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The guy making this quote is very much trying to do the indefensible thing. While you can absolutely be antisemitic in criticism of Israel, that is at most a tiny sliver of anti-Israeli speech on the left (not a Nazi pretending) and yet there is a concerted effort to try to use that to silence criticism by Israel whole cloth (including active government acts). This isn't a good faith advocate mistakenly blurring lines. He's very much trying to tar opposition to Israel (his birth country according to Wiki) or support for their enemy as hate speech. We don't need to pretend this is happening in a void, absent of ongoing campaigns to silence anti-Israel criticism or without the context of the speaker's own words trying to conflate a support for Israeli's victims as criticism with Jewish people.
I don't think it's naïve to make the assumption that these are all good arrests for actual hate speech (for one I expect there are many more than 17 public antisemitic statements), German municipal governments have banned pro-Palestinian events, so it's not really like you can be 100% sure the German government would never blur lines as the quoted speaker wants.
I guess I just don't read his comments as applying as broadly as you do. I would more or less agree with you if I did. I haven't really come across anything that would change my mind about him though.
Schuster was born in Israel - his parents were expelled from Germany in '38 by the Nazis - but he's lived in Germany since he was around 2 years old. This Q&A describes him as a "descendant of one of Germany's oldest Jewish families." He seems like a pretty moderate guy. He himself is critical of the Israeli government. He's opposed to the far-right, theocratic turn in Israel and the ratcheting up of hostilities with Palestinians. He also laments the abandonment of liberal values in Israel. He's specifically stated that criticism of the Israeli government is legitimate but that collectively blaming Israelis or Jews for the actions of the Israeli government is antisemitism. In the past, he's called for the rule of law to be applied consistently when protesters in Berlin were chanting 'Death to Jews,' which doesn't seem like an extreme response. He seems to have been specific in opposing protests that call for violence. I've read criticism of his guest article in Bild that he used the word "barbarian" and there was a photo of Palestinian protesters. There's no way he had anything to do with that photo though, and the text of the article doesn't really match the criticism: "This has nothing to do with Islam . . . We are all part of this society together. It needs everyone . . . Where is the decency that has distinguished this community for so long? [It] is still there. I hope so and I believe in it . . . we don't want shields. We want to live freely in this open society." (autotranslated from German, so there could be some meaning there I missed) He's understandably angry that some Germans would celebrate the killing of Israeli civilians on Oct 7th, but he directs that anger narrowly toward Hamas. I think the contrast between his commentary and some of the extreme statements we saw from Israeli officials in the weeks after the attack is pretty stark anyway.
Most of the time when he's been in the press over the last five years or so it's for really uncontroversial stuff. Like, if someone vandalizes a synagogue, he'll call for more police protection of synagogues. Or he'll meet with a European official and they'll affirm their commitment to combating antisemitism. I can't find any instance of him calling for banning all criticism of Israel and it would seem inconsistent with his past behaviour. He's also not a member of the government so doesn't have any official control over any of these policies, though he seems well-respected and certainly has influence.