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Howard Jacobson

ByHoward Jacobson, Howard Jacobson

Opinion

Hating Israel is not a get-out-of-jail-free card to grant automatic immunity from charge of loathing Jews

March 8, 2012 13:23
2 min read

Can a wish be genocidal? In Baroness Tonge's case, yes. If wishes were horses, bigots would ride. That the baroness will now appear in the martyrology of those who suffer for their opposition to Israel goes without saying.

Already, Mehdi Hasan, the New Statesman's senior political editor, has inscribed her name in the book of the righteous with as shabby a piece of disingenuousness as you will find. Where is the difference, he asks, between Baroness Tonge's proposal for a one-state solution - for that apparently was all it was - and, say, Ehud Olmert's warning that if the two-state solution founders, the state of Israel is finished. By this reasoning, there is nothing to choose between a dire prediction of disaster and the gleeful incitement of it. And the baroness has only Israel's interests at heart.

For her part, she insists her words were taken out of context and repeats that weary mantra that you can labour for the obliteration of Israel and not be an antisemite. To which the weary answer is, yes, but you can equally labour for the obliteration of Israel and be an antisemite. Hating Israel is not a get-out-of-jail-free card; it doesn't grant automatic immunity from the charge of loathing Jews.

It is difficult in Baroness Tonge's case to separate that from stupidity. Even for someone holding an unreasonable position, she reasons badly. Take her point that Israel is "America's aircraft carrier in the Middle East". If she means thereby to accuse America of using Israel to spearhead its aggressive foreign policy, then she can't also cite with enthusiasm, as she likes to, the Mearsheimer and Walt conspiracy-fantasy that the Israel lobby has America in its pocket. It's make-your-mind-up time, Baroness: just who is pulling whose strings?