Western virtue signaling goes hypersonic over Israel
By: Rachel Marsden
With all the rhetoric bluster and warmongering coming from Washington and Brussels, it’s clear that peace isn’t their first priority
“Israel has the right to defend itself – today and in the days to come. The
European Union stands with Israel,” tweeted European Commission President Ursula
von der Leyen, effectively blessing a carte blanche response by the notoriously
measured and restrained Israeli leadership in response to the Hamas attacks.
“Who do you think you are? You’re unelected, and have no authority to determine
EU foreign policy, which is set by @EUCouncil,” replied Irish MEP Clare Daly.
“Europe does NOT ‘stand with Israel’. We stand for peace. You do not speak for
us. If you’ve nothing constructive to say, and you clearly don't, shut up.”
In a single tweet, von der Leyen managed to position all of Europe as more
militant than even the editorial staff of one of Israel’s main national
newspapers, Haaretz, which placed blame for the attacks squarely on Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, accusing him of “annexation and
dispossession” which “openly ignored the existence and rights of Palestinians.”
The implication is that no action occurs in a vacuum absent the risk of sparking
a reaction.
The danger of Europe’s unelected Queen Ursula unilaterally launching hypersonic
virtue signaling missiles in a knee-jerk emotional response is that it can’t
possibly substitute for foreign policy decided in more sobering moments. Yet
these days, more often than not, it’s the only kind of foreign policy we get, on
everything from Israel to Ukraine.
In yet another example of symbolism getting ahead of policy pragmatism, the EU
announced withdrawal of its support for Palestine … before walking back the move
just hours later. On Monday, Israel’s defense minister announced that the IDF
was going to blockade Gaza even more than usual by preventing any entry of
water, food, fuel, and electricity. And just a couple hours later, EU
Neighborhood and Enlargement Commissioner Oliver Varhelyi said the bloc was
joining the cause – by withholding its humanitarian funding for the Palestinian
people. Germany and Austria were the first to get the ball rolling on funding
withdrawal. However, a few hours later, the EU aid freeze was reversed by the
bloc’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, after an apparent epiphany that it
would only end up “punishing all the Palestinian people” and would have “only
further emboldened terrorists.” There’s no way Brussels may have been
inadvertently funding those terrorists in the first place, is there?
Brussels has given $2.5 billion in direct budget support to the Palestinian
Authority over 12 years from 2008, and recently said it would send some $1.24
billion from 2021 to 2024. The funding wasn’t even reduced or cut off – only
held for a few months in 2021-2022, then released without preconditions – when
watchdogs alleged that Palestinian school textbooks had anti-Semitic content
promoting and glorifying terrorism. And now Israel’s foreign ministry is
pointing the finger at Brussels. “The European Union was financing textbooks of
the Palestinian authorities that were full of antisemitism and incitement for
violence and terrorism against Jews,” Israeli Foreign Affairs Ministry spokesman
Lior Haiat said earlier this week.
When the issue was first raised, the EU commissioner in charge at the time met
with the Israeli foreign minister in Brussels and basically said, look, we’ll
just make sure that doesn’t happen again – and passed a resolution to that
effect. There were also NGO watchdog reports released earlier this month
accusing Brussels of financing grants that ended up in the hands of the Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine, which the EU considers to be a terrorist
group.
It was just earlier this year, back in February, that the EU announced another
over $300 million for the Palestinian people in the presence of President
Mahmoud Abbas – funding for salaries, pensions, health care, and things like
“climate-smart agri business,” and “green competitiveness,” And now, suddenly,
Brussels officials appear to be wondering, “Hey wait, did we fund Hamas …
maybe?” Because that’s what their actions seem to be suggesting. Otherwise
what’s the problem with continuing to help the Palestinian people?
Or maybe, given all the climate-conscious verbiage attached to the aid, the EU
just got angry that Hamas’ hang gliders were motorized. You just know that some
egghead in Brussels is watching coverage of all the gas guzzling pickup trucks
used by Hamas to raid villages and kidnap people and asking, “What’s the carbon
footprint on those?”
All the virtue signaling in the world can’t now compensate for a lack of due
diligence that the schizophrenic withdrawal and subsequent reinstatement of
Palestinian funding suggests. It wouldn’t be the first time that innocent people
suffered because of Brussels’ incompetence. Just ask the people of the entire
European bloc currently facing seemingly endless economic hardship so their
leaders can keep patting themselves on the back for supporting Ukraine.
And just like in Ukraine, Brussels doesn’t seem too interested in availing
itself of an opportunity to play any kind of a mitigating or thoughtful role
amid this conflict, but is rather taking its usual seat in riding shotgun to the
US neocons on whatever the current thing happens to be.
While even Secretary of State Antony Blinken says that there’s no “smoking gun”
tying Iran to the latest Hamas attacks, that hasn’t stopped the usual neocon
warmongers on the American side of the Transatlantic alliance from substituting
sloganeering for actual policy, either – in favor of Iranian regime change, of
course. “This is one of history’s best cases for regime change,” said former US
National Security Advisor John Bolton. Because, when it comes to drumming up
Iranian regime change, neocons are suddenly willing to take Hamas’ word to the
bank as their trustworthy source for Iran’s involvement. “The Biden
Administration should get a spine and pin the blame on Tehran where it belongs,”
Bolton later added. It “belongs,” facts and policy be damned, because it fits
the radical neocon narrative, even if it ends up being to the detriment of
American lives and interests.
“It is long past time for the Iranian terrorist state to pay a price for all the
upheaval and destruction being sown throughout the region and world,” chimed in
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC). Somehow, these warmongers never manage to notice the
interventionist sponsorship role long played by Washington and the West that has
arguably interfered with all these Middle Eastern neighbors working things out
amongst each other.
Blustery rhetoric in the heat of crisis is cheap for the Western armchair
generals, but potentially expensive for countless others. They shoot off their
mouths with little regard to the knock-on effects in the interests of appeasing
allies and supporters. And it’s in these desperate moments, when reason risks
taking a backseat to emotion, that they have the best chance of imposing their
potentially catastrophic agenda.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN