Tikvah
A boy sells greens in front of the British chain store Sainsbury's in Cairo, April 2000. (Marwan Naamani/AFP via Getty Images)
A boy sells greens in front of the British chain store Sainsbury's in Cairo, April 2000. (Marwan Naamani/AFP via Getty Images)
Observation

June 8, 2026

The Strawberry Plot

Is America falling for the Middle East’s anti-Zionist delusions?

Undergirding the explicit legal and political norms of any society is a moral order that forbids certain behaviors, lionizes others, values different goals as more or less worthy, and guides how its members make sense of the world around them. It is through this moral framework that nations and individuals find meaning. And when it collapses, people—unable to endure life without meaning very long—quickly find new ways to fill the void.

The West is presently in the throes of a crisis of meaning. Among the substitute sources of meaning presently on offer, the one that asks least and returns most, the cheapest to acquire and the most versatile in its application, is anti-Zionism. It is an old instrument lately refitted, and what recommends it to a society that has lost its bearings is its efficacy: there is no disappointment it cannot be made to explain, no grievances it cannot organize, and no explanation it offers that requires either evidence or the labor of thought.

I understand this all too well because, in Egypt at the beginning of the present century, I observed up close what happens when this form of thinking succeeds. At that time, the Egyptian state had withdrawn from the economy it had long commanded and the cultivation of the land was reorganized toward European markets; Egyptian agriculture turned away from the staples that had fed the country and toward high-value fruits—strawberries, melons, citrus—that could be sold abroad for hard currency, with the consequence that a country that had once aspired to feed itself (and that, in ancient times, had fed much of the world around it) became dependent upon the granaries of others. This was a question of political economy of the most ordinary kind, the sort best evaluated in terms of price and yield, of comparative advantage and the distribution of risk. It was not, however, treated in those terms.

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