May 29: The Inside-Outside Game
Did Malley share classified documents?; IDF seizes Philadelphi corridor; North Korean trash balloons
The Big Story
In a 2016 article for Tablet, “Obama’s Syria Policy Striptease,” Tony Badran laid out the “striptease” messaging genre adopted by the Obama echo chamber to retail White House Syria policy to a skeptical American public. In the policy “striptease,” Tony wrote:
Hand-picked experts offer fresh policy advice to the president. The authors demonstrate their independence by criticizing the supposed current policy and propose a new course of action. Within weeks, the new course of action is acknowledged as policy, thus flattering the importance of the experts. Only, what the experts suggested was already the policy—and what they were “criticizing”—was the fan that the messaging campaign had manufactured to obscure, for a time, what the White House was actually doing in Syria.
The striptease came to mind this morning when we read, in Jewish Insider, that Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) had made an appearance last week on the Twitch stream of the self-proclaimed “Marxist-Leninist” Hasan Piker. On the stream, AOC said she agreed “10,000%” with Piker’s assertion that Donald Trump, Jared Kushner, and the Abraham Accords were to blame for the Oct. 7 attacks. This story, far from demonstrating that AOC is dangerously close to supposedly “radical” Marxist elements of the left—Piker once declared that “America deserved 9/11” and has hosted a Houthi militant on his stream—instead illustrates the way that the Obama-Biden echo chamber has evolved over the past eight years. Namely, rather than operating purely through such D.C. swamp creatures as Jeffrey Goldberg, it has incorporated allegedly independent “communists” and “radicals” like Piker into the heart of the party’s messaging apparatus.
We’ve written before about the split between the Biden White House’s fake public policy in the Middle East and its real, secret policy. The fake policy is both a deep commitment to Washington’s traditional partners in the Middle East, including Israel and Saudi Arabia, and a desire to continue the positive steps toward “regional integration” taken by the Trump administration during the Abraham Accords—albeit without the Trump administration’s allegedly destructive indifference to the Palestinian question. The real policy is that the administration wants to destroy the Abraham Accords, which it correctly perceives as a repudiation of the Obama-Biden policy of realignment toward Iran. Rather than doing this openly—the Abraham Accords were, after all, widely acknowledged as a resounding diplomatic success—the administration is attempting to do it stealthily, by weaving Abraham Accords-sounding language, such as Israeli-Saudi “normalization,” into its own policy framework, which inverts the Trump framework by putting the Palestinian issue front and center.
Since the Oct. 7 attack, we have seen a chorus of seemingly independent voices on the left assert a “critique” of the Biden administration’s fake policy that is in fact a justification for the actual policy, which nonetheless goes unacknowledged. On Oct. 9, for instance, The Intercept declared that Hamas’ attack represented a “total failure of the Biden administration’s Middle East policy”—which, it asserted, was centered on an “expansion of the Abraham Accords” and an expectation that “the Palestinians would simply resign themselves to a slow death.” On Oct. 20, the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft—helmed by leading Iran propagandist Trita Parsi and funded by George Soros and Iranian-born Francis Najafi—again pinned the violence on the Biden administration’s decision to “continue Trump’s normalization efforts” between the Israelis and the Sunni Arab states. In December, Sarah Leah Whitson of Democracy for the Arab World Now, the pro-Qatari, Muslim Brotherhood think tank cozy with the Biden State Department, penned an op-ed in Time Magazine excoriating the Biden White House for supporting and expanding the Abraham Accords, which allegedly “emboldened successive Israeli governments to further ignore Palestinian rights.”
In reality, of course, the Biden policy these critics are describing is entirely mythical; the administration was so hostile to the Abraham Accords that it forbade its officials from uttering the phrase, with sometimes comic results. At the same time, the policy they present as a supposedly radical alternative is a fair description of the administration’s real policy. That policy is to emphasize, time and again, that agreements between the Israelis and Sunni Arab states—now downgraded from “peace deals” to “normalization agreements”—are “not a substitute for Israeli-Palestinian peace,” as then State Department spokesman Ned Price put it in 2021. The latest culmination of this policy is the White House’s attempt to use Saudi-Israeli normalization as leverage to force Israel to preserve Hamas in Gaza and commit to recognizing a Palestinian state.
