Commentary
 
Obama’s Blind Spot About  Anti-Semitism
 
_Jonathan S. Tobin_ 
(https://www.commentarymagazine.com/author/jonathan-s-tobin/)  
Feb 9,  2015


 
There has been a great deal of justified criticism about President Obama’s  
unwillingness to respond to terrorist outrages with the sort of moral 
leadership  that can rally the West to fight back. His comments at last week’s 
National  Prayer Breakfast in which he sought to create a false moral 
equivalency between  ISIS’s horrific burning alive of a captured Jordanian 
pilot and 
the Christian  West’s past sins during the Inquisition and even the 
Crusades have been rightly  blasted for his tone-deaf approach to terrorism. 
The 
president seems so  mired in his deep ambivalence about the West’s role in 
world history that he is  unable to play his part as leader of the free world 
in what is, like it or not,  a life-and-death struggle against truly evil 
forces. It is also revealed in his  administration’s refusal to call Islamist 
terrorism by that name. But just as  troubling is his unwillingness to 
address one of the primary characteristics of  this brand of terror: 
anti-Semitism. _In  an interview with Vox’s Matthew Yglesias_ 
(http://www.vox.com/a/barack-obama-interview-vox-conversation/obama-foreign-policy-transcript)
 , he 
described the terror  attack on a Paris kosher market as a “random” event 
rather than an act of murder  motivated by Jew hatred. Though it won’t get the 
same attention as his  outrageous speech last week, it gives us just as much 
insight into the  president’s foreign-policy mindset. 
It should be recalled that in the immediate aftermath of the shootings at 
the  Hyper Cacher market by killers associated with those who perpetrated the 
 Charlie Hebdo massacre days earlier, _President  Obama also refused to 
call it an act of anti-Semitism._ 
(https://www.commentarymagazine.com/2015/01/09/obama-called-paris-market-attack-anti-semitism-france-terrorism/)
  That 
was, in its  own way, as shocking as the president’s decision to not send any 
high-ranking  U.S. official to the Paris unity march that took place to 
protest the murders or  to go himself as did many other Western leaders. 
But official American statements that did mention anti-Semitism and the  
subsequent rally boycott overtook this controversy. The kerfuffle over that  
initial comment was soon forgotten. But the president’s return to this topic 
has  brought that statement back to mind. 
His Vox comments are, in fact, far worse than his initial reaction which 
was  more a matter of omission than a conscious twisting of events. Here’s 
what the  president said in response to a question about whether the media is 
blowing  terrorist incidents out of proportion: 
It is entirely legitimate for the American people to be deeply concerned  
when you’ve got a bunch of violent, vicious zealots who behead people or  
randomly shoot a bunch of folks in a deli in Paris.
Let’s first note that his characterization of the assailants again omits  
their Islamist loyalties and the fact that religion was the motivating factor 
 for their crime. This is consistent with administration policy that seeks 
to  cleanse ISIS, al-Qaeda, or other Islamists of any connection with the 
Muslim  faith. This is absurd not just because it is wrong. It also puts Obama 
in the  position of trying to play the pope of Islam who can decide who is 
or is not a  real Muslim, a responsibility that no American president should 
try to  usurp. 
But it is also significant that once again the president chooses to treat a 
 deliberate targeting of a Jewish business filled with Jewish customers as  
something that is random rather than an overt act of anti-Semitism. Doing 
so  once might be excused as an oversight. The second time makes it a pattern 
that  can’t be ignored. 
This is a peculiar talking point especially since the increase of  
anti-Semitism in Europe with violent incidents going up every year is something 
 
that even the Obama State Department has dubbed a “rising tide” of hate. 
Why does the president have such a blind spot when it comes to 
anti-Semitism?  His critics will jump to conclusions that will tell us more 
about their 
views of  Obama than about his thinking. But suffice it to say that this is 
a president  who finds it hard to focus on the siege of Jews in Europe or of 
the State of  Israel in the Middle East. Nor can it be entirely 
coincidental that a president  who treats Israeli self-defense and concerns for 
its 
security as a bothersome  irritant to his foreign policy or seeks to blame the 
Jewish state’s leaders for  obstructing a peace process that was actually 
blown up by the Palestinians would  have a blind spot about anti-Semitism. 
To address the spread of violent anti-Semitism in Europe would require the  
administration to connect the dots between slaughters such as the ones that 
took  place at Charlie Hebdo and Hyper Cacher and the hate spread by the  
Islamists of Iran with whom Obama is so keen on negotiating a new détente. To 
 put these awful events in a context that properly labels them an outbreak 
of  violent Muslim Jew-hatred would require the administration to rethink 
its  policies toward Israel as well as Iran. And that is something this 
president has  no intention of doing. 
You can’t defeat an enemy that you refuse to call by his right name. That’
s  why ignoring Islamism and calling ISIS and the Paris killers mere “zealots
” or  “extremists” not only misses the point but also hampers the West’s 
ability to  resist them. By the same token, the omission of any discussion 
of anti-Semitism  about an event that was an unambiguous act of Jew hatred 
similarly undermines  the effort to strike back at such atrocities. When a 
president calls one of the  more egregious acts of anti-Semitism in recent ye
ars a mere “random” shooting,  it trivializes the victims and places the U.S. 
on the wrong side of the moral  divide. In doing so, Obama does the nation 
and the cause of freedom a grave  disservice.

-- 
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