Posted on 07/31/2010 9:50:54 PM PDT by Nachum
You trip yourself up here.
Do you consider Israel defending itself atrocities? You wrote above that you believe Israeli action on the boat and in Gaza is legitimate.
If Israel does not commit atrocities, then defaming them with the charge is very much anti Israel. And where Israel is the only Jewish State, defaming it defames Jews.
You would have to ask the Israeli Foreign Ministry which nations Israel considers friends. But they are diplomats so they will lie.
As for the People of Israel, first and foremost they love the US, no one else comes close.
You must excuse me for being confused.
Where you claim that Israel was legitimate and in the right for what it did on that boat and its blockade of Gaza, you also find nothing wrong with the British PM’s implication that such Israeli actions were criminal.
If this thread is about the British anti Israel stance, the contradiction should prove to you Peres’ statement.
Israel has been involved in quite a few wars, the British have never come to Israel’s defense in any way whatsoever and never will- even deserting Israel in 1956 when they were purportedly on the same side against Egypt. They just always criticize Israel, which I guess is a positive alternative to 1948 when active serving British officers led and supported Arab armies attacking Israel.
Note that Peres didn’t say the British are anti Semitic, he said they are anti Israel.
I can’t speak for him, but I am among many Jews who believe absolutely that almost all Western anti Israel opinion, maybe not all, is influenced by active or latent anti Semitism.
As for the British, all public opinion polls I have seen evidenced profound British anti Semitism. Unfortunately, on that score that are not alone in the World.
Maybe they can’t be blamed, any person raised on the steady hate Israel diet of the BBC and the rest of the British press, might hate Israel and Jews. Still the British have a history vis a vis the Jews and being enamored of Arabs- as shown above- and it is not pretty.
I could cite Jews wring on the subject but that would likely not influence you.
Maybe I can recommend a British Gentile who is very enamored of Israel. Julie Burchill
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julie_Burchill
If interested, seek out some of her opinions on how her countrymen relate to Jews and Israel.
Note that no one can deny the friendship of some British Gentiles to the welfare of Israel. Orde Wingate, for example, is considered a great hero of Israel. Unfortunately, they are exceptions.
Your country is beautiful. Thanks for the pictures.
Yes, that would be my understanding as well.
At any time and place I will stand with Burchill- with all her faults- against the foaming at the mouth anti Semites in the mainstream British press and media.
Then this makes no sense at all. LOL
*Really? I dont see how we can be both Muslim-loving lefty liberals while simultaneously looking down at all other races and creeds on the other.*
There has never been a large chunk of the British elite that are Arab-ist? Huh, must be a whole lot of hallucination in these parts.
As for the rest, yours is a nation-state that came closer to genocide of an entire continent than the Germans ever did. So you’ve got that going for you.
*Its funny, I always thought that Brit-bashing was the preserve of the American left. Judging by all these comments, I must be wrong.*
There’s strategic alliances and there are friendships. Learn the difference.
Benjamin Disraeli
“Benjamin Disraeli, 1st Earl of Beaconsfield, KG, PC, FRS, (21 December 1804 19 April 1881) was a British Prime Minister, parliamentarian, Conservative statesman and literary figure. He served in government for three decades, twice as Prime Minister. Although his father had him baptised to Anglicanism at age 13, he was nonetheless the country’s first and thus far only Prime Minister who was born Jewish.[1] He played an instrumental role in the creation of the modern Conservative Party after the Corn Laws schism of 1846.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Disraeli
Shimon Peres versus the Brits
By EFRAIM KARSH
02/08/2010
Was the president really wrong when he called the British establishment deeply pro-Arab partly due to anti-Semitic dispositions?
Shimon Peres, Israels 87-year-old president doesnt usually arouse antagonism among Europeans.
A tireless peace advocate for decades, and architect of the Oslo Process for which he received the Nobel Peace Prize, he has long presented Israels moderate face to the outside world.
Yet last week he provoked anger among British politicians and Anglo- Jewish leaders when he told a Jewish website that the British establishment had always been deeply pro- Arab ... and anti-Israel, and that this was partly due to endemic anti- Semitic dispositions. I can understand Mr. Peres concerns, but I dont recognize what he is saying about England, said James Clappison, vice-chairman of Conservative Friends of Israel. Things are certainly no worse, as far as Israel is concerned, in this country than other European countries. He got it wrong.
