Schumer’s Folly

It’s no secret that among the potential leaders, Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyanhu is the most right wing, corrupt and disagreeable Israel has to offer. It seems possible that Bibi’s unpopularity both in Israel and abroad was part of the calculus when Hamas decided to attack on October 7th, as no other prime minister holding the post by the oddity of coalition was as vulnerable to criticism.

And yet, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s call for regime change to oust Netanyahu was not only the most tone deaf cry he could have made, causing even Bibi’s many enemies to circle the wagons around him, but feeding into the very thing that Schumer, the highest ranking Jew in the United States government and a staunch supporter of Israel, claimed he wished to prevent.

If you read Schumer’s entire speech, you’ll know it was no sop to progressives. He rejected calls for a permanent cease-fire before Hamas is defeated and called out a strain of antisemitism on the left that believes in the “right to statehood for every group but the Jews.” But he’s clearly trying to keep the Democrats in his caucus — as well as mainstream liberals across America — on Israel’s side by distinguishing between the right of Israel to defend itself and the way Netanyahu has chosen to exercise that right.

I could quarrel with Schumer on some of the particulars of his speech, but I don’t fault his sincerity. He thinks, not without reason, that Bibi is turning the Jewish state into a global pariah and he wants to stop that from happening.

Even Bibi’s worst enemies in Israel came to his defense against Schumer.

Notice what Naftali Bennett, Bibi’s predecessor as prime minister, wrote Thursday on social media: “Regardless of our political opinion, we strongly oppose external political intervention in Israel’s internal affairs. We are an independent nation, not a banana republic.” And Bennett hates Bibi.

After establishing his bona fides as an Israel suppoter, Schumer did what no American official should do openly: call for another country’s regime change. His contention was that Bibi has become “an obstacle to peace.

Israel cannot hope to succeed as a pariah opposed by the rest of the world.

That Netanyahu was almost certainly the worst choice of prime minister for the moment, he is, nonetheless, the prime minister. And he is the prime minister at a time when Israel is in the throes of war against Hamas. Hate Bibi all you want. You’re not alone. But nations do not change their leader in the midst of battle. The focus is on Gaza, on hostages, on the rapes and murders suffered at the hands of Hamas. It’s not the moment for Israel to hold new elections and see if a different coalition forms that would name Benny Gantz prime minister.

But far more importantly, if there were some other, less right wing, less intransigent, less strident, prime minister in office, would it change anything about the way in which Israel was dealing with Gaza? Would they forego the eradication of Hamas for the sake of Gazans, and at the expense of Israelis? Would they embrace President Biden’s call for a two-state solution with a Palestinian state ruled by Hamas?

Patrick: Would another Israeli leader pursue a very different path from Netanyahu?

Bret: When it comes to Gaza, the broad contours of Israel’s policy will be the same whether the prime minister is Netanyahu or any of his plausible rivals or successors — people like Yair Lapid, Benny Gantz, or the former Mossad head Yossi Cohen. Nor is there any chance that any of these leaders will agree to a Palestinian state anytime soon, at least not while there’s a possibility Hamas could come to power and Iran continues to arm groups like Hezbollah.

So what then would be accomplished by regime change?

But tone and emphasis matter, and it would help Israel greatly to have a leader who doesn’t automatically cause such a neuralgic reaction in foreign capitals. Bibi has more than outworn his welcome.

Vibes? By donning the mantle of Israel’s staunchest supporter, America’s highest ranking Jew in government, Schumer sought to accomplish two things. The first was to blunt the outrage that the left wing of the Democratic Party has toward Genocide Joe for not backing Gaza as the oppressed against the Apartheid Genocidal Settler Colonial State of Israel. Schumer hoped to shift the focus off Biden and onto Bibi as the bad dude to be blamed. It didn’t work and won’t work.

The second thing, and it remains unclear at the moment as President Biden has yet to say whether he supports or condemns Schumer’s call for regime change, is that Netanyahu has made no pretense of trying to make Biden look good, or at least not awful, by adopting the rhetoric of empathy and conciliation even as Hamas refuses a ceasefire or the release of the Israeli and American (did we forget about them?) hostages in Gaza. If the goal was to trade the unpleasant and uncooperative Bibi for a prime minister who would help shore up Biden’s support with the left fringe, the speech was a miserable failure as Israelis were universally outraged by Schumer’s attempted interference in their domestic politics.

