OPINION:
I have always been careful to avoid Holocaust analogies. The Holocaust was the biggest and single most evil, deliberate, inhuman massacre of six million Jews and millions of others in human history. There are no analogies. If people cannot make an intelligent case as to why some other world event, cause, or human suffering is unique and indeed as serious as they contend that they must refer to it as a Holocaust, they diminish their own case and display a level of ignorance that also diminishes the actual suffering of the Holocaust.
Mindful of that, I see what’s happening in the world now with the pressure on Israel not to conduct certain military attacks, withholding arms essential for Israel’s defense, and even delegitimizing Israel’s right and obligation to defend itself and can only call it one thing: Auschwitz diplomacy where the world leaves the Jews to deal with and suffer calamities forced on us alone.
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These are people who, like the Allies in World War II, would deliberately avoid bombing the train tracks leading to Auschwitz, either seeing that as a distraction to a military strategy or discounting the deliberate genocidal massacre of Jews, or both. Then and now, these people think that Jewish suffering, mass murder, and attempted genocide are within the acceptable norm and that Jewish lives matter less.
Most details are not yet available of the content of this week’s 45-minute conversation between Prime Minister Netanyahu and President Joe Biden about Israel’s pending strike on Iran. Regardless of the content, it’s noteworthy that this was the first time Mr. Netanyahu and Mr. Biden have spoken since August.
Mostly innocuous details are known publicly as of this writing. The U.S. readout said Mr. Biden affirmed Israel’s right to protect itself from Hezbollah, a global terror group with the stated goal to annihilate Israel and Jews around the world. It also emphasized the Biden-Harris position of the imperative for a diplomatic agreement between Israel and Hezbollah that would allow civilians on both sides of the border to return to their homes.
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This is shocking because not only did Hezbollah disregard the terms of UN resolution 1701 in 2006, but under the nose of UN “peacekeepers,” Hezbollah grew into the terrorist superpower that it became.
Mr. Biden proudly claims to have known all Israeli Prime Ministers for decades. It’s too bad he doesn’t heed Golda Meir’s truism that you cannot negotiate with people sworn to murder you.
Mr. Biden also apparently stressed “the need to minimize harm to civilians, in particular in the densely populated areas of Beirut.” There is seemingly no recognition that while tragic, Israel seeks to minimize civilian casualties. However civilian deaths in Lebanon and Gaza, and perhaps soon in Iran, are all a direct consequence of the terrorists immorally and illegally using civilians as human shields, while firing tens of thousands of missiles, rockets, and drones at Israeli cities, deliberately to maximize civilian casualties.
Following the Biden-Netanyahu call, State Department spokesman Matthew Miller said the U.S. supports Israel’s “limited ground incursions” inside Lebanon but does not want Israel to extend deeper into Lebanon, to the core of Hezbollah’s military capabilities and its leadership. “We are cognizant of the long history of Israel, starting with limited ground operations in Lebanon, turning those into more full-scale ground operations, turning those into occupation, something that we are very clear we are opposed to,” Mr. Miller said.
Israelis are the last ones who want the consequences of a more long-term and deeper operation against Hezbollah (especially me, as my son may be called into service there by the time you read this), it is a self-defeating military strategy not to win through decisive victory.
The same is true of defeating the Iranian Islamic regime, the head of the global Islamic terrorist octopus and its genocidal threats against Israel, and the terror that it perpetuates around the world. The U.S. has made its opposition clear to any Israeli strike against Iranian nuclear facilities. To eliminate the terrorist threat, these should be the first targets, followed by Iran’s IRGC military sites, and even the ayatollahs and Supreme Leader.
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Rather than oppose an Israeli attack, the U.S. should lead the attack. But no, the Biden-Harris administration is calling for Israel’s response to be “proportional.”
Proportional to what, exactly? To the threat? To the number of missiles launched? To the attempted widespread massacre of Israelis and Jews?