But did he? While few arguments have resonated more widely, or among a more diverse set of observers, than the claim that Britain has been the midwife of the Jewish state, the truth is that no sooner had Britain been appointed as the mandatory power in Palestine, with the explicit task of facilitating the establishment of a Jewish national home in the country in accordance with the Balfour Declaration, than it reneged on this obligation.
AS EARLY as March 1921, the British government severed the vast and sparsely populated territory east of the Jordan River (Transjordan) from the prospective Jewish national home and made Abdullah, the emir of Mecca, its effective ruler. In 1922 and 1930, two British White Papers limited Jewish immigration to Palestine the elixir of life of the prospective Jewish state and imposed harsh restrictions on land sales to Jews.
Britains betrayal of its international obligations to the Jewish national cause reached its peak on May 17, 1939, when a new White Paper imposed draconian restrictions on land sales to Jews and limited immigration to 75,000 over the next five years, after which Palestine would become an independent state in which the Jews would comprise no more than one-third of the total population.
Such were the anti-Zionist sentiments within the British establishment at the time that even a life-long admirer of Zionism like prime minister Winston Churchill rarely used his wartime dominance of British politics to help the Zionists (or indeed European Jewry). However appalled by the White Paper he failed to abolish this low grade gasp of a defeatist hour (to use his own words), refrained from confronting his generals and bureaucrats over the creation of a Jewish fighting force in Palestine, which he wholeheartedly supported, and gave British officialdom a free rein in the running of Middle Eastern affairs, which they readily exploited to promote the Arab case. In 1943, for instance, Freya Stark, the acclaimed author, orientalist, and Arabian adventurer, was sent to the US on a seven-month propaganda campaign aimed at undercutting the Zionist cause and defending Britains White Paper policy.
That this could happen at the height of the Nazi extermination of European Jewry of which Whitehall was keenly aware offered a stark demonstration of the mindset of British officialdom, which was less interested in stopping genocide than in preventing its potential survivors from reaching Palestine after the war.
So much so that senior Foreign Office members portrayed Britain, not Europes Jews, as the main victim of the Nazi atrocities.
THIS ANTI-ZIONISM was sustained into the postwar years as the Labor Party, which in July 1945 swept to power in a landslide electoral victory, swiftly abandoned its pre-election pro-Zionist platform to become a bitter enemy of the Jewish national cause. The White Paper restrictions were kept in place, and the Jews were advised by Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin not to get too much at the head of the queue in seeking recourse to their problems.
Tens of thousands of Holocaust survivors who chose to ignore the warning and to run the British naval blockade were herded into congested camps in Cyprus, where they were incarcerated for years.
Should we accept the view that all the Jews or the bulk of them must leave Germany? Bevin rhetorically asked the British ambassador to Washington.
I do not accept that view. They have gone through, it is true, the most terrible massacre and persecution, but on the other hand they have got through it and a number have survived.
Prime Minister Clement Attlee went a step further by comparing Holocaust survivors wishing to leave Europe and to return to their ancestral homeland to Nazi troops invading the continent.
While these utterances resonated with the pervasive anti-Semitism within British officialdom (the last high commissioner for Palestine, General Sir Alan Cunningham, for instance, said of Zionism, The forces of nationalism are accompanied by the psychology of the Jew, which it is important to recognize as something quite abnormal and unresponsive to rational treatment), Britains Middle Eastern policy also reflected the basic fact that as occupiers of vast territories endowed with natural resources (first and foremost oil) and sitting astride strategic waterways (e.g., the Suez Canal), the Arabs had always been far more meaningful for British interests than the Jews.
As the chief of the air staff told the British cabinet in 1947, If one of the two communities had to be antagonized, it was preferable, from the purely military angle, that a solution should be found which did not involve the continuing hostility of the Arabs.
One needs look no further than David Camerons statements on the Middle East to see this anti-Israel mindset is alive and kicking. In the summer of 2006, when thousands of Hizbullah missiles were battering Israels cities and villages, he took the trouble of issuing a statement from the tropical island on which he was vacationing at the time condemning Israels disproportionate use of force.”
Four years later, while on an official visit to Turkey, he went out of his way to placate his Islamist host, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, by criticizing Israels efforts to prevent the arming of the Hamas Islamist group, which, like its Lebanese counterpart, had been lobbing thousands of missiles on Israels civilian population for years.
Plus ça change, plus cest la même chose.
The writer is professor of Middle East and Mediterranean Studies at Kings College London, editor of the Middle East Quarterly and author, most recently, of Palestine Betrayed.
http://www.jpost.com/LandedPages/PrintArticle.aspx?id=183419
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