How Israel became a beacon for western fascists

How Israel became a beacon for western fascists
Comment: Italy's Salvini has declared Israel, - a state that preaches ethnic chauvinism - a role model, writes Sam Hamad.
6 min read
07 Dec, 2018
Lega Nord party leader Matteo Salvini is due to visit Israel next week [Getty]
Israel, whether its liberal or centrist proponents like it or not, has become a beacon for particularly the European and western far-right.  

Later this month, Matteo Salvini, the far-right leader of the fascist Lega party and current interior minister of Italy, will travel to Israel to meet Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu.

Before winning power, Salvini had travelled to Israel, where he 
gushed, "Israel embodies the perfect balance of different realities, while ensuring law and order. It surely is a role model for security and anti-terrorism policies."

So what does Salvini mean by 'security' and 'anti-terrorism'? A look at his current stances and practices in power in Italy, and the meaning swiftly becomes clear.  

During his reign as interior minister, Salvini has been a trailblazer in Europe for brutal anti-immigration policies, as well as attacking Italy's existent ethnic and religious minorities. He recently crafted a law that essentially eliminates humanitarian grounds for granting protection to refugees and asylum seekers.   

Though Lega can't yet end its commitments to take in refugees and asylum seekers entirely, the law paves the way for such an outcome. If there are those in doubt that this is the case, on the day the bill was passed, Lega lawmakers who had just voted it into power gathered outside to unfurl a banner reading, "The Salvini decree is law; the good times (for migrants) are over."   

Salvini has compounded and exacerbated the already genocidal EU policy of halting all rescue operations in the Mediterranean by prohibiting NGOs from operating rescue services for migrants and docking at Italian ports.

European fascists fetishise Israel because it's a state that openly embraces their own prejudiced and racially divided views of the world

There ought to be no doubt that Salvini and Lega have a very specific plan to change the political landscape in Italy. As with the Nazis, whose anti-Jewish measures were rolled out gradually and concomitant with ceaseless political and extra-governmental anti-semitic radicalisation, Salvini is slowly but surely testing the waters with his racist ideas and policies.

Conjuring chilling comparison with Nazi racial abuse policies, Salvini called for a register of Italy's Roma population, while he has demanded the cleansing of all 'non-Italian' Roma and has increased demolitions of 'illegal houses' used by Roma. Again mirroring Nazi-era racial laws, he has even called for 'ethnic shops' to be restricted.  

Salvini has also, like so many other neo-authoritarian and fascist leaders, conjured conspiracy theories regarding the Jewish billionaire and philanthropist George Soros (Soros' Open Society Foundation funds many of the pro-immigration NGOs across Europe), claiming that, 'In the government, we have accomplices of marionettes and puppets of Soros…'

Soros has become the modern equivalent of Rothschild in terms of anti-semitic discourse, with his name being a canard that conjures fascist conspiracies of Jewish financiers flooding white Christian countries with Muslim and non-white immigrants for their own nefarious ends.   

How do neo-fascists, whose ideological origins lie with those who industrially murdered six million Jews, come to be the premier defenders and allies of the Jewish state?  

It's precisely because it is a Jewish state.  

The fact is that Israel has, over the past few decades - but with much greater urgency and radicalisation in recent years - become an ethnocracy defined as much by its Jewish character as its hostility to non-Jews.

European fascists like Salvini see in Israel the perfect paradigm of directly racist states. And while all states are racial states (in that they embody, in some form, ethnic majoritarianism), Israel's policies are often brazenly crafted by a form of ethnic chauvinism unseen since the colonial period.  

It has long been documented how Israel's occupation and illegal annexation of the West Bank has led to apartheid-esque conditions between Jews and Palestinians.  

However, Israel proper has always awkwardly balanced the fundamental contradiction of upholding equal rights for Palestinian citizens of Israel and maintaining Israel as a Jewish state; that is, a state where there must be a permanent Jewish majority with an unassailable Jewish character.  

Though Israel has managed to ensure equal rights for non-Jewish citizens, its recent Nation State bill, which doesn't merely reaffirm the Zionist commitment to Israel as a state for Jews, but asserts that only Jews have the right to self-determination within Israel. This is Salvini's self-declared 'role model'.  

This is the same idea that lies behind fascist slogans such as Italy for the Italians, Europe for the Europeans and, of course, America First.  

European fascists fetishise Israel because it's a state that openly embraces their own prejudiced and racially divided views of the world - a world governed by the racist laws of ethnic majoritarianism.  

Salvini is slowly but surely testing the waters with his racist ideas and policies

It's entire raison d'etre is to keep the Jews in their own state, while, to Salvini, Italy ought to be a state only for Italians. This is how antisemitism can co-exist with what might be called Ziophilia.  

One might remember Netanyahu's scandalous exploitation of the murder of a Jewish man in Copenhagen by an Islamist criminal, when he called for European Jews to migrate en mass to Israel.  

This logic of Jews cleansing themselves from Europe is nothing more than the natural conclusion of the current racist endeavour in Israel.

Israel's main appeal to European and western fascists is precisely that it disregards and subverts the liberal democratic order that prevails in Europe. We've seen a host of European fascists draw closer to Israel as an ideological and geopolitical ally.  

For decades, it has crafted an ethnocracy that reduces Palestinians to second class citizens when it isn't perpetrating acts of mass murder against them with no recourse to law or the liberal values that Salvini and his ilk believe are killing Europe.  

The relations of Israeli Jewish domination and ethnic chauvinism that govern the annexed West Bank are precisely what European fascists envision for Europe and its relation to migrants, especially Muslims.

Israel puts itself forward as a defender of 'western civilisation' from the Islamic hordes, and Islamophobia is perhaps the strongest sinew that connects western fascism with Israel. Salvini has openly stated that Muslims and Islam are incompatible with Italy, but, despite his embrace of Israel, anti-semitism is on the increase in Italy.

This is also something we've witnessed with the rise of Trump in the US - an increase in anti-semitic incidents, despite his own Ziophilia and emphasis on Islamophobia. And this points to the reality that ought to simultaneously disturb yet unite us: Racists, on a street-to-street level, do not discriminate.  

This growing form of ethnic majoritarianism fits nicely into the increasing authoritarian world order. We've seen recently the Holocaust-esque persecution of Uighur Muslims by China's totalitarian state, as well as the genocidal attack by the Burmese regime on Rohingya Muslims.  

More informally, we witnessed the anti-semitic mass murder of Jews at a 
synagogue in Pittsburgh by an anti-semitic America Firster.

We've seen the genocide of Sunni Muslims in Syria by a regime that openly spouts sectarian justifications for such murder, while appealing to Israel-esque defences of defending Europe from the Islamic menace.   

We cannot stand by and simply watch as these relations once again become a reality in the heart of Europe.

Sam Hamad is an independent Scottish-Egyptian activist and writer.

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Opinions expressed in this article remain those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of The New Arab, its editorial board or staff.