Israel's love-in with Europe's new Nazis
Asa Winstanley
Thursday, 06 March 2014 17:33
Right
Sector is an armed fascist - some say neo-Nazi - gang that has been at
the forefront of the street fighting during the recent uprising in
Ukraine.
Matt
Frei's line of questioning was pretty weak, but even he could not avoid
the obvious: what do you say to those, like the Russian government, who
accuse you of being neo-Nazis and anti-Semites?
Yarosh
replied: "No, absolutely not. In the last days, I have met the Israeli
ambassador and we started a friendly relationship."
Yarosh
reportedly now sits on the current government's security council as
Deputy Secretary of National Security. His allies in Svoboda, a fascist
political party, now control the defence ministry, and several other government seats - all the way up to deputy prime minister.
With
such a massive share of power in the emerging "new" Ukraine, it is no
surprise, therefore, that the Israelis should want to meet with an
odious fascist like Yarosh.
There was also one report that
an Israeli army veteran (a Ukrainian Jew who lived there for a few
years) was leading one of the street gangs that overthrew the Ukrainian
president. Although he defended them, this man claimed not to be part of
Svoboda, but he admitted, "I take orders from their team". One such
Ukrainian veteran of the Israeli army admitted on TV last year (as reported by Palestinian writer and activist Abir Kopty,
using a translation I have verified independently with a Russian
speaker - Ukrainian and Russian are partly mutually intelligible)
admitted to shooting Palestinian children, claiming that their mothers
send them to be killed and for Arabs "it's normal" to die like that.
This racist then claimed, as a Ukrainian citizen, to still be active in
the Israeli special forces.
Make no mistake: despite Yarosh's half-hearted denials to Channel 4 News,
both Right Sector and Svoboda are virulently racist, fascist movements,
with a long history of anti-Semitism, stretching back to Nazi-era
collaborators.
The Israeli ambassador's apparent eagerness to meet with the Right Sector fascist gang,and with the leader of Svoboda has a precedent too.
As I've covered before,
the current wave of European fascist movements has broken away from the
historical neo-Nazi position on Israel, and has awoken to the
commonalities between their odious ideology and Zionism, Israel's
founding ideology.
Neo-Nazis
and other fascists tend to hate and scape-goat Jews and want them out
of "their" countries (they also tend to want to get rid of Muslims,
black people, queers and leftists). Zionism also want the Jews to leave
their native countries: to become settlers in occupied Palestine. The
apartheid state needs all the manpower it can get.
The
English Defence League is notorious for waving Israeli flags on its
demonstrations. British National Party leader Nick Griffin flirted with
Zionism for a while, proclaiming during his infamous 2009 BBC Question Time appearance
that the BNP was "the only political party which, in the clashes
between Israel and Gaza, stood full square behind Israel's right to deal
with Hamas terrorists."
There
is some nuance here, however. The powerful Greek neo-Nazi party Golden
Dawn is no friend of Israel, and the Hungarian fascists of Jobbik seem to use some anti-Israel rhetoricas
a pretty thin veneer to mask their anti-Semitism. Nick Griffin, as part
of his rivalry with the EDL, more recently seems to be recanting his
Zionism, and appealing to the more marginal white supremacist fringe.
But a certain pattern is clear: from France's National Front,
to the Norwegian terrorist Anders Breivik, and now to Ukraine's
neo-Nazis, a sort of marriage of convenience between European fascists
and Zionists is in the air. And its odour is extremely smelly.

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