For two decades, Sacha Baron Cohen has built his reputation as comedy’s fearless provocateur, a satirist willing to expose society’s uncomfortable truths. But a closer examination of his body of work reveals a troubling pattern: his comedy consistently targets the marginalized and the West’s designated enemies while remaining conspicuously silent on the actions of the state he openly supports. The Kazakhstan Problem: When Satire Becomes Cultural Assault
When Borat premiered in 2006, Western critics celebrated it as brilliant social commentary. The Kazakh people experienced something entirely different. The Kazakh American Association condemned the film for promoting racism, describing how Cohen’s portrayal reduced their culture to crude stereotypes about backwardness and bigotry.
The impact was immediate and personal. Kazakhs living abroad found their accents mocked, their cultural identity weaponized for laughs. When Borat Subsequent Moviefilm was released in 2020, thousands of Kazakhs expressed outrage on social media using #CancelBorat, calling the continued stereotyping an insult to their nation.
This wasn’t satirical commentary aimed at powerful institutions — it was comedy that punched down at a Central Asian nation with limited global media presence to defend itself. The laughter came at the expense of people who never consented to become the world’s punchline. The Dictator’s Convenient Timing
Cohen’s 2012 film The Dictator targeted Muammar Gaddafi through the fictional character Admiral General Aladeen. The timing was remarkable: the film arrived just months after NATO’s controversial intervention in Libya, which resulted in Gaddafi’s death and the country’s descent into chaos.
Rather than questioning the Western narrative around Libya’s destruction, Cohen’s comedy reinforced it. The film presented the Gaddafi-inspired character as a buffoonish despot worthy of mockery, avoiding any serious examination of the intervention’s legality or consequences. Comedy became a tool for validating recent military action rather than challenging it. The Silence That Speaks Loudest
Perhaps most revealing is what Cohen chooses not to satirize. Despite building his career on exposing powerful institutions and controversial figures, Cohen has remained notably silent on Israeli actions in Palestine — a conflict involving a state he has publicly supported.
Cohen has openly identified as a Zionist and demonstrated his political alignment through his work. His starring role in Netflix’s The Spy, which portrayed Israeli intelligence agent Eli Cohen as a heroic figure, was widely recognized as presenting Israeli operations in Syria through a favorable lens. The series offered no critical examination of Israeli actions in the region during that period.
This selective approach reveals a clear pattern: Cohen readily satirizes Arab and Muslim figures, Central Asian cultures, and leaders opposed by Western governments, while maintaining silence on — or actively promoting positive narratives about — Israeli actions. Comedy as Political Tool
Baron Cohen’s defenders argue that comedy should be free to target anyone and that satirists shouldn’t be held to political litmus tests. This misses the point. The issue isn’t whether Cohen has the right to make these choices — it’s what those choices reveal about his actual role in the media landscape.
True satirical courage involves challenging power wherever it exists, especially when that power aligns with one’s own political sympathies. Instead, Cohen’s work consistently aligns with Western geopolitical interests: mocking Kazakhstan when it’s strategically irrelevant, reinforcing narratives about Gaddafi after his overthrow, and staying silent on Israeli actions while promoting favorable portrayals of Israeli intelligence operations. The Pattern Revealed
Sacha Baron Cohen has built his career on the premise of fearless truth-telling through comedy. The evidence suggests something more calculated: a comedian who targets the convenient and the powerless while protecting the interests of states and institutions he supports.
This isn’t fearless satire — it’s selective satirical work that consistently aligns with particular political interests. Cohen’s comedy doesn’t challenge power; it reinforces existing power structures while providing the appearance of edgy, boundary-pushing entertainment.
The question isn’t whether Cohen has the right to make these choices. The question is whether audiences should continue viewing him as a brave satirical truth-teller when the evidence points to something far more conventional: a comedian whose work consistently serves established power rather than challenging it.
His silence on certain topics, combined with his active promotion of others, reveals not satirical courage but satirical selectivity — comedy that punches down at the marginalized while protecting the powerful interests he personally supports.
It’s OK OP. Not everyone gets satire. Maybe stay away from Starship Troopers.