Democrats don’t have “Sister Souljah
moments” anymore. That political metaphor refers to a moment in the 1992
presidential campaign when Bill Clinton established himself as a
credible centrist candidate by blasting a radical who advocated for the
murder of police officers. President Joe Biden won the 2020 Democratic
presidential nomination primarily because he was embraced as a centrist
alternative to Socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.). But he has
governed as if avoiding the wrath of the political left is his priority
rather than an opportunity to demonstrate his centrist bona fides.
That’s the context for Biden’s decision to
blow up the U.S.-Israel alliance with a series of statements about the
war against Hamas and then an abstention on a vote on Monday in the U.N.
Security Council that confirmed a pivot away from support for the
terrorists’ elimination to a more equivocal stand. It also demonstrates
the assumption that his support for Israel is instinctive, and
therefore, trust in him is equally shaky.
That Biden has governed as if he is in
thrall to the left has been obvious throughout his presidency as his
executive orders implementing woke diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI)
in government; open-border policies on illegal immigration; and
out-of-control spending that fueled inflation have shown. But it’s been
particularly evident in recent months. His willingness to kowtow
to pro-Hamas Arab-American politicians in Michigan might have made some
political sense before the primary in that state, in which he wanted to
undermine an effort to elect an “uncommitted” slate of convention
delegates rather than one that supported Biden’s re-election, even
though his place on the ballot in November was not in any real doubt.
But now that Biden has locked up the 2024 nomination, this would
traditionally be a moment for a candidate to pivot to the center. Yet he
is still acting as if locking up the support of the most extreme voters
in his coalition is the key to victory.
Sympathy for Israel-haters
That’s the only way to explain why Biden
seems so intent on not having his own “Sister Souljah moment” with those
who are calling him “genocide Joe” and who are hounding him on the
campaign trail. As The New York Times reported
this week, despite the attempts of his staff to insulate the
81-year-old president from critical voices and potentially embarrassing
situations, he simply can’t seem to avoid anti-Israel activists.
At one stop in Raleigh, N.C., Biden’s
attempt to speak about his support for Obamacare was interrupted by a
dozen protesters who began shouting about the lack of health care in the
Gaza Strip, and that hospitals were being “bombed” by Israel and he was
complicit in those crimes. Biden could have ignored them or pointed out
that the problems there are the responsibility of the Hamas terrorists
who governed Gaza as an independent Palestinian state in all but name
for the past 16 years. He could have pointed out that it was Hamas that
launched a genocidal war against Israel on Oct. 7 and that caused all
the casualties suffered in the current conflict. It was also a moment to
remind the world that not only were the accusations of Israel bombing
hospitals a big lie, but that health-care facilities in Gaza have
been—and are still being, as the recent Shifa Hospital military
operation proved—used as Hamas command centers, as well as places where
Israeli hostages were held captive.
Biden didn’t say anything like that.
Instead, he told the crowd in Raleigh that those chanting against Israel
and calling for a ceasefire that would crown Hamas as the victors of
the war deserved to be treated with deference. “They have a point. We
need to get a lot more care into Gaza,” said the president, doubling
down on his administration’s stand that Palestinian civilian needs were
more important than ensuring that the terrorists who started the war—and
are still holding Israeli men, women and children captive—were
eliminated.
Just as telling was his response to being
heckled in Virginia in January when he was trying to talk about his
efforts to defend legal abortions. As the Times noted, after that episode, he met privately
with a small group of supporters and urged them not to view the
protesters as political enemies, saying that they deserved sympathy and
that their cause was “really important.”
This doesn’t just explain the decision of
the administration to escalate tensions with Israel. It goes beyond
Biden’s efforts to stop Israel from finishing off Hamas by attacking its
remaining stronghold in Rafah. He is openly planning not
just to open up more daylight between the two countries over the war
against Hamas but to abandon Israel diplomatically, slow down the flow
of arms and even sanction Israeli politicians as part of a campaign to
force Jerusalem to bow to his will.
