The sacking of Rebecca Long-Bailey proves that Starmer’s concern is not opposing anti-Semitism but defending Israeli racism
The Guardian's Begging Hypocrisy
Underneath its coverage of Black Lives Matter there is a variation on the Guardian’s normal begging
message to readers:
As the world speaks out .. against police violence and racism, the Guardian stands in solidarity
with the struggle for truth, humanity and justice. ... Justice starts with uncovering the truth. That
is what we try to do.
as an open, independent news organisation we are
able to adapt and confront prejudice – our own and others’. Our independence
means we can challenge the powerful without fear and give a voice to the
oppressed and marginalised
As Private Eye
used to say, pass the sick bag Alice. The time has long since passed when the
Guardian stood for truth or in solidarity with the oppressed. One only has to
recall the attacks
on Assange by Marina Hyde and Suzanne
Moore including a lying
article, which it has refused
to substantiate or withdraw, alleging that Assange met
with Trump’s Campaign Manager, Paul Manafort.
This opportunism
is on a par with Keir Starmer taking the knee and then talking of the ‘Black
Lives Moment’ when the question of defunding the Police and tackling
institutional racism is raised.
Donald Trump, the most pro-Zionist American President ever, praises the 'bloodlines' of the virulently antisemitic Henry Ford whom Hitler praised |
If their begging
message was a commercial then the Guardian could be prosecuted under the Trades Description Act. When it comes to the Palestinians the
Guardian has committed itself to telling anything but the truth. It has instead
adopted the hegemonic narrative that anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism are
identical.
This is what the Labour 'antisemitism' charade was really about |
The Guardian has
waged its campaign with hundreds of articles in the past 5 years, in order to
justify Israel’s system of Jewish racial supremacy, which has now been codified as a Basic Law.
Jonathan
Freedland has led this campaign alongside those well known opponent of racism, the
Daily Mail. Ironically the Daily Mail, at the very same time was recruiting
Katie Hopkins, who described refugees as ‘cockroaches’ as a columnist.
We should be
grateful to Freedland, the Guardian’s Svengali. His latest article The
sacking of Long-Bailey shows that, at last, Labour is serious about
antisemitism makes it crystal clear that his sole
concern is support for Israel, right or mostly wrong.
It is true that Freedland uses the term ‘anti-Semitism’ rather than ‘anti-Zionism’
but this is like a member of the Mafia offering ‘protection’ to his victims. Everyone
understands what Freedland means. His concerns aren’t protecting Jews but protecting
Israel.
This is the 'Jewish identity' that the Guardian's Freedland is determined to protect |
Freedland’s ‘anti-Semitism’ campaign can only
increase anti-Semitism
One of the inevitable consequences of the hegemonic narrative of
‘anti-Semitism’ is that it cannot but help increase genuine anti-Semitism. When
the Board of Deputies attempted
to ban Chris Williamson from speaking in Brighton last year I later
stumbled on a conversation in a supermarket between two men blaming ‘the Jews’ for trying to censor their free
speech.
There are many people who feel aggrieved that the campaign against Jeremy
Corbyn and the possibility of radical change was orchestrated by Jewish
organisations. Jews being used as the fall-guys for the interests of the
privileged and powerful is nothing new. This was the cause of some of the worst
massacres in their history such as Chmielnicki:
In Israel - Jewish women can choose not to have Arab women in the same ward when giving birth |
Before the Khmelnytsky uprising, magnates had sold
and leased certain privileges to arendators, many of whom were Jewish, who
earned money from the collections they made... By not supervising their estates
directly, the magnates left it to the leaseholders and collectors to become
objects of hatred to the oppressed and long-suffering peasant
Since the Board of Deputies claims it represent British Jews it is
inevitable that when they support Israel’s atrocities that ordinary Jews will
be associated with Israel’s barbarities and will get any backlash. The CST confirmed
in its 2015 Incidents Report:
The highest and second-highest annual totals of
antisemitic incidents recorded by CST came in two years – 2009 and 2014 – in
which there were significant trigger events, in the form of conflicts in Israel
and Gaza,
In 2007 I wrote
in the Guardian’s Comment is Free,
back in the days when the Guardian did debate and Freedland hadn’t become their
gate keeper:
The only effect of making unfounded allegations of
anti-semitism is, as Antony Lerman of the Institute
for Jewish Policy Research has said, to drain anti-semitism of all meaning.
If you cry wolf long and loud enough, when anti-semitism does raise its head no
one will bat an eyelid.
Because being Jewish is a racial/national question in Israel, Palestinians are barred from converting to Judaism |
Why the concern to redefine anti-Semitism?
Freedland’s conspiracy theory rests
on the IHRA
misdefinition of ‘anti-Semitism’ which Geoffrey Robertson QC damned
as being ‘not fit for purpose’. A definition which even its author, Kenneth
Stern has got
cold feet about because it is being
used to chill
free speech.
Freedland and the Zionist movement were
eager to have the IHRA adopted wholesale by Labour. Why? Because the only
criticism of Israel which is allowed is that which is ‘similar to that leveled against any other country’. Except is
unlike all other liberal democracies. As Stephen Sedley, a Jewish former Court
of Appeal Judge observed,
‘Endeavours to conflate... [anti-Zionism and
anti-Semitism] by characterising everything other than anodyne criticism of
Israel as anti-Semitic are not new.’
99% of people have a very simple and straightforward understanding of
what anti-Semitism is. The OED definition is ‘hostility to or prejudice against Jews.’
You don’t need a 500+ word IHRA
definition unless your purpose is the defence of Israel/Zionism.
The Board of Deputies advice to Jews when faced with genuine anti-Semitism in the 1930s |
When
my dad, despite
the advice of the Board of Deputies joined thousands of Jewish and
non-Jewish anti-fascists in stopping Oswald Moseley’s British Union of Fascists
marching through the East End of London in October 1936 he didn’t need a
definition of anti-Semitism to know what he was fighting. Even simple questions
such as ‘why the obsession with defining anti-Semitism’
are not asked by the media.
What
Freedland and his friends are doing is using fears of Jews as a vulnerable
minority in order to defend the West’s special relationship with Israel. That
is why the whole of the racist Tory press joined the Guardian in a wall to wall
campaign against Corbyn alleging anti-Semitism. At the same time ignoring
genuine racists and anti-Semites such as Trump and Boris Johnson, author of 72
Virgins.
This is the 'Jewish identity' that the Guardian's Freedland defends |
How can Freedland get away with
conflating criticism of Zionism and Israel with anti-Semitism? Freedland is a
master practitioner in the dark arts of Identity Politics. In a conjuring trick
worthy of Houdini, Freedland explained
that a recent survey found that 93% of British Jews said Israel formed some part of
their identity. Therefore criticism of Jewish identity with Zionism and Israel
is anti-Semitic.
The
survey, Attitudes
of British Jews Towards Israel found that 59% of
British Jews identified as Zionists whereas 31% did not. A similar
survey in 2010 found that 72% of British Jews identified as
Zionists compared to 21% who did not. A swing of 11.5% over 5 years.
Israel's 'Jewish identity' is threatened by Black Africans - this is normally known as racism but not to Freedland |
Freedland,
who is a good example of the maxim Lies,
damned lies, and statistics, didn’t cite the above figures.
Freedland is using the ‘identity’ of British Jews in order to provide a
moral legitimacy to the State of Israel. His argument is simple. British Jews
identify with Israel. Ipso facto it is ‘anti-Semitic’ to
criticise Israel. Leaving aside whether most Jews are aware of what Israel
does, this argument is typical of Freedland’s superficiality.
Opposition to a political or cultural identity is never racist. It is opposition to the people who hold such views which
is racist.
This is what Jonathan Freedland's 'antisemitism' smears are designed to defend |
Imagine that in the days of Apartheid in South Africa that there were
200,000 Afrikaaner ex-pats living in Britain who identified with the home
country. Would Freedland and friends
have defined opposition to Apartheid as a form of racism against British
Afrikaaners? That is the same as claiming that support for the Palestinians
offends British Jews’ sense of identity.
Jewish identity has changed a number
of times over the past century. No identity is fixed. There was a time when
being Jewish was synonymous with socialism. Today being Jewish is a byword for
conservatism and conformism. When Zionism first arose its fiercest opponents
were themselves Jewish. When the first Zionist Congress was held in 1897 it was
supposed to be in Munich but the opposition of Jews in Munich forced it to
relocate to Basel in Switzerland.
Black South Africans have no difficulty in find similarities between Apartheid in Israel and South Africa |
Let us assume that Freedland is correct
and 93% of British Jews support apartheid Israel. If true that is a matter for
deep shame. Opposition to a racist political culture is anti-racist not anti-Semitic.
Over 30 years ago Muslims reacted
with fury to Salman Rushdie’s The Satanic
Verses which they felt was an affront to the Prophet Mohammed. Almost
certainly most Muslims wanted it banned. Was it
Islamaphobic to support Rushdie’s right to free speech?
FGM is part of the identity of
Africans in Mali where 91% of women undergo this barbaric practice. Is
Freedland going to argue that opposition to FGM is Afriphobic or anti-Muslim
racism? His suggestion that opposition to the current Jewish identity is anti-Semitic
is itself racist and anti-Semitic.
Defending Apartheid Israel - the Guardian and
Freedland
Freedland worries about ‘singling’ out Israel for criticism. Is there
any other state which smashes up European Union donated solar
panels and which destroys water pipes intended for the
Palestinians? These actions are designed to make living in the West Bank
impossible.
Freedland writes about the allegation of Maxine Peake, which
Rebecca Long-Bailey retweeted, that the neck-hold used to kill George Floyd was
taught to the Minnesota Police by Israel. To Freedland this is a Jewish
conspiracy theory.
‘Whatever horrors are
unfolding, the hidden hand of the world’s only majority-Jewish country must be
secretly behind them.’
The
insinuation being that but for the fact of Israel’s ‘Jewishness’ such a
criticism wouldn’t have been made.
Freedland pours scorn on the suggestion that Israel might
have taught the US Police the neck-hold and other repressive techniques. Yet Israel
boasts of having trained hundreds of thousands of US Police.
The Anti-Defamation League, the United States’s most
influential Zionist organisation, in Partnering
with Law Enforcement proclaims that
ADL works with every major federal, state
and local law enforcement agency, from the Federal Bureau of
Investigation to major city police departments, state police, highway
patrol and sheriffs’ departments. Over the past decade, we have trained 150,000
law enforcement personnel
When
Starbucks held ‘anti-bias training’ for its staff when staff called the police
on two Black customers in Philadelphia for ‘loitering’, BLM successfully
forced Starbucks not to employ ADL.
Testimonial from a Captain in the Colombian army - which has an atrocious human rights record |
When the Israeli Tactical School realised that its images were undermining the lies of Israeli Police that they didn't use the knee on neck hold they quickly barred access! |
The
Israeli Tactical School which trains
police and military the world over, makes it clear that the neck hold is part
of their curriculum. The image of the neck-hold could be clearly seen here before they took down
the page! There is a similar one here.
They also have a Twitter account.
It is led by Tomer Israeli who
is described as
‘a former veteran of the Israeli secret
service "Shin bet" and a veteran
captain of the Israeli Defense Forces with over 20 years of both combat and
instructional experience.’
All
of this is an ‘anti-Semitic conspiracy theory’ according to Freedland and
Starmer! It begs the question why should Israel be so integrally involved in
training US police and other military?
According to Jonathan Freedland this picture is an anti-semitic conspiracy theory |
Perhaps
the role of Israel as the principal
military supporter of South Africa in the days of
Apartheid was also a conspiracy theory? Or its role in training and equipping Guatemala’s
Junta when it was killing 200,000 Mayan Indians also a conspiracy
theory? What about Israel’s current
support for the Burmese Junta in its genocide against the Rohinga
or equipping
Ukraine’s neo-Nazi Azov Battallion?
Israel
has been training and equipping some of the world’s most repressive and
murderous states in the world for decades. See e.g. Chomsky’s The Washington Connection and Third
World Fascism
Israel
became the main
arms supplier to Argentine’s military junta from 1976-83. This was the same
neo-Nazi Junta that tortured to death and ‘disappeared’ 30,000 leftists, including
about 3,000 Jews. According to the Guardian article Jews targeted in Argentina's dirty
war:
Jews were a
prime target of Argentina's self-styled "Western and Christian"
military dictatorship during the "dirty war" of the late 1970s,
accounting for a disproportionate number of the thousands of
"disappearances", a report has confirmed....
Jews represented more than 12 per
cent of the victims of the military regime while constituting under 1 per cent
of Argentina's population,"
That article was written before 1999 before
the rise to power of Freeland as the Guardian’s gatekeeper-in-chief. Today such
an article would not appear because Freedland would class it an ‘anti-Semitic conspiracy theory’.
Anyone
who has read Jeff Halper’s copiously researched ‘War Against the People - Israel, the
Palestinians and Global Pacification’ understands that Israel plays a special role in the service
of US imperialism. That is why it receives the largest amount of US aid of any
country in the world.
Are
all of these anti-Semitic conspiracy theories against the world’s only ‘Jewish’
state? If so then ‘conspiracy theories’ and
anti-Semitism itself must be true! This was in fact the view of early Zionists. They held that the
Jews were responsible for their own persecution.
Such is the ‘logic’ of Zionism which ends
up justifying anti-Semitism. Chaim Weizmann, Israel’s first President described German Jews as ‘‘the germ-carriers of a new outbreak of
anti-Semitism.’ [Palestine Post 5.7.33]. Other Zionists were indistinguishable from anti-Semites,
e.g. Pinhas Rosen, Israel’s first Justice Minister, described Palestine as
an ‘Institute for Jewish vermin.’
Israel as a Majority State
According to Freedland the reason
Peake made her allegations was that Israel was a Jewish majority state. A
curious way to describe a state whose Prime Minister openly boasts that Israel is a state only of its
Jewish not its Arab citizens.
If we extrapolate from Freedland’s
racist logic we must assume that the reason people support Kashmir’s independence
is because India is the only Hindu majority state. This is precisely the charge that is being made by Labour Friends
of India and other Hindu chauvinists.
Freedland in his disingenuous style suggested that
as Maxine Peake ‘had got her facts wrong’
she was being anti-Semitic. Whether or ot she was right or wrong had
nothing to do with anti-Semitism. Peake was pressurised into recanting, unaware
that Amnesty International has documented Israel’s role
in training US Police Forces. Perhaps Amnesty too is anti-Semitic?
The evidence that Israel is using and
teaching the neck hold to American Police forces is overwhelming. Freedland’s
allegation that critics of Israel are engaging in ‘anti-Semitic conspiracy theories’ is itself a conspiracy theory. Freedland
finds it difficult to understand that Israel is not a Jew and criticism of
Israel is not anti-Jewish.
Freedland
never spells out what he means by the ‘world’s only majority-Jewish country’. It is like describing Germany as the world’s only Aryan
majority country. It betrays a racist
mentality.
Would anyone other than a
died-in-the-wool reactionary describe Britain as a ‘majority Christian country’? It is true that nominally Britain is a
Christian country but unlike Israel the rights of Jewish citizens in this
country are not dependent on their religion. Being Christian in Britain
entitles you to no privileges.
In Israel access to 93% of ‘national’
i.e. Jewish national land depends on someone being Jewish. In order to protect
the purity of hundreds of Jewish only communities in Israel the Knesset passed
the 2011 Admissions Committee Law which allows Committees to reject
Arab applicants on the grounds they don’t fit in to the ‘social fabric.’
