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Mark Steyn: War between America and Europe
The Spectator (U.K.) ^ | 12/27/2001 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 12/27/2001 8:10:03 AM PST by Pokey78

New Hampshire

My colleague Petronella Wyatt reported the other week that ‘since 11 September anti-Semitism and its open expression has become respectable at London dinner tables’. Barbara Amiel then chipped in with the news that it’s spread to lunch and afternoon tea, too.

Apparently, at a recent gathering chez Barbara, the ambassador of ‘a major EU country’ told guests that the current troubles were all because of ‘that shitty little country Israel.... Why,’ he asked, ‘should the world be in danger of World War Three because of those people?’ Next came a private lunch at which ‘the hostess — doyenne of London’s political salon scene — made a remark to the effect that she couldn’t stand Jews and everything happening to them was their own fault’. A few days after 11 September, Richard Ingrams wrote a column in the Observer headlined ‘Who Will Dare Damn Israel?’ Answer: take a number and join the queue.

This is the mood music of the new war, and more mellifluous in Britain than in the Arab world, with its amusing pop songs (‘I Hate Israel’) and droll sitcoms (Plots of Terror, featuring an Ariel Sharon who drinks the blood of Arab babies and then tosses them on the bonfire). It would be frightfully tedious if Jews were thin-skinned enough to make a fuss about this sort of thing when there are so many more important things to worry about — such as, for example, the potential backlash against Muslims that Western leaders are always fretting about in-between photo-ops at the mosque. President Bush and co. have been so busy enjoining us not to beat up our Islamic neighbours that they’ve failed to notice an actual as opposed to hypothetical spate of ‘hate crimes’: according to Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, more European synagogues have been attacked and burned in the last year than in any year since 1938, the year of Kristallnacht. This doesn’t seem to be getting a lot of press coverage.

Americans are resigned to Britain’s and Europe’s need to ‘damn’ Israel, if only because they’re used to being on the receiving end themselves. Among British Conservatives, anti-Zionism tends to go hand in hand with anti-Americanism — or, to put it in a more positive light, Europhiles tend also to be Arabists (Ian Gilmour, etc.). This is perfectly understandable: a certain type of Englishman looks at an Arab and sees a desert version of his most cherished self-delusions. Where Jews are modern, urban and scientific, Arabs are feudal, rural and romantic. Jews wear homburgs; Arabs wear flowing robes and head-dresses. Jews are famously ‘in trade’; Arabs are just as famously hopeless at economic creativity: they have oil, but require foreigners to extract it and refine it. A backward culture that loves dressing up and places no value on professional activity will always appeal to a segment of the English elite. Look at the Prince of Wales in that wannabe Bedouin get-up he wore to meet Brother bin Laden the other week. Scarcely had he tossed the Highgrove hejab in the washer than he went out and gave a speech denouncing the ‘arrogance’ of skyscrapers. In America, blacks talk of the ‘white Negro’; the Prince comes over like a white Arab.

Over on the other side, meanwhile, whether or not Jews are still regarded in Europe as grasping, taloned, sallow, hook-nosed usurers with eyes like rattlesnakes, the traditional defects pale in comparison with a more recently acquired trait: their Americanism. Americans and Jews are not entirely synonymous, but, to elderly European Jews of a certain age, criticism of the Yanks has a familiar ring to it. In 1937, Sacheverell Sitwell visited the Bukovina, formerly the easternmost province of the Habsburg empire, then part of Romania and now in Ukraine. Its capital city Czernowitz was a multicultural mélange of Romanians, Ruthenians, Poles, Germans, Armenians and Swabians, but, as Sitwell noted, you’d never know that from a stroll down Main Street: ‘There is not a shop that has not a Jewish name painted above its windows. The entire commerce of the place is in the hands of the Jews. Yiddish is spoken here more than German.’ Not any more — the Jews of Czernowitz are dead or fled — but the Hebrew hegemony in the Bukovina has a contemporary echo in the high streets of modern Britain: There is scarce a shop that has not an American name painted above its windows: McDonald’s, The Gap, Dunkin’ Donuts, Toys R Us, Starbucks. American is spoken more than British: ‘Have a nice day.’ ‘Would you like fries with that?’ Resentment of US cultural imperialism is merely a supersized version of the charges levelled at ’tween-wars European Jewry: the anti-globalisation crowd, droning on about interlopers interested only in profits and swamping local cultures, are singing a very old song. Indeed, the savvier Aryans can claim to have seen it coming. As Werner Sombat wrote in The Jews and Economic Life (1911): ‘One can rightly say that the United States owes what it is entirely to the Jews: that is, its American nature. What we call Americanism to a large degree is nothing other than the influence of the Jewish spirit.’

