Dear AJC Supporter,
I've had the privilege of writing for Der Tagesspiegel, one of Germany's
leading newspapers, on several occasions. This time, I was asked to write on
the different reaction in the United States and Europe to Prime Minister
Netanyahu's visit to Washington. AJC, including our office in Berlin, has
grown increasingly concerned about Europe's general drift away from
understanding Israel's yearning for peace and profound security dilemmas.

-- David



America and Israel are Inseparable
<http://www.kintera.org/TR.asp?a=geIHJMMrGcIELYJ&s=dqISJ4NDIcILJYOHItF&m=jmJ
4IlN0LnI2LoJ>  

By David Harris

May 26, 2011

Six days of high-profile Middle East drama have just ended in Washington.
Framed by President Obama's speech on the region, on May 19, at the State
Department and Prime Minister Netanyahu's remarks to Congress on May 24,
observers were taking careful note of words, temperature and body language
in the complex interplay between the two leaders. 

But the overarching story remains the same as always: The United States and
Israel have forged a unique relationship, supported by the overwhelming
majority of Americans. Whatever the occasional differences in policy, normal
even for the closest of friends as we have seen between Washington and
Berlin, the key point is what unites, not divides, the two countries. The
rousing ovation by the Congress for the prime minister said it all - shared
values, outlook and threats. 

Some observers in Europe see it differently. They scratch their heads when
Democrats and Republicans alike give repeated standing ovations to an
Israeli prime minister they view with suspicion. They despair that Israel,
in their eyes the main obstacle to "perpetual peace" in the region, is
lauded for its pursuit of peace and right to defend itself in the Congress.
And they offer theories of "Jewish power" in a vain attempt to explain
America's identification with the Jewish state. 

Those observers are missing the bigger story. America does not support
Israel just because of American Jews, who comprise only two percent of the
population. Rather, it is because Americans of many backgrounds identify
with Israel as a liberal, democratic society in a sea of tyrannies;
understand Israel's struggle, from day one, to defend the Jewish people's
right to self-determination in a tough neighborhood; and grasp that Israel
seeks peace and a two-state solution, but its main problem today is the
absence of peace-seeking partners. 

But then again some of those observers missed earlier stories. 

They believed in Yasser Arafat long after it became clear that he was a
corrupt, duplicitous leader. 

They refused to see the change in Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, whom they
despised, when he came to power in 2001 and that later led him to withdraw
Israel from Gaza. 

They insist that the core of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is
settlements, thus putting the entire onus on Israel, when, in reality, the
crux has always been the right of the Jewish people to a state of their own.


And they won't give Prime Minister Netanyahu the benefit of the doubt,
though it will take someone with his credentials to persuade Israel to take
risky steps for peace, if peace is possible. 

Meanwhile, Americans see a country, Israel, seeking peace and, with
committed partners, as in the case of Egypt and Jordan, ready to pay the
territorial price. They also see a country faced with existential threats to
which there are no easy answers, no alluring "soft-power solutions." Hamas
seeks Israel's elimination. Its charter makes that amply clear. So does
Hezbollah. So does Iran. And the Palestinian Authority sends mixed messages
- peace one day, glorification of terrorists the next; compromise one day,
reconciliation with Hamas the next. 

On June 1st, Israel will mark ten years since a terrorist attack on a Tel
Aviv discotheque. Twenty-one Israeli youngsters were killed. Joschka
Fischer, then Germany's foreign minister, happened to be near the scene. He
rushed over and saw the carnage. He understood what Israel faces when
suicide bombers want to kill Israelis anywhere, anytime. 

No country desires peace more than Israel. No other country faces calls for
its destruction from another UN member state. No other country has its right
to defend itself so microscopically challenged. 

If any part of the world should understand Israel and its journey, it is
Europe. If any part of the world should understand the Jewish people's
vulnerability, it is Europe. And if any part of the word should understand
the need to support liberal, democratic societies as a foundation for peace,
it is Europe. 

David Harris is executive director of the American Jewish Committee (AJC).

For more information, visit
<http://www.kintera.org/TR.asp?a=jrKNJVODIfLLI8I&s=dqISJ4NDIcILJYOHItF&m=jmJ
4IlN0LnI2LoJ> ajc.org.

 



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