| Rahm Emanuel addressing an audience at Tel Aviv University |
Emanuel has made no secret of his apparent ambition to seek
the Democratic presidential nomination in 2028. Unlikely though that is to
happen, to have any chance of winning that nomination, he must align himself
with a Democratic Party whose increasingly influential progressive wing views
Israel as an international pariah led by ‘war criminal’ Benjamin Netanyahu,
whom they portray as beholden to extremist coalition partners and settler
violence.
Much of the anger, disgust, and venom directed at Israel by
the far left is expressed through the demonization of Netanyahu. They treat the
war in Gaza as “Netanyahu’s war,” making him personally responsible for every
civilian casualty. Their narrative assumes that had any other Israeli leader
been in power, the war would have been conducted differently and the civilian
death toll dramatically reduced.
That claim ignores reality. Israel’s political opposition
overwhelmingly supported the war’s objectives and the IDF’s military tactics
and strategy. They understood that Hamas had embedded its military
infrastructure within civilian neighborhoods, schools, hospitals, and mosques
precisely because civilian casualties would become propaganda victories. Israel
repeatedly warned civilians to evacuate targeted areas, saving countless lives.
Tragically, many civilians still died, but much of the world ignores Hamas’s
deliberate strategy of maximizing those deaths for political gain. Not to
mention exaggerating the number of civilian casualties
Israel’s opposition also understood that after October 7th,
eliminating Hamas’s military capability was essential to preventing future
massacres. Yet critics reduce the conflict to the simplistic claim that
Netanyahu intentionally targeted innocent civilians.
For many liberals, however, Netanyahu himself has become the
issue. They see him as arrogant, divisive, and willing to publicly challenge
American presidents, particularly Barack Obama over the Iran nuclear agreement.
Their hostility toward him has increasingly become hostility toward Israel
itself.
Emanuel attempts to strike a middle ground. He condemns
Hamas and acknowledges the atrocities of October 7 while simultaneously arguing
that Israel has become a pariah because of Netanyahu’s leadership. The
implication is clear: remove Netanyahu and Israel will once again regain the
respect of Democrats and much of Europe.
That premise is deeply flawed. I am tired of hearing demands
that Israel apologize for defending itself. I am tired of hearing that a
two-state solution is the only path to peace, despite decades of history
suggesting otherwise. I am weary of antisemitism masquerading as anti-Zionism
and of claims that Netanyahu somehow manipulated President Trump into
confronting Iran.
What disappoints me most is seeing someone like Rahm
Emanuel, once regarded as a strong supporter of Israel, now describe it as a
pariah state because of its elected leader…
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