I don’t entirely agree with that, but it seems to me Sombat is right to this extent: American sympathy for Israel and European support for the Arabs are essentially cultural statements, unrelated to the finer points of the ‘Palestinian question’. America supports Israel not because it’s Jewish but because it’s democratic. In fact, Republicans support Israel despite the Jews. American Jews are urban liberals and one of the Democratic party’s most reliable core demographics. There is no political benefit whatsoever to Bush in taking a ‘hard pro-Israel line’. Au contraire, Arab-Americans are just about the only immigrant group other than the Cubans that votes Republican. Yet that will never translate into GOP support for Arab states as presently constituted. My northern, rural, conservative neighbours are, when you prod ’em a little, mildly xenophobic and share a reflexive distaste for overt Jewishness. But they’ll always back Israel over Syria or Egypt because to them liberty trumps everything else. They are also under no illusions as to the kind of state an Arafat-led Palestine would be: if you gave him Switzerland to run, he’d turn it into a sewer. So Republicans look at Israel and see not Jews but a liberal democracy.

Funnily enough, that’s also what the Arabs see. They don’t hate America because it backs Israel; they hate Israel because it looks like America — it’s a functioning state. If you get out a map of the world and look at the vastness of the Arab lands from North Africa to the Gulf with a tiny Israeli sliver in the middle (if you accept the 1967 borders, it’s only 11 miles wide at one point), it’s simply not possible for any rational human being to blame the tiny sliver for all the woes of the surrounding vastness. At least in the old days Muslim victim culture sought out more plausible oppressors. Writing after the Great War, in which the Ottoman empire picked the wrong side through bad luck as much as anything else, Albert Kinross recounted his discussions with an educated Turk:

The bey’s politics amounted to this: why did British diplomacy allow German diplomacy to lead poor Turkey by the nose? He presupposed, firstly, that the Turk could do no wrong, and, secondly, that the Turk was an irresponsible and charming child whom it was the duty of the Great Powers to pet and spoil. To my unregenerate mind, a good hiding would have been more salutary.

The Turk has grown up, rather impressively. But we’re still trying to pet and spoil his former Arabian provinces — i.e., ‘win their hearts and minds’ — when in truth the good hiding administered to Osama and Mullah Omar is far more salutary.

But even if you accept that Jews are slavering money-lenders no London hostess can stand and that Israel is a shitty little country, so what? In the objective sense, the Arab states are failures. If Israel was ‘imposed’ on the region in the Forties, the other nations date only from the Twenties. The only difference is the Jews have made a go of it. Both Israel and Egypt get massive subventions from Washington: Egypt, an economic basket-case, pisses it away; Israel is now a net technology exporter.

If America recognises a kindred spirit in Israel, then so does Europe in the Arab autocracies. After all, when King Fahd, President Mubarak, et al. sell themselves to the West as anti-democratic brakes on the baser urges of their people, they sound a lot like the European Union. As we’ve seen yet again, the principle underpinning the new Europe is not ‘We, the people’ but ‘We know better than the people’ — not just on capital punishment and the Treaty of Nice and the single currency, but on pretty much anything that comes up, including national elections. When 29 per cent of Austrian voters were impertinent enough to plump for Jörg Haider’s Freedom party, the EU punished them with sanctions and boycotts. As the Swedish Prime Minister Göran Persson put it, ‘The programme that is developing in Austria is not in line with EU values.’ In the new Europe, the will of the people is subordinate to the will of the Perssons. Understandably, to such an elite the Oslo ‘peace process’ ought to be as remorseless and undeviating as the path to European unity: how preposterous to let something as footling as the wishes of the Israeli electorate disrupt it.

So each half of the West looks in the Middle East for what it values most in itself: for the Americans, liberty; for Europe, paternalism, benign or otherwise. The result is a mirror image: just as Israel is the odd man out in the Middle East, so increasingly America is in the West, wedded as it is to such bizarre concepts as capital punishment, gun rights, free speech, etc.

