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Melanie Phillips

ByMelanie Phillips, Melanie Phillips

Opinion

Boris is far from alone

May 19, 2016 11:57
2 min read

Boris Johnson got into trouble last week with a historical reference.He said Napoleon, Hitler and others had tried to unify Europe; the EU was trying to do the same by different methods. He was promptly accused of comparing the EU with the Third Reich.

The fuss all but eclipsed the speech by David Cameron in which he invoked the sacrifice of British soldiers during the Second World War to claim the EU had kept the peace ever since. He was promptly accused of denigrating that sacrifice, made to keep Britain free rather than under the yoke of Brussels.

In Israel, Major-General Yair Golan wandered into the same minefield. In a speech on, of all things, Holocaust remembrance day he said: "If there is one thing that is scary in remembering the Holocaust, it is noticing horrific processes which developed in Europe - particularly in Germany - 70, 80, and 90 years ago, and finding remnants of that here among us in the year 2016."

The uproar over his apparent equation of Israeli society with Nazi Germany obscured other things he said which were sound. In an apparent reference to Sergeant Elor Azaria, whose trial for manslaughter after shooting a wounded Palestinian on the ground has divided the country, Golan said the IDF should be proud that it probes "problematic behaviour" with courage.