By Seth Mandel
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
Spain has reportedly downgraded its diplomatic relations
with Israel. Per Reuters:
“Spain permanently withdrew its ambassador to Israel on Tuesday as a diplomatic standoff worsened
between the two countries over Spain’s opposition to the U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran.”
At some point, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s government
is going to run out of ways to petulantly express its opposition to the
democratic West.
The U.S.-Iran conflict is not like Israel-Gaza in that it
doesn’t pit the U.S. against Europe. There are some countries on the continent,
like the UK and France, that don’t love President Trump’s enthusiasm for
punishing the Islamic Republic but that nonetheless don’t make a scene about
it. But Spain—well, you just can’t take Spain anywhere, can you.
Sanchez’s problem is with Trump first and foremost, but
he can’t go full-throttle against the United States. So he’s doing the
diplomatic equivalent of unfollowing Trump’s friend because he’s angry at
Trump. Welcome to the junior high cafeteria.
Spain’s relations with Israel were already on ice because
of Sanchez’s impulsive decision to recognize “the state of Palestine” last
year. But the UK and France did so as well, and Israel managed to stay on
speaking terms with those two allies.
That’s mostly because those two countries matter.
There is, of course, a third way: the path taken by
Germany. Chancellor Friedrich Merz does not refrain from criticizing Israeli
government policy, but neither does he allow those disagreements to send him
into a toddler tantrum. Israel’s plan to allow construction in the Jerusalem
area known as E1 is, Merz said
yesterday, a “big mistake.”
He added that such construction would amount to
“annexation moves,” and that his foreign minister will convey the same message
to his Israeli counterparts when traveling to Israel.
To repeat: when traveling to Israel. The German
government is not going to boycott the Jewish state over a policy disagreement.
Because in the grand scheme of things, Merz knows who the good guys are and who
the bad guys are—and the mullahs in Tehran aren’t the good guys.
In a different address, Merz was heckled by anti-Zionist
protesters. He was unfazed:
“The federal government I lead will never leave any doubt about where we stand.
We stand with Israel.” After being interrupted again, he shot back: “Let me
tell you one thing. I will do everything in my power to combat anti-Semitism in
the Federal Republic of Germany wherever it occurs, and I will do everything in
my power to ensure that this country remains a country where Jews can move
about freely and openly.” He then pointed to a group holding a pro-Palestine
poster and said: “And if those for whom you’re holding up this banner lay down
their weapons, then the conflict will be over within 24 hours, ladies and
gentlemen. That is the root cause and not the state of Israel, which is
fighting for its existence and its right to live in freedom.”
There is, to be fair, a bit of intellectual consistency
to Spain’s handling of its relations with Israel, at least as compared to
France and the UK. Spain understands that Hamas and Iran are one. (Germany
understands this as well.) That these are set pieces in a larger war. That
there is something funny about running interference for Hamas and then
denouncing Iran.
In fact, to take it one step further, the U.S.-Israel
strikes on Iran are legitimate responses to October 7, when Iran’s subsidiary
invaded Israel and carried out the worst single-day massacre of Jews since the
Holocaust. Those attacks included the murder of dozens of Americans. Another
Iranian proxy then killed three U.S. service members in Jordan.
And yet, France and the UK opposed Israel’s
counteroffensive against those who carried out the massacre but are more
supportive of strikes against those who financed and armed the ones who carried
out the massacre.
Germany doesn’t have that problem, because under its
current government Berlin has remained morally consistent: The terrorists and
their nuke-pursuing masters are the bad guys. Sometimes Israeli actions come in
for criticism from Merz, but never does he abandon the alliance of democracies
for the axis of authoritarians who are currently also trying to smash up Europe
with Iranian missiles. Moral clarity has the advantage of being easy to
explain, even to pro-Palestinian protesters.
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