Josef Joffe: The Demons of Europe
January 28, 2004
It
takes little mental effort to discern the vast discrepancy between the
magnitude of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the amount of attention
lavished upon it. Let’s see: in the last five years or so, 3,500
Israelis and Palestinians have been lost in fighting and terror. In
the last five years in the ultramontane Caucasus, 40,000 Chechens and
Russians (mostly Chechens) have died in the ethnic-separatist war. And
in the same five-year period, 3.3 million Congolese have perished through
war, famine and mass killings. Even the numbers cannot express the hideous
nature of the latter two conflicts, which include systematic rape, torture,
looting and mass execution, crimes unknown among the Israelis and Palestinians.
Everyone knows
the basics of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but who can point
out on a map where the Chechens live or which groups are warring at
present in the Congo? The fact that few can reveals that the fixation
with Israel has little to do with humble concerns about human rights
and peace, as many claim it does, for if that were the case, urgency
and moral responsibility would direct their gaze elsewhere. To repeat,
one thousand times as many people have died in Congo than in Israel,
the West Bank and Gaza Strip. So what’s going on?
One explanation
is that since Arabs are being killed, it is only natural that this
would provoke the lasting enmity of the twenty-two Arab nations. But
Saddam Hussein killed more Arabs on some blood-soaked days than Israel
has in two decades of war and occupation, and yet Arabs marched in
support of him. Could it be a Muslim issue, the concern of 1.2 billion
Muslims ensuring a steady spotlight on Israel? In October 2003, former
Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohammed made a speech to the fifty-seven
members of the Organization of the Islamic Conference, calling for
solidarity in the struggle against the Jews. Muslims however are right
now clashing in a dozen places with nearly every religious group –
with Catholics in Philippines, African animists in Sudan, Orthodox
Christians in Russia and Serbia, Confucians in Xinjiang, Buddhists
in Thailand, Hindus in India and Bangladesh – and always with
bloody results. Why does he only mention Jews?
The outcry over
Jenin in April 2002 – based on a massacre that never even happened
– was more furious than the occasional condemnation of the Indian
pogroms that butchered hundreds of Muslims in February 2002, the rampaging
Russia army that had led to the deaths and displacement of tens of
thousands of Chechens since the mid-1990s, or the Serbian ethnic cleansing
of Albanian Muslims in 1999. No one can point to boisterous riots
in Arab capitals against India's leaders, Syrian-sponsored resolutions
condemning Russian “counterterrorism” in the United Nations,
or a single suicide bombing in Belgrade in revenge against the Serbs.
On the other hand, you can point to rallies in support of Saddam Hussein,
or against the United States, which has saved more Muslims that any
other country in recent history, defending them in Bosnia, Kosovo,
Somalia, Kuwait, Afghanistan and northern and southern Iraq. Despite
everything, Russian President Vladimir Putin was invited to the Organization
of the Islamic Conference.
Without reference
to bigotry, the obsession with Israel is difficult to explain, but
it can be done. However, without bigotry, the demonization of Israel
– Israel is fascist, colonialist, apartheid, imperialist, racist
– is simply unexplainable. It allows for only one conclusion:
the focus on Israel has less to do with what is happening than with
who is involved. That anti-Israel sentiments have roots in anti-Jewish
bigotry is systematically confirmed by polling. A recent poll, conducted
in nine European countries and released Monday, showed that about
30-40% have anti-Jewish views, and anti-Semitism and anti-Israelism
are positively correlated. Even if one acknowledges that Muslims and
Arabs clearly have an issue with Israel, what is Europe’s problem?
Why should Israel receive more attention than, say, the Congolese?
This is what the peerless Josef Joffe examines in the following brilliant
article from the latest issue of Commentary. Joffe, who received his
PhD at Harvard, is the chief editor of the Die Zeit, one of Germany’s
most important weeklies.
