August 24, 2012
This week a German doctor in Bavaria filed a criminal complaint against Rabbi David Goldberg.
Rabbi Goldberg's "crime"? He performs ritual circumcisions on Jewish male infants in accordance with Jewish law.
The doctor's complaint came shortly after a ruling by a court in Cologne outlawing the practice of male circumcision.
The
Austrians and the Swiss also took the ruling to heart and have banned
infant male circumcision in several hospitals in Switzerland as well as
in the Austrian state of Vorarlberg. Denmark and Scandinavian
governments are also considering limiting the practice of circumcision
which has constituted one of the foundational rituals of Judaism for
four thousand years.
Meanwhile, in Norway Dr.
Anne Lindboe has come up with the perfect way out of the artificial
crisis. Lindboe serves a Norway's ombudsman for children's rights. And
she proposes that we Jews just change our religion to satisfy
anti-Jewish sensitivities. She suggests we replace circumcision with "a
symbolic, nonsurgical ritual."
It's worth
mentioning that circumcision isn't the only Jewish ritual these
enlightened Europeans find objectionable. Sweden, Norway and Switzerland
have already banned kosher slaughter.
Attacking
circumcision isn't just a European fetish. The urge to curb Jewish
religious freedom has reached the US as well. Last year San Francisco's
Jewish Community Relations Council had to sue the city to strike a
measure from last November's ballot that would have banned circumcision
if passed. The measure's sponsor gathered the requisite 12,000
signatures to enter the proposition on the ballot. Circumcising males
under the age of 18 would have been classified as a misdemeanor
punishable by a $1,000 fine and up to a year in prison. Sponsors of the
measure distributed anti-Semitic materials depicting rabbis performing
circumcisions as villains.
The people involved
in banning or attempting to ban circumcision are not on the political
fringe of their societies. They are part of a leftist establishment.
They are doctors and lawyers, judges and politicians. This doesn't mean
that all their fellow leftists are anti-Semites. But it does mean the
political Left in the Western world feels comfortable keeping company
with anti-Semites.
This state of affairs is
even more striking in international affairs than in domestic politics.
On the international level the Left's readiness to rub elbows with
anti-Semites has reached critical levels.
While
the Europeans have long been happy to cater to the anti-Semitic whims
of the Islamic world, the escalation of the West's willingness to accept
anti-Semitism as a governing axiom in international affairs is nowhere
more apparent than in the Obama administration's foreign policy.
And
the American Left's willingness - particularly the American Jewish
Left's willingness - to cover up the administration's collusion with
anti- Semitic regimes at Israel's expense is higher today than ever
before.
A clear-cut example of both the Obama
administration's willingness to adhere to anti- Semitic policies of
anti-Semitic governments and the Left's willingness to defend this
bigoted behavior is the Obama administration's decision not to invite
Israel to participate in its new Global Counterterrorism Forum.
The
GCTF was founded with the stated aim of fostering international
cooperation in fighting terrorism. But for the Obama administration, it
was more important to make Turkish Prime Minister Recep Erdogan, who
supports the Hamas and Hezbollah terrorist groups, feel comfortable,
than it was to invite Israel to participate.
Not
only did the US exclude Israel, at the GCTF's meeting last month in
Spain, Maria Otero, the State Department's under secretary for civilian
security, democracy and human rights, seemed to embrace the Muslim
world's obscene claim that Israelis are not victims of terrorism because
terrorism against Israel isn't terrorism.
In
her speech, titled "Victims of Terrorism," Otero spoke of terror victims
in Jordan, Turkey, Pakistan, Uganda, Colombia, Northern Ireland,
Indonesia, India and the US. But she made no mention of Israeli terror
victims.
Rather than criticize the
administration for its decision to appease bigots at the expense of
their victim, American Jewish leftists have defended the administration.
Writing in The Atlantic, Zvika Kreiger, senior vice president of the
far-left S. Daniel Abraham Center for Middle East Peace, wrote that
allowing the Jewish state entry to the GCTF parley would have
"undermined the whole endeavor."
Kreiger
sympathetically quoted a State Department official who explained that
actually, by ostracizing Israel the administration was helping Israel.
The
source "reasoned the progress made by the organization would ultimately
better serve Israel's interests (not to mention those of the United
States) than would the symbolic benefits of including it in a group that
likely wouldn't accomplish anything. [Moreover]... once the
organization was up and running, and its agenda was established, they
could find ways to include Israel that would not be disruptive."
So
despite the fact that Israel is a major target of terrorism, and
despite the fact that many of the states the US invited to its forum
condone terrorism against Israel and support terrorist groups that
murder Israeli Jews, Israel is better off being excluded, because the
anti-Jewish governments invited by the Obama administration will somehow
totally change their perspective on anti-Jewish terrorism as long as
they don't have to suffer the irritation of sitting in the same room as
real-live representatives of the Jewish state.
THE
CYNICISM of the State Department official's statement to Kreiger is
only outpaced by Kreiger's stubborn refusal to acknowledge that
cynicism.
