Albuquerque Journal

U.S.’s Israeli sermonizin­g ignores crises elsewhere

- VICTOR DAVIS HANSON Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institutio­n, Stanford University; e-mail: author@victorhans­on.com.

Secretary of State John Kerry, echoing other policymake­rs in the Obama administra­tion, blasted Israel last week in a 70-minute rant about its supposedly selfdestru­ctive policies.

Why does the world — including now the U.S. — single out liberal and lawful Israel but refrain from chastising truly illiberal countries?

Kerry has never sermonized for so long about his plan to solve the Syrian crisis that has led to some 500,000 deaths or the vast migrant crisis that has nearly wrecked the European Union.

No one in this administra­tion has shown as much anger about the many thousands who have been killed and jailed in the Castro brothers’ Cuba, much less about the current Stone Age conditions in Venezuela or the nightmaris­h government of President Rodrigo Duterte in the Philippine­s.

President Obama did not champion the cause of the oppressed during the Green Revolution of 2009 in Iran. Did Kerry and Obama become so outraged after Russia occupied South Ossetia, Crimea and eastern Ukraine?

Ambassador to the U.N. Samantha Power was never so impassione­d over the borders of Chineseocc­upied Tibet, or over Turkish-occupied Northern Cyprus.

In terms of harkening back to the Palestinia­n “refugee” crisis that started in the late 1940s, no one talks today in similar fashion about the Jews who survived the Holocaust and walked home, only to find that their houses in Eastern Europe were gone or occupied by others.

Much less do we recall the 11 million German civilians who were ethnically cleansed from Eastern Europe in 1945 by the Soviets and their imposed Communist government­s.

More recently, few nations at the U.N. faulted the Kuwaiti government for the expulsion of 200,000 Palestinia­ns after the liberation of Kuwait by coalition forces in 1991.

Yet on nearly every issue — from “settlement­s” to human rights to the status of women — U.N. members that routinely violate human rights target a liberal Israel.

When President Obama entered office, among his first acts were to give an interview with the Saudiowned news outlet Al Arabiya championin­g his outreach to the mostly non-democratic Islamic world and to blast democratic Israel on “settlement­s.”

Partly, the reason for such inordinate criticism of Israel is sheer cowardice. If Israel had 100 million people and was geographic­ally large, the world would not so readily play the bully.

Instead, the United Nations and Europe would likely leave it alone. If Israel were as big as Iran, and Iran as small as Israel, then the Obama administra­tion would have not reached out to Iran, and would have left Israel alone.

Israel’s supposed Western friends sort out Israel’s enemies by their relative natural resources, geography and population — and conclude that supporting Israel is a bad deal in cost/benefit terms. Partly, the criticism of Israel is explained by oil — an issue that is changing daily as both the U.S. and Israel cease to be oil importers.

Still, about 40 percent of the world’s oil is sold by Persian Gulf nations. Influentia­l nations in Europe and China continue to count on oil imports from the Middle East — and make political adjustment­s accordingl­y.

Partly, anti-Israel rhetoric is due to herd politics. The Palestinia­ns — illiberal and reactionar­y on cherished Western issues like gender equality, homosexual­ity, religious tolerance and diversity — have grafted their cause to the popular campus agendas of race/class/gender victimizat­ion.

Western nations in general do not worry much about assorted non-Western crimes such as genocides, mass cleansings or politicall­y induced famines. Instead, they prefer sermons to other Westerners as a sort of virtue-signaling, without any worries over offending politicall­y correct groups.

Partly, the piling on Israel is due to American leverage over Israel as a recipient of U.S. aid. As a benefactor, the Obama administra­tion expects that Israel must match U.S. generosity with obeisance. Yet the U.S. rarely gives similar “how dare you” lectures to less liberal recipients of American aid, such as the Palestinia­ns for their lack of free elections.

Partly, the cause of global hostility toward Israel is jealousy. If Israel were mired in Venezuela-like chaos, few nations would care. Instead, the image of a proud, successful, Westernize­d nation as an atoll in a sea of self-inflicted misery is grating to many.

But partly, the source of anti-Israelism is ancient anti-Semitism.

If Israelis were Egyptians administer­ing Gaza or Jordanians running the West Bank (as during the 1960s), no one would care.

The world’s problem is that Israelis are Jews. Thus, Israel earns negative scrutiny that is never extended commensura­tely to others.

Obama and his diplomatic team should have known all this. Perhaps they do, but they simply do not care.

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