The Demons
of Europe by Josef Joffe
Commentary Magazine | January 2004
At the World
Economic Forum in Davos earlier this year, a demonstrator wearing
a mask of Donald Rumsfeld and an outsized yellow Star of David (inscribed
with the word "Sheriff") was accompanied by a cudgel-wielding
double of Ariel Sharon; the two of them were followed by a huge rendition
of the golden calf. The message? The United States is in thrall to
the Jews/Israelis; both are the acolytes of Mammon; and both represent
the avant-garde of a pernicious global capitalism.
This is the face
of the new anti-Semitism. Lacking certain murderous elements of the
classical type, it is nevertheless rife with some of its most ancient
motifs. What is new about it is the projection of these old fantasies
onto two new targets: Israel and America. Indeed, the United States
is an anti-Semitic fantasy come true: the Protocols of the Elders
of Zion in living color. Do not Jews, their first loyalty to Israel,
control the Congress, the Pentagon, the banks, the universities, and
the media? Having captured the "hyperpower," do they not
finally rule the world? That at least seems to be the consensus of
the Europeans, who in a recent EU poll declared Israel and the United
States, in that order, to be the greatest threats to world peace.
Yet the issue
is more complicated than the reconditioning of an old myth. Almost
every European critic of those two nations will vehemently reject
the charge of anti-Semitism or anti-Americanism. Since the behavior
of Israel and the United States always offers plenty to criticize,
the issue is not easy to resolve. What is the difference between criticism
and anti-Semitism or anti-Americanism? What, indeed, are the elements
of any "anti-ism"?
At all times
and in all places, there are usually five such elements. The first
is stereotyping: indulging in general statements that attribute negative
qualities to the target group as a whole. The second is denigration:
the ascription of moral inferiority to a whole group, traceable in
the last resort to an irreducibly evil nature. The third element is
obsession, the idee fixe that the target group is both omnipresent
and omni-causal — an invisible force that explains all misery,
whether dying cattle or failing businesses. The fourth step is demonization.
Here the key theme is conspiracy: thus, Jews want to sully our racial
purity, or subvert our sacred traditions or, above all, to achieve
domination. Finally comes the determination to seek an end to troubles
by eliminating the alleged source of torment, be it by exclusion,
extrusion, or annihilation.
In polite Western
society, it is infra dig (beneath one's dignity) to say: "Yes,
I hate the Jews." Not so, "I hate Sharon" or "Israelis
behave like Nazis." At this juncture, one begins to muse about
displacement, about the human habit to clobber one object while actually
targeting another, the other being usually protected by fearsome power,
whether symbolic or real. Lashing out at an Israeli leader does not
risk the raised eyebrows that demonizing his people, let alone Jews
as such, would do in a post-racist age.
How then, can
one tell the difference between criticism and "anti-ism"?
One test is language. Take this statement: "Demolishing the houses
of the families of terrorists is morally wrong because it imputes
guilt by association, and politically wrong because it pushes more
people into the arms of Hamas." Such a statement is neither anti-Israel
nor anti-Semitic; it might even be correct. By contrast, "the
Israelis are latter-day Nazis who want to drive the Palestinians from
their land in order to realize an imperialist biblical dream"
inhabits a very different order of discourse, ascribing evil to an
entire collective and, in its equation of Israelis and Nazis, revealing
an obsessive need for moral denigration. In our era, the word "Nazi"
itself stands for boundless evil. To apply the label to Jews or Israelis
is to inflict maximal moral damage on them.
A second test
is the test of selectivity. If it is always Israel that is the target
of indignation or incrimination, but not Russia's war against Chechnya
with about 60,000 dead, China's bloody repression of Tibetans and
Muslims, tribal genocide in Central Africa, or the persecution of
whites in Zimbabwe, then we are in the presence of a double standard.
