The Truth About Israel and Christians
 
_Jonathan S. Tobin_ 
(http://www.commentarymagazine.com/author/jonathan-s-tobin/)  | 
_@tobincommentary_ (http://twitter.com/tobincommentary)  09.14.2014 
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After several days of furious commentary, Senator Ted Cruz’s decision to 
walk  out of a conference on the plight of Middle East Christians continues to 
sizzle.  _As I first wrote last Thursday_ 
(http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2014/09/11/jeers-for-cruz-and-the-reality-of-jew-hatred-christians-middle-e
ast/) , friends of  Israel praised him for telling those in attendance 
booing him off the stage that  if they wouldn’t stand with Israel, he wouldn’t 
stand with them. But the chorus  of criticism of Cruz has been getting 
louder with some conservatives weighing to  express their outrage at what they 
consider a cynical gesture that prioritized  the senator’s ties with the 
pro-Israel community over the plight of  Christians. 
In a follow-up post published here, _our Seth Mandel did a great job_ 
(http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2014/09/12/ted-cruz-idc-and-the-politics-of-sol
idarity/)  assessing  some of the day after commentary and in particular 
the hypocrisy of some  anti-Israel pundits who have suddenly discovered that, 
at least on this issue,  they no longer think it is wrong for people to 
making decisions about  politicians on the basis of their stands on the Middle 
East. Yet I think there  is still something more to be said about the way 
some people who ought to know  better are rationalizing the indefensible 
behavior of the In Defense of  Christians (IDC) group and criticizing Cruz for 
his 
principled stand. 
One of these that deserves some scrutiny is the New York Times’s  Ross 
Douthat who joins in the pile-on against Cruz i_n his most recent column_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/14/opinion/sunday/ross-douthat-the-middle-easts-fri
endless-christians.html?ref=opinion)  but attempts to do  so without 
echoing the invective or the clear anti-Israel bias of those who  write for, 
say, 
the American Conservative. Douthat acknowledges that  the unsavory ties of 
some of its supporters are a problem for IDC. But he was  critical of Cruz’s 
insistence on lecturing the group that instead of attacking  Israel, they 
should recognize that the Jewish state is the best, and perhaps the  only, 
friend they have in the Middle East. 
For Douthat, this obvious statement of truth—in a region where Christians 
are  universally treated as Dhimmi by Muslim regimes, Israel remains the only 
place  where freedom of religion is guaranteed for adherents of all faiths—
was a bridge  too far for Cruz. More to the point, he thinks supporters of 
Israel are showing  bad manners if not flawed strategy, by insisting that the 
cause of religious  tolerance in the Middle East must include the Jews and 
their embattled state  rather than merely treating the plight of Christians 
in isolation from the  broader conflicts of the region. 
Douthat writes in criticism of Cruz and his supporters: 
Israel is a rich, well-defended, nuclear-armed nation-state; its  
supporters, and especially its American Christian supporters, can afford to  
allow a 
population that’s none of the above to organize to save itself from  
outright extinction without also demanding applause for Israeli policy as the  
price of sympathy and support.
There are two flawed assumptions to be unpacked in this sentence. 
The first is that Israel is so strong and its position so unassailable that 
 its friends can afford to be complacent about the mainstreaming of allies 
of  terrorist groups—which is exactly what it seems that Cruz’s critics are 
 asking. 
The second is that the Islamist campaign to extinguish Christians and all  
other minority faiths in the Middle East can be resisted without the effort 
to  do the same to Israel also being defeated. 
It is, to put it mildly, a bit rich for a writer for the New York  Times, 
which has through both slanted news coverage and biased editorial  and op-ed 
pages, done its best to undermine Israel’s position, to demand that  friends 
of the Jewish state stand down in its defense. That Douthat, who is  
otherwise the most thoughtful columnist in the paper, has rarely, if ever,  
voiced 
any dissent from the paper’s prevailing orthodoxy on Israel may be a  
function of his interests and that of the other putative conservative in the  
employ of the Times opinion section, neither of whom are, as a rule,  all that 
interested in foreign policy (a stark contrast to the not so distant  past 
when non-liberal writers at the Times such as William Safire and  A.M. 
Rosenthal mounted repeated and spirited defenses of Israel to balance  the 
attacks 
against it from fellow columnists, editorial writers, and reporters  at the 
Grey Lady). But it is disappointing nonetheless. 
But leaving aside Douthat’s chutzpah, that he should be treating Israel’s  
position as unassailable at this time shows that his knowledge of the 
Middle  East really falls fall short of his normal sure footing on domestic  
and 
social issues. While I’m sure Christians in Iraq and Syria would gladly  
trade places with them, Israelis spent 50 days this summer dashing in and out 
of  bomb shelters as Hamas terrorists launched rockets aimed to kill and maim 
 civilians. Their army had to invade Gaza in order to demolish a vast 
network of  cross-border tunnels aimed at facilitating acts of mass terror. 
They 
watched in  horror as the streets of Europe were flooded with demonstrators 
denouncing  Israelis for defending themselves against Islamist butchers in 
terms that  recalled the worst excesses of the Nazi propaganda machine. And 
they also  witnessed an American administration—ostensibly Israel’s sole 
superpower  ally—doing its best to undermine Israel’s position, cutting off 
arms resupply  and leaving the strategic alliance at its lowest point in more 
than 20  years. 
Is this really a moment for Israel’s American supporters to put aside their 
 scruples about making common cause with a group that is compromised by 
allies of  those seeking to destroy Israel and to murder its population? 
Just as important, the notion that the fight to save Christians can be  
separated from that of Israel is a pernicious myth that should be debunked.  
Douthat believes exposing the existence of Jew haters in the ranks of those  
purporting to represent Middle East Christians is a mistake because it shows 
no  appreciation for the plight of Christians who face genocide. But by 
allying  themselves with those who wish to perpetrate genocide on the other 
significant  religious minority in the region, as some have repeatedly done in 
the last  century of conflict, they have flung away their best hope for a 
strategic  partner who could help them resist the Islamist tide. Religious 
persecution  cannot be stopped against one minority while hatred against 
another 
is  legitimized. As Seth wrote, Israel is already doing more to assist 
Christians  than Douthat or the anti-Zionists at the American Conservative who  
claim to be their friends. 
Today Christians are being slaughtered or forced to flee from Iraq and 
Syria  to the point where soon once great communities may be extinguished. But 
while we  rightly protest against this and lament such destruction, it is apt 
to also  recall that a generation ago, some Christians and their foreign 
friends either  assisted or stood by mutely while the same thing was happening 
to the once great  Jewish communities in the Arab and Muslim world. 
American Christians of every  denomination, including evangelicals and 
Catholics, 
are among the most faithful  friends of Israel today. But the refusal of 
Middle East Christians to befriend  the Zionist movement, even as it offered 
them the only possible counterforce in  the region to a hostile Muslim 
majority, was a historic error. That this error  is being repeated today is a 
tragedy for both sides. 
Let me repeat, as I wrote on Thursday and many times before that, that  
Americans have a duty to rise up and demand that Western governments pay  
attention to the plight of Middle East Christians and to, if necessary,  
intervene on their behalf. But the notion that this struggle can be conducted 
in  
isolation from the defense of Israel against the same forces seeking to wipe 
out  Christians is madness. That those who claim to care about these 
Christians  believe that politicians like Ted Cruz should check their support 
for 
Israel at  the door when discussing the Middle East is an indication of just 
how little  some of them understand the region as well as their cluelessness 
about the  rising tide of anti-Semitism sweeping the globe.

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