Berikut tulisan Frank Weltner (warga AS) tentang
dominasi Yahudi di pemerintahan AS.

Jadi saya menulis dengan bukti/bukan nonsens bahwa
minimal warga AS sendiri menentang lobby Yahudi di
pemerintahan AS. Bahkan ada yang menulis Pemerintah AS
dikuasai Yahudi.

Saya kasihan dengan ibu Moritis yang kerap menulis
kata cinta tapi dari tulisannya tercurah kebencian
yang amat sangat. Apakah cinta yang dimaksud bu Iis
sama dengan cinta tentara Serbia kepada warga sipil di
Bosnia?

Di milis kita bebas menulis dengan mengajukan bukti.
Kalau anda rasa kurang tepat coba berikan alasannya.
Bukan dengan mencaci atau menggurui.

Kepada pak Sitorus kalau saya "ditugaskan", coba sebut
siapa yang "menugaskan" saya. Jangan asal tuduh karena
saya menulis atas kehendak sendiri.

Berikut artikel tentang lobby Yahudi:
http://www.jewwatch.com/jew-occupiedgovernments-usa.html#bushjews

Frank Weltner, M.A. English & Certified Librarian 
Presents His Famous Scholarly Library of Factual Links
Known Around the World

Jew Watch

Keeping a Close Watch on Jewish Communities &
Organizations Worldwide

Jew Watch is a Not-For-Profit Library for private
study, scholarship, or research. 

This is NOT a hate site. This is a scholarly research
archive of articles. We Achieved 5 Million Hits Last
Year.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Top: Jewish Occupied Governments: United States



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Jews in the Bush Administration

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Archived on July 19, 2004 from
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/US-Israel/bushjews.html
where it appeared under the title of "Jewish Virtual
Library" in accordance with the "fair use" provision
of copyright law for use as research, educational, and
scholarly investigation and study which is the focus
of the scholarly website Jew Watch.

Ari Fleischer (2001-2003) White House Press Secretary 
Josh Bolten Deputy Chief of Staff 
Ken Melman White House Political Director 
David Frum (2001-2002) Speechwriter 
Brad Blakeman White House Director of Scheduling 
Dov Zakheim (2001-2004) Undersecretary of Defense
(Controller) 
Paul Wolfowitz Deputy Secretary of Defense 
I. Lewis Libby (Liebowitz) Chief of Staff to the Vice
President 
Adam Goldman (2001-2003) White House Liaison to the
Jewish Community 
Tevi Troy (2003-2004) White House Liaison to the
Jewish Community 
Noam Neusner (2004-) White House Liaison to the Jewish
Community 
Chris Gersten Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary,
Administration for Children and Families at HHS 
Elliott Abrams Director of the National Security
Council's Office for Democracy, Human Rights and
International Operations 
Mark D. Weinberg Assistant Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development for Public Affairs 
Douglas Feith (2001- ) Under Secretary of Defense for
Policy 
Michael Chertoff Head of the Justice Department's
criminal division 
Daniel Kurtzer Ambassador to Israel 
Cliff Sobel Ambassador to the Netherlands 
Stuart Bernstein Ambassador to Denmark 
Nancy Brinker Ambassador to Hungary 
Frank Lavin Ambassador to Singapore 
Ron Weiser Ambassador to Slovakia 
Mel Sembler Ambassador to Italy 
Martin Silverstein Ambassador to Uruguay 
Jay Lefkowitz (2001-2004) Deputy Assistant to the
President and Director of the Domestic Policy Council 
Blake Gottesman President's personal aide 
John Miller Director, State Department Office to
Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons 
Michael Chertoff Secretary, Homeland Security 
  
Sources: News reports, Republican Jewish Coalition

 


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Jewish Overwheming Participation in the New Left


>From Jews and American Politics by Stephen D. Isaacs,
Doubleday & Company, Inc., 
Garden City, New York, 1977, pp. 104-111. top of page

Harvard professor Seymour Martin Lipset, a
sociologist, has spent much time analyzing Jewish
participation in the New Left. He emphases that many
of the new radicals are repelled by the hypocrisy of
their parents, who espouse liberal causes, then turn
around and exploit those less well off in their
business or on vacation; they imbue their chil-dren
with the message of mankind's equality, then com-plain
about uppityness when the maid asks a five dollar
raise to sixty-five dollars a week. "Many Jewish
parents," Lipset has written, "unlike gentile parents
of equivalent high economic class background, live a
schizophrenic ex-istence. They sustain a high degree
of tension between their ideology and their life
style." What kind of models are these, who started out
wanting to change the world and then, when they
accumulated a few dollars, suddenly lost their
reformist zeal? Further, anything that threatened
their new life style was to be resisted.

Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg, president of the American
Jewish Congress, preferred an economic explanation of
Jewish prominence in the New Left. "These kids are not
merely the children of left-wing parents," he said.
"These kids are now the new rentiers. They don't need
economic careers, therefore they can really stay out
of society and ~ around at Berkeley. The key to Mark
Rudd [leader ~th. S.D.S. disruption of Columbia
University in the lat. i 96os] is not left-wing
politics but an unlimited expense account. Indeed,
young Jewish radicals do gener-ally come from well off
families. As Feingold noted, "We can see youngsters
who seem poverty stricken but carry around their necks
the most expensive cameras or who spend small fortunes
on other 'arty' hobbies such as film making."

"What the media have missed," said Morris B. Abram,
speaking in the scenic office once occupied by Arthur
J. Goldberg at Paul Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton &
Garrison, "is that these are the children of affluent
families. The movement is drawing from a heavily
Jewish base. Ninety per cent of Jewish children of
college age are attending college but only 45 per cent
of the population as a whole who are of college age
attend college. And the colleges they're attending are
not just any colleges-they're the good schools in the
Fast. The revolt, you know, occurred in the best
institutions, not the average ones. You'll never have
a revolt at a military school, or a religious school.
You would never have one at a place like Oral Roberts
College. The revolts are at places like Columbia,
Har-vard, Brandeis." Abram was president of Brandeis
during its most turbulent days and he sees economics,
of both the student protesters and of the faculty
members of the col-leges, as a key factor:

"Much of the student protest movement was the direct
result of faculty participation. You had a case of
grown people trying to get student adulation and,
without that, I don't think the protest movement would
have amounted to a hill of beans. Remember, in 1968
and '69, the uni-versities were struggling to retain
good faculty people. The Ph.D. market wasn't flooded
then, as it is now. The pr~ fessors felt secure, and
they acted irresponsibly. It's inter-esting to note
that, when the Ph.D. market dried up, the protest
movement dried up. In the good schools in the Fast, up
to 30 per cent of the faculty members are Jewish and,
very frequently, these are the younger faculty. The
older [predominantly gentile] faculty members were
hired when there was discrimination in academia. By
1968, a large proportion of the younger faculty was
Jewish and this younger faculty felt an affinity for
the students who were Jews-the Jews, after all, had
the higher board scores, and the brightest students
are always the most yeasty." Along with this, Abram
said, the Jewish students were ripe for the
anticapitalist tone of the movement because "their
parents talked very liberal at home, as Jews always
have. The parents' liberalism, of course, was largely
as a reaction against fascism, which colored the
thinking of almost any Jew who could read and write.
The parents talked liberal and then, in the 1960s, the
thrust of the civil rights movement was no longer for
civil and political rights. In the middle of the
Johnson years, the civil rights movement began to
switch into an economic and social movement. Suddenly,
the civil rights movement had a price tag. I suspect
that Jews, like everybody else, started to look at the
civil rights movement differently. They began to get
up tight and their children tended to look askance at
their parents' sense of values." The children Abram
was describing were not particularly the children of
onetime Communists or onetime Socialists. They are the
down-ward-striving offspring of the most
upward-striving parents. "They are repelled," as
Feingold wrote, "by the strident cult of success
hammered on incessantly by their ambitious parents.
For some, it is clear that Judaism means simply
'making it,' becoming a doctor or a lawyer." Further,
he says, the kids "have not read Marx; all they really
know is that, for them, the 'system' doesn't work."