This strengthens the presupposition of anti-Israelism, if not of anti-Semitism.[1]
Indisputably,
Israel has assumed a special place in contemporary demonology. At
the more extreme end, Israelis have been characterized as oppressors
and colonizers, as arrogant settlers and crazed religious fanatics,
as Nazi-like killers of women and children. In this sense, Israel
has become an obsession that cannot be explained away by recourse
to anti-colonialism, a standard fixture of the post-1960's Western
mind. Nor can the Western liberal habit of siding with the underdog
explain why the Russian war against Chechnya has attracted only perfunctory
condemnation and French interventions in Africa almost none while
an Israeli retaliatory incursion into the West Bank city of Jenin
in 2002 should have been branded instantly as a "massacre"
of "thousands" before the facts were in (the facts being
that 24 Israeli soldiers died along with 52 Palestinians, mostly combatants).
As in all cases of anti-ism, it was the prejudice that selected the
facts, not the facts that informed the judgment.
Nor can the opprobrium
attaching to Israel be explained in terms of the Palestinians' noble
cause of liberation and statehood. For neither the means nor the end
is noble: suicide bombs seek to murder as many civilians as possible,
while the noble cause itself is articulated in terms of politicide
— i.e., the elimination of the state of Israel. Militarily,
the Palestinians are the weaker party, but their ultimate objective
remains a total one, whether expressed directly by Hamas and Hizballah
and Islamic Jihad or indirectly by PLO officials when speaking to
kindred audiences. That these cold facts are virtually ignored in
European discourse is deeply suggestive of an old obsession.
The new obsession
might be called "elimination-lite." If the anti-Semitism
of yore sought to get rid of the Jews, either physically or by means
of their complete assimilation, the "lite" version holds
that if one could only weaken and push back Israel, only somehow force
Israel to retract its occupation-cum-settlements, then, presto, "the"
Middle East conflict would be solved. Less reductionism — that
is, less fixation on single causes — would reveal a larger set
of problems and a wider tally of "root causes." These would
include the many dysfunctional elements of Arab political reality
that are unrelated to the Palestinian issue, including hegemonial
strife among shifting contenders, barely suppressed civil war between
believers and secularists (and between one sort of believer and others,
e.g., Sunni and Shiite), failed economies that offer no future to
millions of young people, minimal interaction with other Arab economies,
severely rationed political participation, a culture inhospitable
to introspection, blatant inequalities between the sexes and among
sects and classes.
Is all of this
Israel's fault, too? Propinquity to the "Zionist entity"
and the dynamics of regional enmity might be invoked to help explain
the dynastic dictatorship of Syria; it cannot explain the mayhem in
faraway Algeria. Adducing Israeli behavior in the occupied territories,
brutal as it sometimes is, cannot explicate the sheer hatred directed
against leaders like Ariel Sharon, the moral indignation directed
against Israel but rarely against Palestinian terrorists, the reflexively
one-sided apportionment of blame when there is so much blame to pass
around.
But if Israel
is not a "shitty little country" (in the words of a French
ambassador at the Court of St. James), it is considered somehow inherently
guilty — as Jews were seen to be inherently guilty through the
ages. Hence, terror against Israeli civilians, even if briefly condemned,
is placed in the context of Israeli conquest and oppression and so
alleged to call for a "deeper" understanding. In fact, the
higher the toll, the greater terrorism's validation in terms of the
injustice and despair that are supposedly driving it. Thus, softly-softly,
does murder spell out its own moral justification. Nietzsche would
clap his hands in delight over this transvaluation of values, which
ascribes moral worth to the most reprehensible of deeds: the massacre
of innocents.
How has
Israel come to be seen as the source of all misery? Why the denigration?
The route to anti-ism is not a straight and narrow one. A cynical
insight has been ascribed to the Israeli psychiatrist Zvi Rex: "The
Germans will never forgive the Jews for Auschwitz." Like the
survivors of the Holocaust, the state of the Jews is a constant reminder
of the moral failure not only of Germany, but of Europe as a whole.
