Americans, with their naval-gazing self-preoccupation, are nearly unanimously oblivious that the UK has undergone the same crisis of "anti-Semitism" now wracking the political and academic landscape in the US. Britain's Jewish Lobby, in both parties and in Jewish civic groups, banded together to oust Jeremy Corbyn from his leading role in Labour, along with other Israel critics like black Jewish activist Jackie Walker.
As in the US, academia was a special target of Lobby wrath. The Israeli embassy accused Oxford University students of anti-Semitism and witch-hunted student leader Max Shanley into blackmailed capitulation. Peddling smears against critics of Israel, or pro-Palestinian advocates, the intellectual bludgeoning only went so far before the public drew back in disgust.
But even with Corbyn ousted, the movement went on to dominate Labour (as it now does the Conservatives.) "Telling the truth," as longtime Labour and Palestinian rights activist Asa Winstanley concludes, "is now incompatible" with membership in any of the main UK parties. The root question is why and how this was allowed to happen.
The answer lies in Israeli intelligence operating through its embassy, and the "revolving door" between it and native pro-Israel advocacy groups. The funding for such interference comes from the Israeli government, Winstanley notes, but he stops short of the funding even behind that, which is the billions in fungible aid dollars coming from the United States. Keeping both the UK and US secure for Israel is, perhaps, also the last safety net: the "New Zion" when Israel finally implodes and its leaders are themselves refugees from, like Samson, blindly pulling down the pillars of their own temple.
Highly prophetic foreshadowing of the whirlwind to come but a few months after publication.