A British columnist in the Telegraph points out that Israel was not always hated in an essay that says that as Israel goes, so goes the West:
But there’s also an important difference from Rome: the purpose of victory has been more about security than conquest for its own sake. Israeli politics for the past dozen years has been the attempt to reconcile extrication from territory with security. That is what Sharon thinks about all the time, as did his Labour predecessors, Yitzhak Rabin and Ehud Barak.
In the history of the West, such a narrative used to command fascination and respect. Many could apply it to their own people. British people whose convict cousins had built Australia out of their barren exile could understand; so could Americans, who had overcome hostile terrain and hostile inhabitants, and forged a mighty nation. So could any country formed in adversity, particularly, perhaps, a Protestant one – with its idea of divinely supported national destiny and its natural sympathy for the people first chosen by God. The sympathy was made stronger by the fact that the new state was robust in its legal and political institutions, free in its press and universities – a noisy democracy.
Anti-imperialists and the Left also found much to admire. They admired people whose pioneer spirit kept them equal, who often lived communally, who fled the persecution of old societies to build simpler, better ones. If you read Bernard Donoughue’s diaries, just published, of his life as an adviser to Harold Wilson in the 1970s (a much better picture of what prime ministers are like than Sir Christopher Meyer’s self-regarding effort), one difference between then and now that hits you hard is Donoughue’s (and Wilson’s) firm belief that the cause of Israel is the cause of people who wish to be free, and that its enemies are the old, repressive establishments.
This one gets a RIF (read-in-full) recommendation.
Belated hat tip: Joel G.
Every now and then an intelligent Brit pops up leading me to feel that there are parts of the U.K. that are not dhimmified.
Melanie Phillips is one. She’s like the Oriana Fallaci of the UK.
http://www.melaniephillips.com
I’ve said this before: the Left turned on Israel when Kibbutzim became Moshavim, and the government scaled back Socialism to create a working economy.
Now, I don’t think many individual leftists had this specific conversion of thought, but it does track pretty closely with the attitudes of the left as a whole.
Well, part of this is Israel’s own doing. It had the sympathy of progressives everywhere but in 1967 forfeited that sympathy, ceasing to be the gallant little underdog: it won the Six Days War.
If it had lost, even to this day its name would be praised in memory by the left. But they managed to survive and so, say, the Episcopalians and Presbyterians and progressives generally had to find someone else to feel sorry for.
Thanks for the hat tip.