Calling an Israeli attack “retaliatory” is misinformation. Buffered by pathological pandering to, and funding of (since Obama’s 2015’s infamous Iran Deal and the release of billions of dollars to the Iranian Islamic regime) Iran continues to progress, perhaps being weeks away, from having enough nuclear material for one or more bombs. For Israel, it’s about survival, not reprisal.
To the extent that the Biden-Harris administration is concerned about an Israeli attack and regional escalation because of the upcoming election, that’s a criminal abdication of their responsibility. A global economic impact including increased gas prices, or the need to defend Israel too publicly (or not) can have negative consequences on November 5. Perhaps, they think, it’s better to ride out the Iranian storm, put Israelis at greater risk, and do nothing.
Just like the Allies at Auschwitz.
Before speaking with Mr. Biden, Mr. Netanyahu underscored the threat Israel faces to a delegation of American Jewish leaders.
“There is only one force in the world fighting Iran right now. There’s only one force in the world that stands in Iran’s way to conquest. And that force is Israel. If we don’t fight, we die. But it’s not only our fight, it’s the free world’s fight, and, I would say, the civilized world’s fight,” he said.
Despite tense relations between Mr. Biden and Mr. Netanyahu, and Mr. Netanyahu not being popular among Israel’s opposition parties, it’s clear that the Biden-Harris administration is out of touch with prevailing Israeli attitudes. Recently, three Israeli opposition leaders including former Ministers of Defense Benny Gantz and Avigdor Liberman, and former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, have called for a strong Israeli military attack on Iran. Some of these, and others, have called specifically to target Iranian nuclear facilities.
Being out of touch has not been a one-time thing in the past year. The U.S. and others have argued violently, even threatening Israel, over strategies such as the IDF entering Rafah to eliminate Hamas terrorist infrastructure, and free hostages which were effectively executed, and with minimal civilian casualty.
Nonsensical mantras including “diplomacy,” “ceasefire” and “getting a deal done” have not made any viable headway to bring any of these about, much less realize anything that looks like peace and security for Israel. Parroting nonsensical statements is not unique to Biden-Harris. Under President Barack Obama, Secretary of State John Kerry repeated “No,” six times, that there would never be peace without a Palestinian State. The Abraham Accords, and the Arab states’ preparedness to do what’s best for their own interests, proved Mr. Kerry wrong, and foolish.
It’s anyone’s guess what will happen regarding an Israeli attack on Iran, how Iran will respond, and accordingly how the U.S. will respond. It matters whether these happen before, and after, the election, when Mr. Biden is unincumbered by fear of a negative electoral fallout.
Will he withhold arms, place sanctions, or not block anti-Israel resolutions in the UN as Mr. Obama did?
Other than correctly standing up for Israel to prevent Iranian missiles from taking their toll as any ally should against a genocidal enemy, Mr. Biden, Ms. Harris, and Mr. Blinken and all their puppets have been dead wrong on the Auschwitz lines they have drawn. If only they would realize this and act accordingly.
Unlike the Auschwitz analogy where at least the Allies were fighting the Nazis, Mr. Biden, Ms. Harris, and Mr. Blinken all have a degree of culpability regarding the threats Israel faces, by releasing tens of billions of dollars to Iran, making the U.S. not just an enabler, but an investor.
Even amid the very real stress and threats, personally and nationally, I remain a naïve optimist that the U.S. will wake up and support Israel unconditionally, coordinating to lead the charge against the Islamist threats, and not leaving Israel to its own devices. This is for Israel’s well-being of course, but ultimately for the U.S. as well.
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Jonathan Feldstein was born and educated in the U.S. and immigrated to Israel in 2004. He is married and the father of six. Throughout his life and career, he has become a respected bridge between Jews and Christians and serves as president of the Genesis 123 Foundation (www.Genesis123.co). He writes regularly about Israel and shares experiences of living as an Orthodox Jew in Israel. He is host of the popular Inspiration from Zion podcast and publisher of www.IsraeltheMiracle.com. He can be reached at firstpersonisrael@gmail.com.
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