Secretary ScarJo. by Bret Stephens.
Secretary ScarJo. By Bret Stephens. Wall Street Journal, February 10, 2014.
Demonizing Israel; Demonizing ScarJo. By Jonathan S. Tobin. NJBR, January 28, 2014. With related articles and video.
Stephens:
Last
month the Palestinian ambassador to the Czech Republic blew himself up as he
tried to open an old booby-trapped embassy safe. When police arrived on the
scene, they discovered a cache of unregistered weapons in violation of
international law. Surprise.
Then
the real shocker: After prevaricating for a couple of weeks, the Palestinian
government apologized to the Czechs and promised, according to news accounts, “to
take measures to prevent such incidents in the future.”
As far
as I know, this is only the second time the Palestinians have officially
apologized for anything, ever. The first time, in 1999, Yasser Arafat’s wife,
Suha, accused Israel of poisoning Palestinian children. Hillary Clinton was
there. Palestinian officialdom mumbled its regrets.
In
other words, no apology for the 1972 massacre of Israeli athletes at the Munich
Olympics. No apology for the 1973 murder of Cleo Noel, the U.S. ambassador to
Sudan, and his deputy, George Moore. No apology for the 1974 massacre of 25
Israelis, including 22 schoolchildren, in Ma’alot. No apology for the 1978
Coastal Road massacre, where 38 Israelis, including 13 children, were killed.
And so
on and on—straight to the present. In December, Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas posthumously bestowed the “Star of Honor” on Abu Jihad, the mastermind of
the Coastal Road attack, as “the model of a true fighter and devoted leader.”
Dalal Mughrabi, the Palestinian woman who led the attack itself, had a square
named after her in 2011. In August, Mr. Abbas gave a hero’s welcome to
Palestinian murderers released from Israeli jails as a goodwill gesture. And
Yasser Arafat, who personally ordered the killing of Noel and Moore, is the
Palestinian patron saint.
I
mention all this as background to two related recent debates. Late last month
Scarlett Johansson resigned her role as an Oxfam “Global Ambassador” after the
antipoverty group condemned the actress for becoming a pitchwoman for the
Israeli company SodaStream. Oxfam wants
to boycott Israeli goods made—as SodaStream’s are—inside the West Bank; Ms.
Johansson disagrees, citing “a fundamental difference of opinion in regards to
the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions [BDS] movement.”
The
second debate followed rambling comments on the Israeli-Palestinian
negotiations from John Kerry at this month’s Munich Security Conference.
Israel, he warned, faced a parade of horribles if talks failed. “For Israel
there's an increasing delegitimization campaign that’s been building up,” he
said. “People are very sensitive to it. There are talks of boycotts and other
kinds of things.”
So here
is the secretary of state talking about the effort to boycott Israel not as an
affront to the United States and an outrage to decency but as a tide he is
powerless to stop and that anyway should get Israel to change its stiff-necked
ways. A Secretary of State Johansson would have shown more courage and presence
of mind than that.
But Mr.
Kerry’s failure goes deeper. How is it that Mr. Abbas’s glorification of terrorists
living and dead earns no rebuke from Mr. Kerry, nor apparently any doubts about
the sincerity of Palestinian intentions? Why is it that only Israel faces the
prospect of a boycott? When was the last time the U.S., much less the
Europeans, threatened to impose penalties on Palestinians for diplomatic or
moral misbehavior?
In 2011
the Palestinians defied the U.S. by making a bid for statehood at the U.N.;
then-U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice warned there would be “adverse negative
consequences” for the Palestinians. Of course there were none, and the
administration fought behind the scenes to make sure there wouldn’t be any.
Type the words “Kerry condemns Abbas” or “Kerry condemns Palestinians” into a
Web search and you’ll get that rare Google event: “No results found.”
No
wonder one Israeli government minister after another has taken to calling the
secretary “insufferable,” “messianic” and “obsessive”—and that’s just what they
say in public. The State Department has reacted indignantly to these gibes, but
this is coming from the administration that likes to speak of the virtues of
candor between friends. Its idea of candor is all one-way and all one-sided.
This is
a bad basis for peace. If one expects nothing of Palestinians then they will be
forgiven for everything. If one expects everything of Israel then it will be
forgiven for nothing, putting the country to a perpetual moral test it will
always somehow fail and that can only energize the boycott enthusiasts. It all
but goes without saying that the ultimate objective of the BDS movement isn’t
to “end the occupation” but to end the Jewish state. Anyone who joins that
movement, or flirts with it, is furthering the objective, wittingly or not. One
useful function of an American diplomat is to warn a group like Oxfam that it
is playing with moral fire.
Instead,
the job was left to Ms. Johansson. How wonderfully commendable. “One gorgeous
actress with courage makes a majority,” said Andrew Jackson—or something like
that. We could do worse with such a person at State.