You may or may not have seen Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's address to Congress the other day. If you did you'll understand the reason for this posting. If you didn't I highly recommend you watch it HERE.
Since the prime minister's speech I have read people saying on social media, "I wish we had leadership like Israel". I too wish for the same thing.
There are many reasons why Prime Minister Netanyahu is different from President Obama and there are many reasons why Israel is different from the United States. The following article by Victor David Hanson describes in detail why "WE" don't have leadership like Israel.
One more thought. I wonder how many of those "leaders" sitting there listening to Prime Minister Netanyahu were aware that a plaque of Moses was up on the wall looking down at them?
Barack Obama’s foreign policy will go down in U.S. history as one
of the most dangerously inept ever. Created by equal amounts of ignorance,
arrogance, and partisan politics, the president’s policies have left behind a
world in which rivals and enemies are on the march, while allies and friends
are endangered and alienated. He deserves the opprobrium with which future
history should load him.
But focusing on individuals and
their personal flaws can prevent us from seeing the larger bad ideas that
transcend any one person or party. We justly remember British Prime Minister
Neville Chamberlain as the architect of the 1938 Munich conference that paved
the way for Hitler’s aggression. And indeed, Chamberlain’s flaws of
character––most important a vanity about his personal powers of persuasion that
blinded him to Hitler’s brilliant diplomatic misdirection about his true
intentions––contributed to that debacle. But we should also remember the
delirious public joy that greeted Chamberlain when he returned to England, and
the global acclaim he received for avoiding war with Germany. Millions of
people thought Chamberlain had heroically succeeded because many shared the
assumptions and ideas that drove his decisions.
So too today, Obama’s vanity and
self-regard have from the beginning led to dangerous foreign policy decisions.
His belief that he was a global “transformational” and “world-historical”
figure drove him to court inveterate enemies like Iran, the Taliban, and the
Muslim Brothers, who he mistakenly believed would be seduced by his brilliance
and sympathy for their grievances. His fatuous Cairo speech in 2009 and his
numerous groveling letters to Iran honcho Ayatollah Khamenei were predicated on
Obama’s notion that as a person “of color,” who had spent a few childhood years
in a Muslim country and was ashamed of America’s global sins, he had an instant
rapport with hard, cruel men who despise the West as “Crusaders,” godless
infidels to be conquered, converted, or killed. Indeed, Obama’s delusional
self-estimation recalls Chamberlain’s comments to his cabinet that in the
negotiations over Czechoslovakia “Hitler was speaking the truth,” and that
“he had established some degree of personal influence over Herr Hitler.” Herr
Hitler, in fact, considered Chamberlain “a little worm.”
But beyond these failures of
character and self-knowledge, larger cultural ideas have contributed to this
country’s mistakes in dealing with a resurgent Islamic jihad. Most important
has been the triumph of secularism in the West, the marginalization of religion
in our politics and culture. Anyone who believes the received wisdom that the
U.S. is a religious country should ignore the polling data on churchgoing and
look instead at our public culture. Sordid sexual content in movies, television
shows, and popular music; 58 million abortions since 1973; the legitimization
of same-sex marriage; the incessant demonization of any participation of
religion in schools or politics––all bespeak a culture in which religion has
been reduced to a private life-style choice and comforting holiday rituals, as
Obama suggested when he reduced the First Amendment’s protection of religion to
the “freedom to worship.” Anyone who does take Christianity or Judaism
more seriously than that is considered, to quote Polish poet Czeslaw Milosz,
“shamans or witch doctors from savage tribes whom one humors until one can
dress them in trousers and send them to school.”
More important, the animus
against faith has contributed to the fashionable self-loathing and dislike of
their home country on the part of many progressives and leftists, who have
implicated Christianity in the crimes of capitalism, colonialism, and
imperialism. Hence Obama’s bringing up and distorting the history of the
Crusades and the Spanish Inquisition in a speech about religious violence.
Meanwhile, a noble-savage multiculturalism masquerading as tolerance for the
oppressed “other” considers Islam an exotic “religion of peace,” despite
its 14 centuries of slaughter, invasion, pillage, slaving, occupation, and
colonization. Those tolerant Muslims of Granada in 1066 killed as many Jews in
one day as the Spanish Inquisition did in its 3 centuries of existence.
