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THE MANIPULATION MYTH

As the war against Iran continues, a growing domestic chorus is proclaiming that the United States has been manipulated into fighting a war more in Israel’s interests than our own.

The loudest of such voices belong to those with impeccable anti-Semitic credentials.  Tucker Carlson warns that the U.S. is “tethered” to Israel, like a pet or a small child.  Marjorie Taylor Greene declares that MAGA has been supplanted by “Make Israel First.” The clear leader in the lunatic wing is Candace Owens, who asserts that Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk was killed “for this war.”

Like most conspiracy theories, the manipulation myth does not withstand scrutiny. The truth is that the United States is following the course of action which it deems best for itself. One may agree or disagree with this choice, but President Donald Trump is nobody’s fool. He is certainly nobody’s puppet.

This does not mean that American and Israel’s objectives are identical in every respect. The objectives of allies at war rarely are. America has a long history of waging war alongside allies with different, sometimes conflicting, interests. One can trace that history all the way back to the Revolution, which we fought alongside our oldest ally, France. The United States fought the Revolution to establish a free and independent republic based on individual rights. The French monarchy wasn’t particularly interested in such aims. It just wanted to win back some of the possessions it had lost to the British a few years earlier in the French and Indian War (known outside North America as the Seven Years War). But the alliance worked well for both parties.

The United States and Israel vary in population, location, size, and history. It would be astonishing if their war aims did not diverge to some extent. But most of the supposed differences tend to disappear upon close examination.

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WHAT ZELENSKY CAN LEARN FROM BIBI

On February 24, 2022, Russia invaded Ukraine. In keeping with established Russian military doctrine, its invasion plans called for the immediate decapitation of the Ukrainian government, including the capture and execution of its President, Volodymyr Zelensky . The U.S. Government, which had confidential sources in the Kremlin, disclosed that Zelensky was a “prime target.”   Ukrainian intelligence disclosed that the Russians had marked Zelensky as “target No.1” and his family as “target No.2.”

The U.S. Government offered to evacuate Zelensky and his family from Kyiv to safety.

Zelensky declined the offer, stating: “The fight is here; I need ammunition, not a ride.”

It is worth recalling these facts while reviewing the nauseating scene that played out in the Oval Office last Friday. President Trump thought he could browbeat Zelensky, just as he had gelded his Secretary of State, who sat there, silent and ashen. But it simply was not in Zelensky’s DNA to stay quiet while Trump and his Vice Presidential lackey berated him. Instead, Zelensky calmly but forcefully corrected Trump and Vance when they uttered lies about Ukraine’s record of willingness to negotiate, Europe’s  level of support for Ukraine, and Putin’s trustworthiness.

He did not immediately correct their lie about not thanking the United States for its support, perhaps because he had thanked America so many times (33 times in English, and an unknown number in Ukrainian, according to one count), it hardly seemed necessary. Nevertheless, immediately after the meeting, he wrote on X: “Thank you America, thank you for your support, thank you for this visit. Thank you POTUS, Congress, and the American people.”

But however disgusting Trump’s performance may have been, Volodymyr Zelensky cannot entirely escape responsibility for the debacle.  After all, he knew full well the nature and character of the man he was meeting. Just days before the meeting, Trump had called him a “dictator without elections” and had stated that Ukraine “never should have started” the war. Zelensky should have been prepared to deal with Trump without jeopardizing Ukraine’s supply of American military assistance.

It would have been difficult but Zelensky could have placated Trump without groveling. How? By emulating another leader, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

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