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Choosing the Ideal U.S. President for Israel

If we insist that all of our friends adopt but one position, we are creating a standard of loyalty for friends much narrower than the standard we are applying for ourselves

By DONNIEL HARTMAN

 
For us Israelis, and for many Jews around the world, the identity of the president of the United States is understood as an issue of existential significance. We have few friends in the world and our most significant and strategic ally is – and we hope will continue to be – the United States. Without the U.S., our world will be both more dangerous and profoundly lonely.
 
The recent Super Tuesday primaries in the United States have begun to narrow down the field of candidates for president, and around the Jewish world, the debate as to who is better for Israel – Clinton, Obama or McCain – is becoming both more heated and pressing. However, as we carefully scrutinize the record of each candidate, both real and fictitious, there is a larger issue which I believe we must first put on the table: What are our criteria for assessing friendship and support for Israel?
 
Without a doubt, we are looking for a president who is our friend, and friends are those who have empathy for each other, who care for each other, and, most importantly, who are capable of seeing the other as the other sees himself. Friends also stand by each other even when it is not always the most politically expedient thing to do.
 
Different standards
 
There is, however, a different standard of friendship that has been making the rounds in the Jewish community over the last number of years that is deeply mistaken and which, at the end of the day, is a disservice to Israel and to its cause, as well as threatening to Israel’s ability to develop and sustain true friendships throughout the world.
 
Under this standard, a friend is not one who is merely with you through thick and thin, but is one who agrees with you regardless of whether he believes you are right or wrong. All too often in the Jewish community today, we require our friends to be exclusively "yes-sayers" – individuals who will declare "amen" regardless of what we do. More than that, we have begun to require that our friends never have an opinion different from ours. Friends under this argument must always agree, and in our case, our friends must agree with us and follow our lead.
 
There are two serious flaws in this notion of friendship. The first is that it is antithetical to Judaism’s notion of true friendship, as stated in Vayikra 19:17 – "Do not hate your brother in your heart. You must admonish your neighbor, and not bear sin because of him." The Jewish tradition teaches us that a sign of true love and friendship is when you care enough about somebody to correct them. You care enough about somebody to tell them you think they are doing something wrong. The perpetual declaration of "amen," at the end of the day, is both a symptom and source of indifference.
 
Under the commandment of "tohekhah" – the commandment to rebuke somebody who you feel is doing something wrong – Jewish tradition is trying to foster a level of care among friends that has no tolerance for this type of indifference.
 
I don’t know who will be "a better" president for Israel. I do know, however, that I would welcome a friend who, if he or she feels so, would come and talk to us and encourage policies they believe are both more in our interest or more in accordance with our mission. I do not fear such a dialogue. Quite to the contrary I welcome it, for I am in search of true friends.
 
Audacious debate
 
The standard of friendship I am attacking here is flawed for yet another reason. This new standard does not take into account or allow for the vibrant debate and disagreement within us in Israel as to what is our position. It anoints one approach as "the" approach of Israel, and requires our friends to line up behind it, all the while feigning ignorance to the fact that even we Israelis seriously debate the best policy.
 
If we insist that all of our friends adopt but one position, we are creating a standard of loyalty for friends much narrower than the standard we are applying for ourselves. Such a standard will leave us in the near future with no friends and deeply alone.
 
The beauty and power of Israel is founded on the vibrancy, the vitality and even the audaciousness of the political debate that abounds every day in Israeli society. We have succeeded in creating one country by creating a broad enough umbrella to engage in discussion in the spirit of "These and these are words of the living God." If an Israeli can vote for Kadima, Likud or Labor, and still be within the core consensus of loyalty to Israel and loving this country, we must allow no less from our friends overseas.
 
As the list of candidates has been whittled down, and we are able to look more carefully into the faces of the next potential president of the United States, I am looking carefully at who I believe will be my friend. Let us create, however, a standard of friendship that is both true to our tradition and true to the complexity of the issues we face here in the State of Israel.
 

 

 

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The End of Policy Substance in Israel Politics