As for Barbara Amiel’s EU ambassador, fretting that shitty little Israel, ‘those people’, are plunging the world into war, let me propose an alternative theory: it’s all his fault. The other day, Mickey Kaus, an iconoclastic neoliberal, noticed that Zacarias Moussaoui, the French national now charged with conspiracy in connection with 11 September, became an Islamic radical while living in London ‘drawing welfare benefits’; also, Ahmed Ressam, arrested on the eve of Y2K while en route to blow up Los Angeles International Airport, had been living in Montreal where he ‘survived on welfare payments’; likewise, Metin Kaplan, who heads a radical Islamic sect, ‘claimed social benefits in Cologne for many years until two million deutschmarks in cash was found in his flat’.

In other words, life in the Middle East may have fired their Islamic fundamentalism, but benefit cheques from the soft West Euro-Canadian welfare states enabled them to pursue their obsession at the taxpayer’s expense. If you’re looking for ‘root causes’ for terrorism, European-sized welfare programmes are a good place to start. Maybe if they had to go out to work, they’d join the Daily Mirror and become the next John Pilger. Or maybe they’d open a drive-thru Halal Burger chain and make a fortune. Instead, Tony Blair pays Islamic fundamentalists in London to stay at home, fester and plot. Having grown up in Arab countries that place no value on work and provide little incentive to economic activity, your would-be suicide bomber fits easily into the welfare culture of the European Union or Canada. He wouldn’t last long in New Hampshire.

Say what you like about the Jews, but they don’t sit around on welfare. In St Urbain’s Horseman, Mordecai Richler recalled some of the routine slurs of the Quebec government during the second world war, including an official pamphlet showing ‘a coarse old Jew, nose long and misshapen as a carrot, retreating into the night with bags of gold’. A junior minister was dispatched to do damage control. ‘Anti-Semitism,’ he told the press, ‘is grossly exaggerated. Speaking for myself, my accountant is a Jew and I always buy cars from Sonny Fish.’

Just so. In the Middle East, two cultures jostle side by side: one channels its citizens’ energy into economic fulfilment, the other into pathetic victim fantasies. The sides the United States and the European Union have chosen to align themselves with say as much about themselves and their own psychological health as they do about Palestine.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: clashofcivilizatio; marksteynlist
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To: D Joyce
who said you have to worship them. Watch you language this is a public forum!
121 posted on 12/27/2001 12:41:39 PM PST by Khepera
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To: Carry_Okie
His assertion is condescending garbage.

I'd say it's typical ethnocentric self-congratulating racist garbage. Any objective person will realize that the article stinks.

122 posted on 12/27/2001 12:43:58 PM PST by madrussian
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To: LaBelleDameSansMerci
I believe that any American man of any dispensation who wears a homburg or a derby should be shot on sight

I wear a derby, well a bowler actually, on occasion. It goes well with boots & braces.

123 posted on 12/27/2001 12:44:56 PM PST by Britton J Wingfield
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To: Britton J Wingfield; pgkdan
Both added.
124 posted on 12/27/2001 12:59:05 PM PST by Pokey78
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To: NewAmsterdam
I am really tired of this perverted 80s ideology that somehow Americans work whereas Europeans (whoever they might be) do nothing. It just is so devoid of any sense of reality that the argument should have become a joke long ago.

Yes, the Europeans work. I mean, having abortions, killing off the elderly with euthanasia, running child pornography rings, having periodic pogroms of the Jews... that all requires a lot of work.

NOT.

Europe is a toilet, and should be treated as such. If they don't like it, too bad. We have more nukes.

125 posted on 12/27/2001 1:24:54 PM PST by ambrose
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To: pgkdan
And they live in America. Show me the Arab/Moslem country where this is true.

Such Islamic professionals also live in Britain, India, Canada, France, Indonesia, Mexico, the Phillipines... They too have their rural poor, but that is a characteristic hardly unique to Islamic countries.

You infer that Arabs would be backward but for those fortunate enough to enjoy being in America, but that idea negates the accomplishments of Byzantium, and Arabic contributions to medicine, architecture, and mathematics during the Dark Ages. Are you prepared to assert that those weren't significant to the advancement of Civilization?

Please carefully READ ALL of what I wrote in numerous responses before you try such a juvenile tactic. I could just as easily respond, "Show me how you disagree with what I wrote," but I am not going to bother just to satisfy someone who tries to "win" a debate against an argument I didn't make by dropping poisoned bait.