Kreiger's behavior makes sense. If he
acknowledges the bigoted nature of the Obama administration's policies
he will have to stop defending them.
To a
degree, Kreiger's willingness to defend and justify the Obama
administration's anti-Israel behavior parallels the behavior of Israelis
who argue against Israel unilaterally striking Iran's nuclear
facilities in order to delay the Iranian regime's acquisition of nuclear
weapons.
Since 2003, when Iran's nuclear
weapons program was first revealed to the world community, Iran's
leaders have succeeded in convincing world leaders that Israel is No. 1
on their target list. And so, the international debate about what a
nuclear-armed Iran will mean for the world has always followed the
Iranians' lead and centered on the dangers it would pose to Israel.
Israel's
leaders from then-prime minister Ariel Sharon down to the last
governmental spokesman have maintained that Iran's nuclear program
threatens the entire Free World. Sharon - like his leftist disciples
today - claimed that given the threat Iran's nuclear program constitutes
for global security, Israel has no reason to lead the global fight to
destroy Iran's nuclear weapons program. Indeed, Israeli leadership of
the campaign against Iran's nuclear program would cause some countries
to do nothing because they hate Israel even more than they fear Iran.
Like
his followers today, Sharon insisted that the US, as the leader of the
Free World, is responsible for preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear
weapons. And they are right. Iran's nuclear program does threaten global
security and Iran's nuclear program does threaten the US specifically.
Iranian dictator Ali Khamenei just ordered his troops to carry out
terror attacks against the US in retaliation for US moves to overthrow
Iran's Syrian puppet Bashar Assad. Iran was the principle sponsor of the
insurgency in Iraq and remains the principle supporter of the Taliban
in Afghanistan.
It's not that Israel's leaders
belittle the threat Iran's nuclear weapons program constitutes for
Israel. Across the spectrum on the Iran debate in Israel - from former
Mossad director Meir Dagan and President Shimon Peres on the Left to
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak on the
Right - everyone agrees that in light of the Iranian regime's religious
fanaticism and its millenarian belief that Armageddon will hearken the
coming of the Shi'ite messiah, Iran cannot be trusted not to use nuclear
weapons against Israel.
Everyone admits that
given Iran's open sponsorship of terrorism, it is a certainty that
terror groups would use the Iranian nuclear umbrella to massively expand
their terrorist war against Israel.
Just as
Dagan, Peres and their associates share Netanyahu's assessment of the
threat Iran's nuclear program poses for Israel, Netanyahu agrees with
their assessment that Israel's options for contending militarily with
Iran's nuclear program are limited and imperfect. No one argues that
Israel has a magic bullet to destroy Iran's nuclear project.
Netanyahu
and Barak have repeatedly warned that Israel has no perfect strike
option. They have also warned that a response from Iran and its proxies
in Syria and Lebanon to an Israeli strike will likely be harsh and
deadly. All they say is that it is better than the alternative of
Iranian acquisition of nuclear weapons.
The
doves agree with Netanyahu that a limited Israeli strike is better than
the alternative of a nuclear-armed Iran. They differ with Netanyahu on
only one issue: their assessment of the US's willingness to use military
force to prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear power.
Voicing
the doves' assessment of the Obama administration and Europe, this week
former commander of Military Intelligence Maj.-Gen. (res.) Aharon Zeevi
Farkash told NBC news, "I think Western leaders realize a nuclear Iran
is the No. 1 challenge facing the world."
Unfortunately,
Farkash is wrong. Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the US Joint
Chiefs of Staff, made this point earlier this week in an interview from
Afghanistan. There Dempsey said frankly, "Israel sees the Iranian threat
more seriously than the US sees it, because a nuclear Iran poses a
threat to Israel's very existence."
In other
words, Dempsey told us that Iran's cynical packaging of its nuclear
program as an anti-Israel initiative has worked. The Americans - and the
Europeans - believe that Iran's nuclear program is Israel's problem to
deal with. The Israelis are right that as the leader of the Free World
it is the US's responsibility to prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear
power. But as Dempsey's statement shows, the US is not interested in
fulfilling its responsibility.
Like the
Europeans, the Americans will only act when Iran forces them to do so.
And that means they will do nothing to prevent Iran from developing the
bomb. They will only move when Tehran has already crossed Israel off the
top of its target list.
Israeli opponents of
an Israeli strike against Iran don't want to believe that Americans are
capable of such cynicism. They would like to believe that the only
government capable of behaving cynically is their own. They want to
believe that the US - with its vastly superior military capabilities to
destroy Iran's nuclear program - will do the right thing and not leave
it to Israel - with its limited means - to take care of the problem for a
cynical world.
But just as Kreiger's defense
of the Obama administration's courtship of anti-Semites at Israel's
expense crosses the line separating naivete from willful,
bigotry-enabling blindness, so Peres, Dagan and their colleagues cross
the line. And it is not mere bigotry they are enabling.
Originally published in The Jerusalem Post.
No comments:
Post a Comment