This inside-outside game, in which the administration leaves the articulation of its real policy to “outside” “critics” of its fake policy, explains why the White House—and the Democratic Party more generally—often appears to be irrationally caving to pressure from its “left flank,” which, critics rightly point out, represents an insignificant share of the American electorate. We’re not saying that Piker is receiving instructions from the White House—although, given the revelations that the administration was pushing its talking points to the New York Times Pitchbot X account and an Arab amateur porn star, we wouldn’t be shocked if he was. What we’re saying is that the administration cannot articulate its own position, and so it leaves the task to outside “critics,” which is what gives the public the misleading impression that the left-wing tail is wagging the White House dog.
IN THE BACK PAGES: Jeremy England on why Israel cannot be a country like any other
The Rest
→Robert Malley, Biden’s former Iran envoy, downloaded sensitive classified documents and might have shared them with individuals outside the U.S. government, according to a Wednesday report by Jay Solomon in Semafor. Sources close to an ongoing Republican congressional investigation into Malley, who had his security clearance pulled and then was placed on unpaid leave last spring, told Semafor that Malley had transferred classified emails, including detailed notes of his meetings with Iranian officials, to his personal devices. The content of these emails later appeared in Iranian state media. In a letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken earlier this month, Sen. James Risch (R-ID) and Congressman Michael McCaul (R-TX) wrote that they had learned that a foreign government had hacked into Malley’s personal devices. However, they are also attempting to discover if Malley shared the documents with outsiders, including members of the Iran Experts Initiative, an Iranian influence operation that used a network of U.S. and European experts to push Iranian Foreign Ministry talking points in the Western press under the guise of independent analysis. Malley hired one of those experts, Ariane Tabatabai, to work for him in the State Department. Although Malley remains on leave, Tabatabai now works at the Pentagon, where she retains a security clearance.
→An IDF spokesman announced on Wednesday that Israel had gained full control of the Philadelphi Corridor, the border separating Gaza from Egypt. This may explain the timing of Hamas’ tent-massacre blood libel from over the weekend: The terror group was in the process of losing its border. Which, the IDF discovered, contained not only a minimum of 20 tunnels leading into Egypt, but rocket launch sites located immediately adjacent to the border—located there, presumably, in the knowledge that Israel would not bomb them and risk complications with Egypt.
→Speaking of the fake tent “massacre,” the bombs used by Israel in the Sunday strike on Rafah were U.S.-supplied 37-pound GBU-39s, which the United States had been pressing the Israelis to use in order to avoid civilian casualties, The New York Times reports. Perhaps for this reason, the Biden administration neglected to openly condemn the Israelis for the strike, with White House national security spokesman John Kirby telling reporters Tuesday that if the Israelis did “in fact” use 37-pound bombs (they did), “it is certainly indicative of an effort to be discrete and targeted and precise.” IDF Spokesman Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said Tuesday that the bombs dropped on Rafah were the “smallest munition our jets can use” and “could not have ignited a fire of this size.” But there’s no substitute for seeing for yourself:
Both audio released by the IDF and video circulated on social media revealed eyewitness Gazans describing a secondary explosion from a Hamas ammunition cache, which ignited the deadly fire that spread through the displaced persons camp.
→But Hamas’ massacre propaganda had its desired effect, prompting large-scale protests in Paris, London, Madrid, Bologna, and Mexico City, where protesters armed with Molotov cocktails set fire outside the Israeli embassy:
→Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who was declared persona non grata in Israel after describing the war in Gaza as a “genocide” comparable to the Holocaust, recalled the Brazilian ambassador to Israel on Wednesday, according to reports in the Israeli media, citing diplomatic sources. No further details were available about the recall as of early Wednesday afternoon, but on X, Israel’s ambassador to Brazil, Yonatan Gonen, shared this video of Brazilian members of Congress waving Israeli flags on Tuesday:
A CNN Brazil poll in February found that 80% of Brazilians took issue with Lula’s Holocaust comparison, and 57% sided with Israel in the war.
→A video circulated on social media Wednesday showed three Hamas operatives in the Tulkarem area of the West Bank opening fire on the Israeli town of Bat Hefer, just west of the Green Line, with what appear to be AR-15s. No injuries were reported, but the video underscores the presence of both Hamas operatives and military-grade weaponry, likely smuggled from Iran, in the West Bank. An April report in The New York Times described Iranian efforts to “inundate” the West Bank with weapons, including small arms and more advanced weapons such as antitank missiles and rocket-propelled grenades, while footage of IDF counterterror raids in Tulkarem and other West Bank cities has shown Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad operatives equipped with automatic weapons and body armor engaging in extended gun battles with Israeli forces. On Telegram, however, Abu Ali Express notes that the video of the attack released by the Hamas operatives in Tulkarem is of much lower quality than the Gaza Hamas videos, perhaps indicating that Israel’s success in eliminating Hamas’ West Bank commanders in Gaza is degrading the group’s ability to coordinate with its operatives in the West Bank.
