[The Anglo Old Guard is no longer running the show...]

Sent to you by Sean McBride via Google Reader: When It Comes to Israel,
Foundation for Defense of Democracies Plays Hide the Salami via
Mondoweiss by Philip Weiss on 1/31/08
One of the best lines in Jacob Heilbrunn's book on the neocons, They
Knew They Were Right, is that having been excluded by the old WASP
establishment, young Jewish rightwing intellectuals of the 50s-70s
burned with outsider resentment. And in the end, when they gained
influence (in the administrations of Reagan, Clinton and GWBush) they
created a "parallel establishment" in Washington.

Heilbrunn never fleshes this idea out; but it is in essence an idea
about money. Scott McConnell, the editor of The American Conservative,
has said that "Neoconservatism is a career." The neocons created a
wealth of jobs and opportunities for intellectuals in Washington,
chiefly at thinktanks--the thinktanks that thunk up the Iraq war.

I bring this up because lately I took a look at the Foundation for the
Defense of Democracies, a little-known thinktank in Washington that is
a pillar of that parallel establishment. The whole foundation is
dedicated to fighting radical Islam and fostering democracy in the
Middle East. Its website says that it is defending democracies "under
assault by terrorism and militant Islamism." There is very little on
the website about Israel, and yet it is plain when you look into the
group that support for Israel is at the heart of the group's creation.
In this sense, FDD is like Freedom's Watch, the Ari Fleischer pro-Iraq
war group I have written about. Freedom's Watch purports to be all
about America's interests, and yet it is plain, even to the Jewish
Telegraphic Agency, which did the first story on the outfit last
summer, that its board and staff are chiefly Jewish and that promoting
a U.S. foreign policy that joins the U.S. at the hip with Israel in the
fight against terrorism, starting with the Palestinians, is the group's
main objective.

I have criticized Freedom's Watch for not being upfront about this aim.
The same charge can be leveled at FDD. Go to the website and the group
says it was started after 9/11 by "visionary philanthropists," then
gives as its board of directors just three names, Jack Kemp, Steve
Forbes and the late Jeane Kirkpatrick. Three gentiles. But if you go to
the organization's latest 990 form, which it filed with the federal
government because it is a 501c3 (forms collected by the great
guidestar.org) there are more than 20 directors listed, and most of
them have a strong Jewish interest.

Among the board members listed for 2005 are Michael Steinhardt, the
co-owner of the New Republic who started birthright, the program to
send Jewish kids to Israel for free; Roland Arnall, the ambassador to
the Netherlands who co-founded the Simon Wiesenthal Center; Charles
Bronfman, who started birthright with Steinhardt; Cheryl Halpern, who
has been associated with the Republican Jewish Committee and WINEP, the
pro Israel military thinktank; Tony Gelbart, who started Nefesh
B'nefesh, an organization that urges American Jews to move to Israel;
Larry Mizel, who started a Jewish museum in Denver; Leonard Abramson,
founder of U.S. Healthcare and founder of a Jewish museum; and Lindsay
Rosenwald, who is identified online as a member of the Republican
Jewish Committee.

These are some of those "visionary philanthropists." Of course, there
is nothing wrong with these folks taking a part in the political
process. What is unkosher is the website's failure to identify them.
Indeed, I see an effort throughout FDD's online publications to hide
the salami. Charles Jacobs, a member of the board of advisers, is
listed as the head of the American Anti-Slavery Group, a Darfur
organization. There is no mention of the fact that Jacobs started the
rightwing David Project, an Israel lobby group on campus, or that he
was (according to Wikipedia) associated with CAMERA, another Israel
lobbyist. Why doesn't FDD share this info?

I.e., if the U.S. and Israel really do share interests, and Americans
widely support the unwavering alliance (even as apartheid conditions
prevail in the West Bank), why don't the people who care about Israel
put it right on the menu when they're selling foreign policy? Because
they fear, as Bill Kristol, an adviser to FDD, said at Yivo, that
Americans may abandon Israel post-9/11 and -Iraq.

Now let's talk about money. The salaries listed in the Form 990 on
Guidestar.org are pretty shocking. The writer Claudia Rossett gets
$110,000 a year. Walid Phares, anti-Islamist, get $118,000. Joel
Mowbray, a columnist based in New York, gets $127,000 a year. Wow. I
can tell you, that's big money for writers. Eleana Gordon, the group's
senior v.p. who does occasional events on women's rights in Iraq, got
$197,500--3 years ago. I bet she's gotten a raise since then.

Then there's the group's vice chairman: Tucker Carlson's father Richard
W. Carlson, a former ambassador. In the 2005 report Carlson made
$138,255 as vice chairman and then his company, Tulip Hill Enterprises,
got another $385,000 for "radio show and documentary production." Huh.
I wonder what they produced.

This is the character of the "parallel establishment." Conservative
gentiles working intimately with conservative Jews to fight radical
Islam; and I bet most of the money is Jewish, as most of the money
behind Freedom's Watch is Jewish. The sense I got about the visionary
philanthropists is that they are self-made entrepreneurs who made it in
the great Jewish leap forward of the meritocracy and service economy.
Megarich, like Arnall, who started Ameriquest, a subprime lender, or
Bernard Marcus, of Home Depot. A couple others are in biotech.

That leap forward is something I participated in and celebrate. We
knocked down the doors that made my parents' generation justly
resentful. But you have to wonder whether Jewish entrepreneurs have not
become the leading engines of the American economy. Surely the
thinktank economy. I would never single out their Jewishness were it
not for the role that wealth is playing in the political process.

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