Should the Wars in Israel and Ukraine Be Treated the Same?
Americans are divided over the wars in Israel and Ukraine and how much foreign aid should go to each of the countries. Victor Davis Hanson claimed that the wars are similar but different conflicts “in more ways than we can imagine.” He then proceeded to explain why they are similar yet different.
Ukraine was invaded by a huge Russian
state, with a population three-and-a-half times greater, a gross national
product 10 times larger, and an area 30 times its size.
Hamas, by contrast, is a terrorist clique
of about 50,000 to 70,000 gunmen and terrorist kingpins who run Gaza. It is
dwarfed by the Israeli population (20 times larger), economy (27 times
greater), and area (60 times larger).
Most of Europe, the United States, and the
West understandably supported arming Ukraine to repel Vladimir Putin’s Russian
aggression.
By contrast, such support for democratic
Israel was strangely mixed.
In many elite political, academic and
media circles, Israel is criticized for its massive retaliation after Hamas’
Oct. 7 attack.
The Western attitude towards the two wars
grows even more inconsistent, if not incoherent.
There are constant calls for Israel to be
“proportionate” in Gaza following the massacres of nearly 1,200 Jes, the vast
majority civilians.
But Westerners understandably seek to give
Ukraine more and better arms than Russia to ensure a disproportionate response
necessary to win the war.
Israel is faulted for collateral damage
from its efforts to destroy Hamas – even though terrorists are burrowed in and
beneath hospital, mosques and schools.
Hanson’s
article is much longer with even more reasons for the difference between the
two wars. He explained that Hamas launches rockets into Israel without any
warning, but Israel is expected to drop leaflets into Gaza to warn the Gazan
civilians to stay out of the area. In the other war, no Westerner expects
Ukraine to warn civilians in either occupied Ukraine or across the border in
Russia of impending attacks. Yet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is
blasted for its “disproportionate” retaliation in Gaza.
Netanyahu
is watched closely by Americans “for any sign of absolutist rule or failure to
create” the right type of Cabinet. Yet, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy
has actually “suspended elections during the war but also declared martial law
over his entire country.”
Hanson
continued his explanation by recognizing that “Zelenskyy remains a rock star in
the West,” while Israel “has not declared martial law” but “has formed a
bipartisan coalition government with members of the opposition.”
According
to Hanson, the media and politicians in the Western world “discount Russian
propaganda … especially its unsubstantiated claims of relative Russian and
Ukrainian casualties or Ukrainian setbacks or atrocities.” Yet, “many of these
same Westerners oddly take Hamas’ casualty totals at face value” even to
believing that “the Islamic jihad rocket that hit a Gazan hospital was an
Israeli bomb.” Hanson stated that “Hamas has proven to be no more honest, and
perhaps far more inaccurate, than even Russia state-controlled media.”
So,
why are there so many “strange disconnects in Western attitudes toward these
two wars?”
Here
are Hanson’s reasons: It has nothing to do with who started the war or which
country is more democratic or the most atrocities. It is about the rising of
antisemitism in the West. Hamas’ killers are romanticized as “freedom fighters”
while all Russians are considered as villains. “Middle East oil money and
massive immigration into Western countries dwarf the influence of an ailing
Russia.” Therefore, “Left-wing politicians in Europe and the U.S.” court Muslim
nations while not worrying about the Russian lobby.
This
means that the disconnect continues and “grows into absurdity.”
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