The Germans did
it, and Europe either connived or looked on — with some notable
counter-examples like Denmark and those many individuals elsewhere
who risked their lives for their Jewish compatriots. To consult Freud
again, moral surrender to evil creates an irrepressible urge to shift
blame from perpetrators and bystanders to victims and their heirs.
The psychic mechanism goes like this: if the Jews could be shown to
behave like Nazis, they would no longer have a special moral claim
on us; if they are as bad as our forefathers, we can unshoulder our
own inherited burden of guilt.
Add to
this the culpability felt by the French over Vichy and colonial repression
in Algeria, by the Belgians over their bloody reign in the Congo,
by the Spaniards, Italians, and Portuguese over their fascist pasts,
by the Dutch over their (carefully concealed) collaboration with the
Nazis, by the Swedes and the Swiss over their "pro-German neutrality,"
and there are plenty of incubated guilt feelings to spread around.
Clearly, Israel delivers an excellent canvas for the projection of
blame. When a former government minister, Nobert Blum, calls Israel's
anti-terror strategy a "Vernichtungsfeldzug" against the
Palestinians, a war of annihilation, using a term normally applied
to the Nazi war against the Jews and other "subhumans" in
the East, the message of his subconscious rings out loud and clear.
Thus, not so softly-softly, are words forged into weapons of self-rehabilitation.
Nor is Germany
the only player in this game. Much of Western Europe has drawn its
post-Holocaust identity from the rejection of the darkest part of
the Continent's proud history. The battle cry of postwar Europe is
"Never Again!," as Alain Finkielkraut has put it: a "no"
to fuehrers, duces, and caudillos, to colonialism, conquest, and discrimination
against the "Other." To regain moral stature, Europeans
have turned anti-fascism into a doctrine of worldly transcendence,
with a secular decalogue that reads, in part: thou shalt not pray
to the discredited gods of nationalism; thou shalt not practice power
politics; thou shalt relinquish sovereignty and rejoice in cooperation.
From this moral stand it is but a short, tricky step to redemption's
darker side. Do not the Israelis, of all people, behave in the evil
ways we have transcended? Well, then, are we not better than those
who so gratingly remind us of our unworthy past?
This is not anti-Semitism,
but it is a derivative phenomenon. The inherited moral burden cries
out for projection, and Israel, fighting for its just cause with sometimes
unjust means but with far more restraint than Russia against the Chechnyans
or Algeria against its Islamists, makes for a perfect target. Vilification
spells moral relief because it redresses the moral balance —
and so the verdict against Israel has to be "guilty."
But the story
does not end here. Recall Jose Bove, the French foe of globalization
who in 1999 led a "deconstructivist" mob against a McDonald's
to protest what that company was doing to his country's culinary culture.
In March 2002, this same Bove showed up in Ramallah, denouncing Israel
and declaiming his support for Yasir Arafat, whose headquarters was
surrounded by Israeli tanks. Never mind that the Israeli army had
not just dropped in for a little oppression but rather to defend against
mounting terrorist attacks. What the scene suggested was that Arafat's
cause was Bove's cause. Here was a spokesman of the anti-globalization
movement conflating globalization with Americanization (McDonald's)
and extending his loathing of both to Israel.
The routine pairing
of Israel and America is surely the most interesting new motif in
our old story, and has been well dissected by Natan Sharansky in these
pages.[2] How to interpret it? Again, one must beware of equating
criticism with anti-ism and instead look for the classic telltale
signs. They are there in abundance.
Stereotyping
and denigration. The indictment of the United States comes in three
parts. First, America is morally flawed. It executes its own people,
and it likes to bomb other people. It is the land of intolerant fundamentalist
religion. Selfish and self-absorbed, it refuses to ratify the International
Criminal Court or agreements to protect the environment. It is "Dirty
Harry" and "Globocop" rolled into one — an irresponsible
and arrogant citizen of the world.
