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March 6, 2007 at 21:01:21

When Does Opposition to Israel or the Israel Lobby Indicate Anti-Semitism?

by Walter C. Uhler     Page 1 of 2 page(s)

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Writing for the New York Times online on March 4, 2007, Stanley Fish asked the question, "Why Does Anti-Semitism Persist?" Quoting Professor Charles Small of Yale University, Professor Fish notes, "Increasingly, Jewish communities around the world feel under threat," and he blames three words for that feeling: "Israel, Iraq and anti-Semitism."

Here's how Professor Fish explains the connection: "Much of the world has been opposed to the Iraq war from its beginning, and now after four years 70 percent of Americans share the world's opinion. Some who deplore the war believe that those who got us into it and cheered it on did so, at least in part, out of a desire to improve Israel's position in the Middle East. Those who hold this view (and of course there are other analyses of the war's origins) fear that the same people - with names like Wolfowitz, Perle, Feith, Abrams, Kristol, Kagan, Krauthhammer, Wurmser, [the convicted felon] Libby and Lieberman - are pushing for a strike against Iran, arguably a greater threat to Israel than Iraq ever was. Why, they ask, should our foreign policy be held hostage to the interests of a small country that is perfectly capable of defending itself and is guilty of treating the Palestinians, whose land it appropriated, in ways that are undemocratic and even, in the opinion of many, criminal?"

Well put. But, when it comes to the origins of Bush's Iraq war, readers of James Bamford's book, A Pretext for War, and Ron Suskind's book, The Price of Loyalty, know that improving Israel's position played a key role. Readers of Bamford's book also will recall his indictment of the arguably treasonous activity of three American neoconservative Jews, Richard Perle, Douglas Feith and David Wurmser.

In their 1996 policy paper, "A Clean Break: A Strategy for Securing the Realm" - written for Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, no less! -- Perle, Feith and Wurmser recommended that Israel find pretexts for waging wars of aggression that would roll back its Arab neighbors. "The centerpiece of their recommendations was the removal of Saddam Hussein as the first step into remaking the Middle East into a region friendly, instead of hostile, to Israel." [Bamford, p. 262]

Arguably treasonous? Yes, especially when you consider the following observations by Bamford: "It was rather extraordinary for a trio of former, and potentially future, high-ranking American government officials to become advisers to a foreign government. More unsettling still was the fact that they were recommending acts of war in which Americans could be killed, and also ways to masquerade the true purpose of the attacks from the American public." [p. 263]

Bamford also devoted a few pages to Douglas Feith, noting his friendship with Joseph Churba, an associate of Rabbi Meir Kahane of the terrorist Jewish Defense League, as well as his worsening pro-Israel and anti-Arab extremism, which he brought into the Department of Defense under President George W. Bush. [pp. 278-82]

Thus, was it an accident that the Pentagon's Policy Counterterrorism Evaluation Group, headed by Feith (and derisively called Feith's Gestapo Office by Colin Powell), seized upon shards of evidence already discounted by the officially responsible intelligence agencies in order to claim that Saddam Hussein had ties to al Qaeda? Was it mere coincidence that, by providing such bogus intelligence to justify regime change in Iraq, Feith was able to advance the centerpiece of his "Clean Break" recommendations for Israel from inside the Department of Defense?

Even worse, there's evidence to suggest that the "Clean Break" proposals shaped the Bush administration's obsession with regime change in Iraq. Consider the eyewitness testimony of former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill, who attended the very first meeting of Bush's National Security Council. Beyond being devoted to the Middle East, even that very first meeting was scripted.

Scripting explains why Bush would ask National Security Adviser, Condoleezza Rice: "So, Condi, what are we going to talk about today? What's on the agenda?" [Ron Suskind, The Price of Loyalty, p. 72] As if he didn't know! And Rice responded on cue: "How Iraq is destabilizing the region, Mr. President." [Ibid]

But, that's not all. According to Secretary O'Neill, Bush stated that he was going to tilt toward Israel by pulling out of the Arab-Israeli conflict. Moreover, when Secretary of State Colin Powell objected that such a pullback "would unleash Sharon and the Israeli army," Bush responded: "Sometimes a show of strength by one side can really clarify things." [Ibid] According to Bamford, it was "Clean Break" Perle and Saddam-obsessed Paul Wolfowitz, who were able to fill Bush's "sympathetic ear" with such pro-Israel ideas. [Bamford, p. 282]

To his credit, by listing "Wolfowitz, Perle, Feith, Abrams, Kristol, Kagan, Krauthhammer, Wurmser, [the convicted felon] Libby and Lieberman," Fish has identified many of the American Jewish neoconservatives, whose pro-Israel warmongering has brought great harm to the U.S. and Israel -- not to mention Iraq. They are, indeed, part of the powerful Israel Lobby in America.

Moreover, although Fish accurately summarizes the views of the war's critics, when he says, "The war was a huge mistake and is causing us no end of trouble at home and the world at large," I believe the war was a crime -- for which Bush and Cheney should be impeached, tried and convicted, before being subject to criminal prosecution.

