Why Don't You Support Israel?
Israel is one of the most free and most prosperous countries in the world. Not only is Israel a booming economy and a wellspring of innovation, it is the only democracy in the Middle East. So why is it so controversial to support the Jewish state? Stephen Harper, the 22nd Prime Minister of Canada, lays out several fundamental truths about America’s most critical ally.
Every military action Israel has ever taken has been _________________.
to oppress the Palestiniansto aid the United Statespolitically motivatedto protect itselfWhich country came to Israel’s aid in 1948?
The United StatesThe United KingdomCanadaNoneMuslims in Israel are the freest Muslims in the region.
TrueFalseWhich of the following countries has Israel achieved peace with?
IraqJordanLebanonNoneWhat explains the singling out of Israel for condemnation?
ApartheidHuman rights violationsAnti-SemitismWar crimes
- Every military action Israel has undertaken has been to protect itself; Israel is a defensive state, not an aggressor state.
As a nation still in infancy in 1948, Israel was attacked by surrounding Arab nations. No other international power aided Israel; despite this, Israel was victorious.
View sourceOn April 16, 1948, Palestinian leader Jamal Husseini told the U.N. that “the representative of the Jewish Agency told us yesterday that they were not the attackers, that the Arabs had begun the fighting. We did not deny this. We told the whole world that we were going to fight.”
View sourceDuring the Six-Day War of 1967, Israel’s neighbors again sought to utterly destroy the Jewish State. Again, Israel prevailed.
View sourceIsrael survived another all-out attack in 1973, the Yom Kippur War.
View source- Israel has been a frequent target of attacks by its neighbors, yet it has sought to make peace with them.
The first of two waves of terror, so-called intifadas, occurred in the late 1980s.
View sourceIn the early 2000s, Palestinian terrorist organization Hamas refused to accept the Oslo agreement and started a second intifada against Israel.
View sourceIsrael has faced repeated incursions from terror groups like Hezbollah in Lebanon.
View sourceHamas has launched thousands of rocket attacks on Israel from the Gaza Strip — even after Israel completely withdrew from that territory in 2005.
View sourceDespite the wars and terrorism, Israel has sought peace with its neighbors. And it did achieve a peace treaty with Egypt on March 26, 1979.
View sourceIsrael signed a peace treaty with Jordan on October 26, 1994.
View source- Despite being repeatedly targeted by terror groups, Israel has remained committed to the rule of law, democracy and tolerance.
Nearly one-fifth of Israel’s citizens are Muslim.
View sourceMuslims enjoy the same rights as Jewish citizens in Israel and occupy key positions in the nation’s courts, press and government.
View sourceMuslims have their own parties representing them in the Knesset, Israel’s parliament.
View sourceIsrael is the only country in the region devoted to democracy.
View sourcePrisoners in Israel, be they Jewish or Arab, are well-treated. Israel has one of the lowest recidivism rates in the world.
View source- Israel has not only managed to survive coordinated efforts to take it down, it has produced a thriving, innovative economy.
According to a report from The Heritage Foundation, Israel’s “overall regulatory framework promotes efficiency and entrepreneurial activity.”
View sourceDespite lacking the rich oil reserves that other Middle Eastern countries have, Israel has the most advanced economy in the region.
View sourceIsrael’s thriving technology sector was built on the foundation of its defense industry’s advancements.
View sourceIsrael is known as “start-up nation,” ranking just behind Silicon Valley.
View sourceMany key tech components were designed in Israel as well as many life-saving drugs and medical devices.
View source- Israel is the most tolerant, democratic country in the Middle East, yet leftist politicians and activists are devoted to destroying it.
BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions) advocates anti-Israel policies on college campuses, calling Israel an “apartheid” state.
View sourceBDS promotes boycotting Israeli products and companies.
View sourceIsrael has been boycotted by academics such as scientist Stephen Hawking.
View sourceIt has become commonplace for celebrities to denounce Israel.