→Stat of the Day: 260
That’s how many balloons full of o-mul—a Korean term that can mean either “trash” or “excrement”—floated over the North Korean border into South Korea between Tuesday evening and Wednesday morning, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal. The trash balloons appear to be Kim Jong Un’s response to a swarm of balloons recently sent into North Korea by a South Korean activist group, which contained 30,000 anti-regime leaflets and USB drives with music from K-pop bands such as BTS. Previously, the North Korean government had blamed South Korean balloons for starting the COVID-19 pandemic.
TODAY IN TABLET:
This Moment, by Ron Dahan
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Live by the Law or Die on the Cross
Israel must stop pretending it is a nation like any other
by Jeremy England
When my parents moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1974, they were young idealists trying to foment Marxist revolution.
Having kids and getting a mortgage mellowed their radical views substantially, but I still grew up marinating in progressive ideas. One such idea was that nationalism was a great evil that had caused Germans to hate and murder all of my mother’s aunts and uncles in Poland. Another idea was that private schools should not exist, a noble notion which lasted until we realized I was going to finish the math offerings at our small-town New Hampshire public high school before starting ninth grade. That’s how I ended up at Phillips Exeter.
Had you visited during my senior year you would have seen me acing written exams on the Sabbath, filling blackboards with German verb conjugations, and cracking claws with gusto at the annual lobster dinner. A Jew? Of course! But I would have told you that that just meant I leaned left politically, played Brahms on the violin, and enjoyed making clever arguments about what is right and wrong.
In 1999, I moved to Cambridge as a Harvard freshman. I had been there throughout my childhood, when we had made periodic family pilgrimages to Harvard Square, where we browsed in bookstores, sampled ethnic foods, and generally paid homage at the red brick, high temple of academic meritocracy. When I started as a student there, it felt like I was fulfilling my purpose, which was to develop my talents as fully as I could, with details to be sorted out later as to how best to use them. Subsequently, my studies carried me through Oxford as a Rhodes scholar, Stanford for my Ph.D., and Princeton for a postdoctoral lectureship, so that I returned to Massachusetts in 2011—this time, to MIT as a physics professor. While there, I made a bit of a splash with some theoretical work on thermodynamics and the spontaneous origin of life.
As for how to argue about what is right and wrong, that is something my elite academic surroundings were always eager to dictate to me, especially when it came to international relations. At Exeter in the 1990s, we had school assemblies about how the fighting in the Balkans had gone on between groups of identical people who had shot at each other pointlessly over differing tastes in cigarette brands. One MLK Day, a PLO apparatchik masquerading as a journalist came to tell us lurid tales about the Israeli Air Force dropping napalm on fleeing Arab children. I got in a heated, yet fumbling dispute with her about it, and was puzzled afterward as to why I had cared at all. At Harvard, the authorities made sure I read Kant’s Perpetual Peace, and otherwise the place was utterly awash in specimens of starry-eyed Clintonian social “science” about how economic growth through global trade would automatically bring an end to all war and oppression. I made it to Hillel for Yom Kippur two out of four years.
It was at Oxford, after having one too many chats over a glass of port with a fellow Oxonian who seemed way too interested in the Jewish influence on the American political process, that something shifted in me. The place was so fully blanketed by the fumes of post-colonial theory that Zionism (and its inherent criminality) was a constant subject, which made me wonder more deeply about it all.
I started doing wild things, like learning history and facts and even visiting the region. Somewhat inevitably, I also ended up familiarizing myself with the standard arsenal of arguments for Zionism made by people at universities: Israel is fighting on the front lines to defend the West from barbarian zealots! Israel kicks Jewish extremists out of their illegal settlements and puts Arab citizens on its Supreme Court! Israel is the only country in the Middle East that is entirely both bomb shelter and gay bar! These points captivated me, but there was always something about them that felt off.
I now know what it is.
During the last 20 years, anti-colonialist doctrine more fully replaced critical thinking throughout most of the academy, and it would be easy to attribute the fever pitch of present anti-Israel sentiment on campuses solely to that shift. And to be clear, it’s indeed obvious that many students today at Ivy League schools are badly informed and cannot craft good arguments with whatever information they do manage to come by. And, yes, all of the curricular and pedagogical rot compels them to join the mob pouring its wrath on the Jewish state.