126 posted on 12/27/2001 1:25:15 PM PST by Carry_Okie
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To: Yehuda
Thanks for the ping! Steyn's article is pretty provocative and I'm bookmarking this one to read again. A hell of a topic.
127 posted on 12/27/2001 1:27:30 PM PST by Lady Jag
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To: Pokey78
This article is great, and he hits the nail right on the head. Trust the people, or trust some cronies to run the people. We need to start asking "Whose side are you on?"

Please add me to the ping list.
128 posted on 12/27/2001 1:36:42 PM PST by July 4th
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To: NewAmsterdam
Thanks, you make good points.

Especially your point that the US and Euro elites are in agreement about the european project, particulary the foreign policy establishment. I was initially surprised at US acquiescence in the Euro rapid reaction force, which seems perfectly silly to me. Isn't that NATO's job?

I think here in the US many have reacted to the anti-US sentiments certain French ministers have routinely been making, as well as Germany's call for a federal Europe, which I found shocking. And as you can see from Steyn, many in the US are quite irritated at Euro support for Arafat, a corrupt dictator in my view, and the "peace process," which has been dead for a year.

Since you're on the scene, what's the mood in Europe about the introduction of the Euro? It's value has fallen considerably over the last year. Can the governments maintain fiscal discipline in a recession?

129 posted on 12/27/2001 1:40:39 PM PST by colorado tanker
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Comment #130 Removed by Moderator

To: Pokey78
Bump for later reading
131 posted on 12/27/2001 1:44:13 PM PST by hattend
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To: Celtjew Libertarian
No one says Arabs are incompetent or uneducated or incapable of making a positive contribution to civilization. The tens of thousands of Arab and Muslim immigrants here in the U.S who work hard and give something to our economy shows they can. The problem is that thanks to the backwardness, the poverty, the illiteracy, and the oppressive political conditions in their homelands they can't build a better life there. Instead Osama Bin Laden's thesis the West is hostile to Islam is refuted by the single overriding observation that when given a free choice Muslims either come to America or welcome the American invaders with open arms. If America were that evil they'd either be shunning us in droves and our Afghan allies would be launching a jihad against us. The fact it hasn't happened must be to Bin Laden a depressing sight along with the fact the anti-American Muslim street hasn't caught fire and gone with guns blazing after The Great Satan. Muslims appreciate what they're getting in AND from America and that is what's sticking in his craw. No wonder his rants aren't making much of an impression. Oh and kudos to another terrific piece from Mark Steyn!
132 posted on 12/27/2001 2:04:06 PM PST by goldstategop
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To: Pokey78
Please put me on your ping list, Pokey!
133 posted on 12/27/2001 2:12:28 PM PST by stands2reason
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To: Pokey78
Pl put me on Mark Styne ping list
134 posted on 12/27/2001 2:13:39 PM PST by dennisw
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To: tex-oma
In your case Mark Styne was casting pearls before swine.

"Give not that which is holy unto the dogs, neither cast ye your pearls before swine, lest they trample them under their feet, and turn again and rend you." Matthew 7:6
Neither Cast Ye Your Pearls Before Swine
... unto the dogs, neither cast our pearls before swine, lest they trample them under ...
[ Eschatology | Bible Studies | Classics | Articles | Apologetics ...
members.aol.com/twarren20/castswine.html - 14k - Cached - Similar pages

135 posted on 12/27/2001 2:24:23 PM PST by dennisw
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Comment #136 Removed by Moderator

To: Pokey78
Could you please put me back on your ping lists? Thanks!
137 posted on 12/27/2001 3:02:43 PM PST by Amelia
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To: sphinx
Interesting, and true, I think. Works for neighborhood and cities too.
138 posted on 12/27/2001 3:09:06 PM PST by Bahbah
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To: NewAmsterdam
You are on to something here, NewAmsterdam. Europe, like America, has those who want to work and those who don't. However, I think some European governments reward non-work too much which is demoralizing to the rest. Works that way here too. I love Amsterdam, by the way.
139 posted on 12/27/2001 3:13:23 PM PST by Bahbah
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To: Yehuda
Whether you agree with everything Steyn says or not, he raises some very interesting points. Because of the world I live in, anti-semitism always shocks me, but, by golly, it is still there and in some surprising places.
140 posted on 12/27/2001 3:17:16 PM PST by Bahbah
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