| The "settler violence" campaign is meant to offset real Arab violence  Israel's public security minister gives us slogans, not facts as  part of a well-orchestrated campaign by anti-Zionist left-wing groups  to wage a moral counterassault to the explosion of Arab violence in the  last six months. Opinion.            Amnon Lord It's hard to envy Israeli Public Security Minister Omer Bar-Lev. On  one hand, he is one of the few qualified appointments of the  Bennett-Lapid government. On the other, what can be said about someone  who believes that all the recent terrorist attacks had "personal"  motives, even though they come on the heels of the ongoing Palestinian  Arab violence on both sides of the Green Line in the last six months? It's  hard to believe that Bar-Lev truly believes that one terrorist murders  because his wife left him and another terrorist was motivated by a  family squabble, and that a car-ramming happened because some teenager  argued with his dad. Maybe we should send in Education Minister Yifat  Shasha-Biton to handle Palestinian Arab family troubles. Bar-Lev has to hang on to the supporters to his left. So, much like his legendary father,  he barricades himself in local battles: He fights Palestinian terrorism  as if there is no settler violence, and fights settler violence as if  there was no Palestinian terrorism. What he isn't taking into account is  that the very phrase "settler violence" is a slogan. It's a campaign  that left-wing groups have been working to promote for six months or  more, as a moral counterassault to the wave of terrorism and rioting that erupted during Operation Guardian of the Walls in May.                                                                                                                                    It  started at the end of July. Israel Defense Forces Maj. Gen. (res.) Yair  Golan dared to sign a letter condemning the Ben & Jerry's boycott.  His fellow Meretz member, Mossi Raz, attacked him and informed him that  the "settlements" in Judea and Samaria weren't part of Israel. Golan  withdrew his signature. At the same time, we started to see billboards  that warned about the people in charge of the defense and  public-security portfolios, Benny Gantz and Bar-Lev. This was the work  of the Breaking the Silence NGO. "Settler violence—not on your watch,"  they said. The threat went along with quotes from the two ministers. Bar-Lev's recent meeting  with U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Victoria  Nuland proves how deeply the radical anti-Zionist left has penetrated.  The left-wing groups have inserted this narrative into the core of the  discourse among American Democrats and media, including, of course,  left-wing "Jewish" organizations. J Street is passing it along on its  social media to people whom it sees as propaganda targets. In one  case, images show clashes between a few masked settlers and a group of  left-wing activists and Arabs. It's not clear when or where this  happened. In another, images show the demolition of a house in the  middle of nowhere, while a Palestinian Arab woman makes gestures of  despair. There are doubtless other scenes in this campaign that seeks to  instill hatred of Israel through isolation incidents of this kind. A  minister in the Israeli government, even one who holds a Labor  Party-style view of how the Israeli-Palestinian conflict should be  solved, should be expected to present the truth to the American  diplomat. To put the systematic Palestinian attacks and a few isolated  cases of violence by Jews, which Israel is able to handle, in  proportion. Amnon Lord is  an Israeli journalist with the daily newspaper "Makor Rishon." His  articles and essays about media, film and politics have been published  in "The Jerusalem Post," "Mida," "Azure," "Nativ" and "Achshav."This  article first appeared in Israel Hayom | 
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