Just imagine that in Britain Freedland
was refused the right to buy a home because it was owned by the Christian
National Fund. I suspect he might call it anti-Semitic! Arabs in Israel cannot marry partners from the Occupied
Territories or other Arab states in an attempt to keep the proportion of
non-Jews in Israel as low as possible. As the then Knesset Speaker, now
President, Reuben Rivlin declared, such couples “can be united in Ramallah”
Doris Rabinyan, author of Borderlife, whose book was banned by Israel's Ministry of Education |
It is the same concern for Jewish
racial purity that led the Ministry of Education to ban a novel, Borderlife,
because it depicted a romance between a Jew and an Arab. In the Deep South of
the United States this was called miscegenation.
As Education Ministry spokesperson Dalia Fenig explained
“Intimate relations between Jews
and non-Jews and certainly the open option of institutionalising them through
marriage and establishing a family... are grasped among large segments of the
society as a threat to the distinct identity,”.
Her fear was that
“Adolescents do not have the
systemic view that includes considerations of preserving the identity of the
nation and [understanding] the meaning of assimilation,”
This is the argument of Bloemfontein and Nuremberg. It is also the
argument of Jonathan Freedland, the Guardian, Starmer and those who peddle the
false allegations of ‘anti-Semitism’.
These are the same impulses which led hundreds of demonstrators in
Afula, led by their Mayor, to demonstrate against the sale of a house to
an Arab Israeli or the edict by dozens of Israeli rabbis that
Jews should not let their homes to Arabs. This is what Freedland means by those
weasel words ‘a majority Jewish state’.
Freedland is more than aware from the survey Israel’s
Religiously Divided Society that a plurality of Israeli Jews
favour the forced expulsion of Israel’s Arab citizens and a whopping 79%
believe that Jews are entitled to preferential treatment.
One wonders what Freedland would say if similar figures were found among
non-Jews in Britain. Anti-Semitic? Such
is the acceptance of racism amongst Zionist Jews that the Jewish Chronicle even
conducted a debate ‘Is it racist to set aside Israeli
land for Jews only?” What would Freedland say if the Guardian conducted a
debate on whether it’s anti-Semitic to bar Jews from buying land in
England?
The irony
of all of this is that it is the far-Right, from Donald Trump and Steve Bannon,
to Viktor Orban, Richard Spencer and Tommy Robinson, who combine both anti-Semitism
and avid pro-Zionism. In the words
of the neo-Nazi founder of the alt-Right Richard Spencer, Israelis should
respect him because he is a White Zionist.
It is
usually alleged by people like Freedland that there is a thin line between anti-Zionism
and anti-Semitism. That support for the Palestinians and anti-Semitism frequently
overlap. In fact both today and historically the main supporters of anti-Semitism
have been the far-Right. It is the fundamentalist Christians of the United
States, many of whom are openly anti-Semitic, who are the main supporters of Israel.
In fact it is very difficult and very unusual for supporters of the Palestinians
to hold anti-Semitic views.
Tony Greenstein
The
sacking of Long-Bailey shows that, at last, Labour is serious about
antisemitism
Asked to
name the greatest single cause of the climate crisis, you might waver between,
say, industry or electricity generation
or agriculture, but in 2007 the former Labour cabinet minister Clare Short
had a novel answer: Israel. At a
conference in Brussels, Short said the global finger of blame should point at
Israel because, if it wasn’t for that country’s conflict with the Palestinians,
the world would be amicably united in dealing with carbon emissions. Israel,
she said, “undermines the international community’s reaction to global
warming”, an act of distraction that would ultimately lead to “the end of the
human race”.
The memory
of Short’s insight returned on reading the Independent’s
Thursday interview with the actor Maxine Peake, in which Peake
falsely claimed that the knee on the neck that killed George Floyd in
Minneapolis was a technique “learnt from seminars with Israeli secret
services”. It was Rebecca Long-Bailey’s refusal to delete, and apologise for, a
tweeted endorsement of the Peake interview that saw Keir Starmer make his first
shadow cabinet sacking – a move with serious implications for his party and his
leadership of it, and perhaps beyond.
The link
between Peake and Short is a cast of mind that sees the worst events in the
world and determinedly puts Israel at the centre of them, even in defiance of
the facts or basic common sense. Whatever horrors are unfolding, the hidden
hand of the world’s only majority-Jewish country must be secretly behind them.