But, as is often the case with politics organized against Jews, the poor quality of the accusations lures well-meaning people into contesting false details while implicitly accepting the enemy’s vocabulary and criteria for judgment. In answering the question of why it feels like pro-Israel voices are losing in the public square, I now think that some of the blame also rests with all the smart pro-Israel arguments—including those I once got so good at slinging myself.
***
Forget, for a moment, how monstrously wicked Hamas may be, and focus instead on testing each of the common claims and counterclaims made about Israel.
Detractors say Israel is an apartheid state. Yet, since Muslim Arab citizens here vote in elections, enjoy equal civil rights, and hold public office, is this not simply a smear whose sole intention is to lay the ground for dismantling the Jewish state?
Islamist leaders frequently congratulate Muslims who kill Jews in Israel as “the defenders of Al-Aqsa” because of the widely held suspicion that the Jews are about to take over the Temple Mount. But isn’t this propaganda prima-facie absurd, since the current situation at the holy site is one where Israeli police are formally charged with preventing Jews from praying there?
Anti-Zionists, jihadists, and other disinterested humanitarians accuse Israel of killing innocent Arab children indiscriminately, but fact-checkers are quick to produce data on exceptionally good combatant-to-civilian kill ratios and to remind us that the IAF warns residents in Gaza neighborhoods before dropping bombs.
Game, set, and match. Right?
Not quite. Each of these volleys is returnable for the same kind of reason.
The Law of Return in Israel establishes an explicit preference for admitting new immigrants who are Jewish, based on parentage or religious observance. Each year, the increasing number of Jews who ascend the Temple Mount to pray portends major changes there in favor of the normalization of Judaic worship. The war aims Israel has set guarantee it will cause the deaths of many people the state scrupulously labels as innocent. How many innocent deaths are too many?
What is so complicated here is that the accusations are, at one level, untruthful and unfair, and an Israel-loving Jew—one also educated in the halcyon days before critical thinking was defenestrated from atop the ivory tower—cannot resist a public dissection of all the manipulation and inaccuracy.
In each case, though, the point of the accusation is less to sell a lie than it is to bait the hook with an expendable one so that anyone who bites has to agree on what would constitute a crime.
Consider, for example, if Israel were shown to be an apartheid state, a usurper of religious sites, or a bomber of more innocents than permitted by U.N. observers. Even rigorous and right-thinking Ivy League Zionists educated in the twilight of the 20th century would be forced to agree then that the modern State of Israel had lost its right to exist, no? It is debatable whether this maneuver has always been the strategy of anti-Zionists, or whether it just works out this way; certainly, plenty of people who hate Jews just love to peddle outlandish delusions without seeking to entrap anyone. In any case, the typical Western Jew advocating for Israel is usually quite defenseless the moment a shrewder anti-Zionist steps into the debate, having already conceded at the outset that Israel will only be exonerated if it ever gets a fair trial—and by “fair,” these people always mean one judged by Western, and therefore Christian, standards.
Christianity no longer gets top billing in the Western marketplace of ideas, but its legacy is everywhere you look, no matter how secular the setting. In the formation of a religious community that embraced all of humanity as equivalent, and all souls/persons/moral agents within its ultimate dominion, the Christian project rejected the hereditary priesthood and national chosenness of the Jews. Thomas Jefferson’s deistic “all men are created equal” (by God) filtered through the centuries to a point where the preference for Jews shown by the Law of Return sounds plainly illegal to an American ear.
Nor is chosenness the only point of divergence. Speaking in terms of religious archetypes, a Jew and a Christian can come to vastly different conclusions about what the right thing to do is in a given situation, particularly where something as ugly as war is involved. What would Jesus do if a Hamas fighter held a Gazan Arab child up as a shield while firing? Hard to say for sure, but anyone who argues that a properly humane response is to die rather than to try to shoot around the child has ample basis in Christianity. The image of the Crucifixion may mean many things, but part of what it means is that accepting corporeal defeat in this world can be a path to God-like virtue and spiritual victory in the world of tomorrow. You will not hear Jesus mentioned when Western leaders speak on how important it is that Israel adhere to international laws of war, but the concept of the innocent civilian enshrined in these laws grew practically out of wars fought within Christendom during the last several hundred years.
More importantly, the very idea of the innocent civilian makes sense in an explicitly Christian context: “Render unto Caesar” plus the idea of a universal community of faith that transcends nationality means the conscience of the individual is paramount, and a person cannot so easily be classed as a targetable enemy “just because” of his membership in some nation waging war.
The contrast with the Jewish perspective here is sharp.
