Worse than North Korea?
It seems almost incredible, more like a bad dream than
reality. The majority of Europeans — and no telling how many in
the rest of the world — consider Israel the greatest threat to peace
in the world. The following article from The Jerusalem Post is frightening
in its implications. The Arabs, the enemies of Israel and of the United
States, are obviously successful in their p.r. efforts to demonize Israel
and the Jewish people. The work of FLAME, countering these vilifications
is of major importance in the fight against these slanders. But we must
do more — and YOU must help us.
Gerardo Joffe, President
Jerusalem Post
November 2, 2003
Over the past decade, the North Korean "people's"
regime of Kim Jong-Il has starved an estimated three million of its citizens.
A roughly equal number work in slave labor camps that dwarf Auschwitz
in size and nearly in cruelty.
The regime has developed nuclear weapons, in violation of
several agreements, and intends to sell those weapons to the highest bidder.
It has lobbed ballistic missiles over Japan. It threatens a war of annihilation
against its southern neighbor. It supports itself by dealing drugs and
counterfeit currency. But at least it's not as bad as Israel.
That, at any rate, is the conclusion of a just-released
poll of Europeans from 15 EU member states sponsored by the European Commission.
Asked to rank 15 countries on how they threaten "world peace,"
Europeans chose their top threats thus: Israel, Iran, North Korea, Afghanistan,
Iraq, and the United States.
A full 59 percent of those polled in 15 European nations
ranked Israel as the top threat.
What is one to make of this?
The simplest explanation cannot be dismissed. As Minister-without-Portfolio
Natan Sharansky, responsible for Diaspora affairs, responded, the fact
that Europe regards Israel as more threatening than nations that support
and finance terrorism is "proof that behind 'political' criticism
of Israel stands nothing less than pure anti-Semitism."
It is fair for Sharansky to challenge the EU to work to
halt the "demonization" of Israel "before Europe again
deteriorates to the dark vestiges of its past." But the poll results
do not just reveal hateful and intense anti-Israel sentiment — they
are incoherent.
Among the six nations ranked as top threats are two veteran
democracies besieged by terrorism, the US and Israel; two rogue dictatorships,
Iran and North Korea; and two former terrorist states now beginning to
taste freedom, Afghanistan and Iraq. It is as if the European mind worked
like this: any country that is in the headlines related to the war against
terrorism, whatever side it is on and regardless of whether it is free
or oppressed, is a threat to world peace.
We know that Europeans tend to regard any discussion of
good and evil, or democracy and dictatorship, as "cowboy talk"
and terribly unsophisticated. But now we find the European opposition
to such petty distinctions taken to an opposite extreme.
How sophisticated is it for Europeans to become the modern-day
equivalent of the old non-aligned movement with respect to the greatest
threat of the day, the threat from militant Islam and its embrace of terrorism?
Truly sophisticated Europeans would perhaps notice that
continental nihilism is getting out of hand. During the Cold War, an equally
irresponsible neutralism became fashionable in Europe between the US and
the Soviet Union. But in reality, Europe remained part of NATO and the
threat of being overrun by Soviet divisions was extremely remote.
Not so in the current conflict.
Militant Islam and its arsenal of terrorism will either
be beaten, or it will engulf Europe as well. It does not take an enormous
degree of sophistication to realize that, now that the United States and
Israel have come under vicious attack, remaining neutral in the struggle
will not save protect Europe over the long run.
This realization seems to have begun to sink in to the extent
that even Europe is worried about Iran developing nuclear weapons. But
this poll shows that whatever ability European governments have to distinguish
between political fashion and reality may not extend to European publics.
The fact that so many Europeans feel that Israel and the
United States are threats to world peace comparable to Iran and North
Korea bespeaks a profound intellectual and ideological malaise.
Is Europe's fourth estate so confused that it would have
answered the poll the same way?
In any case, European journalists should ask themselves,
did we really intend to lump Israel, now suffering its fourth year of
suicide bombings, along with Iran, a primary terrorism sponsor, and North
Korea, a nuclear proliferator?
Ironically, the same poll found that 81 percent of Europeans
thought that the EU should become more involved in Middle East peacemaking
efforts.
Obviously, such polls confirm every Israeli instinct to
keep Europeans as far away from any position of diplomatic influence as
possible.
Memo to Europe: Demonizing a democracy under attack is no
way to win friends and influence people.
Facts and Logic About the Middle East
P.O. Box 590359
San Francisco, CA 94159
Gerardo Joffe, President
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