But Schumer’s point, that Israel cannot succeed if it becomes an international pariah, is undeniable. The problem is that Schumer’s speech has now contributed to Israel being viewed as a pariah for defending itself just as any country, most notably including this country, would and did when attacked. Schumer’s speech validated the “free Palestine” and “from the river to the sea” midwits by laying the blame for this travesty on Bibi’s intransigence rather than Hamas’ terrorism. If the world ends up seeing Israel as a pariah, Chuck Schumer will have been a major contributor to its demise.

13 thoughts on “Schumer’s Folly

  1. Mike V.

    Schumer spent years bemoaning alleged interference in American politics by a foreign nation, but it is somehow ok for him to do it. The hypocrisy is almost stunning.

    And as you said, Hell will freeze before Israel accepts a Palestinian State that counts Hamas as part of it’s administration.

  2. Virginia Burke

    Netanyahu is a glue trap for America. Saying anything against his tactics as a leader and his clear barbarity towards Gazans is publicly interpreted as one being anti semitic, anti Israel and pro Hamas. Schumer can speak his mind privately, but when it is done on the floor of the Senate he’d better be sure he is speaking for the US administration, because his words will now do more harm than good.

    No country should ever give another country’s leader carte blanche (fundamental mistake) and one should certainly never call for a leader’s removal unless they are taking them straight to the International criminal court for egregious crimes against humanity.

  3. Elpey P.

    The face-eating leopard party/foreign policy apparatus talks about eating another face.

    Meanwhile they call their own face “Democracy!” while crying that it’s being eaten by people not voting for them.

  4. B. McLeod

    U.S. politicians disregard the laws and sovereignty of other nations all the time. Even open calls for regime change have not been infrequent. The monumental faux pas here is in calling for regime change in an “allied” country. Ooopsy.

  5. James

    Israel may need to wait for the Leviathan field to come online before resolving the Hamas Gaza problem. Much more latitude when other countries need the product provided.

  6. Neil

    But nations do not change their leader in the midst of battle.

    Winston Churchill became Prime Minister in May 1940 well after the start of the war and was subsequently victorious. Is Israel winning or losing?

    1. B. McLeod

      It is hard to say. If they do not achieve their war aims, but Hamas does not achieve its war aims, what has happened?

  7. AnonJr

    Oh yeah, the American hostages… wonder what Carter thinks about a Democrat president not catching flak for American hostages in a middle eastern conflict.

    I was always under the impression that Jordan was created to form a state for the Arab population of British Mandate Palestine. Is making a state out of Gaza providing a home for a group that has nowhere to go or is it an attempt at land for peace?

    Might just be my Polish heritage – and my conversations with my great grandfather who fought in both wars, fleeing Poland after the 2nd – the latter tends not to work out all that well.

  8. Miles

    Latest word is that Biden approved of Schumer’s speech and that Schumer ran it past the WH beforehand, so your suspicion, that Schumer was a front for Biden in calling for Netanyahu’s ouster, appears to be correct.

    And now that Israel, including Netanyahu’s enemies, have found this call for regime change outrageous, what’s Biden going to do? Will he end support for the only ally the US has ever had in the middle east because its PM won’t sacrifice his own citizens to help Biden’s re-election campaign. Come to think of it, another president did something very similar just a few years ago with Ukraine and was impeached for it.

    1. David

      Imagine you’re Hamas, hearing Schumer/Biden demand that Bibi be thrown out of office for being too mean to Gazans. How hard are you laughing now that you know you’ve got Biden by the balls?

  9. rxc

    Behavior that is rewarded, will be repeated. Applies to pets, children, terrorist organizations, and countries..

  10. KeyserSoze

    Chuck the Schmuck. A name well established and earned every time he opens his mouth.

    Why, why, why does NY inflict this fool on the rest of us?

    I think that being a pariah country is not one of Israel’s immediate concerns. After the elimination of HAMAS will send another message to the world that it should heed: DON’T FUCK WITH ME!

    HAMAS delinda est.

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