Delegitimizing Israel: the new anti-Semitism

Portraits of Israel as apartheid state, illegal occupier help those who seek its destruction.

Palestinians call for a boycott 370 (photo credit: REUTERS)
Palestinians call for a boycott 370
(photo credit: REUTERS)
It's Jew-hating time, again. No cross-burnings, or bomb-wearing psychos screaming for Allah. It's sophisticated, draped by UN and EU glitz, banal reports about Israeli atrocities, and Palestinian liberation. It's so holy, so morally pompous, so fashionable.
Criticizing Israel doesn't lack for issues: "apartheid," "war crimes," "stealing Palestinian land," "oppressing Palestinians," "the occupation," etc.
NGOs funded by European governments, the UN, and most Arab and Muslim organizations and countries, condemn Israel as a pariah state, unworthy of existence. In this pogrom of conscience, they wear no hoods. Their masks are self-righteousness.
The mechanism for vilification and delegitimization, Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) campaigns, is coordinated by the Palestinian BDS National Committee, located in Ramallah and supported by the Palestinian Authority. A global movement, it spurs the spread of anti-Israel actions by churches, unions and student groups.
The mantra chants are easy: "End the Occupation," "Justice for the Palestinians," and "Peace Now." No need to think about complicated issues; just blame Israel. And Hate.
Anti-Israel campaigns overlap anti-Jewish sentiments. This explains why hate-Israel campaigns garner support from atheists, anarchists and even some Christians; why young people wrap themselves in checkered scarves, like late PLO leader Yasser Arafat, and come to Israel in order to fight alongside Arabs; and why EU countries with hard-hit economies spend hundreds of millions of Euros every year supporting anti-Israel organizations.  
Backed by Islamists, especially Muslim Brotherhood supported student organizations, hating Israel has become the campus rage. Meanwhile, university administrators have been obsessively neutral and Jewish organizations, excessively polite.
In addition, Israel has produced its own über-critics – columnists who condemn Israel as "racist," editors who recommend "raping" Israel, academics, literary figures, and artists who support BDS against Jews living in Judea and Samaria.
In order to understand delegitimization, therefore, we need to distinguish between those who seek Israel's destruction, and those with legitimate, honest criticism. Since one of the pillars of democracy is freedom of speech, drawing the line between what is acceptable, and what is not, is often difficult. Self-criticism is essential; without it there cannot be growth. But self-criticism without limit, unbalanced and exaggerated, is destructive.
Challenging Israel's identity as a nominally Jewish state might be acceptable if all states with official religions were rejected. But in the absence of this universal standard, singling out Israelis not only bigoted, it is a form of delegitimization, a softer denial of Israel's right to exist.
The soft deniers protest being lumped in with hard-line delegitimizers. Their stance : We support Israel, but disagree with its "racist policies," its "illegal occupation of Arab lands," and  its "colonialism." But the line between criticism and full-blown hatred blurs when biased news stories and distorted rhetoric about Israeli "atrocities" and "war crimes" become self-defined truths, distortions of reality.
Decrying "the occupation as a moral disaster" for Israel, therefore, identifies Jews as immoral, a state-sponsored immorality, a legal and historical fraud that sharpens the sword of delegitimization, justifies BDS campaigns, and anti-Jewish violence.
When the Gaza Strip is portrayed as "a vast prison," for example, then attacking the warders is heroic and Hamas missiles are “self-defense.”
If a Jewish, democratic state is inherently discriminatory, those who oppose it can be honored as "freedom fighters."  If Israel "steals Arab lands," then those who struggle to regain what is rightfully theirs are reasonable. If Israeli settlements are "illegal," it is a crime that should be punished.
This ugly portrait of Israel is intentional, one that has no descriptive shades, no positive images, or perspective. It is one-dimensional evil.
The power of propaganda is that it lacks critical thinking.Delegitimizing Israel, therefore, needs to be reconsidered not only as an informational problem, but as a philosophical issue.
For the first time in history, Christian and Muslim Jew-hatred, liberals, anarchists, fascists and communists, dictators and presidents have merged into a formidable coalition against Israel, an international, multi-faceted onslaught to bring Israel to its knees.
One of the mechanisms used to delegitimize Israel is promoting Palestinianism and Palestinian statehood. Paradoxically, promoting a "two-state" plan, instead of reducing resistance to Israel, increases it. This is because the prospect of Palestinian statehood and full sovereignty raises expectations that it will replace Israel, not accept her.
This explains why Palestinian leaders "never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity." It's not due to a miscalculation. It's exactly what they intend. It also explains why they can't and won't recognize Israel's right to exist, refuse to negotiate the refugee issue, and reject any compromise on Jerusalem. The problem is not territorial, but existential.
Posing simple questions, therefore, reveals the dilemma: What kind of Israel is fully and wholeheartedly acceptable? Is the Nakba (catastrophe – Israel’s establishment in 1948) over? Will Arab/Islamic terrorism, violence and incitement cease with the establishment of another Palestinian state?  What will bring an end to this conflict?
If the response is, “End Israel’s existence,” you know what you are fighting for.    
The writer has a PhD in history and is a commentator and journalist.