Second, America
is socially retrograde: it is the fountainhead of a "predatory
capitalism" (according to a former German chancellor) that denies
social services to those who need them most. Instead of bettering
the lot of its darker-skinned minorities, it shunts millions of them
into prison. America accepts, nay, admires gross income inequalities
and defies the claims of social justice.
Finally, America
is culturally inferior. It gorges itself on fast food, wallows in
tawdry mass entertainment, starves the arts, and prays only to one
god, which is Mammon. It sacrifices the best of culture to pap and
pop. In matters sexual, America is both prurient and prudish. It is
a society where Europe's finest values — solidarity and community,
taste and manners — are ground down by rampant individualism.
Demonization
and obsession. The best shorthand statement under this heading is
a cartoon on a Jordanian website in April 2002 that showed a jeep-like
SUV, a pack of cigarettes with a Marlboro design, a can of Coca-Cola,
and a hamburger — all dripping with blood. These, the cartoon
insinuates, are the weapons that drive America's quest for global
domination. They are meant to seduce, but the blood with which they
are saturated symbolizes violent imposition. Yield to the seduction,
and the price will be the loss of your own culture, dignity, and power.
Like any proper
target of anti-ism, America is seen as omnipotent and omni-causal.
America's is the hand that pulls all strings. The U.S. is the cause
of poverty, despotism, and exploitation in the third world. Like any
target of anti-ism, the U.S gets it coming and going: it is a threat
to peace when it uses its fearsome power (Iraq) and a traitor to humanity
when it does not (Rwanda as well as Bosnia/Kosovo before the bombing
campaign).
The similarities
with anti-Semitism are hard to escape. Like Jews, Americans are selfish
and arrogant. Like Jews, they are in thrall to a fundamentalist religion
that renders them self-righteous and dangerous. As classical anti-Semitism
opposes the loving kindness of the New Testament to the vengeful God
of the Old, rapidly de-Christianizing Europe likes to contrast its
secular-humanist ethos with the harsh Calvinism of America. If the
Jews bestride the world as the "Chosen People," Americans
claim to live in "God's Own Country" while arrogating unto
themselves, as a favorite anti-Bushism has it, a "divine mission."
Another mainstay
of the anti-Semitic faith, anti-capitalism, has likewise passed smoothly
from the Jews to the United States. Like Jews, Americans are money-grubbers
who know only the value of money, and the worth of nothing. Like Jews,
Americans are motivated only by profit. Relentlessly competitive ("pushy"),
they are the solvents of social justice as they are of every worthy
tradition. If the empire of international Jewry was built on finance
and trade, America's is built on a "globalization" that
exploits the helpless and kills jobs.
Here conspiracy
rears its head. Again like the Jews, America is the mastermind extraordinaire,
its hand behind every plot, even the immolation of the World Trade
Center; in 2003, a half-dozen books on this theme became bestsellers
in France and Germany. Echoing a classic indictment of "World
Jewry," a poster during an anti-Bush demonstration in Berlin
in 2002 read: "Stop Bush's Grab for Global Power!"
And so, the remedy:
extrusion. The most murderous variant is al Qaeda's: kill Americans
and Jews, expel the new "crusaders" from Araby, and our
soil will be holy, the umma whole again. ("Seeking to kill Americans
and Jews everywhere in the world," Osama bin Laden exhorted Muslims,
"is one of the greatest duties, and the good deed most preferred
by Allah.") Elsewhere, the impulse is not physical elimination
but pushback, elimination-lite.
The watchword
is "anti-hegemonism." America must be repelled because it
is the global steamroller that flattens community and solidarity,
leaving behind a few rich winners and many poor losers. America is
also the great temptress that seduces the rest of the world's children
into wolfing down fast food and watching Hollywood violence. Accordingly,
the world must resist the hyperpower-turned-empire by going instead
for "self-assertion" and "multipolarity" —
shibboleths for containing and defanging the American behemoth.
