Earlier this week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited President Obama in the White House. Many words were exchanged, but they all might have been superfluous.
Netanyahu delivered his overriding message almost wordlessly, in the form of a gift to the president.
The gift he handed Obama was a copy of "Megillah of Esther," the scroll that recounts the heroics of Queen Esther in ancient Persia. Jews read the whole Megillah -- as the saying goes -- in synagogues across the globe, to celebrate Purim, the apotheosis of the "They Tried to Kill Us, They Failed, Let's Eat" category of Jewish holidays.
The scroll tells the story of the beautiful Esther and her cousin, the wise Mordechai, and how they plot -- successfully -- to keep the evil vizier Haman from murdering Persia's Jews.
The prime minister of Israel is many things; subtle is not one of them. The message of Purim is: When the Jews see a murderous conspiracy forming against them, they will act to disrupt it.
A further refinement of the message is: When the Jews see a plot forming against them in Persia, they will act to disrupt it, even if Obama wishes that they would wait for permission.
From what I understand about the meeting between the two leaders, the prime minister stressed Israel's sovereign right to act against plots forming against it. The president doesn't disagree with this, of course -- he has repeatedly said Israel has the right to act on its own against the Iranian nuclear program.
But he had another message for Netanyahu. As Obama put it to me in an interview last week, the message is, "I have Israel's back."