Israel, unruly teenager

Tony Judt gives Israel a talking-to in today's FT. At the age of 58, Israel, he argues, can no longer act like an unruly adolescent: "confident of its uniqueness; certain that no one “understands”; quick to take offence, and to give it. Like many adolescents, Israel is convinced – and aggressively asserts – that it ...

Tony Judt gives Israel a talking-to in today's FT. At the age of 58, Israel, he argues, can no longer act like an unruly adolescent: "confident of its uniqueness; certain that no one “understands”; quick to take offence, and to give it. Like many adolescents, Israel is convinced – and aggressively asserts – that it can do as it wishes; that its actions carry no consequences; that it is immortal."

Tony Judt gives Israel a talking-to in today's FT. At the age of 58, Israel, he argues, can no longer act like an unruly adolescent: "confident of its uniqueness; certain that no one “understands”; quick to take offence, and to give it. Like many adolescents, Israel is convinced – and aggressively asserts – that it can do as it wishes; that its actions carry no consequences; that it is immortal."

Why is it high time that Israel grew up? Because the world has changed, and Israel, he says, hasn't yet recognized it:

Israel’s long-cultivated persecution mania no longer elicits sympathy. The country’s national narrative of macho victimhood appears to many now as simply bizarre: a collective cognitive dysfunction. Israel, in the world’s eyes, is a normal state; but one behaving in abnormal ways. As for the charge that criticism of Israel is implicitly anti-Semitic, this is in danger of becoming a self-fulfilling assertion: Israel’s reckless behaviour, and its insistent identification of all criticism with anti-Semitism, is now the leading source of anti-Jewish sentiment in western Europe and much of Asia.

Carolyn O'Hara is a senior editor at Foreign Policy.
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