and Israel became a
full-fledged Western over-dog, closely associated with its new patron, the much
envied and hated United States. Not only were the new anti-Semites no longer
just buffoonish skinheads, neo-Nazis, and Klansmen, but they were polished and
sophisticated intellectuals. Deploring anti-Semitic illiterates in white sheets
was rather easy; but countering Hamas cartoons of Jews as apes and pigs in West
Bank newspapers was difficult when they were disseminated in the name of free
speech at U.C. Berkeley.
There was a second facet of
the new anti-Semitism. The establishment of the state of Israel itself also
served as a respectable cloak for anti-Semitism. One now spoke not of disliking
Jews, but only of despising the Jewish state and seeing Palestinians as if they
were victims analogous to minority groups within the West. From Oxford dons to
award-wining novelists, it became socially acceptable to decry the creation of
Israel in a way it was not to say that the Jews were again causing trouble.
Alleging that “Jews” had too much influence was still retrograde, but worrying about
the power of the “Jewish lobby” was suddenly politically-correct.
Oil, of course, played an even
larger role. By the 1960s, the West was heavily dependent on Persian Gulf and
North African oil and gas, and by the 1990s, was in a rivalry with emerging economies
in India and China to ensure steady Middle East supplies. After the deleterious
oil cutoff of 1973, the Arab world proved not just that it was willing to use
oil as an anti-Israel weapon, but also that it could do so quite effectively.
On the flip side, since the
1960s, trillions of petrodollars have flowed into the Islamic Middle East, not
just ensuring that Israel’s enemies now were armed, ascendant, and flanked by
powerful Western friends, but through contributions, donations, and endowments
also deeply embedded within Western thought and society itself. Universities
suddenly sought endowed Middle East professorships and legions of full
tuition-paying Middle East undergraduates. Had Israel the oil reserves of Saudi
Arabia, then “occupied” Palestine might have resonated at the UN about as much
as Ossetia, Kashmir, or the Western Sahara does today.
Size matters as well. Israel
is tiny; its enemies, legion. For many in the world, demography is everything:
would an opinion-maker or journalist rather side with seven million Israelis or
400 million of their enemies in the largely Islamic Middle East? And if Israel
had clearly done well in the 1947, 1956, and 1967 wars, after the next round of
fighting in 1973, 1982, and 2006, critics smelled weakness and found it more
comfortable to prefer the soon-to-be winning side. As a result, diplomats,
military officers, journalists, writers, and actors found it easier to count
heads and choose the path of least resistance—given Israel’s recent inability
to defeat quickly and decisively its Arab adversaries.
The terrorism of the last
thirty years loomed large as well. If in the 1970s, Western governments feared
that their Olympic games, their jet airliners, their embassies, and their
sports teams might by attacked by secular left-wing Palestinian terrorists, by
the late 1990s they were even more afraid that radical Islamist suicide bombers
and terrorists would strike not just abroad, but inside Europe and North
America itself. After 9/11, to draw a cartoon in Denmark mocking a Jewish rabbi
would earn either praise or indifference; but to caricature Mohammed or the
Koran ensured threats of assassination in the heart of postmodern, humanitarian
Europe.
Intellectuals are not moral
supermen, and supposedly courageous muckraking writers and journalists prefer,
we have seen, to live without fear than to accurately describe the situation on
the ground in the Middle East. For many intellectuals, the choice of lauding or
disliking Israel was not just based on careerist self-interest, but also on a
careful calculus that Western nations, for all their talk of free speech, were
as terrified of terrorists as were the latters’ targets. Criticize or caricature
radical Islam, and a terrorist was more likely to get you than your fearful
Western government was to protect you. Ask Salman Rushdie or Kurt Westergaard.
Finally, Israel in the West
has become analogous to something like the uncool image of Sarah Palin—a target
of mindless and uniformed invective that nevertheless serves as a sort of
cachet or membership card into the right circles. Filmmakers do not usually
shoot sympathetic documentaries about Israel—not if they want grants from
foundations and social acceptance from their peers and overseers. Visiting
journalists and authors might hotel in Israel, but their professional work on
the West Bank will be praised and supported to the degree that it is
pro-Palestinian and shunned should it be either balanced or pro-Israeli.
Will the image of Israel ever
be reversed? Only if the above criteria are altered—a damning indictment that
popular antipathy has little to do with the reality of Israel’s
predicament.
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