understanding politics, considerations

Israel and Britain


December 16th, 2009 · Europe, Great Britain and Ireland, Islam, Israel and the Middle East, Judaism, Law and Legal Affairs, Media and Journalism, Religion, World Affairs

JERUSALEM — Rela­tions between Eng­land and Israel might not be as warm as one might think:

One of Britain’s most emi­nent his­to­ri­ans has assailed the country’s pol­icy towards Israel, ques­tion­ing why Queen Eliz­a­beth II has vis­ited a host of despotic regimes but has never made an offi­cial visit to the Holy Land.

Speak­ing at the Anglo-Israel Asso­ci­a­tion din­ner in cen­tral Lon­don last week, Andrew Roberts sug­gested that the For­eign Office had a de facto ban on royal vis­its to Israel.

The true rea­son of course, is that the FO [For­eign Office] has a ban on offi­cial royal vis­its to Israel, which is even more pow­er­ful for its being unwrit­ten and unac­knowl­edged,” he said. “As an act of dele­git­imiza­tion of Israel, this effec­tive boy­cott is quite as seri­ous as other sim­i­lar acts, such as the aca­d­e­mic boy­cott, and is the direct fault of the FO Arabists.”

Roberts, whose work includes biogra­phies of Churchill and Cham­ber­lain, as well as Hitler and Roo­sevelt and a look at the rela­tion­ship between Napoleon and Welling­ton, said that Britain had been at best “a fair-weather friend” to Israel.

I am not entirely sur­prised that for­eign min­istries — includ­ing the U.S. State Depart­ment in most admin­is­tra­tions — tend to be more Ara­bist than sym­pa­thetic to Israel. Inter­na­tional rela­tions is like a chess game, only per­haps three-dimensional and with hun­dreds of sides. It is realpoli­tik in its most-pure form. With the num­ber of Arab and Mus­lim coun­tries out­num­ber­ing Israel by dozens to one and since many of them have oil — a resource that can bring the West to its knees — the bias is at least an under­stand­able real­ity. (Con­versely, defense min­istries are gen­er­ally more sup­port­ive of Israel, for obvi­ous reasons.)

More­over, the United King­dom has a mixed his­tory with Israel in the recent past. After World War I, Britain gained con­trol of a large part of the Mid­dle East includ­ing the region known as Pales­tine. Over the next sev­eral decades, the coun­try had to deal with Zion­ists pur­su­ing inde­pen­dence — and some extreme fac­tions did things like bomb the King David Hotel – as well as an Arab pop­u­la­tion that became increas­ingly unruly and prone to riot­ing. Even­tu­ally, the United King­dom essen­tially threw up its hands and said the diplo­matic equiv­a­lent of, “Thank you, that’s enough, we’re sick of this. We’re going home.” (Remem­ber, the coun­try was also deal­ing with Mahatma Ghandi-led tur­moil in India at the time, and the post-World War II cost of empire was becom­ing too high.) After the British left, the Arabs in Pales­tine rejected a U.N. offer to par­ti­tion the land, the Jews declared an inde­pen­dent State of Israel, and the neigh­bor­ing, Arab coun­tries invaded. The rest is mod­ern, Mid­dle East history.

If present trends con­tinue, it is likely that rela­tions between Eng­land and Israel will only become worse. Anti-Semitism in Britain and else­where is increas­ing. (See here for a doc­u­men­tary by Chan­nel 4 in Eng­land.) A U.K. court has issued an arrest war­rant for for­mer For­eign Min­is­ter Tzipi Livni for Israel’s actions dur­ing the war with Gaza last year. The num­ber of extrem­ist Mus­lims in Britain is increas­ing. The trends present in a country’s pop­u­la­tion usu­ally fil­ter upwards towards the gov­ern­ment over time.

On a related issue, the author men­tioned in the arti­cle also report­edly made other com­ments that will hope­fully not fall on deaf ears:

Roberts, whose cur­rent book The Storm of War: A New His­tory of the Sec­ond World War reached No. 2 on the Sun­day Times best-seller list, also attacked those who accuse Israel of respond­ing “dis­pro­por­tion­ately” to provocation.

William Hague [a Con­ser­v­a­tive MP] called for Israel to adopt a pro­por­tion­ate response in its strug­gle with Hizbul­lah in Lebanon in 2006, as though pro­por­tion­ate responses ever won any vic­to­ries against fas­cists,” he said.

In the Sec­ond World War, the Luft­waffe killed 50,000 Britons in the Blitz, and the Allied response was to kill 600,000 Ger­mans — 12 times the num­ber and hardly a pro­por­tion­ate response, but one that con­tributed might­ily to vic­tory. Who are we there­fore to lec­ture the Israelis on how pro­por­tion­ate their responses should be?”

He then ques­tioned how Britain would respond to sim­i­lar provo­ca­tions faced by Israel.

Very often in Britain, espe­cially when faced with the over­whelm­ingly anti-Israeli bias that is endemic in our lib­eral media and the BBC, we fail to ask our­selves what we would do placed in the same position?

The pop­u­la­tion of the UK is 63 mil­lion — nine times that of Israel. In July 2006, to take one exam­ple entirely at ran­dom, Hizbul­lah crossed the bor­der of Lebanon into Israel and killed eight patrol­men and kid­napped two oth­ers, and that sum­mer fired 4,000 Katyusha rock­ets into Israel which killed a fur­ther 43 civilians.

Now, if we mul­ti­ply those num­bers by nine to get the British equiv­a­lent, just imag­ine what we would not do if a ter­ror­ist orga­ni­za­tion based as close as Calais were to fire 36,000 rock­ets into Sus­sex and Kent, killing 387 British civil­ians, after killing 72 British ser­vice­men in an ambush and cap­tur­ing a fur­ther 18?

I put it to you that there is absolutely no lengths to which our gov­ern­ment would not go to pro­tect British sub­jects under those cir­cum­stances, and quite right, too. So why should Israel be expected to behave any differently?”

Roberts is absolutely cor­rect. But I will go a step fur­ther: the phrase “pro­por­tion­ate response” in mil­i­tary terms does not mean what most peo­ple and jour­nal­ists think. (Dwight Eisen­hower, as Supreme Allied Com­man­der dur­ing World War II, was ulti­mately respon­si­ble for the fire­bomb­ing of the Ger­man city of Dres­den dur­ing World War II that killed many civil­ians. Should he have been tried later for war crimes?) More­over, Israel’s inten­tions in the war against Hamas were morally sound while those of the ter­ror­ist group were not.

Else­where: Isi Leibler writes that Europe has for­saken Israel.

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