Lovable
Bernie Whacks Israel
By Charles
Krauthammer
Washington Post
June 3, 2016
After all, he’s not going to win the nomination, so what
harm can he do? A major address at the party convention? A say in the vice
presidential selection? And who reads party platforms anyway?
Well, platforms may not immediately affect a particular
campaign. But they do express, quite literally, the party line, a written record
of its ideological trajectory.
Which is why two
of Sanders’ appointments to the 15-member platform committee are so
stunning. Professor Cornel West not only has called the Israeli prime minister a war
criminalbut openly supports the BDS movement (boycott, divestment and
sanctions), the most important attempt in the world to ostracize and
delegitimize Israel.
West is joined on the committee by the longtime
pro-Palestinian activist James Zogby. Together, reported
the New York Times, they “vowed to upend what they see as the party’s
lopsided support of Israel.”
This seems a gratuitous provocation. Sanders hardly made
Israel central to his campaign. He did call Israel’s response in the 2014 Gaza
war “disproportionate” and
said “we cannot continue to be one-sided.” But now Sanders seeks to
permanently alter — i.e., weaken — the relationship between the Democratic
Party and Israel, which has been close and supportive since Harry Truman
recognized the world’s only Jewish state when it declared independence in May
1948.
West doesn’t even pretend, as do some left-wing
“peace” groups, to be opposing Israeli policy in order to save it from
itself. He makes the simpler case that occupation is unconscionable oppression
and that until Israel abandons it, Israel deserves to be treated like
apartheid South Africa — anathematized, cut off, made to bleed
morally and economically. The Sanders appointees wish to bend the Democratic
platform to encourage such diminishment unless Israel redeems itself by
liberating Palestine.
This is an unusual argument for a Democratic platform
committee, largely because it is logically and morally perverse. Israel did in
fact follow such high-minded advice in 2005: It terminated its occupation and evacuated
Gaza. That earned it (temporary) praise from the West. And from the
Palestinians? Not peace, not reconciliation, not normal relations but a decade
of unrelenting
terrorism and war.
Israel is now being asked — pressured — to repeat that
same disaster on the West Bank. That would bring the terror war, quite fatally,
to the very heart of Israel — Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Ben Gurion Airport. Israel
is now excoriated for declining that invitation to national suicide.
It is ironic that the most successful Jewish presidential
candidate ever should be pushing the anti-Israel case. But perhaps not
surprising considering Sanders’ ideological roots. He is old left — not the
post-1960s, countercultural New Left. Why, the man honeymooned in
the Soviet Union — not such fashionably cool communist paradises as
Sandinista Nicaragua where Bill de Blasio went to work for the cause or
Castro’s Cuba where
de Blasio honeymooned. (Do lefties all use the same wedding planner?)
For the old left, Israel was simply an outpost of Western
imperialism, Middle East division. To this day, the leftist consensus, most
powerful in Europe (which remains Sanders’ ideological lodestar), holds that
Israeli perfidy demands purification by Western chastisement.
Chastisement there will be at the Democratic platform
committee. To be sure, Sanders didn’t create the Democrats’ drift away from
Israel. It was already visible at
the 2012 convention with the loud resistance to recognizing Jerusalem
as Israel’s capital. But Sanders is consciously abetting it.
The millennials who worship him and pack his rallies
haven’t lived through — and don’t know — the history of Israel’s
half-century of peace offers. They don’t know of the multiple times Israel has
offered to divide the land with an independent Palestinian state and been
rebuffed.
Sanders hasn’t lifted a finger to tell them. The lovable
old guy with the big crowds and no chance at the nomination is hardly taken
seriously (except by Hillary Clinton, whose inability to put him away reveals
daily her profound political weakness). But when he makes platform appointees
that show he does take certain things quite seriously, like undermining the
U.S.-Israeli relationship, you might want to reconsider your equanimity about
the magical mystery tour. It looks like Woodstock, but there is steel inside the
psychedelic glove.