I believe they deserve a Nuremberg-type trial that also would examine the supporting role played by America's neocons - Jewish or not. After all, wars of aggression are still illegal under international law.

Unfortunately, Professor Fish construes attacks on the Israel Lobby to constitute evidence of anti-Semitism. First, he summarizes the war critics's views by asserting, "The lobby that led us into [war] is a 'de facto agent for a foreign government' - Israel." Then he suggests that such criticism is anti-Semitic, because, "Members of that lobby are largely, though not exclusively, Jewish. And that's where the anti-Semitism comes in. Or does it?"

But, curiously, Fish is not content to construe attacks on the largely Jewish Israel Lobby as evidence of anti-Semitism. He also seems to believe that the attacks on the lobby - by critics who do see it as the "de facto agent" of Israel - are indistinguishable from attacks on Israel. And by implying their similarity, Fish is able to invoke a recent study, which demonstrates that "anti-Israel sentiment consistently predicts the probability that an individual is anti-Semitic." [Edward H. Kaplan and Charles A. Small, "Anti-Israel Sentiment Predicts Anti-Semitism in Europe," Journal of Conflict Resolution, Vol. 50 No. 4, August 2006, p. 548]

Moreover, Fish also is impressed with their conclusion that "Those with extreme anti-Israel sentiment are roughly six times more likely to harbor anti-Semitic views than those who do not fault Israel on the measures studied." [Ibid, p. 550]

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Walter C. Uhler.com

Walter C. Uhler is an independent scholar and freelance writer whose work has been published in numerous publications, including The Nation, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, the Journal of Military History, the Moscow Times and the San Francisco Chronicle. He also is President of the Russian-American International Studies Association (RAISA).

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2 comments

Don'pigeon hole me or sterotype me
pratliff94Don'pigeon hole me or sterotype me

A fine line? Yes, but it must be fine and not broad

I think it can get to be anti-Semitic when it is always a criticism against Israel or Zionism and never a balanced criticism against their enemies. I can understand verbally attacking some deed Israel does without provocation. They should be held accountable like everyone else; i.e. what Sharon did in the Beriut refugee camps.

I think to demand this and that of Israel while condoning acts of terrorism and violence against her time and again is anti-Semetic: 1. Hamas's refusal to recognize Israel as a sovereign nation. 2. Hamas' avowed goal to wipe Israel off the map. 3. Rockets shot at civilian targets by Hezbollah and Palestine. 4. Attacking civilian Jews in Europe and else where.

When we defend these acts of terrorism while linking the acts of Likud with Zionism and Israel, it smacks of anti-Semitism.

Israel has as much right to lobby the American government as any other nation. She probably has representatives in London, Paris, Berliln, Toyko and Peking as well.

There is also a Muslim lobby group and no one blinks an eye. Lobby groups hire people to bring their concerns before Congress. It is when you accept pay under the table as Agnew did, or as Cunningham and maybe Rep. Jefferson has done, it becomes a crime. The  accusation against the Israeli lobby is many times anti-Semtic  and may have a Muslim base when other lobby groups are not criticized for doing the same things.

I watch for the same article writers or the same person making comments to see if there is a pattern. Most of the time there is pattern, then I call a spade a spade for what it is.

by pratliff94 (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 962 comments) on Saturday, March 10, 2007 at 3:19:01 PM
 


Don'pigeon hole me or sterotype me
pratliff94Don'pigeon hole me or sterotype me

A fine line? Yes, but it must be fine and not broad

I think it can get to be anti-Semitic when it is always a criticism against Israel or Zionism and never a balanced criticism against their enemies. I can understand verbally attacking some deed Israel does without provocation. They should be held accountable like everyone else; i.e. what Sharon did in the Beriut refugee camps.

I think to demand this and that of Israel while condoning acts of terrorism and violence against her time and again is anti-Semetic: 1. Hamas's refusal to recognize Israel as a sovereign nation. 2. Hamas' avowed goal to wipe Israel off the map. 3. Rockets shot at civilian targets by Hezbollah and Palestine. 4. Attacking civilian Jews in Europe and else where.

When we defend these acts of terrorism while linking the acts of Likud with Zionism and Israel, it smacks of anti-Semitism.

Israel has as much right to lobby the American government as any other nation. She probably has representatives in London, Paris, Berliln, Toyko and Peking as well.

There is also a Muslim lobby group and no one blinks an eye. Lobby groups hire people to bring their concerns before Congress. It is when you accept pay under the table as Agnew did, or as Cunningham and maybe Rep. Jefferson has done, it becomes a crime. The  accusation against the Israeli lobby is many times anti-Semtic  and may have a Muslim base when other lobby groups are not criticized for doing the same things.

I watch for the same article writers or the same person making comments to see if there is a pattern. Most of the time there is pattern, then I call a spade a spade for what it is.

by pratliff94 (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 962 comments) on Saturday, March 10, 2007 at 3:19:07 PM
 

 

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