Israel is the subject of severe criticism on many fronts.
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Why stop engaging Israel’s enemies? Because it does no good. How many times have you countered every charge thrown at Israel by your anti-Israel friends and colleagues with undisputed facts that completely refute whatever negative claim they might be making. Settlements.
Occupation. Desperation. Checkpoints. Apartheid. Etc.
And how many times have you actually changed the mind of an anti-Israel critic
or even given him or her pause? Right. Never. Not once. Why is that? Because the mindset of the critics of Israel is not fact-based or even rational. It is grounded in an agenda forged, at best, out of a desire on the part of the anti-Israel exponent to fit into a certain social set, whether it be academia, a liberal circle of friends or a Christian “human rights” community. At worst, and, more commonly, the anti-Israel attitude is grounded in good old-fashioned, but ever popular, anti-Semitism.
One can talk until one is blue in the face, but one will never convince someone who instinctively blames Israel for the problems in the region that Israel retains the moral high ground. I know. I have tried for 66 years. Aside from its futility, it is time to abandon a defensive posture to supporting Israel because it is not necessary. This is because it just doesn’t matter what the critics of Israel say, think, or do. It doesn’t matter what you, your friends or your cousin Bernie think about Israel.
It doesn’t matter what the columnists of The New York Times or The Washington Post, the heads of the European Union or the United Nations, the leaders of think tanks, churches, synagogues, charities, institutes, or the writers of op-eds, blogs, tweets, and comments think either. It doesn’t even matter what the present holder of the office of the president of the United States thinks. (For those of you who say that what the president says matters because Israel could not survive without the support of the United States, that support is not in jeopardy. The United States does not provide financial support to Israel out of charity, but in its own national interest.
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The survival of the State of Israel does not depend upon any of these elite
institutions or individuals. Certainly, it would be nice to have these entities express a more sympathetic attitude toward the only democracy in the Middle East. However, their unwarranted and often abusive criticisms do not pose an existential threat to the State of Israel or its people. From its founding in 1948, Israel has managed to survive (and prosper) with support from various countries, groups and individuals. It will continue to do so.
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For the people of Israel, these issues are a matter of life and death. And they have nowhere else to go.
01/12/2015 19:54 THE JERUSALEM POST
The author is a writer and attorney in Washington, DC.
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