One particular Talmudic-era commentary comes to mind. Everyone knows that Pharaoh and his army were on horses as they chased Moses and the Israelites seaward. But it took the genius of Shimon ben Yochai, the sage, to ask where the horses came from. A plague of hail had killed off all the livestock in Egypt, other than that which belonged to upright individuals who held the Lord in awe. What this means, then, is that Pharaoh got his horses from the upright individuals. Ben Yochai concludes: [In times of war], it is correct to kill even the righteous among your enemy (Mekhilta 14:7).
This is a wince-inducingly Judaic—and very unchristian—position.
Ben Yochai witnessed the Roman annihilation of Judea. He understood that the way your enemy fights a war affects the definition of the righteous way to fight back. In other words, his recommendation was calibrated to the assumption that if the Jews are fighting a war, then their own future survival (and flourishing) is a nonnegotiable goal of the war. Thus, a Jew living by the Torah and confronted with an enemy armed with a human shield must ask: What does God want me to do now, given what I face? And how might I figure that out by studying the Torah?
As Abraham learns when arguing with God about Sodom, the ultimate decision about who lives and who perishes in calamity is the Creator’s choice, and while you can plead with God to spare the righteous, you must also have the moral humility to trust that He knows what He’s doing. As for you and what you can do: The Torah commands you to accept that the world’s Creator put you in the circumstances you are in, and that He only wants from you that you should do the most correct thing possible according to the Law, given the circumstances. And among the constraints and instructions given by the Torah is a specific one: “Choose life.” Accepting one’s own death because the other options are ugly and seem heartless is not on the menu.
In the current war in Gaza, a basic Judaic question therefore arises and must not be ignored: What is the bare minimum we must do in order to prevent our own mass murder?
***
The Jews do not venerate the image of a more-divine-than-usual human who achieved an abstract victory for all of humanity by dying horribly. And because we do not, we cannot accept the Western exhortation to be suicidally gentle with our enemies in order to receive a Christian burial on their “moral high ground.”
There are many things about the Jewish state, both as it currently is and as the Torah imagines it could be, that meet the loftiest ideals of the liberal, crypto-Christian West. Jews by and large love living in the liberal, secular West because our culture has great intuitive affection for freedom of speech and conscience, as well as the need for each unique individual to be given the freedom to discover his God-given purpose.
But as a reflection of the oneness of the God described therein, the Torah is obstinately balanced when it comes to simple principles. It insists on justice, but makes room for mercy. It cherishes human life, but acknowledges deadly violence can be correct. It sees all people as created in the image of God, but it commands the nation of Israel to play a unique priestly role, through example rather than through world-dominating force, in leading the world to greater knowledge and service of God.
Put into practice in 2024, this means that Israel must stop pretending it is a nation like any other, begging to be judged fairly by whatever standards the current hegemon has decreed we all agree upon. We need to look for standards from within our tradition to set a moral example for the whole world, while making it more practically possible to defend our homeland.
Instead of bragging about the extra danger our soldiers experience for the sake of sparing enemy noncombatants, we should reject the premise that we Jews bear any responsibility for protecting the human shields employed by our enemy.
Instead of threatening Jews with arrest for praying on the Temple Mount, we should take a hint from the "Al-Aqsa" moniker our attackers gave to their day of savage invasion and let kohanim up there on the hill to slaughter lambs for Passover.
And above all—given that land is nearly all that matters to this death-worshipping foe—instead of repeatedly withdrawing troops from areas we have just taken over so we can deny having unchristian territorial ambitions, we should conquer, annex, and resettle parts of Gaza so that Jews and friendly gentiles both can live there safely.
If our own, unsurpassably subtle ethical tradition guides us to these policies, then it is only our lingering ideological subjugation to the Western tradition that makes them seem scandalous. Like the Jew among nations, Israel constantly struggles with its half-successful attempt to blend in with the crowd and pretend to be a member like any other, and it is time to put an end to this paralyzing charade. We did not stick to our Law through 3,000 years of human civilization to continue national life as the perpetual defendant. It is our job to know that Law, to teach what we know—and, most of all, to live by it.
https://www.frontpagemag.com/the-seeds-of-bidens-betrayal-of-israel-were-planted-a-long-time-ago/ Former SOS George Schultz once remarked that personnel make policy. Don't be fooled by any chatter that Biden has an ironclad committment to Israel. Middle East policy in this administration is run by open supporters of Hamas
https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/news/articles/live-law-die-cross-israel
Jeremy London's article
He's on YT on the Machon Shilo yeshivas channel, sorry if you linked it elsewhere and I missed it, I enjoyed that article