David Friedman’s Nomination Exposes the Great Divide of the American Jewish Community

U.S. Ambassador to Israel-designate David Friedman
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David Friedman, President Donald Trump’s nominee for U.S. ambassador to Israel, has managed to anger Jewish Voice for Peace, J Street, U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) and the Union for Reform Judaism. It’s a safe bet that every Jewish leftist who ever cut a check to the New Israel Fund is enduring sleepless nights.

Friedman must be doing something right.

The nomination reflects a growing divide in the Jewish community, one that was partially etched into the voting returns in Brooklyn on election night.

The Orthodox neighborhoods voted for Trump. The secular ones went for Hillary Clinton. 

This, however, is only a partial indicator of a growing chasm in the American Jewish community between liberal Jews who are incapable of separating their Jewishness from allegiance to the Democratic Party, and the growing number who are rejecting the party of former President Barack Obama and his second term’s secretary of state, John Kerry. 

They are the political leaders who made Iran a nuclear power, and their party has nominated U.S. Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) to head its national committee despite Ellison’s past ties to the Nation of Islam and his defense of its anti-Semitic leader, Louis Farrakhan.

The legacy of Obama and Kerry is changing the calculus of American Jewish voters. The political apostasy has caused families to rupture and friendships to unravel, exacerbated by Trump’s unanticipated victory. 

The intensity is palpable as seen in Peter Beinart’s questioning Jared Kushner’s Jewishness in The Forward. Liberal Jews not only believe they have a monopoly on the moral high ground, but their corrupted perspective of tikkum olam (“repairing the world”) justifies action that has made the world a more dangerous place for Jews and Christians. 

Nowhere is this intensity more pronounced than in the opposition to David Friedman. Lara Friedman, director of policy and government relations for the leftist Americans for Peace Now, invokes the anti-Semitic canard of dual loyalty in attacking David Friedman. He owns a home in Jerusalem, contributes a column to a conservative newspaper and, like many Jews and non-Jews alike, does not believe Israeli policy should be based on Arab promises, she writes. Lara Friedman also notes that David Friedman has been identified with the “settlers’ movement.”

Lara Friedman’s use of her blog in The Hill to impugn David Friedman’s loyalty is a reckless reinforcement of anti-Semitic stereotypes.

If David Friedman is appointed ambassador to Israel, he will swear an oath of allegiance to the U.S., not the state of Israel. 

That the dual loyalty accusation against Jews represents a double standard is abundantly clear from the fact that nobody in the mainstream of America dared raise the issues that Barack Obama’s father was a Muslim, that his stepfather was a Muslim, that his African grandmother was a Muslim and that his African family members are Muslims. The former president attended a madrassa in Indonesia and has a Muslim name. 

It was essentially forbidden to say that Obama had Muslim sympathies. Any remote allusion to Obama having any relationship with Islam was considered inappropriate for public discourse. 

But no such consideration is granted to David Friedman, certainly not by leftist Jews, because Friedman plans to implement Trump administration policies that are totally at variance with the policies that the liberal-dominated American Jewish community considers sacrosanct.

For more than 60 years, the Jewish community leadership has bought into the fable of a democratic, secular Palestinian state living side by side in peace and security with a Jewish state. It hasn’t happened. It isn’t going to happen because the conflict is not about borders and settlements, but about the Jewish state, which the Palestinians see as one big settlement. 

David Friedman is perceived as a disrupter. He is already reshaping conventional thought about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and even before he is confirmed, he is forging new ideas that progressives find appalling.

J Street, which even Obama eventually silenced, giving the group’s seat at the progressive table to a revamped Israel Policy Forum, has been further discredited on Capitol Hill by the emergence of the CUFI Action Fund, a Christians United for Israel (CUFI)-affiliated lobby group.

The Action Fund lobbies Congress with the effective support of CUFI’s more than 3.3 million members. The organization recently brought more than 250 activists to Washington with just a few days’ notice to descend on Congress. Their agenda was to “end Israel-bashing at the United Nations, support moving the American Embassy to Jerusalem and confirm David Friedman.”

This is a substantially different set of proposals than that of the previous administration and much of the liberal Jewish community. An American ambassador who is committed to confronting the intractable problem of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict with this new vision will expose the irrelevance of the Jewish community leadership. That is why they fear David Friedman’s appointment.

Abraham H. Miller is an emeritus professor of political science, University of Cincinnati, and a distinguished fellow with the Haym Salomon Center. Paul Miller is president and executive director of the Haym Salomon Center.

This article was originally published at JNS.org. Used with permission.

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