By Rich Lowry
Tuesday, October 14, 2025
Donald Trump has held many rallies, but never one in the parliament of a
foreign nation.
President Trump’s speech to the Knesset on Monday was a
raucous, celebratory affair with the audience of Israeli lawmakers showering him with
adulation.
Trump’s reception made it a little like a State of the
Union address with no Democrats in attendance (although there was one
disruption).
For all the focus on Trump as the dyspeptic voice of
“American carnage” — and there’s no doubt that he can be excoriating about his
political enemies — he is a natural at the vaultingly optimistic pep talk.
His speech was utterly characteristic upbeat Trump. It
was amusing, boastful, discursive, and full of over-the-top praise for everyone
in his charmed circle.
Its ideological significance was Trump’s ringing
endorsement of the Jewish state. Certainly, no American president has ever
given a more lavishly pro-Israel speech. It was especially notable coming at a
time when international opinion has swung hard against Israel and when
anti-Zionism and even antisemitism have been on the rise in the United States,
both on college campuses and among MAGA influencers.
Some of the most powerful podcasters on the right are
probably workshopping conspiracy theories for how Trump has been manipulated by
dark forces into becoming a tool of the Jews as we speak.
One thing we’ve learned in recent months is that
isolationists and malicious enemies of Israel are part of Trump’s coalition,
but the president absolutely does not number himself among them.
“I love Israel,” Trump said at the end of this speech.
“I’m with you all the way.”
Again and again, he emphasized this theme. He boasted of
being the best friend Israel has ever had. He bragged about how much aid he’s
given Israel and the lethality of the weapons he’s sold to the Jewish state. He
hailed close U.S.-Israel military cooperation and went on at length about the
brilliance of the mutual U.S.-Israel attack on Iranian nuclear facilities.
He said the United States and Israel share the same
values, and we will always be vital allies.
He celebrated the achievements of the Jewish people and
marveled at how much Israel has been able to accomplish on a small speck of
land in the Middle East.
Sometimes Trump lacks subtlety and one wishes he’d be
more circumspect, while sometimes he lacks subtlety and one marvels at his
willingness to speak the truth of the matter in a way no one else will. The
Knesset speech was an instance of the latter and will long be remembered as a
deep-felt statement of the unique bond between America and the Jewish state.
Trump pushed back against the image of himself as a
warmonger and instead argued — with a lot of evidence now — that he’s much more
interested in peace. It’s a testament to Trump’s real-estate background that
his foreign policy is based to a large extent on deal-making and economic
development. And it’s no accident that he tapped two men with backgrounds in
real estate, Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, to cinch the Gaza deal.
In his speech, Trump offered a vision of a Middle East
newly focused on building, and the Gaza deal does indeed open up a vista of
extending the historic Abraham Accords in momentous ways.
Still, there is much hard work ahead that will require
U.S. commitment and staying power. How will Hamas, which is already undertaking
violent reprisals against its internal enemies, be disarmed and displaced from
power in Gaza? Who will provide security in the portions of Gaza not controlled
by Israel? Will Qatar and Turkey, which have done so much to support malign
actors in the region, get on board a Trumpian vision of peace and prosperity —
of normality — for the region?
These and other questions will do much to determine the
future of the Middle East, but there’s no question, as far as Trump is
concerned, about the U.S. commitment to its Israeli ally.
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