n is challenging both Israel and American Jewry.

Trump, who continues to lead the Republican list of presidential hopefuls 
and can no longer be dismissed as a bizarre candidate, has consistently and 
strongly supported Israeli positions on many critical issues, including the 
Iran nuclear deal and Israeli- Palestinian relations. He has also 
criticized US President Barack Obama for his attitudes toward Israel and 
warmly praised Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. On the other hand, he has 
proposed policies and made statements that no Jew can in good conscience 
accept or identify with.

Trump has often used pro-Israel rhetoric.

He called Israel America’s best and most reliable friend, and argued that 
it should be viewed as the cornerstone of US policy in the Middle East. He 
has accused Obama and US Secretary of State John Kerry of “selling Israel 
out,” and said that the US should do everything possible to protect and 
defend it. “They’ve always been there for us and we should be there for 
them,” he declared.

“They are the only stable democracy in a region that is not run by 
dictators. They are pioneers in medicine and communication and a close fair 
trading partner.” And, like his father, he said, he had always been loyal 
to Israel and “would do more for Israel than anybody else.”

Trump highlights the facts that he served as grand marshal for the Israel 
parade in New York in 2004 and that he has received many awards from 
American Jewish organizations for his support of Israel. Last February, on 
receiving such an award from the Algemeiner, a Jewish news organization, he 
said, “We love Israel. We will fight for Israel 100 percent, 1,000 percent. 
It will be there forever.” On June 16, when he declared his candidacy, 
Trump vehemently attacked the Iran nuclear deal calling it “a disaster” 
that could threaten Israel’s survival.

In the background, there was also a close personal connection between Trump 
and Netanyahu. Before the 2013 Israeli election, Trump recorded a 30-second 
video message endorsing the Likud leader. “You truly have a great prime 
minister in Benjamin Netanyahu. He’s a winner, he’s highly respected, he’s 
highly thought of by all. Vote for Benjamin – terrific guy, terrific 
leader, great for Israel,” he enthused.

On the other hand, Trump’s statements on prisoners of war, Jewish campaign 
contributions, immigration and entry to the US have touched on a very raw 
Jewish nerve.

On John McCain, who spent six years as a POW in Vietnam and refused early 
release when his captors discovered that his father was an admiral, Trump 
flippantly said he was “a war hero only because he got captured. I like 
people who weren’t captured.”

In Israel the nation as a whole cares about its POWs and the government 
invests huge resources in attempts to release them. The protracted and 
ultimately successful effort to free Gilad Schalit, a soldier who was 
captured and held hostage for five years by Hamas in Gaza, well illustrates 
this ethos.

On December 3, Trump told members of the Republican Jewish Coalition that 
he suspects many members won’t back him because he is rich and doesn’t want 
their contributions.

Trump may have thought he was making a joke, but the Israeli media saw his 
comments as reinforcing anti-Semitic stereotyping of Jews as rich people 
who “control the world” and can “buy” elections with their money.

Trump has also made highly provocative and controversial statements on 
immigration and entry to the US. On June 16, he said that Mexico is sending 
in people bringing drugs, crime and rape. Later he extended this 
observation to include immigration from other Latin American countries. And 
after the recent San Bernardino massacre, he called for a temporary ban on 
the entry of Muslims to the US, until the government figures out “what the 
hell is going on.”

Jews, who have suffered from closed immigration gates and been saved by 
open ones, find these statements appalling. Mass Jewish immigration from 
Russia and Eastern Europe to the US, Palestine and other countries, 
especially from the beginning of the 20th century, saved Jews from pogroms, 
persecution and oppression. Mass Jewish immigration from the Arab countries 
to Israel after the 1948 War of Independence saved them from a similar 
fate. On the other hand, before, during and immediately after the Second 
World War, Jews trying to flee Nazi Germany or occupied Europe were refused 
entry to many countries, including the US.

Millions perished. Therefore, Jews cannot but protest a wholesale, 
religion-based ban on entry to the US. Indeed, many Jewish organizations in 
the US, as well as political and religious groups in Israel, overwhelmingly 
rejected Trump’s call for a ban on the entry of Muslims to the US.

TRUMP HAD intended to visit Israel and meet Netanyahu on December 28. The 
parties had agreed on the itinerary two weeks before Trump’s Muslim ban 
statement. Thirty- seven Knesset members, all but two from the opposition, 
strongly criticized Trump’s proposed blanket ban on Muslim entry and urged 
Netanyahu to cancel their meeting in protest. Netanyahu rejected this 
demand but issued a critical statement of his own: “The State of Israel 
respects all religions and strictly guarantees the rights of all its 
citizens. At the same time, Israel is fighting against militant Islam that 
targets Muslims, Christians and Jews alike and threatens the entire world.” 
His office went on to explain his policy on meeting presidential candidates.

“The Prime Minister decided earlier this year on a uniform policy to agree 
to meet with all presidential candidates from either party who visit Israel 
and ask for a meeting.” It further clarified that “this policy does not 
reflect support for the candidates or their policies, but rather expresses 
the importance that the Prime Minister attributes to the strong alliance 
between Israel and the United States.” However, in response to the critical 
furor in Israel, Trump postponed his visit until after the presidential 
elections, claiming that he did not want to place Netanyahu “under 
pressure.”

Trump had hoped his visit to Israel on the eve of the Republican primaries 
would bolster his lead in the race. He wanted to project interest and 
knowledge in national security and foreign affairs, especially in the 
Middle East, the No. 1 source of violence, terrorism and instability in the 
world. He also wanted to garner legitimacy for his controversial positions 
on the region, and to contrast his support for Israel with what he called 
the Obama administration’s abandonment of the Jewish state. The strategy 
made sense, but the injudicious Muslim ban statement undermined any chance 
of successfully implementing it. Had Trump stuck to his plan, the protests 
and demonstrations in its wake would almost certainly have rendered it 
counterproductive.

