Two weeks
ago, Israel Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon set off a twenty-four hour fire-storm
with a single remark. He called US
Secretary of State John Kerry ‘obsessive’--and ‘messianic’ (“Yaalon criticized
for reportedly calling Kerry ‘obsessive, messianic’”, Jerusalem Post,
January 14, 2014).
The remark
was supposedly a reference to how Kerry has managed current Arab-Israel peace
negotiations. The remark was part of a private conversation. It was not meant
for publication. It was certainly far less offensive than the ‘Netanyahu’s a
liar’ comment from another private conversation, this one between the then-President
of France Nicolas Sarkozy and US President Barack Obama, in November, 2011.
Do you remember
that incident?
That 2011
conversation between two heads-of-state was not reported by an overly-aggressive
newspaper or by someone who violated an understanding of what was ‘private’ (as
might have been the case with the Yaalon comment). That 2011 comment became
public because a microphone between the two men (or close to them) had not been
turned off. Sarkozy told Obama, "I cannot bear Netanyahu. He's a liar”.
Obama didn’t
just listen. He joined the insult. Not realizing that the microphone was still
‘live’, he responded to Sarkozy, “You're fed up with him. But I have to deal with
him even more often than you" (“Sarkozy tells Obama Netanyahu is a
"liar", Reuters News Service, November 8, 2011).
The White
House refused even to discuss the matter. Obama did later acknowledge the
incident. But he refused to comment on the disparaging remarks he and Sarkozy
had exchanged (“Obama acknowledges gaffe over Netanyahu insult but refuses to
elaborate”, Haaretz, November 14, 2011).
Israeli
officials did not express ‘outrage’. They did not condemn the remarks.
Israel did
not demand an apology. Obama did not volunteer to apologize.
When American
officials reacted to Yaalon’s remark, they clearly did not remember that
whispered insult—or Obama’s refusal to apologize to the Israeli head-of-state. Perhaps
they did remember—but didn’t care.
Instead,
American officials expressed anger at Yaalon’s comment. They were shocked. They
were outraged. They condemned it as ‘offensive’. They demanded an apology.
Next day, Yaalon
apologized.
How curious.
The US President participates in an insult to the Israel Prime Minister and
then does not apologize; but when an Israeli Defense Minister (not the
head-of-state) describes the US Secretary of State (not the head-of-state) in a
private remark, he so offends the Americans that an apology is necessary. Why?
Why do
American officials condemn ‘messianic’? What part of ‘messianic’ don’t they
like? More important, why should an Israeli official’s truly private remark
stir such anger when the US President’s own insult is to be ignored?
Is this how
a double standard works? The Jewish Tanach teaches that double standards
are immoral (the same justice must be applied to all, evenly). Do the Americans
act immorally by demanding an apology for an offense they refuse to apologize
for?
The American
response seemed unnaturally aggressive. Do Americans know something about the
Jewish Redemption story they prefer to ignore? Why do they object with such
passion when Jews use a word associated with, ‘Messiah’? Indeed, why does
‘messianic’ provoke the Americans to perform what might be an immoral act?
How curious.
Do you know
the Jewish Redemption story? It’s a story of powerful nations counselling
together to attack Jerusalem. It’s a story of the powerful seeking to strip
Judaism’s Holy City from the Jews. It’s a story of Jew-haters conspiring to
destroy what is Jewish.
It’s a story
we hear today. It’s a story of an immoral—perhaps anti-moral—world attacking
Israel. It’s the story of an Arab-Israel conflict managed by the EU and the US
for the Arab’s benefit.
The Jewish
Redemption story is today’s modern history. It’s the history of Arabs demanding
Jerusalem—and the EU and the US assisting them. The ancient Jewish Redemption
story is the tale of powerful enemies joining together to divide Jerusalem (at
the very least) and to carve up the Holy Land for others.
The Jewish
Redemption story is an ancient prediction of the machinations of Edom (the US
and the EU, according to many) and Yishmael (the Arab) causing trouble for
Israel. To see these machinations, read Zohar Va'era 32a, as quoted by breslev.co.il,
March 4, 2013.
US Secretary
of State John Kerry might not be ‘messianic’. He might not even be Jewish (he
isn’t). But he might well be one of the major players on the international
stage who helps to ‘throw the switch’ that starts the final act of the Jewish Redemption.
In his own
way, Kerry might be a lot closer to the Jewish Moshiach than we think. Yaalon’s
comment might be prescient. It might suggest why the Americans (descendants of immoral
Edom) reacted as they did. It might even suggest what the Arab-Israel conflict
is all about.
You hit the nail on the head...but your title is confusing. Kerry can't possibly be Moshiach but certainly a major player among the instigators, if not THE major player. As you suggest, in their neshamot they have a sense of being found out that's why the strident reaction. I think you should repost this with a different title. For the Christians write something like "Is Kerry the AntiChrist?" For the Jews, write "What does the Zohar say about Kerry and the End of Days?"
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