By Matthew Continetti
Saturday, May 11, 2024
Since May 8, when President Biden told CNN’s Erin
Burnett that the United States would not supply Israel with weapons if the IDF
enters Hamas’s stronghold in the Gaza Strip, many of Israel’s supporters in the
United States have felt a sense of shock, confusion, anger, betrayal,
abandonment, and dread.
Shock at the suddenness of the policy reversal and the
banal setting of Biden’s major shift. Confusion at the incoherence of a policy
that denounces antisemitism one day and protects Hamas the
next. Anger at the news that Biden tried to hide his “pause” in munitions shipments to
Israel so that it would not interfere with coverage of his speech on Holocaust
Remembrance Day. Betrayal at his threat to deny Israel the tools it needs to
finish the task of ending Hamas as a coherent military force. And dread at what
might befall the United States and Israel during the remainder of this
presidency.
What happened to the Joe Biden who exhibited moral
clarity toward Israel? Did he shuffle off the stage in search of ice cream?
For a while after the October 7 attacks, it looked as if
Biden might back Israel to the hilt. As Biden said in Tel Aviv on October 18, Hamas’s despicable
acts “recall the worst ravages of ISIS, unleashing pure unadulterated evil upon
the world.” In America’s campaign against ISIS, we dropped heavy bombs on urban environments. Not because we
wanted to. Because terrorists who burrow underground and use civilians as
shields force us to.
Then the war in Gaza ground on. Media outlets amplified
Hamas propaganda. Biden’s poll numbers dropped. He lost the plot. He began to
waver. And he retreated to his usual corner: the Bernie Sanders left.
Sanders’s priorities have informed Biden’s governance as
far back as the unity task force in the summer of 2020. Biden filled his government with allies of Sanders’s
left-wing ally, Senator Elizabeth Warren (D., Mass.). True, Biden repudiated
Medicare for All, the Green New Deal, Defund the Police, and Abolish ICE. But
his “Build Back Better” agenda would transform the United States into a social
democracy. His Inflation Reduction Act and electric-vehicle subsidies and
environmental regulations are catnip for the green movement. He’s done little
to stop the millions who have crossed the southern border illegally. His
regulatory agencies are anti-business. His student-loan-forgiveness initiatives
are an unconstitutional sop to the campus Left. Biden hasn’t endorsed the
Sanders-Warren program. He just dances to its tune.
Consider: On April 22, the same day Biden denounced
“antisemitic protests” as well as “those who don’t understand what’s going on
with the Palestinians,” the president met with Senator Ed Markey (D., Mass.) and
Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D., N.Y.). Ocasio-Cortez supports illegal pro-Hamas encampments on college campuses.
She has repeated the disgusting slander that Israel is
committing “genocide” in Gaza. And she belongs to the notorious “Squad” of
antisemitic Democratic members of Congress like Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib, and
Jamaal Bowman.
Biden was all smiles with the extremist AOC. “I learned a
long time ago: Listen to that lady,” Biden said before the private meeting.
“We’re going to talk more about another part of the world, too.”
On May 3, around the time Biden denounced the campus
protests in brief remarks, Sanders told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour that, like LBJ and the
Vietnam war, “President Biden is putting himself in a position where he has
alienated, not just young people, but a lot of the Democratic base, in terms of
his views on Israel and this war.” Sanders went on to say he hoped Biden “stops
giving a blank check to [Israeli prime minister Benjamin] Netanyahu, and I
would hope that they understand that from a political point of view, this has
not been helpful.”
Message received. Among the few lawmakers who
unequivocally backed Biden’s “red line” against Israel: Bernie Sanders.
If Biden sees short-term gain in his alliance with
Sanders, he is mistaken. Daylight between the United States and Israel
emboldens Iran and its murderous proxies. This isn’t guesswork. It’s the story
of Barack Obama’s presidency.
Obama downgraded relationships with traditional U.S.
allies such as Israel, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia to withdraw America from the
region under the cover of the Iranian nuclear deal. Wars in Gaza, Syria, Iraq,
and Yemen, a supercharged global Islamist movement, and an Iran engorged on oil
money and sanctions relief were the result.
No one should want to repeat this bloody history. But
that is the path Biden has chosen. “We’re not walking away from Israel’s
security,” he told Erin Burnett. “We’re walking away from Israel’s ability to
wage war in those areas.”
Does he even know what “security” means? Israel is not
waging war in places like Rafah for fun. Israel is fighting Hamas because
Israel was attacked on October 7 and because the terrorist organization poses
an existential threat. If Hamas remains in power anywhere in Gaza, it will
regenerate, replenish, and plan future atrocities. Israel won’t be secure.
Worse, if Hamas survives the current hostilities, it will
be seen as the victor throughout the Greater Middle East and in the Arab and
Muslim world more generally — not to mention in places such as Russia and
China, or inside faculty lounges and tent encampments throughout the West. The
risks to Israel will multiply. The tactics used in antisemitic marches and
protests will be legitimized. Harassment and violence against Jews will grow.
If Israel cannot achieve its aims of defeating Hamas and
recovering the hostages, then Israel will suffer a tremendous blow to its
credibility as a state. Israelis will lose confidence in their government’s
capacity to protect them from Iran’s ring of fire.
Some Israelis may look for the exits. Other Jews may think twice before
migrating to the Holy Land. The foundation of Zionism — that the Jewish people
will find security in their national home — will be undermined.
That is why Israel has no choice but to continue its war.
That is why “walking away from Israel’s ability to wage war in those areas” is
the same as walking away from Israel’s security. Weakening the U.S.-Israel
alliance, pressuring Netanyahu to tamp down or pause military operations,
forcing on Israel a cease-fire weighted toward Hamas, and otherwise
constraining the actions of our democratic ally of 76 years serves no
constructive purpose whatsoever. All it does is degrade and destroy.
Biden may think that, by listening to Sanders and to
Ocasio-Cortez, he is walking away from Israel’s war. He is not. He is embracing
a morally blind and strategically unsound position. And more voters will walk
away from him.
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