By Noah Rothman
Wednesday, July 24, 2024
There is a school of thought — one that must be taken
seriously — that advises against highlighting the partisan divisions within the
U.S. over issues related to Israel. The major parties’ coalitions shift over
time, as do views on the Jewish state, and neither party has a monopoly on the
presidency. Preserving the alliance between Israel and the United States
compels responsible leaders in both countries to guard against the possibility
of U.S.–Israel relations’ becoming just another political football.
That is a valuable cautionary note. But speaking the
truth plainly and with conviction in times of crisis is also valuable. In his
barn-burner address before a joint session of Congress, Israeli prime minister
Benjamin Netanyahu sounded a variety of notes that sounded like
hyper-partisanship to American ears. Adherents to the notion that Israel must
remain a neutral actor in American politics likely shuddered with trepidation
over the effect of Netanyahu’s speech on Democratic views toward the Jewish state.
But although they may fairly call Bibi imprudent, they cannot call him wrong.
“These protesters stand with them,” Netanyahu says of the
anti-Israel demonstrators whose cause compels them to advance the interests of
the “rapists and murderers” of October 7. “They should be ashamed of
themselves.”
“They refuse to make a distinction between those who
target terrorists and those who target civilians,” he continued. Citing
intelligence produced by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence,
Netanyahu noted that enemies of the United States in Iran have been implicated
in providing the demonstrators with financial and material support. “When the
tyrants of Tehran, who hang gays from cranes and murder women for not covering
their hair, are praising, promoting, and funding you, you have officially
become Iran’s useful idiots,” he declared.
He’s right. Iran has been accused by U.S. intelligence officials of supporting
pro-terrorism protesters. The demonstrators do routinely elide the plain moral distinctions between
terrorists who kill civilians and a professional military force accountable to
civilian oversight tasked with defending Israeli lives. Many of the protesters are
as anti-American as they are anti-Israel. If Democrats react
defensively to these verities, they only have themselves to blame. Had the
party not sought to mollify the protesters and reintegrate them into the
Democratic coalition, these truths would offend no one.
After calling out the demonstrators’ adjacency to evil,
Netanyahu focused his attention on the locus of that evil: Iran. He observed
that Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza, its looming confrontation with
Hezbollah in Lebanon, and its response to an attack on Tel Aviv by the Yemeni
Houthis are all facets of the conflict with Iran. “When Israel fights Hamas,
we’re fighting Iran,” he said. “For Iran, Israel is first, America is next.
When Israel acts to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons, we’re not only
protecting ourselves, we’re protecting you.”
He’s right. Israel is one of America’s front-line
partners in a war against a terroristic entity that has — as the prime minister
noted — killed American servicemen and servicewomen by proxy, taken
Americans hostage, hatched murder plots targeting U.S. officials, and even sent assassins to the United States. Again, these truths can
only offend those who remain wedded to the failed Obama-era effort to bribe
Iran into temporarily mothballing its nuclear-weapons program. But if the truth
must become a casualty for that project to succeed, the project itself is
anchored to a rotten foundation.
Netanyahu closed by rattling off a litany of equally
harsh truths that surely irritated those who languish in their preferred
fictions. “The war in Gaza could end tomorrow if Hamas surrenders, disarms, and
returns the hostages,” he said. He’s right. He touted the success the Israel Defense Forces
have enjoyed in clearing out Rafah of Hamas terrorists, citing the operation’s
limited collateral damage. He’s right. He cited the work of scholars who have
commended the IDF for going above and beyond to protect civilian life in Gaza. He’s right (as even Biden-administration officials have reluctantly acknowledged). “Give us the tools faster,” he
asked of his American counterparts, “and we’ll finish the job faster.” He’s right.
Netanyahu went out of his way to thank former president
Donald Trump for his diplomatic efforts in the region and President Joe Biden
for his support in the war effort and for putting together the coalition that
beat back a direct Iranian missile and drone attack on Israel. But Republicans
in the room heard a speech that would have been at home at the Republican
Party’s presidential nominating convention — up to and including Bibi’s praise
for the University of North Carolina students, who were fêted at the convention
for defending the American flag against a rabble of anti-Israel protesters.
About half the Democratic House and Senate conference didn’t hear the speech at
all — they boycotted it in protest. Netanyahu didn’t create these
divisions, and he is under no obligation to ignore them.
The squeamish will condemn Netanyahu’s temerity. But the
truth deserves to be spoken. If the truth offends, that’s not Israel’s fault.
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