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What Israel and Ukraine Have in Common
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What Israel and Ukraine Have in Common

Partisans claim the wars are distinct, but their enemies are allies and helping both is in the American interest.

Flag of Israel flies in front of the Lviv Regional State Administration building as a sign of solidarity with the Israeli people on October 13, 2023 in Lviv, Ukraine. (Photo by Les Kasyanov/Global Images Ukraine/Getty Images)

In normal times, domestic political fights over foreign policy break down more or less along a conventional left-right divide. These are not normal times. 

The right is largely united around the need to support Israel in its war with Hamas, but increasingly divided about backing Ukraine in its war with Russia. The left is largely united around the need to help Ukraine, but more divided about siding with Israel. 

It’s not perfectly symmetrical. Democrats are more unified on Israel, in part because of President Biden’s unequivocal support. But it’s early. After all, the history of the Democratic Party resisting campus radicals and the “anti-war” left is not a tale of heroic resolve. That the response on campuses to a terrorist pogrom was to immediately express support for Palestinians does not suggest the left-wing fringe will come around to a more nuanced stance. 

Meanwhile, even though the GOP is unified in its support for Israel—to the point where even many America Firsters have abandoned all foreign policy consistency to show solidarity with Israel—skepticism over support for Israel is growing on the fringes, especially on social media.

In some of the swampier quarters, outright antisemitism is breaking into the open. And Donald Trump, who has long boasted of doing more for Israel than anyone since Moses, is suddenly celebrating how “very smart” Hezbollah is and berating Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (which is not to say he doesn’t deserve criticism, though not from Trump). 

Given the hothouse of a presidential election, it doesn’t seem far-fetched to imagine support for Israel melting away on the New Right and the “anti-Zionist” left as Biden becomes more identified with support for Israel. 

In short, inside the water’s edge of domestic politics, it’s a two-front war. What I think a lot of people are missing is that it’s a two-front war outside the water’s edge too. 

There’s been an intense and bizarre debate over Iran’s complicity in Hamas’ attack. Iran has supported Hamas for decades. Whether it officially ordered or approved the invasion beforehand hardly erases its culpability. If you keep assassins who vow to kill Israelis on a retainer, it’s hardly an outrageous slander to say you have some responsibility when they do precisely what you kept them on the payroll for. 

The more vital question is of Russia’s involvement. Russia’s disastrous war on Ukraine has drawn it ever closer to Iran, which supplies it with drones and other weapons. Both of these heavily sanctioned pariah states depend on oil revenue to stay afloat. Global instability keeps the petrodollars flowing. There’s no evidence that Russia greenlit the attack, but it’s clear that Putin benefits from a Middle East war that diverts Western attention and resources. 

Why give him the win he wants? 

Ukraine, which has expressed its support for Israel, certainly sees the stakes clearly. President Volodymyr Zelensky even wants to visit Israel as a show of solidarity. 

Opponents of aiding Ukraine dismiss any linkage—legislatively, strategically, or morally—between Israel and Ukraine. Forty-eight hours after the Hamas attack, Sen. Josh Hawley insisted, “Israel is facing existential threat. Any funding for Ukraine should be redirected to Israel immediately.” The populist Heritage Foundation declared, “Lawmakers need to resist attempts to link emergency military support for Israel with additional funding for Ukraine. These conflicts are separate and distinct.” 

Not really. 

Viewing both conflicts through a partisan lens just demonstrates how domestic partisanship can blind you to the bigger picture. These are two fronts in broadly the same fight. Israel and Ukraine alike are flawed but decent democracies facing enemies who seek to erase them from the map. Israel may be more of an historic ally than Ukraine, but their enemies are allies with shared interests. 

Putting all other obvious moral and strategic considerations aside, America simply has a vital interest in maintaining its credibility to keep its commitments not just to Ukraine and Israel, but to our broader coalition of allies. 

After 9/11, NATO got our back. Now NATO needs us to help deal with the threat on its doorstep. And we may need NATO if Iran opts to join the fray in Israel. Lord knows the Chinese are watching to see if we buckle, as they contemplate their options for taking Taiwan.

None of this requires American boots on the ground in Israel or Ukraine. Both countries are willing to do the fighting and dying. What they want is help in what amounts to the same war on two fronts.

Click here for more coverage of the war in Israel.

Jonah Goldberg is editor-in-chief and co-founder of The Dispatch, based in Washington, D.C. Prior to that, enormous lizards roamed the Earth. More immediately prior to that, Jonah spent two decades at National Review, where he was a senior editor, among other things. He is also a bestselling author, longtime columnist for the Los Angeles Times, commentator for CNN, and a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. When he is not writing the G-File or hosting The Remnant podcast, he finds real joy in family time, attending to his dogs and cat, and blaming Steve Hayes for various things.

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