Can
you assure American viewers
across our country that we're
in this situation against
Saddam Hussein for American
security interests? And what
would be the link in terms of
Israel?"
--
Michael Russert to Richard
Perle | [Images added
by this website]
New
York, February 28,
2003 Israel's
Role: The 'Elephant' They're Talking
About By Ami Eden Forward
Staff "It is the proverbial
elephant in the room," wrote liberal
columnist Michael Kinsley in the
October 24, 2002, edition of the online
journal Slate. "Everybody sees it,
no one mentions it." Kinsley was referring to a debate, once
only whispered in back rooms but lately
splashed in bold characters across the
mainstream media, over Jewish and Israeli
influence in shaping American foreign
policy. In recent weeks, in fact, the
Israeli-Jewish elephant has been on a
rampage, trampling across the airwaves and
front pages of respected media outlets,
including the Washington Post, The New
York Times, the American
Prospect, the Washington Times,
the Economist, the New York
Review of Books, CNN and SNBC. For its
encore, the proverbial pachyderm plopped
itself down last weekend smack in the
middle of "Meet the Press," NBC's
top-rated Sunday morning news program. Many
of these articles project an image of
President Bush and Prime
Minister Sharon working in tandem to
promote war against Iraq. Several of them
described an administration packed with
conservatives motivated primarily, if not
solely, by a dedication to defending
Israel. A few respected voices have even
touched openly on the role of American
Jewish organizations in the equation,
suggesting a significant shift to the
right on Middle East issues and an intense
loyalty to Sharon. Still others raise the
notion of Jewish and Israeli influence
only to attack it as antisemitism. .
THE key moment on "Meet the Press" came
when host Tim Russert read from a
February 14 column by the editor at large
of the Washington Times, Arnaud
de Borchgrave, who argued that the
"strategic objective" of senior Bush
administration officials was to secure
Israel's borders by launching a crusade to
democratize the Arab world. Next, Russert
turned to one of his guests, Richard
Perle, chairman of the Defense Policy
Board, a key advisory panel to the
Pentagon. "Can
you assure American viewers across our
country that we're in this situation
against Saddam Hussein and his
removal for American security interests?"
Russert asked. "And what would be the link
in terms of Israel?" It was a startling question, especially
when directed at Perle, the poster boy
(right) -- along with Deputy
Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz
and Under Secretary of Defense Douglas
Feith -- for antisemitic critics who
insist the United States is being pulled
into war by pro-Likud Jewish advisers on
orders from Jerusalem. But Russert is no
David Duke, nor even a Patrick
Buchanan. He is generally regarded as
a balanced, first-rate journalist in sync
with the zeitgeist of Washington's media
and political elite. If Russert is asking
the question on national television, then
the toothpaste is out of the tube: The
question has entered the discourse in
elite Washington circles and is now a
legitimate query to be floated in polite
company. In three recent opinion articles,
New York Times columnist Maureen
Dowd fired off one-liners claiming that
Bush's conservative aides were guided
simply by the need to defend Israel. MSNBC
talk-show host Chris Matthews
insisted that Israeli hawks are "in bed"
with hardliners at the Pentagon and Vice
President Dick Cheney's office and
suggested that at times Sharon essentially
dictates Bush's speeches. The Washington Post supplied a
less glib, more systematic attempt to
demonstrate an unprecedented political
partnership between Sharon and Bush, in a
2,100-word front-page story February 9 by
Robert Kaiser, headlined " Bush and
Sharon Nearly Identical On Mideast
Policy." The story also included a
paragraph outlining a supposed rightward
shift among American Jewish
organizations. "Over the past dozen years or more,
supporters of Sharon's Likud Party have
moved into leadership roles in most of the
American Jewish organizations that provide
financial and political support for
Israel," Kaiser wrote. Just a few weeks earlier, in its
January 25 issue, the Economist
published a lead editorial urging Bush to
ignore "so-called friends of Israel who
will accuse Mr. Bush of 'appeasement' the
moment he pushes hard for territorial
compromise." The barrage of commentary on supposed
Israeli interests in an invasion of Iraq
has triggered a powerful backlash of
sorts: a parallel barrage of commentary on
the bounds of legitimate criticism of
Jerusalem, American Jews and Jewish
officials working in the White House.
Several Jewish commentators have recently
written articles warning that subtle and
not-so-subtle antisemitic undertones
permeate the new wave of anti-war
criticism. In turn, critics have charged
these writers with unfairly playing the
antisemitic card in hopes of silencing
opposition to the war. So far, the main event in the parallel
clash started with an opinion article by
Lawrence Kaplan, senior editor of
the New Republic, that appeared
February 18 in the Washington Post.
