There is a school of thought particular to that New
Conservatism which decrees that any criticism of any action by the state of
Israel is not to be tolerated. Any upstanding Republican politician in the USA,
or aspiring Tory in the UK, must conform to this unwritten decree. Equally, anyone
breaking ranks is fair game for whatever abuse and merely adverse comment can
be mustered.
The enforcers of this doctrine range from the ranks of “think tanks” who instantly categorise
criticism as “hate speech” to
newspaper pundits to the websites and group blogs epitomised by Matt Drudge and
the disciples of Andrew Breitbart in the USA, and ConservativeHome and The
Commentator in the UK. The accent changes, but sadly, the originality of the
rhetoric does not.
One favourite target of the yah-boo boys is the deeply
subversive Guardian, where an opinion
posted on Comment Is Free is
instantly seized upon by the likes of the permanently humourless Robin Shepherd
and asserted to be editorial policy. Should the post be significantly
anti-Israel, the goons at CiF Watch will join in and invariably find the paper
to be anti-Semitic at the very least.
With that backdrop, Harriet Sherwood’s article posted
yesterday – “Israel
losing international support, says British ambassador” – will doubtless
have the usual suspects frothing as they denounce Alan Rusbridger for deviating
from the line that they would impose on him given half a chance. But the piece
is well worth reading, as is the reaction of the Israeli Government.
Matthew Gould, the new British ambassador to Israel, and the
first Jewish occupant of the post, has said in an interview for Channel 10 in
Israel “Support for Israel is starting to
erode and that's not about these people on the fringe who are shouting loudly
and calling for boycotts and all the rest of it. The interesting category are
those members of parliament in the middle, and in that group I see a shift”.
But in case anyone thought his tone was hostile, he added “Anyone who cares about Israel's standing in
the world should be concerned about the erosion of popular support”. This
is the message of a friend of Israel, who is relaying the concern of many over
lack of movement in negotiations with the Palestinians, along with settlement
expansion on the West Bank and movement restrictions.
And the reaction from an Israeli foreign ministry spokesman
was one of receptiveness: “diplomats
don't just make comments, they convey messages. We have taken good note”.
Sometimes your best friends are the ones who are prepared to tell you when all
is not as well as you believed. Far better to be thus informed, than deafened
by wall to wall ranting denunciation.
That is a lesson the
self appointed supporters of Israel on the right may never learn.
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