The triumph of secularization has
disarmed us in the fight against modern jihadism. No matter how often jihadists
evoke the religious foundations of their actions, no matter how many Koranic
verses and Hadith they quote, we cannot imagine a people for whom the spiritual
realm is more real than the material world. We cannot imagine a life permeated
with the divine and directed by submission––what “Islam” literally means––to
Allah and the model of Mohammed. We ignore, as Bernard Lewis has written, the
fact that “in most Islamic countries, religion remains a major political
factor,” for “most Muslim countries are still profoundly Muslim, in a way and a
sense that most Christian countries are no longer Christian.” Hence the
worldwide Muslim support for shari’a law and its codified sexism, intolerance,
and penal cruelty.
Given this failure of
imagination, we have misunderstood jihadism ever since it burst onto the global
scene in 1979 with the Iranian Revolution, when our foreign policy
establishment ignored or dismissed its religious roots. Thirty-five years
later, Obama continues the same mistake, refusing to identify ISIS as an
expression of Islamic doctrine, or to use the adjective “Islamic” to describe
the numerous jihadist movements active today, or to recognize the apocalyptic
messianism and genocidal aims of the Iranian mullahcracy. This
blindness reflects widespread delusions like the long mischaracterization
of Islam as the “religion of peace,” the reinterpretation of jihad to mean a self-improving
“inner struggle,” or the historical fantasies of Islamic “tolerance” in Ottoman
Turkey or Andalusian Spain.
Behind this Orwellian rhetoric lies the assumption that all
religions are basically the same and preach the same doctrines of “love thy
neighbor” and “do unto others as you would have them do unto you.” This
reduction of religion to Hallmark-card sentimentalism is yet another instance
of the refusal to take spirituality seriously, and to acknowledge that all
spiritual aims are not the same or compatible. How much easier it is to indulge
a flabby ecumenicalism and dismiss the jihadists as “evil” or “barbaric,” as
though we are dealing with psychopathic serial killers rather than fervent
believers in a worldwide faith with doctrines and practices dating back to
the 7th century.
Finally, the dismissal of
spiritual causes leads us to focus on material ones, which in turn creates the
preposterous analyses of jihadism as a reflection of material conditions or
psychological dysfunctions created by them. Hence this administration recently
has talked about “root causes” like “lack of opportunity for jobs” (State
Department spokesman Marie Harf); the need for “peaceful democratic
change” and “economic growth and devoting more resources on education,
including for girls and women” (Barack Obama); “alienation, poverty,
thrill-seeking, and other factors” (John Kerry); and “the perceived effect of
U.S. foreign policy in the Muslim world” (Rashad Hussain, recently named
Obama’s Special Envoy and Coordinator for Strategic Counter-terrorism Communications),
to name a few.
Yet even some Christian and
observant Jewish conservatives have ignored the power of spiritual imperatives
and religious differences, particularly in their focus on democracy promotion
as the cure for jihadist terror. George W. Bush, in his 2002 National Security
Strategy, focused U.S. foreign policy on promoting a “single sustainable model
for national success: freedom, democracy, and free enterprise,” for “these
values of freedom are right and true for every person, every society.” These
dubious ideals became strategic aims during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
And for all he styles himself the anti-Bush, Barack Obama has made the same
claims, as in his 2012 remarks at the U.N. “Freedom and self-determination,” he
said, “are not unique to one culture. These are not simply American values or
Western values—they are universal values.”
But no matter how potentially true
these claims may be, to those pious Muslims who consider themselves the “slaves
of Allah,” freedom and democracy as we understand them are incompatible with
shari’a law, and “national success” will be achieved by restoring Islam to its
original purity, and following the “model” that empowered Allah’s warriors to
create a global empire stretching from the Atlantic to China. If we take
seriously Islam’s spiritual aims––the necessity of obeying Allah’s precepts in
order to create for Muslims a totalizing political-social order of justice,
piety, and equality, and to ensure an eternity of bliss in paradise––then we
will see that our notions of earthly freedom, leisure, confessional tolerance,
and prosperity are to millions of Muslims mere temptations to abandon their
faith and risk their eternal souls. And we will understand that waging jihad
against those responsible for those temptations, especially a rich and powerful
infidel West, is the communal duty of the Islamic ummah, and death in that
battle the key to paradise.
Trapped in our own secularist and materialist assumptions, we
mistake the nature of the enemy and thus create policies––most important the
appeasement of Iran through negotiations and concessions that will end
with the world’s foremost terrorist state in possession of nuclear
weapons––doomed to fail and damage our security and interests. But Barack
Obama will not be the only father of that failure.
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