The article suggested that the
insinuations of Jewish and Israeli pro-war
pressure were reminiscent of Buchanan's
claims in 1990 that only soldiers with
non-Jewish names would be killed in a war
being pushed solely by Israel and its
American "amen corner." Kaplan, in turn, was promptly slammed
by Slate's Mickey Kaus, who
argued that Kaplan had unfairly tarred
critics of administration policy. Kaus
offers some convincing critiques. For
example: Although Kaplan acknowledged that
it is "legitimate" to debate "how the Bush
administration has arrived at the brink of
war with Saddam Hussein, and to what
extent Israeli influence has brought it
there," he failed to articulate a clear
sense of how and when. Of course, Kaus could just as easily be
faulted for failing to address adequately
the potential damage done by pundits,
intellectually sloppy even if well
meaning, who rush to break down
longstanding taboos on bigotry even as
antisemitic conspiracy theories run
rampant across the Internet and the Muslim
world. Without crying antisemitism, one
could easily find serious shortcomings in
several of the articles panned by Kaplan
or defended by Kaus. For example, Kaiser's
shorthand evaluation of Jewish
organizations glosses over a commonly
overlooked point: American Jews and Jewish
groups overwhelmingly supported the Oslo
process prior to the outbreak of the
intifada. The muddled, undefined debate was on
full display last week, when Kaplan
squared off February 20 on CNN's
"Crossfire" against the conservative
columnist Robert Novak, a longtime
critic of Israel. Novak attempted to repel
Kaplan's criticisms by arguing that he had
never used the word "Jewish" or invoked
questions of "dual
loyalty" when criticizing
pro-Israel conservatives. Kaplan countered
that -- contrary to Novak's claim -- he
never used the term "antisemite" in his
Washington Post column. Their
respective responses were the same: You
meant it. | Website
note: Abraham Foxman,
wealthy and controversial chief
of the Anti Defamation League,
likes to refer to himself as a
"Holocaust survivor." As a
biography
on this website shows, he was not
even born when Hitler invaded his
native Poland, and he was looked
after by Polish Catholics
throughout the war; his parents
also "survived". | Attempting to sort out the tangle,
Anti-Defamation
League national director Abraham
Foxman, in an interview with the
Forward, outlined what seemed to be
a more constructive approach to the
issue.The first point, he said, is to accept
as legitimate questions concerning the
pro-Israel leanings of administration
officials -- so long as such criticisms
recognize that the hawkish camp includes
significant Jewish and non-Jewish players.
And, Foxman said, while it is certainly
legitimate to question where the Sharon
government or American Jewish groups stand
on the war, the thin line is crossed by
those who portray these entities as a
shadowy Jewish conspiracy that controls
American foreign policy. Others have noted that many Jewish
hawks with ties to the administration,
including Perle, have advocated aggressive
American action in defense of democracy
far beyond the Middle East, from Latin
America to Southeast Asia. In the end, Foxman said, while American
Jews are sometimes too quick to assume
that antisemitism is at play, history has
offered plenty of reasons to be wary of
debates over their influence on foreign
policy. "It is an old canard that Jews control
America and American foreign policy,"
Foxman said. "During both world wars,
antisemites said that Jews manipulated
America into war. So when you begin to
hear it again, there is good reason for us
to be aware of it and sensitive to
it." -
Eric
Margolis: Bush's War is not about
Denmocracy | The
hijacking of America
Richard
Perle told German chancellor
Schröder to resign-
The
Israeli lobby's influence: appointments
of advisors to White House and
Executive Branch
-
A
disturbing Beirut report on Douglas
Feith, Bush's new "Dr
Goebbels"
-
Pentagon
hawks make haste
-
Robert Fisk exposes
President Bush and his pro-Israel lobby
by name
-
The
Guardian also unmasks Richard Perle and
his gang:
"When he is not
too busy at the Pentagon, or too busy
running Hollinger Digital -- part of
the group that publishes the Daily
Telegraph in Britain -- or at board
meetings of the Jerusalem Post, Mr
Perle is "resident fellow" at one of
the thinktanks -- the American
Enterprise Institute (AEI)."
-
The
Guardian exposes a US "Arab" news
agency as a clandestine Israeli
Intelligence operation
-
Time
To Get The Facts Right, By David
Welch (Ambassador of the United States
of America
-
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