When Prime Minister Netanyahu strides to the lectern in about five hours time, he will be doing so as the
leader of the free world, argues Quin Hillyer at the National Review (Hat Tips:
Memeorandum and
Pete F).
The leader of the free world will be addressing Congress on
Tuesday. The American president is doing everything possible to
undermine him.
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu leads a nation surrounded by
enemies, a nation so small that it narrows at one point to just 9.3
miles.
Yet, in a world where the Oval Office is manned by someone openly
apologetic for most American exercises of power; and where Western
Europe’s economy is enervated, its people largely faithless, and its
leadership feckless; and where Freedom House has found “an overall drop
in [global] freedom for the ninth consecutive year,” the safeguarding of
our civilization might rely more on leaders who possess uncommon moral
courage than on those who possess the most nukes or biggest armies.
Right now, nobody on the world stage speaks for civilization the way
Netanyahu does. While Barack Obama babbles about the supposedly
“legitimate grievances” of those who turn to jihad, Netanyahu talks like
this (from his speech to the United Nations on September 27, 2012):
...
As Barack Obama complains (with scant grasp of the historical
context) about how Christians were such gosh-darn meanies a thousand
years ago in the Crusades, Netanyahu protects the ability of Muslims
today to have free access to the Old City of Jerusalem, even as Jews and
Christians are prohibited from visiting the Temple Mount. At the
beginning of his first term, in his first trip overseas as president,
Obama delivered a speech to Turkey’s parliament, under the thumb of the
repressive Tayyip Erdogan. “The United States is still working through
some of our own darker periods in our history,” he confessed, sounding
like America’s therapist-in-chief. “Our country still struggles with the
legacies of slavery and segregation, the past treatment of Native
Americans.”
Netanyahu, in contrast, in a 2011 Meet the Press interview, offered
unabashed words of praise for the United States: “Israel is the one
country in which everyone is pro-American, opposition and coalition
alike. And I represent the entire people of Israel who say, ‘Thank you,
America.’ And we’re friends of America, and we’re the only reliable
allies of America in the Middle East.” (Netanyahu was accurate in his
description of how much Israelis appreciate Americans, as I saw last
summer during a visit to the country.)
In thanking America, Netanyahu was not posturing for political
advantage. Netanyahu — who spent far more of his formative years on the
American mainland than Obama did, and who took enemy fire at the age
when Obama was openly pushing Marxist theory, and who learned and
practiced free enterprise at the same age when Obama was practicing and
teaching Alinskyism — has spoken eloquently for decades in praise of the
Western heritage of freedom and human rights. He also speaks and acts,
quite obviously, to preserve security — for Israel, of course, but more
broadly for the civilized world. On Tuesday, as he has done for more
than 30 years, Netanyahu will talk about the threat to humanity posed by
Iran.
...
It’s mind-boggling to imagine that any national leader in the free world
would fail to understand the danger. The ayatollahs have never backed
down from their stated aim of destroying Christendom. They have never
wavered from their depiction of the United States as the “Great Satan.”
Just last week, Iran bragged about its recent test-firing of “new
strategic weapons” that it says will “play a key role” in any future
battle against the “Great Satan U.S.”
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