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Monday, July 30, 2012

Mitt Romney: An Illuminating Speech From Jerusalem, Israel



Governor Mitt Romney gave quite a speech to the Jerusalem Foundation today. And the contrast with President Obama couldn't be more clear cut.

Whereas President Obama, in his infamous Cairo speech parroted the Arab line that the establishment of Israel was essentially due to western guilt over the Holocaust, Romney got it exactly right:

To step foot into Israel is to step foot into a nation that began with an ancient promise made in this land. {...}

Our two nations are separated by more than 5,000 miles. But for an American abroad, you can’t get much closer to the ideals and convictions of my own country than you do in Israel. We’re part of the great fellowship of democracies. We speak the same language of freedom and justice, and the right of every person to live in peace. We serve the same cause and provoke the same hatreds in the same enemies of civilization.

It is my firm conviction that the security of Israel is in the vital national security interest of the United States. And ours is an alliance based not only on shared interests but also on enduring shared values.


And throughout his speech, Mitt Romney made persistent reference to one simple phrase...'Jerusalem, Israel'.

The Obama Administration has never seen fit to utter, unequivocally, those two words..Jerusalem, Israel. It has indulged in sneaky changes to captions, gone through the most absurd verbal tics, denied that Jews have any right to their holy places in Jerusalem, even outright lied about agreements made with previous U.S. presidents.

That Mitt Romney does it, naturally, without a moments hesitation or nuance says volumes.

Nor does Governor Romney appear to be under any illusions about Iran:

It was Menachem Begin who said this about the Ninth of the month of Av: “We remember that day,” he said, “and now have the responsibility to make sure that never again will our independence be destroyed and never again will the Jew become homeless or defenseless.” “This,” Prime Minister Begin added, “is the crux of the problems facing us in the future.”

So it is today, as Israel faces enemies who deny past crimes against the Jewish people and seek to commit new ones.

When Iran’s leaders deny the Holocaust or speak of wiping this nation off the map, only the naïve – or worse – will dismiss it as an excess of rhetoric. Make no mistake: the ayatollahs in Tehran are testing our moral defenses. They want to know who will object, and who will look the other way.

My message to the people of Israel and the leaders of Iran is one and the same: I will not look away; and neither will my country. As Prime Minister Begin put it, in vivid and haunting words, “if an enemy of [the Jewish] people says he seeks to destroy us, believe him.”

We have seen the horrors of history. We will not stand by. We will not watch them play out again.

It would be foolish not to take Iran’s leaders at their word. They are, after all, the product of a radical theocracy.

Over the years Iran has amassed a bloody and brutal record. It has seized embassies, targeted diplomats, and killed its own people. It supports the ruthless Assad regime in Syria. They have provided weapons that have killed American soldiers in Afghanistan and Iraq. It has plotted to assassinate diplomats on American soil. It is Iran that is the leading state sponsor of terrorism and the most destabilizing nation in the world.

We have a solemn duty and a moral imperative to deny Iran’s leaders the means to follow through on their malevolent intentions.

We should stand with all who would join our effort to prevent a nuclear-armed Iran – and that includes Iranian dissidents. Do not erase from your memory the scenes from three years ago, when that regime brought death to its own people as they rose up. The threat we face does not come from the Iranian people, but from the regime that oppresses them.

Five years ago, at the Herzliya Conference, I stated my view that Iran’s pursuit of nuclear weapons capability presents an intolerable threat to Israel, to America, and to the world.

That threat has only become worse.

Now as then, the regime’s claims that it seeks to enrich nuclear material for peaceful purposes are belied by years of malign deceptions.

Now as then, the conduct of Iran’s leaders gives us no reason to trust them with nuclear material.

But today, the regime in Iran is five years closer to developing nuclear weapons capability. Preventing that outcome must be our highest national security priority.

I want to pause on this last point. It is sometimes said that those who are the most committed to stopping the Iranian regime from securing nuclear weapons are reckless and provocative and inviting war.

The opposite is true. We are the true peacemakers. History teaches with force and clarity that when the world’s most despotic regimes secure the world’s most destructive weapons, peace often gives way to oppression, to violence, or to devastating war.

We must not delude ourselves into thinking that containment is an option. We must lead the effort to prevent Iran from building and possessing nuclear weapons capability. We should employ any and all measures to dissuade the Iranian regime from its nuclear course, and it is our fervent hope that diplomatic and economic measures will do so. In the final analysis, of course, no option should be excluded. We recognize Israel’s right to defend itself, and that it is right for America to stand with you.


An amazing clarity, after the fog of the last three and a half years.

The thing is, Mitt Romney gets Israel and its relationship to the survival of the west in a way President Barack Obama not only never did, but never wanted to.

Where Barack Obama sees Israel as an impediment and as a western colonialist outpost he despises, deep within, Mitt Romney sees it as an important and key western ally, and a place whose survival against the odds is to be admired.In short, Governor Romney appears to know whom our friends are and whom our enemies are.

That's the clear difference.

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