View sourceWATCH: Stephen Harper at the Knesset
View source
When I was Prime Minister of Canada, I was often asked this question: "Why do you support Israel?"
My response, in effect, was always the same: Why wouldn't I support Israel?
Why wouldn't I support a fellow democratic nation where open elections, free speech, and religious tolerance are the everyday norm? Why wouldn't I support a country with a vibrant free press and an independent judiciary? Why wouldn't I support a valuable trading partner and a well-spring of amazing technological innovation? Why wouldn't I support our most critical ally in the Middle East, and in the international struggle against terrorism?
In a rational world, in a world where simple common sense prevailed, the question "why do you support Israel?" would be like asking "why do you support Australia?" or..."Canada?"
But we don't live in that rational, common-sense world. So the case for Israel has to be made over and over. I, for one, am happy to make it.
Let me start with this:
Every military action Israel has ever taken has been to protect itself. Israel is not an aggressor state; it's a defensive state. This has been true from its founding to this day.
As a fledgling nation in 1948, Israel was immediately attacked by its Arab neighbors. Their goal was not to contain the tiny new country; it was to annihilate it. No nation came to Israel's aid--not the United States, not my country, Canada, not the United Kingdom--no one. They all thought Israel would lose. But it didn't lose. It won.
In 1967, Israel's neighbors again sought to utterly destroy the Jewish State, a nation that had then existed for two decades. Again, Israel prevailed. And It survived another all-out attack in 1973.
Those are the big wars, but I'm not sure there has been a single day in Israel's entire history when some act of terror has not been waged against it--inside or outside its borders.
There have been two bloody waves of terror, so-called intifadas, in the late 1980s and the early 2000s, when Israelis were blown up on buses, at pizza parlors and celebrating weddings. There have been incursions from terror groups like Hezbollah in Lebanon. There have been thousands of rocket attacks from Hamas in the Gaza Strip--even after Israel completely withdrew from that territory in 2005.
In between the wars, in between the terror, Israel has sought peace with its neighbors. And it has achieved peace treaties with Egypt and Jordan. For others, however, every Israeli gesture for peace is met with incitement and violence.
I recount this history for one reason: Any nation that has endured what Israel has endured could easily have become a police state. But through it all, Israel has never abandoned its commitment to the rule of law, to democracy, to tolerance. One-fifth of its citizens are Muslim. They enjoy the same rights as Jewish citizens. They occupy key positions in the nation's courts, press and government. And they have their own parties representing them in the Knesset, Israel's parliament. To say that Muslims in Israel are the freest Muslims in the region is an understatement. How about this as a human rights test: Prisoners in Israel, be they Jewish or Arab, are well-treated, well-fed, and have access to the best possible medical care. Parents and spouses of these prisoners know where they are and that they are safe. Who else in the region but Israel can make that claim?
Through all the wars and all the terror, Israel has survived and, especially in the last twenty years, it has thrived. It's known as "start-up nation," and with good reason. Key components of your cell phone and your laptop were designed in Israel. A drug or a medical device that has saved your life or the life of a loved one may have been developed in Israel. Yet there are leftist politicians, activists, artists, academics and college students who devote their lives to denouncing Israel, calling for boycotts, demanding it be cut off from academic and professional societies.
Do they denounce the Palestinian leadership that hasn't held an election in well over a decade? Do they denounce the leadership of Hamas, who use women and children as human shields to protect their fighters?
No. They denounce free, vibrant, democratic, innovative Israel.
With all the brutal and violent regimes, not only in the Middle East, but around the world, how is one to explain singling out Israel for condemnation? Sadly, only one explanation fits: anti-Semitism.
Do these haters of Israel question the legitimacy of any other democratic nation? Of any nation, for that matter? Of course, the answer is "no." Somehow, they only manage to oppose the Jewish one.
The State of Israel has now existed for 70 years. It is one of the freest, most prosperous, most successful nations on earth.
Why do I support Israel? Why wouldn't I? Why wouldn't anyone?
I'm Stephen Harper, 22nd Prime Minister of Canada, for Prager University.
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