By Peter Beinart (a former rabid Zionist who had the courage to see the
ugly truth about Israel)
*https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/28/opinion/tucker-carlson-israel-conspiracy-theories.html
<https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/28/opinion/tucker-carlson-israel-conspiracy-theories.html>*

Tucker Carlson can read the room. In November 2016, just days after
President Trump’s first election victory, he launched a prime-time show on
Fox News largely devoted
<https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/15/us/replacement-theory-shooting-tucker-carlson.html>
to
the proposition that liberal elites were replacing white Americans and
Europeans with Black and brown immigrants.

Now, as many Americans sour on Israel, he’s in the vanguard once again. Over
the last year or so
<https://jppi.org.il/en/sharp-rise-in-anti-israel-and-antisemitic-rhetoric-among-leading-right-wing-influencers-in-the-united-states/>,
he’s become a leading champion on the right for abandoning America’s
long-held support for the Jewish state. “Hopefully the first thing we do
when and if this war is resolved is detach from Israel,” he told
<https://podcasts.happyscribe.com/the-tucker-carlson-show/breaking-netanyahu-s-terror-attack-on-lebanon-destroys-trump-s-ceasefire-tucker-reacts>
his
audience in early April.

Mr. Carlson’s worldview hasn’t fundamentally changed. Like other prominent
figures on the anti-Israel right, he still sees the West as menaced by
alien civilizations bent on its destruction. He has just turned his
attention to what he sees as the alien civilization that populates the
Jewish state. And he’s done so with the same penchant for conspiracy
theories that has long marked his public commentary. Now he is using a
destructive, ill-defined and unpopular war to give those theories even
greater reach.

Consider a monologue
<https://podcasts.happyscribe.com/the-tucker-carlson-show/war-update-israel-s-true-motives-potential-false-flags-and-oncoming-global-crisis>
Mr.
Carlson delivered in March, in which he offered a bizarre theory as to why
Israel attacked Iran: The strike was, he said, part of a stealth plan to
demolish the Al Aqsa Mosque and rebuild the ancient Jewish Temple in
Jerusalem, which would then incite a global religious war. The real victims
of that religious war, Mr. Carlson claimed, would be “Christian, Western,
white countries.” Israel’s “real target,” he suggested, “is not the mullahs
in Iran. It’s us, as it always has been.”

Mr. Carlson’s theory is preposterous, but it reflects a perspective growing
on the American right. He is at the forefront of a cohort of right-wing
commentators who don’t merely condemn Israel’s manifold crimes against the
Palestinians and others in the Middle East. They also suggest something far
more troubling: that Israel’s crimes stem from its Jewishness, which they
claim threatens the Christian West.

Commentators of all ideological stripes can conflate Israel with Jews,
progressives included. Still, when progressives seek explanations for
Israel’s misdeeds, they often talk about systems — settler-colonialism,
imperialism, ethnonationalism. These structural explanations implicate many
countries, including the United States. By contrast, conservative critics
like Mr. Carlson tend to shun such explanations because they threaten
American and Christian moral superiority. Instead, they frequently root the
problem in Israel’s Jewishness.

In its focus on identity, the right’s discourse about the Jewish state
increasingly resembles its discourse about Islamist terrorist groups. Just
look at America’s post-9/11 arguments about Al Qaeda and ISIS. The left
tended to see these terrorist groups as a product of American imperialism
in the Muslim world. The right saw them as the product of Islam. A 2021 Pew
Research poll
<https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2021/09/02/two-decades-later-the-enduring-legacy-of-9-11/#CHAPTER-views-of-muslims-islam-grew-more-partisan-in-years-after-9-11>
found
that Republicans were more than twice as likely as Democrats to say “Islam
is more likely than other religions to encourage violence among its
believers.”

Now Americans across the ideological spectrum are growing more critical
<https://news.gallup.com/poll/702440/israelis-no-longer-ahead-americans-middle-east-sympathies.aspx>
of
Israel. But young conservatives are more likely than their lefty
counterparts to link Israel’s transgressions to its religious identity.
Last fall, a Yale survey <https://youthpoll.yale.edu/fall-2025-results> asked
Americans ages 18-34 how they felt about claims that American Jews enjoy
too much power, are more loyal to Israel than America and should have their
businesses boycotted to protest the war in Gaza. Almost two-thirds of
respondents ages 18 to 34 who defined themselves as “extremely
conservative” agreed with at least one of those statements. Among people in
that same age group who defined themselves as “extremely liberal,” less
than one-third did.

