By Quin Hillyer
Monday, March 2, 2015
The leader of the free world will be addressing Congress
on Tuesday. The American president is doing everything possible to undermine
him.
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu leads a nation
surrounded by enemies, a nation so small that it narrows at one point to just
9.3 miles. Yet, in a world where the Oval Office is manned by someone openly
apologetic for most American exercises of power; and where Western Europe’s
economy is enervated, its people largely faithless, and its leadership
feckless; and where Freedom House has found “an overall drop in [global]
freedom for the ninth consecutive year,” the safeguarding of our civilization
might rely more on leaders who possess uncommon moral courage than on those who
possess the most nukes or biggest armies.
Right now, nobody on the world stage speaks for
civilization the way Netanyahu does. While Barack Obama babbles about the
supposedly “legitimate grievances” of those who turn to jihad, Netanyahu talks
like this (from his speech to the United Nations on September 27, 2012):
The clash between modernity and medievalism need not be a clash between progress and tradition. The traditions of the Jewish people go back thousands of years. They are the source of our collective values and the foundation of our national strength.At the same time, the Jewish people have always looked towards the future. Throughout history, we have been at the forefront of efforts to expand liberty, promote equality, and advance human rights. We champion these principles not despite of our traditions but because of them.We heed the words of the Jewish prophets Isaiah, Amos, and Jeremiah to treat all with dignity and compassion, to pursue justice and cherish life and to pray and strive for peace. These are the timeless values of my people and these are the Jewish people’s greatest gift to mankind.Let us commit ourselves today to defend these values so that we can defend our freedom and protect our common civilization.
When Hamas fired thousands of rockets into Israel last
year, Netanyahu, in his necessary military response, did something almost
unprecedented in the history of warfare. As he accurately described in his U.N.
speech last year, on September 29:
Israel was doing everything to minimize Palestinian civilian casualties. Hamas was doing everything to maximize Israeli civilian casualties and Palestinian civilian casualties. Israel dropped flyers, made phone calls, sent text messages, broadcast warnings in Arabic on Palestinian television, always to enable Palestinian civilians to evacuate targeted areas.No other country and no other army in history have gone to greater lengths to avoid casualties among the civilian population of their enemies
As Barack Obama complains (with scant grasp of the
historical context) about how Christians were such gosh-darn meanies a thousand
years ago in the Crusades, Netanyahu protects the ability of Muslims today to
have free access to the Old City of Jerusalem, even as Jews and Christians are
prohibited from visiting the Temple Mount. At the beginning of his first term,
in his first trip overseas as president, Obama delivered a speech to Turkey’s
parliament, under the thumb of the repressive Tayyip Erdogan. “The United
States is still working through some of our own darker periods in our history,”
he confessed, sounding like America’s therapist-in-chief. “Our country still
struggles with the legacies of slavery and segregation, the past treatment of
Native Americans.”
Netanyahu, in contrast, in a 2011 Meet the Press
interview, offered unabashed words of praise for the United States: “Israel is
the one country in which everyone is pro-American, opposition and coalition
alike. And I represent the entire people of Israel who say, ‘Thank you,
America.’ And we’re friends of America, and we’re the only reliable allies of
America in the Middle East.” (Netanyahu was accurate in his description of how
much Israelis appreciate Americans, as I saw last summer during a visit to the
country.)
In thanking America, Netanyahu was not posturing for
political advantage. Netanyahu — who spent far more of his formative years on
the American mainland than Obama did, and who took enemy fire at the age when
Obama was openly pushing Marxist theory, and who learned and practiced free
enterprise at the same age when Obama was practicing and teaching Alinskyism —
has spoken eloquently for decades in praise of the Western heritage of freedom
and human rights. He also speaks and acts, quite obviously, to preserve
security — for Israel, of course, but more broadly for the civilized world. On
Tuesday, as he has done for more than 30 years, Netanyahu will talk about the
threat to humanity posed by Iran.
It’s mind-boggling to imagine that any national leader in
the free world would fail to understand the danger. The ayatollahs have never
backed down from their stated aim of destroying Christendom. They have never
wavered from their depiction of the United States as the “Great Satan.” Just
last week, Iran bragged about its recent test-firing of “new strategic weapons”
that it says will “play a key role” in any future battle against the “Great
Satan U.S.”
Iran also continues developing, while trying to keep them
secret, new missiles and launch sites with devastatingly long-range capability.
It continues to enrich uranium, including an allegedly secret program, to a
level that’s a short jump-step from bomb strength. It has a lengthy record of
lying and cheating about its military activities, its compliance with U.N.
mandates (not that the U.N. is worth much anyway), and its protections of even
the limited human rights it actually recognizes as such.
About the only thing Iran never lies about is its
absolute, unyielding determination to wipe Israel off the face of the earth. It
was only a few months ago, for example, that the “revolutionary” regime’s
“Supreme Leader,” the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, released a nine-point plan for
how to “annihilate” the Jewish state.
Yet Obama not only begrudges the Israeli prime minister
the opportunity to make his case against this existential threat to his nation,
but he conducts a diplomatic and political assault against Netanyahu of a
ferocity rarely seen in the annals of American foreign policy. Obama’s actions
aren’t just wrongheaded; they are malignant. They pervert American tradition
and American interests, and they attempt to deprive the entire free world of
its single most clarion voice for enlightenment values.
Benjamin Netanyahu of course speaks first for Israel, but
he speaks also for you and for me, for decency and humaneness, and for
vigilance and strength against truly evil adversaries. Congress, by inviting
him, is wise. Obama, by opposing him, is horribly wrong. And the civilized
world, if it ignores him, will be well-nigh suicidal.
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