Unholy Alliance Douglas Murray’s new book looks at the dangers posed by the burgeoning coalition of radical leftists and Islamists in the wake of 7 October.Michael M. Rosen

https://quillette.com/2025/05/27/unholy-alliance-on-democracies-and-death-cults-douglas-murray-review/

A review of On Democracies and Death Cults: Israel and the Future of Civilization by Douglas Murray, 240 pages, Broadside Books (April 2025)

On 21 May, Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Milgrim were shot dead in Washington, DC, less than a mile from the US Capitol, apparently by a radical anti-Israel activist. They were attending an event for young Jewish professionals at the Capital Jewish Museum when they were murdered by a thirty-year-old assailant subsequently identified as Elias Rodriguez by DC police.

The museum event, sponsored by the American Jewish Committee, featured a multi-faith umbrella of nonprofit organisations working to respond to humanitarian crises in the Middle East and North Africa. A member of an avowedly Marxist-Leninist outfit called the Party for Socialism and Liberation, Rodriguez was heard shouting, “Free, Free Palestine!” upon his arrest. He seems to have killed his victims despite—or perhaps because of—the anodyne mission of the event they were attending. And, apparently, because he thought they were both Jews (Milgrim was Jewish, and Lischinsky was born to a Jewish father and a Christian mother).

Since Hamas’s savage invasion of Israel on 7 October 2023, radical progressives around the world have made common cause with Islamists—not only against the Jewish state, but also against ordinary Jews. Why is this happening? And what can we do about it? In his latest book, On Democracies and Death Cults: Israel and the Future of Civilization, the British journalist Douglas Murray approaches these challenging questions without an ethnic or religious dog in the fight. That does not make him a dispassionate observer, however, because he is committed to the defence of the free world, of which the State of Israel is a part.

Murray is therefore a longstanding supporter of the only liberal democracy in the Middle East, and an interview he gave to Rita Panahi on Sky News Australia about proportionality in war briefly went viral on social media in the immediate aftermath of Hamas’s attack. Murray then made his way to the so-called Gaza Envelope to bear witness to the otherworldly carnage that followed, which he documents in his new book with frank accuracy and intensity.

Even worse, perhaps, than the grievous wound Israel suffered on 7 October is what the massacre portends for the rest of the free world. Murray believes that Israel is merely an appetizer on the menu from which global jihadists have been feasting for decades—the United States and Europe are the main dish. “[W]hat Israel stared into that day,” he writes, “is a reality we might all stare into again at some point soon—and that some of us have already glimpsed.”

Murray summarises his argument in a thesis statement that gives his book its title: “The story of the suffering and the heroism of October 7 and its aftermath,” he reckons, “is one that spells not just the divide between good and evil, peace and war, but between democracies and death cults.”

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