The Israel Double Standard. By Victor Davis Hanson.
The Israel Double Standard. By Victor Davis Hanson. National Review Online, January 16, 2014.
Hanson:
An
obscure academic organization called the American Studies Association not long
ago voted to endorse a resolution calling for a boycott of Israeli
universities. The self-appointed moralists were purportedly outraged over the
Israeli government’s treatment of Palestinians.
Given
academia’s past obsessions with the Jewish state, the targeting of Israel is
not new. Yet why do the professors focus on Israel and not Saudi Arabia, which
denies women the right to drive and only recently granted them the right to
vote? Why not Russia, which has been accused of suppressing free speech, or
Nigeria, which has passed retrograde anti-homosexual legislation?
The hip
poet Amiri Baraka (a.k.a. Everett LeRoi Jones) recently died. He was once poet
laureate of New Jersey, held prestigious university posts, and was canonized
with awards — despite being a hateful anti-Semite.
After
9/11, Baraka wrote a poem that suggested Israel knew about the plan to attack
the World Trade Center. One of his poems from the ’60s included this
unabashedly anti-Semitic passage: “Smile, jew. Dance, jew. Tell me you love me,
jew. . . . I got the extermination blues, jewboys. I got the hitler syndrome
figured.” Yet that did not preclude the New
York Times and NPR from praising him after his death.
Trendy
multicultural French comedian Dieudonné M’bala M’bala is known for his
anti-Semitic provocations and for making a gesture that has been described as
an inverted Nazi salute. He recently quipped of a Jewish journalist: “When I
hear him talk, you see . . . I say to myself, gas chambers . . . a pity.”
Auschwitz is now a joke?
Loudmouth
multimillionaire hip-hop artist Kanye West recently suggested in an interview
that President Obama’s approval ratings have waned because “black people don’t
have the same level of connections as Jewish people.” In the mind of Mr. West,
Obama’s current unpopularity has nothing to do with the IRS, Benghazi, the
Associated Press and NSA scandals, or with the Obamacare disaster.
In
politics, Israel often finds itself at the wrong end of a troubling double
standard.
Secretary
of State John Kerry seems to be camped out in Israel these days. The Obama
administration hopes to pressure Israeli leaders to offer concessions that will
lead to an elusive Middle East peace. Yet even if Israel gave this
administration what it wanted, how would the United States guarantee reciprocal
commitments from the notoriously corrupt Palestinian Authority, which has no
democratic legitimacy among those in the West Bank? Terrorist-affiliated Hamas
wants no part of any such settlement.
It is
hardly anti-Semitic to focus on problems between Israel and the Palestinians,
or even to pressure the Israelis. But it becomes so when problems elsewhere are
simply ignored and Israel alone is singled out to be chastised.
Is the
U.N. focused on the 13 million Germans who were ethnically cleansed from
Eastern Europe about the same time that thousands of Palestinians left what
became Israel? Would the American Studies Association boycott Chinese
universities over the absorption of Tibet?
Is the
world really troubled about divided capitals like Jerusalem? If so, why not an
international conference on the Turkish occupation of a divided Nicosia?
Can
Kerry not use shuttle diplomacy to settle who owns all those disputed rocky
islands that have led China and Japan to the brink of war?
Nazis
and racists used to spearhead Jewish hatred using ancient crackpot defamations
that date back to the Jewish diaspora into Europe after the Roman destruction
of Judea. But lately, anti-Semitism has become more a left-wing pathology. It
is driven by the cheap multicultural trashing of the West. Jewish people here
and abroad have become convenient targets for those angry with supposedly
undeserved Western success and privilege.
Aside
from the old envy, and racial and religious hatred, I think cowardice explains
the new selective anti-Semitism. Kanye West would not dare slander radical
Muslims, given the violence and threats against European cartoonists and
filmmakers who have dared to create work perceived as insulting to Islam. The
American Studies Association would not call for a boycott of Russia despite its
endemic persecution of gays. After all, Russian president Vladimir Putin is as
unpredictable as Israeli politicians are forbearing.
Kerry
is not rushing into Damascus to stop the bloodletting that has claimed far more
lives than all the Palestinians lost in 70 years of conflict with Israel.
Syrian president Bashar Assad, Shiite terrorists, and al-Qaeda would not listen
politely to Kerry’s pontificating sermons.
The
sort of anti-Semitism we see from buffoons like Dieudonné M’bala M’bala is
appalling, but the double standard to which Israel is held in matters of
foreign policy by those who should know better is in many ways even more
galling.