Not only is there
a striking family resemblance between anti-Israelism and anti-Americanism,
but the two are routinely conjoined in the minds and in the rhetoric
of those obsessed with them. Of course, America as "Great Satan"
and Israel as "Little Satan" (note the religious language)
are metaphors as old as the Khomeinist revolution of 1979. But the
pairing of the two Satans is no longer just an Islamic affair. At
the anti-Bush demonstrations in Berlin in May 2002, no accompanying
posters were held up against Russian or Chinese leaders, let alone
against Saddam Hussein, but plenty against Ariel Sharon — as
"oppressor," "warmonger," and "state terrorist."
Why trundle out Sharon unless to suggest that the enemy was both America
and Israel?
Another regular
occurrence is the application of Nazi imagery to both America and
Israel. At demonstrations against the Iraq war last year, one German
poster showed an obviously Jewish figure setting the world aflame.
Another proclaimed: "USA–Third Reich, Both Alike"
(USA–Drittes Reich, Ihr seid so gleich). Still another stated:
"One Hitler Is Enough" (the unspoken message being, Bush
equals Hitler). To top them all, a placard read: "Remember Nuremberg,
Mr. Bush: Death by Hanging." Franz Alt, a German author and TV
moderator, denouncing Bush as the "greatest enemy of mankind,"
seemed to be echoing the old Nazi slogan: "Die Juden sind unser
Ungluck — the Jews are our misfortune."
Still, similarities
are not sameness, and parallels are not proof. What are the psychic
compulsions that turn Israel and the U.S. into joint targets of hatred
and contempt? The simplest answer is that both of these two outriggers
of the Occident are different from the rest of the West — different
in the same way — and differences, especially when flanked by
assertiveness and achievement, do not for fondness make.
To my mind, these
differences come in a foursome, of which the first component is power.
Specifically, Israel and the United States are the most advanced and
powerful players in their respective neighborhoods — Israel
in its region, the United States on the global beat. Unvanquished
in war, they possess armies unmatched by any of their rivals. America's
economy is the world's largest, its technology the world's most sophisticated.
The Israeli economy outperforms those of its four Arab neighbors combined.
In some technology sectors, like avionics, Israel surpasses even the
major powers of Europe. America's top universities are the world's
best, and whereas the Arab world boasts not a single true research
university, Israel has seven. If America is Gulliver unbound, Israel
is a constant and grating reminder of Arab failure.
We need not invoke
Freud to infer that success breeds envy and resentment. The indignation
is compounded by the rampant modernity both countries epitomize. Relentless
change, inflicted from outside, does not sit well with European society,
let alone with Arab societies. The European dispensation favors social
and economic protection, while the Arab model seems suspended among
various reactionary Utopias ranging from state socialism to Islamism.
The unconscious logic goes like this: modernization is Americanization,
and both have found their most faithful disciple in Israel.
The second element
has to do with identity. Compared with continental Europe, the U.S.
and Israel stand out for their strong sense of nationhood. For all
their actual multiculturalism — indeed, both the U.S. and Israel
are ethnic microcosms of the world — these two countries share
a keen sense of self. They know who they are, and what they want to
be. They define themselves in terms not of ethnicity but of ideology
— novus ordo seclorum, Zionism — that transcends tribe
and class (though not, in Israel's case, religion) and is ultimately
rooted in founding documents like both countries' declarations of
independence. Both of their national myths are written in the language
of salvation. Indeed, the Puritans, seeking to build a "new Jerusalem"
in a "promised land," consciously patterned their own flight
from England on the biblical exodus from Egypt. America may be the
most "Jewish" nation in the Christian world.
Compare this
sense of nationhood with the mindset of Western Europe's mature democracies.
The polities extending from Italy via Germany and the Low Countries
through Scandinavia may already have passed into post-nationalism.
