Europeans voted for the right because they are worried about the muslims, not the jews. That does not mean that the european antisemitism is dead, it is not. The far right in Europe has long been a vehicle of antisemitism, but that’s no longer one of its main thrusts. So it’s not a case of antisemitism suddenly having become stereophonic because of equal opportunity hate at both ends of the spectrum, it’s general concern about national identity, poorly articulated, but widely felt.
It’s the failure of integration of the muslim immigrants that is the source of the tension, from a deep distrust, which is quite reciprocal, unfortunately. In contrast, the jews are not particularly anti-Europe. Those who leave do so for their safety, driven by the surrounding ntolerance, not by particular hate of their own.
The European right has many pro-Israel leaders these days, who have awakened to threatening aspect of Islam, and are trying to wake up the rest of society.
Obama, the ultimate political animal posturing as the general purpose solver of all problems, has taken an anti-Israel stance! The situation is ripe with latent unstability.





