President Trump is not the only world leader facing criticism for a delayed condemnation of Saturday's white nationalist march in Charlottesville, Va.For three days, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — an outspoken critic of anti-Semitism around the world — said nothing about the anti-Jewish chants and Nazi swastikas paraded in Charlottesville.Only after Trump delivered a statement Monday against "the KKK, neo-Nazis, white supremacists and other hate groups" did Netanyahu tweet his own condemnation: "Outraged by expressions of anti-Semitism, neo-Nazism and racism. Everyone should oppose this hatred."Critics pointed out that Netanyahu tweeted his statement in English — not to Israeli followers in Hebrew — and from his official "PM of Israel" Twitter account of 494,000 followers rather than his more popular personal account of 1.07 million followers.Some called his condemnation vague."Guess which world leader took even longer than Trump to condemn Neo-Nazism and even then couldn't even specify where he was referring to," tweeted Anshel Pfeffer, a columnist of the liberal Israeli daily Haaretz.Months ago, Netanyahu was also criticized for his muted response to the toppling of graves at a St. Louis Jewish cemetery and bomb threats to U.S. Jewish community centers.Netanyahu had no comment on Trump's most recent remarks, in which he blamed "both sides" for the Charlottesville violence on Tuesday.Eylon Levy, a news anchor at i24News, an Israeli cable channel, argued on Twitter that Netanyahu has responded cautiously so as not to anger President Trump."Israel must prioritize its own security. He looks across the seas at Donald Trump, sees a volatile president, and says, 'We need to remain on his good side,'" Levy said.FormerIsraeli ambassador to the U.S. Michael Oren told Israel Radio he did not think Israel needed to demand a different response from Trump, calling it an internal American matter."It's not our place," he said.He argued that anti-Semitism from the left wing affects American Jews more than anti-Semitism from the right.If Netanyahu's response to Charlottesville was vague, his 26-year-old son's reaction on Facebookwas not.Yair Netanyahu, who is often perceived as being groomed to follow his father's footsteps in politics, has a combative social media presence and Israeli commentators claim he plays a role in shaping his father's social media messaging and some of his political positions.He played down the anti-Semitic displays in Charlottesville, instead focusing on counter-demonstrators affiliated with Antifa, the leftist anti-fascist group, and Black Lives Matter, calling them "thugs" who hate Israel:
Israel's Netanyahu Faces Criticism For Delayed Reaction To Charlottesville Rally
