Why Europe Is an Enemy of Israel. By Guy Millière.
Why Europe Is an Enemy of Israel. By Guy Millière. Real Clear World, July 31, 2013. Also at Gatestone Institute.
Millière:
For
nearly two millennia, the European continent has been a land of persecution and
hatred for the Jewish people. The blood libels and the vilest accusations
against the Jews have been accompanied by violence, pogroms, and confinement in
ghettos and of course death camps. Eight decades ago, in the 1930s,
anti-Semitism was considered honorable and aroused few objections. Later, the
Nazi machine set into motion the “final solution,” and zealous collaborators
existed in virtually all of continental Europe. “Willing executioners” were not
only Germans – far from it.
After
1945, anti-Semitism suddenly became unmentionable, and European anti-Semites
had to be silent. But they did not disappear. In the 1960s, after the Six Day
War, a new way of being anti-Semitic emerged that allowed them to recycle their
old way: they could not be “anti-Semites,” but they could be “anti-Israelis.”
They rejoiced when General de Gaulle in France spoke of the Jews as a “proud
and domineering people,” and saw those words as a kind of official sanction, a
green light. Since then, “anti-Israelism” rapidly became mainstream. European
politicians, diplomats and journalists have done their best never to miss an
opportunity to berate and criticize Israel. Anti-Semitic terms used in the
1930s began to be used again, this time to describe the Jewish State.
When
the “Palestinian cause” appeared, it immediately became a sacred cause in
Europe, never mind what sort of values or governance it espoused. When it
seemed possible to accuse Jews of “behaving like Nazis,” the opportunity was
not missed.
Today,
hatred of Israel is one of the most shared and prominent feelings in Europe.
Using anti-Semitic terms to criticize Israel is common, normal and “politically
correct.” Fighting for the “Palestinian cause” in the name of “peace” is the
only fight that can bring together politicians from the left and the right. Any
terrorist attack against Israel is almost unanimously described as a fruit of
the “cycle of violence” and of “Israeli intransigence,” never mind that it is
actually the Palestinians who historically have been intransigent. An Israeli
response to a terrorist attack is immediately criticized by European diplomats
as “disproportionate.” A Palestinian attack is never criticized at all.
When
anti-Israeli groups rally to boycott Israel and violently invade stores selling
Israeli products, the only condemnations to be heard are from Jewish
organizations.
It is
in this context that the recent EU decision to ban its members from dealing
with Jewish communities and with any Jew living beyond “1967 borders” must be
viewed.
European
leaders who took the decision, and those who approved it, know perfectly well
that there has never been a “1967 border,” only armistice lines drawn in 1949,
but they act as if they did not know. European leaders know perfectly well how
indefensible the “1967 borders” are for the Israeli army, but again they act as
if they did not know.
European
leaders also know that the “1967 borders” place the Old City of Jerusalem and
the Western Wall and the Temple Mount (the holiest site of Judaism) outside the
boundaries of Israel. They know, too, what the loss of these would mean for
Israel and the Jewish people, but they stand their ground. They know, as well,
that their position is similar to that of the Palestinian Authority, which seeks
ethnic cleansing of Judea, Samaria and eastern Jerusalem, but self-righteously
insist. They know that the Golan Heights, under Israeli law and administration
since 1981, was used for years by Syria to shoot down from the plateau at the
farmers in the valley, and are fully aware of the situation in Syria and its
al-Qaeda affiliates near the Golan Heights today, but nonetheless stand fast.
For
more than four decades, several European countries, and the European Union
itself, have established close and compromising relationships with various
regimes in the Arab world. They have become prisoners of what is called Europe’s
“Arab Policy” – with full support for the “Palestinian cause” and “anti-Israeli”
activities and movements, regardless of how thoroughly detrimental these might
be to their own survival – as so presented by Bat Ye’or in her prophetic book, Eurabia, published in 2005.
European
leaders who voted for the ban and those who approved it also stand their ground
in part because migration flows have changed the demographics of Europe, and
because in Europe the number of Muslims – a significant proportion of whom have
become radicalized – has sharply increased. Europe today is therefore not only
a prisoner of Europe’s “Arab Policy,” support for the “Palestinian cause” and “anti-Israeli”
activities and movements: it is also hostage to its Muslim population, to
Islamists, and to the immense success of the campaign of intimidation waged
against it by Muslims, such that any incident, or any political position
unpleasant to Muslims, can lead to riots.
When
Israel’s leaders appeal to Europe’s “moral values,” they should realize that
when the subject is Jews, almost all Europeans abandoned moral values seven
decades ago, and the same may be said for their views of Israel. If moral
values are what the Israelis and Jews are looking for in Europe, they are
looking in the wrong place.
Europe
has once again chosen cowardice and complicity.
European
governments and the European Union are the biggest donors of financial
assistance to the Palestinian cause and the Palestinian Authority. They are
also the biggest donors to most anti-Israel movements operating in Europe and
in Israel. They in fact funded BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions)
movements long before they took the decision that now makes BDS official.
The
Israeli government has warned European governments and the European Union that
this may trigger a “serious relationship crisis between Europe and Israel;” in
reality the crisis has been ongoing for a long time.
On July
26, Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon ordered the Coordinator of Government
Activities in Judea, Samaria and Gaza to turn down any request by the European
Union concerning these regions.
In an article published July 27 in the Jerusalem
Post, Caroline Glick suggested further Israeli responses to the European
decision: “passage in the Knesset of a law requiring all Israeli entities that
agree to operate under the EU’s funding guidelines to register as foreign
agents and report all EU contributions.” “Those contributions,” she added, “should
be taxed at the highest corporate tax rate.”
As “Area
C” is the area of Judea and Samaria where Israel exercises most civil and
military authorities, Glick writes that Israel should “suspend all EU projects
in Area C. Future EU projects should be subject to intense scrutiny by the
civil administration. Israel’s default position should be to reject, rather
than approve such requests, given their hostile intent.”
Israel’s
leaders surely see that European governments and the EU are not friends of
Israel.
European
governments and the EU have never been friends of Israel. Now, they are less
friends of Israel than ever. The likelihood that they will adopt a more
positive attitude toward Israel is nil.
They
speak as enemies of Israel. They behave as enemies of Israel. They take
decisions only enemies of Israel would take.
They
are at war with Israel. They do not wage war directly: they engage battle
through other channels, hypocritically, viciously, and cowardly.
In the
1940s, Europe was the continent of Auschwitz. Today, Europe is a continent
where politicians and technocrats support what Abba Eban called the “Auschwitz
borders.” There is no doubt they hope for results similar to those obtained in
Auschwitz, just by other means.