by Dr. Alex Joffe
The ongoing collapse of Theresa May’s government in Britain raises the possibility of new elections in which Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn would be the likely winner.
BESA Center Perspectives Paper No. 640, November 13, 2017
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: The 
ongoing collapse of Theresa May’s government in Britain raises the 
possibility of new elections in which Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn would 
be the likely winner. The red-green alliance between the European far 
left and Islamist parties threatens to create a dystopian scenario in 
which national identities are rapidly discarded and national security 
compromised by terrorism and separatism. This would represent a 
tremendous danger to the continent’s Jews, to Israel, and to the US. 
The resignation of Priti Patel from the British 
Cabinet after leaks that she had secretly met with Israeli officials to 
discuss aid to Syrian refugees has thrown the government of Theresa May 
into even greater upheaval. Already reeling after electoral failures 
earlier this year and unsuccessful Brexit negotiations, there is now the
 possibility that May’s government could fall.
This prospect once again brings into focus 
demographic and electoral trends in Britain and across Europe. Earlier 
in 2017, the alliance between the far left and Muslim voters was not 
sufficient to bring a Communist anti-Semite, Jeremy Corbyn, to power as 
prime minister under the banner of Labour, but it might pull it off next
 time. In Europe, the problem is compounded by the presence of Muslim 
political parties that are reshaping national politics.
What are the long-term implications for Israel and the US?
The promised economic and political consequences 
of a Corbyn victory – higher taxes, increased immigration, a renewed 
relationship with Europe (despite promised support for Brexit), and 
distance from the US – may prove insufficient to repel voters. In any 
coming election, growing frustration with the ineptitude of Theresa May 
and her government, undefined anger at the “establishment,” and the 
desire for change will again play roles.
That Corbyn, a vocal admirer of the IRA, Hamas, and Hezbollah and guest on Iranian television,
 is a credible politician at all says something about a sizeable portion
 of the British population. For British Jews especially, the message is 
ominous. Their concerns about rapidly rising anti-Semitism, anti-Israel 
bias, and terrorism are simply unimportant as electoral issues. 
Endlessly documented anti-Semitism within all levels of the Labour Party
 registers with Jews, but not with the broader electorate.
A Corbyn victory, which is entirely plausible, would be a harbinger of demographic and electoral changes throughout Europe. The “red-green alliance”
 of far-left and Muslim parties is nominally united against 
globalization, capitalism, imperialism, and colonialism, but it is more 
fundamentally linked by shared anti-Americanism and anti-Semitism.
The alliance is comprised primarily of Communists 
and Greens, but also by mainstream parties such as Corbyn’s Labour 
Party, as well as by explicitly Muslim parties, such as the DENK party 
in the Netherlands, the Equality and Justice Party in France, and the 
NZB Party in Austria. These purport to help downtrodden Muslim 
minorities, but are in fact part of a network controlled by Turkey’s AKP party that organizes Muslims under an anti-assimilation platform. Belgium’s Islam party is explicitly Islamist, as is the Arab-European League.
These Muslim parties and others
 are already reshaping local politics by functioning as voting blocs 
that influence mainstream candidates and by putting forward their own 
candidates. They are also influential in organizations such as unions. 
Sooner or later, one of these parties will be elected outright or will 
wield decisive national power in a coalition government. What might be 
expected to follow? Recent history suggests little reason for optimism.
The first concern is counterterrorism. On the one 
hand, incidents will be responded to and terrorists neutralized. But on 
the other, the “counter violent extremism” paradigm – which has proven 
only to empower clever Islamists with funding and credibility
 – will be expanded. This will amplify problems that have already 
overwhelmed counterterrorist and police forces in Western European 
countries. If “de-escalation” police tactics are adopted, the situation on the streets will become far worse.
But further loss of control is assured. The red-green alliance has already empowered local Muslim leaders who govern the banlieues
 and the hundreds of other no-go zones. Most mainstream and all Muslim 
parties are already opposed to assimilation as a means of national 
integration and favor increased immigration, ostensibly in the name of multiculturalism. Retreat from national control and national identity will accelerate.
Speaking out against these trends has already been deemed “racist” at the highest levels. Witness, for example, Angela Merkel’s collusion with Facebook and May’s promise to intensify Britain’s already obsessive policing
 of the Internet in the wake of recent London attacks, ostensibly in the
 name of preventing “radicalization.” Opposition to free speech on the 
grounds that it permits “defamation of religion” is already in the European mainstream and will expand further.