For a long while, my favourite illustration of such thinking was the Washington
DC council member who in 2018 blamed a
day’s heavy snowfall on “the Rothschilds”. But Peake might now have a
claim to top spot.
To look at
the US, with its four centuries of racist oppression and white supremacist
violence, its many decades of police brutality, and to decide that the Floyd
killing was not something US police might have come up with all by themselves –
that they required the instruction of faraway Israel – is to stray from
rational analysis into the wilder reaches of conspiracy theory. In the words of
Dave Rich, author of
The Left’s Jewish Problem, such ideas perfectly “mimic the thought structure”
of age-old antisemitic theories of a Jewish plot to bring global ruin: they
simply insert the world’s only Jewish country, Israel, where “the Jews” used to
be.
The story
has played out in several of the familiar ways. Once again, Jews and their
allies have had to patiently explain to the likes of John McDonnell that this
isn’t mere “criticism of practices of Israeli state”, as he tweeted – and not
only because, as Peake herself confessed, she had got her facts wrong.
Long-Bailey’s defenders on the left have argued that she didn’t really notice
the antisemitism, that she was merely affirming a constituent saying admirably
radical things, not realising that that is precisely the problem: the failure,
even after several years of this stuff, to see anti-Jewish prejudice when it
stares them in the face. Once more, Jews have had to wonder why those who are
usually so intolerant of microaggressions against other minorities are so
curiously forgiving of pretty macro aggressions directed against Jews.
Is it any surprise that some in Israel are identifying with Hitler? |
But there’s
a big difference this time – because now, after five painful years, Labour is led by
someone who gets it. What a relief it was to hear Starmer identify the core
accusation amplified by his colleague not as “inappropriate” or “unhelpful” but
as “antisemitic”. He and his team did not need a 12-step education programme to
see the problem, nor did they insist on a seminar-room debate about the finer
definitions of what is and what isn’t anti-Jewish prejudice. Instead, they
understood that they are running a political party, not a student union: the
scope for error is narrower.
By his
action, Starmer has shown he grasps that politics is painted in primary
colours. Most voters will barely be aware of this episode, let alone follow the
nuances. If anything cuts through, it will be that the new Labour leader
promised zero tolerance of antisemitism and he meant it. (Though it seems
Starmer offered her a way out, had she agreed to apologise, which she refused
to take.)
That’s been noticed by
Conservatives, who after five years believing themselves
essentially unopposed, and therefore able to get away with anything, now
recognise they are up against someone serious about power. The contrast with
Boris Johnson’s failure to sack Robert Jenrick, let alone Dominic Cummings, is
striking – and not flattering to the prime minister. It’s possible that Starmer
has overreached, provoking the Corbynite diehards in ways that could cost him.
But the scale of his victory margin in April, and his success in getting his
own choice of party general secretary, have led him to calculate that his
position is stronger than others might imagine.
Starmer’s
response is not the only cause for cautious cheer here. Peake’s retraction is
also welcome: even if she didn’t apologise, she conceded
that she had got it wrong and acknowledged the link
between what she’d claimed and antisemitism. Tellingly, she admitted to having
made an “assumption”, a habit all too common on the far left: a readiness to
assume that if there’s evil afoot, then Israel must be pulling the strings. It
also helps that Amnesty International has disavowed
attempts to suggest a report of theirs in any way
substantiated Peake’s false claim. Suddenly, the likes of McDonnell, Jon Lansman and Len
McCluskey, still banging out the old denialist tunes, look
isolated and out of time.
It might be
fanciful, but perhaps something else might come out of this. If people can
absorb that Israel is not responsible for all the world’s evils, but rather for
a very specific injustice that desperately needs resolution, then perhaps we
can move away from a conversation that casually echoes centuries-old slurs
against Jews, and towards one that at last addresses the on-the-ground reality.
That reality is getting worse for
Palestinians, with the prospect of annexation of the West Bank
looming ever closer. We need to hear that, without getting diverted by medieval
fantasies about Jews.
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