Trump has certainly been exploiting the weaknesses and confusion in Obama’s 
handling of Israel, Islamic extremism and terrorism.

The president’s blaming only Israel for the impasse in Israeli-Palestinian 
negotiations has only strengthened Palestinian recalcitrance. The delay in 
defining the San Bernardino massacre as terrorism, Obama’s refusal to use 
the term “Islamic terrorism” and his pathetic attempts to characterize the 
Islamic State organization as non-Muslim reveal an acute denial of both 
American and Middle Eastern realities.

Indeed, American Jews have been disappointed by Obama. In the 2008 
elections, they voted for him by a ratio of 78 percent to 22 percent; in 
2012, this had dropped to 69 percent to 30 percent. Gallup’s surveys show 
that in 2008, 71 percent of American Jews identified themselves as 
Democrats or leaning to the Democratic Party, while 22 percent identified 
themselves as Republicans or leaning to the Republican party. In 2014, this 
ratio dropped to 61 percent to 29 percent.

Over the past decade, Republicans have generally been more supportive of 
Israel than Democrats. The trend began around 2000, almost 10 years before 
Netanyahu was reelected prime minister. Nevertheless, none of this is 
likely to help Trump. Most American Jews will still vote for the Democratic 
nominee. If Trump is selected as the Republican candidate, even more 
American Jews are likely to vote for his opponent.

After Obama, Netanyahu would have liked to see a Republican in the White 
House. Nevertheless, despite his strong pro-Israel stance, given his 
character and controversial positions, Donald Trump may not be the best 
choice to repair American- Israeli relations in the post-Obama era. 

*Prof. Eytan Gilboa is director of the Center for International 
Communication and a senior research associate at the BESA Center for 
Strategic Studies at Bar-Ilan University.*

On Friday, January 22, 2016 at 2:16:36 PM UTC-6, plainolamerican wrote:
>
>
> http://www.rawstory.com/2016/01/donald-trump-just-retweeted-a-white-supremacist-just-to-get-a-dig-on-jeb-bush/
>
>
> GOP front runner Donald Trump has been accused of racism 
> <http://www.rawstory.com/2015/11/that-racist-trump-tweet-about-blacks-killing-whites-isnt-just-false-its-neo-nazi-propaganda/>
>  in 
> the past, but on Friday morning, Trump retweeted a white supremacist 
> website promoting Adolf Hitler <http://thegreateststorynevertold.tv/>.
>
> The tweet was a jab at rival, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and showed him looking 
> down-and-out, holding a “Vote Trump” sign.
>
> “@WhiteGenocideTM <https://twitter.com/WhiteGenocideTM>: @realDonaldTrump 
> <https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump> Poor Jeb. I could’ve sworn I saw 
> him outside Trump Tower the other day! pic.twitter.com/e5uLRubqla 
> <https://t.co/e5uLRubqla>“
>
> — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 22, 2016 
> <https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/690562515500032000>
>
> The tweet originated from an account called @WhiteGenocideTM 
> <https://twitter.com/WhiteGenocideTM>, which is promoting a pro-Hitler 
> movie called, *The Greatest Story Never Told. *The trailer for the film 
> calls Hitler the “saviour of Europe.” The website also includes an 
> interview with Holocaust-denier Ursula Haverbeck 
> <http://thegreateststorynevertold.tv/ursula-haverbeck-panorama-interview-english-subtitles/>
> .
>
> One of the many troubling tweets from the account is an animated picture 
> of Donald Trump dressed as a Nazi, about to gas potential Democratic rival 
> Sen. Bernie Sanders. Sanders is Jewish.
>
> @Perennialism <https://twitter.com/Perennialism> @Ricky_Vaughn99 
> <https://twitter.com/Ricky_Vaughn99> pic.twitter.com/C6PT2o1ex2 
> <https://t.co/C6PT2o1ex2>
>
> — Donald Trumpovitz (@WhiteGenocideTM) January 13, 2016 
> <https://twitter.com/WhiteGenocideTM/status/687404088787599361>
>
> The Twitter account is littered with anti-Semitic and anti-Muslim rhetoric 
> and lists its location as “Jewmerica.” Its “pinned” or featured tweet shows 
> a man saying he is Jewish, with a yellow Star of David with the word “Jude” 
> added on.
>
> Trump tweeted the image of Bush with the racist twitter handle to his 
> nearly 6 million followers Friday morning.  It’s not the first time Trump 
> has been associated with the fascist leader of Nazi Germany who was 
> responsible for genocide against millions of Jewish people and other groups.
>
> Last month, a Trump fan page attributed a quote by Hitler to Trump 
> <http://www.rawstory.com/2015/12/oops-trump-fan-page-attributes-hitlers-christian-warrior-quote-to-donald-j-trump/>,
>  
> inscribing the words, “As a Christian I have no duty to allow myself to be 
> cheated, but I have the duty to be a fighter for truth and justice” on the 
> image of Trump. The sentence was part of a 1922 speech by Hitler in Munich.
> Long before Trump hit the campaign trail, his ex-wife, Ivana, told Vanity 
> Fair 
> <http://www.rawstory.com/2015/08/donald-trump-kept-book-of-hitler-speeches-on-his-nightstand-ex-wife-claims/>
>  in 
> a 1990 interview that Trump kept a collection of Hitler’s speeches on his 
> night stand by his bed.
>

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