The European Union is fitfully undoing national sovereignty without
providing its citizens with a common identity. "Europe"
is still a matter of practicality, not of pride. As a work in progress,
it lacks the underpinning of emotional attachment. Europeans become
all wound up when their own country's soccer team wins or loses, but
the fierce nationalism that once drove millions into the trenches
of two world wars has evaporated, and with it has gone the thirst
to identify oneself with a glorious national past or with heart-stirring
national traditions.
With a strong
sense of national identity comes, typically, a sense of national purpose
and the determination if necessary to back it up with force; this
is the third element I would point to. Post-national Europe cherishes
its "civilian power," its attachment to international regimes
and institutions. Individual European armies are no longer repositories
of nationalism or career advancement, but organizations with about
as much social prestige as the post office. Europeans pride themselves
on having overcome the atavism of war in favor of compromise, cooperation,
and institutionalism. This self-perception imbues them with a sense
of moral superiority vis-a-vis the "yahoos" in Washington
and Jerusalem, who over the last 50 years have resorted to force more
frequently than any other Western nations.
Perhaps many
Europeans resent unconsciously what they no longer have — all
those qualities that once made them fierce and fearsome warriors.
Perhaps they resent these two nations in the Western family for doing
what they no longer can — or dare — do. And here is another
way in which both Israel and the U.S. offer an excellent canvas for
the projection of others' superior self-image. Do not the two countries
behave in the brutish ways we Europeans have at last unlearned? They
are Hobbes and Machiavelli, we are Kant and Rousseau. They insist
on war and domination, we on peace and community. And so, Europe's
conscience, forged in the cozy shelter of America's strategic might,
abounds with reassurance: we have frog-leaped the barbarians and landed
in history's moral avant-garde.
This is hardly
to deny the strong currents of post-nationalism that run through California's
Marin County, not to mention Tel Aviv's Sheinkin Street and the writings
of Israel's "post-Zionists." But along with the influences
of culture and psychology we must come back in the end to power and
politics — in short, to the positions of America and Israel
in the international system.
Israel will remain
a threatened polity, and the U.S. the world's number-one power, probably
for the rest of this century. These are the raw and irreducible facts
of international politics. Ehud Barak and Bill Clinton may have enjoyed
a better press than do George W. Bush and Ariel Sharon, but that merely
obscures the deeper realities. Both countries remain targets not only
for what they do, but also for what and where they are.
What they do
is sometimes unwise or nasty; where they are, in the international
scheme of things, can be changed only by sacrificing their exceptionalism
and the power needed to secure it. Without extraordinary strength
and the willingness to use it, Israel will not endure as a state among
those who deny it legitimacy, nor America as a Jeffersonian "empire
of liberty" seeking safety in the juste milieu of a democratizing
world.
No Western European
country has been attacked since 1945. No wonder, then, that the martial
instincts of the Europeans have faded along with their militaries
in the course of a seemingly perpetual peace. No wonder, then, that
they resent Israel and America as the reprobate children of the West.
But nations in harm's way cannot and will not soon evolve into Sweden
or Germany — not in the Hobbesian world of the Levant, and not
on the precarious perch of the "last remaining superpower."
By dint of what they are and what they have, America and Israel will
remain both targets and warriors.
The anatomy of
the international system, to borrow one last time from Freud, is destiny.
On post-nationalism, postmodernism, and the rest, where you sit is
where you stand. America and Israel are the outsiders — just
as Jews have been all the way into the 21st century. The question
yet to be decided, and on which everything hangs, is who will prevail.
[Footnotes]
[1] On the question
of whether Israel and the Jews are two sides of the same coin, I cannot
improve on Hillel Halkin's compelling argument in "The Return
of Anti-Semitism," COMMENTARY, February 2002. Suffice it to say
that to profess intense dislike for Israel while sparing the Jews
engenders such sharp verbal contradictions as inevitably to ring hollow.
[2] "On
Hating the Jews," November 2003.
Josef Joffe
is the editor of the German weekly newspaper Die Zeit and an associate
of the Olin Institute for Strategic Studies at Harvard.