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Melanie Phillips

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Melanie Phillips,

Melanie Phillips

Opinion

Wars for Western minds

July 30, 2015 13:26
2 min read

In the words of the 17th-century English diplomat Sir Henry Wotton, an ambassador is "an honest gentleman sent to lie abroad for the good of his country". What happens, though, when an ambassador is sent abroad from an honest country into a culture of lies? Michael Oren and Daniel Taub were, respectively, Israel's ambassadors to the US and UK. Oren's posting ended in 2013 and Taub's this week .

Both were born and raised in the countries to which they were sent - an invaluable advantage, since both understood the people to whom they were talking. Taub was sent into a Britain whose political and cultural establishment was consumed by virulent and irrational hatred of Israel, while David Cameron (perhaps guided by Taub) became more supportive.

Oren was in the mirror-image situation: a country which was well-disposed towards Israel but where President Obama's agenda of empowering the Arab and Muslim world translated into a vicious animus against the one country, Israel, that stood in his way. As he relates in his gripping memoir, Ally, Oren found himself trapped in a nightmare.

Aghast, he watched as the Obama administration subjected Israel to relentless, malevolent pressure to surrender its security to enemies who never ceased manoeuvring for its destruction. The rupture between the US and Israel caused him personal anguish. The two identities to which his psyche was attached came into hitherto unthinkable conflict with each other.