Using aid as leverage
Democrats may have impeached former
President Donald Trump because of what they claimed was his desire to
use aid as leverage to gain some domestic political points. But they are
now threatening aid hold-ups and sanctions in order to force Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to stop the war in order to shore up
Biden’s ties with his left-wing critics. The administration’s decision
this week to let the U.N. Security Council pass a ceasefire resolution
that mandated that the war against Hamas stop without linking it to the
release of the hostages the terrorist group still holds captive is part
of this effort.
That was a clear betrayal as well as a
demonstration of how Biden’s skewed political priorities have led him to
betray the 75-year-old alliance with Israel. It also shows that the
effort to spin the breach in that alliance as being caused by
Netanyahu’s overreaction to the U.N. vote is pure bunk motivated by
partisan motives.
Netanyahu is getting blasted not just by
Democrats but by some left-wing Israelis for having the temerity to
denounce Biden’s betrayal. They say that he should be swallowing this
shift in American policy instead of calling it out.
This discussion isn’t new. The same things
were said about Netanyahu’s stands that earned him the opprobrium of
President Barack Obama and his media “echo chamber.” They labeled the
Israeli responses to Obama’s efforts to force Israel back to the 1967
armistice lines, surrender part of Jerusalem and then acquiesce to
Washington’s appeasement of Iran’s nuclear ambitions as evidence that
Netanyahu was needlessly confrontational. His refusal to play the part
of a loyal vassal to Israel’s superpower ally was considered arrogant.
That was unfair to Netanyahu. He had done
his best to defer to Obama but couldn’t be silent when his country’s
vital interests were being sold down the river by a president eager for
the applause of those in the Muslim world who hated America and its
Israeli ally.
It could be argued that his decision to
challenge Obama on the Iran nuclear deal in his address to a joint
meeting of Congress in 2015 made it easier for Democrats to go along
with his tilt toward Tehran by interpreting his defiance as an insult to
the president. But by speaking up in this manner, Netanyahu didn’t just
rally Americans to oppose the pact. He was also sending a signal to
Arab states that feared Iran more than Israel that they should look upon
the Jewish state as a potential ally and not merely a meek client state
for the Americans. That not only helped persuade Trump to withdraw from
Obama’s dangerously weak agreement but led directly to the 2020 Abraham
Accords.
Don’t blame it on Bibi
But today, the stakes in the argument with
Biden are even higher than those with Obama. Israel is currently locked
in an existential struggle with Hamas and its Iranian allies. Israel
must win the war against Hamas to ensure that no more Oct. 7 atrocities
ever occur, and also to allow the hundreds of thousands of Israelis who
were forced to flee their homes in the south and the north by the
fighting to go home in safety. If Biden gets his way and Hamas is able
to emerge from the war as its victors, then Israeli deterrence and
security are finished. And the fallout from the U.N. vote will only fuel
efforts to isolate Israel and harm its economy through lawfare.
The claim that Netanyahu is speaking up
only to shore up his right-wing/religious party coalition is a
misunderstanding of the reality of post-Oct. 7 Israel. Netanyahu may
remain controversial, but the war he is leading is supported by a broad
consensus of Israelis who will not accept anything less than a complete
victory over Hamas and who are equally unwilling to reward Palestinian
terrorism with the offer of statehood.
The only leader playing politics in the
war against Hamas is Biden. It is his craven response to antisemitic
supporters of a Hamas victory that has caused the current impasse
between Israel and the United States. He could have carved out a space
in the center of American politics where support for Israel is
widespread; instead, he is obsessed with not angering left-wing
intersectional activists who hate Israel and falsely think it is a
settler/colonial state of “white” oppressors. Blaming the gap that this
shift has opened up between Washington’s stand and Israeli positions
that would be maintained no matter who was in power in Jerusalem on
Netanyahu, is just political spin.
The current crisis in the U.S.-Israel
alliance isn’t Netanyahu’s fault. It’s the product of the belief among
Democrats that Israel is always in the wrong. And the more that Biden
validates those smears, the more evident it is that the claim that
support for Israel is in his “kishkes”—and thus to be trusted—is a
dangerous supposition.
1 comment:
There are now more Muslim voters than Jewish voters in the U S, and a LOT of them are in Michigan.
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