Americans Differ on Ukraine and Gaza

5Mind. The Meme Platform
Victor Davis Hanson: The Blade Of Perseus Header

When Russia invaded Ukraine, Americans overwhelmingly supported Ukraineโ€”as they did with Israel after Oct. 7.

No wonder: Ukraine was surprise attacked by Russia, and Israel was by Hamas.

It seemed an easy binary of good versus evil: Both the attacked Ukraine and Israel are pro-Western. Both their attackers, anti-Western Russia and Hamas, are not.

Now everything is bifurcating. And the politics of the wars in America reflect incoherence.

Both Ukraine and Israel are portrayed in the media as supposedly bogging down in their counteroffensives.

More pro-Israel Republicans are troubled by Ukraineโ€™s strategy, or lack thereof, in an increasing Somme-like stalemate.

Yet more pro-Ukrainian Democrats are turning away from Israel as it dismantles Gaza in the messy, bloody slog against Hamas. The left claims either Israel cannot or should not defeat Hamas, or at least at the present cost.

So the left pushes Israel to a cease-fire with Hamas.

It blasts Israeli โ€œdisproportionateโ€ responses.

It demands that Israel avoid collateral damage.

It pressures it to form a wartime bipartisan government.

It lobbies to cut it off from American resupply.

It is terrified that Israel will expand the war by responding to aggression from Hezbollah and Iran.

Yet on Ukraine, the left oddly pivots to the very opposite agenda.

It believes Ukraine should not be forced to make peace with Russian โ€œfascists.โ€ It must become disproportionate to โ€œwinโ€ the war.

President Zelensky deserves a pass, despite cancelling elections while suspending political parties.

America must step up its resupply to Kyiv with more and far deadlier weapons.

Ukraine has a perfect right to hit targets inside Russia.

Russian threats to widen the war should be considered empty and thus ignored. America should hate Russia far more than Hamas.

By contrast, conservatives are less supportive of Ukraineโ€™s offensives, if more than ever allied with Israel.

In their realist views, Ukraine is a smaller power, vastly outnumbered by a richer, better-armed Russia. Thus, it should negotiate while it can, rather than eventually losing everything.

Israel, however, is, in their view, defeating Hamas. If allowed to finish the job, it can soon win the war in Gaza and still handle Hezbollah and deter Iran.

Furthermore, the right is wary that Russia is a nuclear power. The Ukraine war is unfortunately creating a new, potent anti-American axis of Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea and drawing in former U.S. allies like Turkey and Qatar.

Yet, in Israelโ€™s case, the U.S. is far more powerful than Hamasโ€™s patron, Iran, and can easily deter it should Tehran intervene.

As of now, none of Hamasโ€™s allies have nuclear weapons. Israel, however, does, unlike Ukraine.

Many conservatives further point out that Israel is a long-time U.S. democratic ally.

Ukraineโ€™s elections are currently suspended while the country remains under martial law.

In realist terms, the old idea of Russian triangulation still makes some sense. Russia should be no friendlier to China than to the U.S., and China is no more aligned with Russia than with America.

Hamas, by contrast, is a terrorist clique, as are Hezbollah and all of Iranโ€™s terrorist appendages. Their hatred of the U.S. is long-standing, immutable, and transcends the Gaza war.

How about the publicโ€™s views in general?

With over $35 trillion in debt, still smarting over the humiliating withdrawal from Kabul, and the military short 40,000 recruits, the public does not wish to get heavily involved in either war, even as polls still show radically differing left/right attitudes toward both.

Americans once overwhelmingly supported vast aid for Ukraine. Now they decidedly believe the U.S. is providing too much to Kyiv.

They still poll strong support for Israel over Hamas, but less so for Israelโ€™s ongoing destruction of Hamas given the collateral damage that follows.

Given there are few Russian-Americans, there are almost no demonstrations on behalf of Moscowโ€™s war. But there are plenty of protests for Hamas since there are lots of Middle-Eastern Americans and visitors within the U.S.

What are we to conclude about these contradictory wars and American attitudes toward them?

The more democratic and defensive the power, the more Americans support itโ€”but only up to a point.

Even more, they demand quick victoryโ€”and lose interest when the wars stagnate, costs increase, and protests grow.

When Ukraine and Israel began costly counteroffensives, the former losing thousands and the latter killing thousands, the American public began to be less invested in either war.

Final lessons?

Israel should do all it can to destroy Hamas as quickly as possible and end the war.

Ukraine does not have the wherewithal to defeat Russia. It should cease costly offensives against Russiaโ€™s fortified lines and seek to negotiate.

Or, put another way, fickle Americans sympathize with those who are attacked. But their continuing support seems contingent on whether the victim can remain sympatheticโ€”and win decisively to end the war rapidly.

Read Original Article on VictorHanson.com

Contact Your Elected Officials
Victor Davis Hanson
Victor Davis Hansonhttp://victorhanson.com/
Victor Davis Hanson is the Martin and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow in Residence in Classics and Military History at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, a professor of Classics Emeritus at California State University, Fresno, and a nationally syndicated columnist for Tribune Media Services.

The anti-wealth manifesto

Twenty-four years after 9/11, New York City elected a 34-year-old whose biography reads like a Marxist coming-of-age novel with a Brooklyn rewrite.

OpenAI Oligarch Pre-Emptively Demands Government Bailout When AI Bubble Bursts

โ€œAI hype may soon meet fiscal reality โ€” and, as history shows, taxpayers could be left holding the bag while the bubbleโ€™s architects face no real consequences.โ€

Why Lie?: If Democrats Are Correct…Then Why All the Deceit?

When the facts cut against the left's narrative, they are minimized, distorted, or buried under a flood of falsification of information.

House Democrats BLOCK Release of Epstein Files!

Democrats released email redacting Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre's name after she cleared Trump of any wrongdoing which exposed Epstein as an intelligence asset.

A defining search

Coaches juggle players, staff, alumni, boosters, fans, recruiting pipelines, NIL deals, and the transfer portal, balancing many pressures simultaneously.

Pennsylvania School District Using AI-Enabled Wi-Fi to Search Students for Firearms

A Pennsylvania school district uses AI to prevent guns on campus, but critics warn it risks mass surveillance and constitutional rights violations.

Google Sued for Allegedly Using Gemini AI Tool to Track Usersโ€™ Private Communications

Google faces a civil suit alleging its Gemini AI harvested data from usersโ€™ private Gmail, chat, and video communications without proper consent.

Ultraprocessed Foods Linked to Increased Risk of Precancerous Colorectal Tumors: Study

A new study revealed that ultraprocessed foods (UPFs) may be linked to a rise in colon cancers among young people across the globe.

Atmospheric River Hits Southern California With Risks of Flash Floods and Deaths on Stormy Seas

An intense atmospheric river soaked Southern California, triggering flood warnings in coastal Los Angeles areas recently scarred by wildfire.

Trump Withdraws Nominee for Top IRS Lawyer

Trump withdrew his nomination of veteran tax attorney Donald L. Korb to serve as the IRSโ€™s top lawyer on Nov. 14.

Trump Issues 2 Pardons Related to Jan. 6 Investigations

Trump pardoned two individuals whose crimes were uncovered during investigations into the Jan. 6, 2021 U.S. Capitol breach.

Trump Removes Tariffs on Beef, Coffee, Other Agricultural Products

President Donald Trump issued an executive order on Nov. 14 removing reciprocal tariffs on coffee, beef, and other agricultural products.

Trumpโ€™s Working Class Alliance

On April 29, 4 weeks after introducing tariffs on nearly every country, President Trump addressed Michigan workers on his 100th day in office.
spot_img

Related Articles