That’s not surprising given the rhetoric of some of America’s most
influential far-right commentators. Candace Owens, one of America’s most
popular <https://podcastcharts.byspotify.com/us/top-podcasts> podcasters,
has endorsed <https://x.com/RealCandaceO/status/2029553368541073680> Mr.
Carlson’s claim <https://tuckercarlson.com/live-show-march-4-2026> that the
ultra-Orthodox Jewish group Chabad is using the Iran war to try to rebuild
the Temple. She has also claimed
<https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=885691553831712> that the Talmud tells
Jews “that we’re animals, that they have a right to own us, that they have
a right to make us worship them.” In 2024 she accused
<https://www.instagram.com/reels/C-0ek5DOB12/> Israel of giving refuge to
pedophiles and linked that behavior to the ritual murder of Christians in
Europe during Passover. Nick Fuentes, an avowed racist and misogynist who
Mr. Carlson recently hosted <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=efBB0D4tf1Y> for
a friendly interview, has insisted
<https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=1202150881785798> that “If you read
anything about the Israeli government, anything even about Talmudic
Judaism, what they say is, we don’t love our enemies. They say that the
non-Jews, we don’t even consider them human.”

Mr. Carlson is more subtle. But he, too, often attributes Israel’s behavior
to what he sees as its anti-Western religion. Last October, he claimed
<https://podcasts.happyscribe.com/the-tucker-carlson-show/tucker-carlson-interviews-nick-fuentes>
that
“the Israeli position is ‘everyone who lives in Gaza is a terrorist because
of how they were born, including the women and the children.’ That’s not a
Western view. That’s an Eastern view. That’s a non-Christian — that’s
totally incompatible with Christianity and Western civilization.” Earlier
this year Mr. Carlson said
<https://podcasts.happyscribe.com/the-tucker-carlson-show/tucker-confronts-mike-huckabee-on-america-s-toxic-relationship-with-israel>
that
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel had tried to punish members of Mr.
Carlson’s family because Mr. Netanyahu “believes in blood guilt, Amalek.
You know, when someone commits a crime against you, you punish not just him
but his family, his bloodline. There’s no idea that’s less Western than
that, more anti-Christian than that. Christians reject that.”

Mr. Carlson is implying that Israel’s punishment of the Palestinian people
stems from something particularly Jewish — or “non-Christian” — about its
misdeeds. Such civilizational generalizations are false; many Christian and
Western leaders practice collective punishment. The United States was
founded on the same kind of land theft that Israel is committing against
Palestinians.

Combating the anti-Israel right’s conflation of Israel and Jewishness is
made harder by pro-Israel American Jewish organizations that have conflated
those two things as well.

But progressives must not blur the distinction between viewing Israel as a
state, which practices forms of oppression and aggression that can occur in
states of every ethnic and religious type, and viewing Israel as the
product of a peculiarly Jewish pathology. It is understandable that some
progressives, who are rightly eager to end America’s support for Israel’s
human rights abuses, might be tempted to see figures like Mr. Carlson as
allies. But the struggle for Palestinian freedom should not indulge bigotry
of any kind. That includes the bigotry of figures like Tucker Carlson, who
blame Israel’s crimes on its Jewishness so they can pretend that America
and Christianity are morally pure.

Peter Beinart is a contributing Opinion writer at The Times. He is also a
professor at the Newmark School of Journalism
<https://www.journalism.cuny.edu/> at the City University of New York and
an editor at large at Jewish Currents <https://jewishcurrents.org/>, and he
writes The Beinart Notebook <https://peterbeinart.substack.com/>, a weekly
newsletter. His latest book is “Being Jewish After the Destruction of Gaza
<https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/775348/being-jewish-after-the-destruction-of-gaza-by-peter-beinart/>
.”


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