| Ro Khanna’s car stopped near the West Bank village of Khirbet Zanuta |
But my appreciation ends there.
His professed support for Israel’s right to defend itself
amounts to little more than rhetoric, since he has repeatedly characterized
Israel’s actual efforts to defend itself after the brutal attack by Hamas on
October 7 - as genocide. And while he may not explicitly describe Israel as a
colonial entity, he nevertheless portrays it as a brutal occupier of
Palestinians on the West Bank, where, according to him, settlers routinely
terrorize Palestinians while the Netanyahu government either looks the other way
or tacitly encourages it.
And he is far from alone in making these accusations.
Last Sunday, Face the Nation host Margaret
Brennan interviewed Israel’s Kipa wearing ambassador to the United States, Dr.
Yechiel Leiter. She referred to an incident Congressman Khanna said happened to
him during his recent visit to the West Bank:
“There was... an incident with Ro Khanna, the congressman
from California, who said the vehicles he was in were stopped by Israeli
settlers, and then when the IDF showed up, they were on the side of the
settlers, not him.”
There are, unfortunately, a small number of extremist
settlers who have engaged in exactly the kind of conduct of which they are
accused. So Khanna’s account is not beyond the realm of possibility. Whenever
such incidents occur, they lend credence to the nefarious accustions of
Israel’s harshest critics in media. Outlets like the BBC and CNN. Those
organizations eagerly seize upon these incidents because they reinforce the
narrative they consistently promote.
But it is far too easy to blame a sitting prime minister who
supports the peaceful settlement movement for every criminal act committed by a
tiny minority of vigilantes. I am convinced that Prime Minister Netanyahu would
not approve of what allegedly happened to Congressman Khanna if it occurred as
described. That some members of his cabinet have expressed sympathy for
extremist settlers is a separate issue. One that deserves serious discussion,
but is beyond the scope of this post.
The real question is whether the incident happened as Khanna
described it and what the facts really are.
The media, however, largely accepted Khanna’s version
without question, consistent with its eagerness to portray Israel in the worst
possible light.
So what is Israel’s response…
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