By Seth Mandel
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Buried deep within a Haaretz article
about the EU’s anti-Semitism coordinator is an implicit threat of moral
blackmail that explains much of the anti-Israel discourse today.
The article is a hit piece on Katharina von Schnurbein,
the head of the EU’s office of the European Coordinator for Combating
Antisemitism and Fostering Jewish Life. Von Schnurbein is the rare EU official
who stands again the otherwise nonstop flood of single-minded Israel
condemnation from the union’s officials. Haaretz, and the sources who
spoke to the paper for the piece, are putting a bureaucratic target on her back
in the hopes that she will be reined in.
Von Schnurbein knows that certain criticism of Israel,
even when it ostensibly addresses policy, can bleed into anti-Semitic tropes or
collective blame. She is therefore a moderating force, but the EU establishment
(and Haaretz, apparently) sees her as a threat. Supra-national bodies
like the EU and UN thought they had figured out a clever way to lob blood
libels at the Jewish state without taking responsibility for them: They would
support a network of NGOs and pressure groups who would claim expertise and let
those groups, behind a veneer of objectivity, make the harshest accusations.
Von Schnurbein undermines this system of
criticism-by-catspaw. And former EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell used the
Haaretz article to make that clear:
“In an interview with Haaretz, Borrell warned over
‘inflationary misuse’ of accusations of antisemitism against Israel’s critics.
“The Catalonian former chief EU diplomat added that
labeling the institutions mandated to uphold international law — including the
UN, the International Criminal Court and International Court of Justice — as
‘antisemitic’ implies that, by opposing crimes against humanity, you oppose
Jews. ‘That is playing into the hands of Jew-haters,’ he says.”
And that’s the scam underlying the entire narrative of
the Gaza war: Jews cannot defend themselves against spurious accusations of
blood-lust because then they’ll be confirming for the world that “Jews” and
“crimes against humanity” are synonymous. You see, even in trying to bat away
claims of anti-Semitism, these officials cannot help but express anti-Semitic
tropes.
This is called blackmail. Jews must either accept the
libelous denunciations of those who seek their destruction or they will trigger
an escalating campaign of libelous denunciations.
The tactic of fabricating authority and then appealing to
that authority can backfire, however. It has deprived the anti-Israel crowd of
their critical-thinking skills, or erased whatever critical-thinking skills
they once had.
You see this play out daily. Yesterday, for example,
Spectator editor Michael Gove debated the “genocide” lie on social media with
Green Party head Zack Polanski. Polanski accused Israel of genocide, and Gove responded,
correctly, that “Rwanda was a genocide. The Shoah was a genocide. Equating
Israel with the Interahamwe or SS is just wicked.”
And what was Polanski’s response?
“Amnesty International, Medecins Sans Frontieres, Save the Children, the UN,
International Association of Genocide Scholars, B’Tselem, Physicians for Human
Rights-Israel, Palestinian Human Rights Organizations Council, Islamic Relief –
all say, it’s a genocide.”
This is the issue in a nutshell. Gove mentions actual
points of history, and Polanski says well these pro-Palestinian pressure
groups said so. What’s more, Amnesty International’s attempt to accuse
Israel of genocide was very famously a complete disaster for the organization’s
credibility.
The definition of “genocide” is quite specific; it
requires establishing intent and that genocide be the only plausible
explanation for a government’s actions. In its report, Amnesty wrote
of that definition: “Amnesty International considers this an overly cramped
interpretation of international jurisprudence and one that would effectively
preclude a finding of genocide in the context of an armed conflict.”
Amnesty, then, was openly admitting that according to the
accepted definition of genocide, Israel could not be found guilty. So the
organization changed the definition, specifically for the Jewish state.
Thus Amnesty accused Israel of something, but it wasn’t “genocide.”
Amnesty was relying on its supporters and financial
backers to not know the law or the history. It understands that people
like Michael Gove, who know a thing or two about the issue, aren’t its
audience. It must count on Zack Polanski and his type—activists who must rely
exclusively on “somebody told me” arguments.
Amnesty and its ilk must, that is, account for the
knowledge gap between Israel’s defenders and the anti-Zionists, who are
punching above their intellectual weight class.
Here’s another example. I wrote
last week about Hamas’s own latest fatality statistics in Gaza. The pro-Israel
side understands that the topline number of war dead given by Hamas is just a
starting point—that it includes combatants, natural deaths, Hamas-caused deaths
of Palestinians, etc. But in order to understand what the Hamas report actually
says, you have to know these things, and you have to have the means to
calculate the various subcategories. The result is that Israel’s defenders must
master the data and develop actual expertise on what happens in a warzone.
Israel’s accusers are entirely unable to navigate this terrain, and they aren’t
expected to. They are merely expected to parrot what Hamas wants them to say
and sneer that to challenge their errors is itself tantamount to a war crime.
It would be much better for the anti-Zionists personally
to develop the critical thinking skills necessary to thoughtfully and
knowledgeably engage on this subject. They just wouldn’t be anti-Zionists
anymore.
No comments:
Post a Comment