The parallel Muslim societies that already exist 
in Europe will expand and be protected by national authorities, since 
local authorities are too co-opted or frightened to take action. “Trojan Horse” takeovers of institutions like schools, from kindergartens onward,
 are already widespread. New generations of violent separatists are 
being both cultivated and imported, firming up voting bases for 
red-green alliances.
The existence of parallel Muslim legal structures 
beyond the reach of European states is well-established. Calls for 
Muslim communal autonomy and autonomous zones in Europe are increasing 
and, despite vociferous denials, no-go zones are proliferating. The 
temptation to formalize Muslim autonomous zones in the name of religious
 freedom or other rationalizations will be enormous, particularly as it 
will have electoral backing. A German court has started the process by declaring an unofficial “sharia patrol” that polices “morality” in Muslim neighborhoods to be legal.
Eventually, policies that endorse separatism, criminality, and violence emanating from places like Molenbeek in
 Brussels will provide safe havens for more systematic insurgent 
violence. It is unclear how governments will respond to entire 
neighborhoods or towns effectively outside national control. Security 
measures such as cordon and sweep operations still seem anathema, much 
less preventive detention, denaturalization, and deportation.
In this dystopian scenario, already problematic
 information-sharing between governments, the lifeblood of 
counterterrorism, will be disrupted as intelligence and security 
institutions are infiltrated by their targets, both as employees
 and as political overseers – a scenario already playing out in Germany 
and France. Intelligence and security services may even be tempted to 
interrupt information-sharing with their own political echelons. 
Democratic oversight will be shaken because police and spies will 
properly fear sharing information with a Home Secretary like Diane 
Abbott.
Predicting European red-green foreign policy is 
dismally easy. The convergence of traditional European, far left, and 
Muslim anti-Semitism and anti-imperialism has already produced an 
obsessive focus on Israel, the “little Satan,” and the “Great Satan,” 
the US. Corbyn, a supporter of Hamas and Hezbollah as well as the BDS 
movement, is an exemplar, as are virtually all European Muslim 
politicians. Leftist European politicians, such as German Foreign 
Minister Sigmar Gabriel, already find vocal condemnations of Israel irresistible. These will increase, both from leftist and Islamist conviction and political opportunism.
Suspension of trade, international sanctions, and 
legal action against Israelis are all on the cards once far 
left/Islamist governments wield power in Europe. This will not produce a
 Palestinian state, but that was never the goal. Shunning of the US 
might not be as great, but vilification will increase and security 
cooperation will decline, to the advantage of the Russians and the 
Chinese.
Blind eyes are already being turned across Europe to rapidly rising Muslim anti-Semitism and even the murder of Jews. The vehemence with which governments in Sweden and
 elsewhere have jettisoned their own national identities and abandoned 
their Jewish citizens reflects post-national eagerness to assimilate to 
“multicultural” ideals – that is, to norms established by immigrants, 
and the final expression of their loathing of Jews.
In response, the Israeli economic and diplomatic 
shifts to Asia and Africa will continue. Protection of Jewish refugees 
from Europe will become a factor in Israel’s relationship with the 
continent. Immigration to Israel from France has risen rapidly over the 
past decade, and Jews from other countries will likely join in. Jewish 
life in much of Western Europe will be extinct within decades. The rise 
of the far right and other separatist movements will also intensify, but
 these trends will also bode ill for national integration and for Jews.
Can anything be done to save these countries from 
their duly elected, suicidal fates? The US stepped in twice in the past 
century to help save Europe from German militarism and fascism, and then
 a third time to protect it from Communism. Some of the same tools that 
pushed back Communism may be of use against the far left/Islamist force.
US willingness to employ Russian-style “active 
measures” against European countries currently seems absent. But 
European problems invariably become problems for the US, and for Jews. 
In the US, political will and strategic daring are almost as lacking as 
they are in Europe. If this continues to be the case, a dystopian future
 will continue to unfold.
BESA Center Perspectives Papers are published through the generosity of the Greg Rosshandler Family
Dr. Alex Joffe is an archaeologist and historian. He is a Shillman-Ginsburg Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
Source: https://besacenter.org/perspectives-papers/britain-political-crisis/
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