In his youth in Baltimore, Waskow said, " . . .
shabbas [the Sabbath day] was Mr. Shapiro up the
street yelling at me because I was carrying books to
the library. I've never dug that and I still don't,
the notion that shabbas was prohibitions, that it was
unfree. . . . Beginning about two years ago, I began
to get a sense of shabbas as a liberation, not as
unfreedom, not as restrictions. All right, you're not
supposed to work. But the whole point in what we're
reaching for is a society in which people don't have
to work, in which work and play get intermixed. My
dream for a society of the messianic age is a place
where you get what you need when you need it because
you need it. . . . I discovered a few years ago that
there's a strand in tradition, a very long strand,
which says shabbas is a moment in the messianic age,
it's the nearest we can get. Fvery week, we try to
create a little piece, just to remind ourselves what
it's like. And there's even a strand in the tradition
that says the messianic age will come when the whole
Jewish people celebrates two shabases in a row. The
way to get there is to do it. I guess the theory in my
head and my gut sense of what the world should be like
is that there should be a community, a neighborhood. .
. .I put the best things about the neigh-borhood
together with my best dreams and I began to see how
they relate and I also see the ways in which the
neigh-borhood is messed up and begin to see what it
would mean to create a really good neighborhood, a
really good com-Waskow and his fellow radicals
represent an enormous
threat to most older Jews, especially the intellectual
elite that has set the agenda for discussion of Jewish
issues over the past several decades. When this writer
evinced ad-miration for Waskow's gentle nature and
humanism, one Jewish intellectual blurted out:

"The amazing thing about Waskow is that he doesn't
know anything; he's an am ho'orets [Hebrew for
ignoramus].- everything-at least materially-that one
cannot find a gift for them. Their parents were part
of a culture that was in-tent on "making it" and
"making it" often meant spending increasingly less
time at home. Fven though the Jewish family has
retained some of the closeness traditionally ascribed
to it, more and more sons and daughters have grown up
seeing only a glimpse of their parents' attentions and
emotions. Consumer goods are no substitute for love. 

At the same time, they have been protected from the
world, as good Jewish parents are inclined to do with
their children. Despite the interest and activity of
so many of the parents in politics, the children have
often remained ignorant of the realities of power. The
situation is wholly different with the Jews of Israel,
as Feingold has written, since they are "accustomed to
exercising power and as-suming responsibility for
their own interest and security. They cannot afford to
hold. . . universalistic assumptions because the
experience of governing has taught them that in the
real world, civilization, whether it calls itself open
society' or 'socialist humanism,' is not nearly so
generous or so rational as ideologists assume.' These
new Jewish radicals of America are ignorant about
power.

 



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Jewish Assets in FDR's New Deal 
Decision-Making Apparatus


>From Jews and American Politics by Stephen D. Isaacs,
Doubleday & Company, Inc., 
Garden City, New York, 1977, pp. 61-63. top of page


Franklin D. Roosevelt

This highborn Episcopalian was a superb New York
politician, which among other things meant that
Roosevelt had come to know many Jews well. Jewish
labor leaders, in particular, adored Governor
Roosevelt. David Dubinsky of the International Ladies
Garment Workers Union recalled how Roosevelt would
yank industry executives into his office in Albany and
knock heads to force agreements out of them. As
governor, Roosevelt often called on one old friend in
particular for help with tricky legal parts of the
pioneer-ing social legislation he was planning for the
state. The old friend was Harvard law professor Felix
Frankfurter.

After March 1933 the bright young lawyers, many of
them Jews, who Frankfurter had been sending to Albany
were diverted instead to Washington. The new
immigrants were called "Frankfurter's happy hot dogs."
Among the first was Benjamin V. Cohen, who was called
in for assistance in drafting emergency legislation to
deal with the Wall Street crisis. Cohen, James
McCauley Landis, and Thomas G. Corcoran-with regular
telephone calls to Frankfurter in Cambridge-wrote the
Securities Act of 1933 based on the idea that
corporations were in fact pub-lic and therefore ought
to be publicly regulated. The idea may have seemed
somewhat radical in America, hut it was not so radical
according to precepts of Jewish communality and to the
Talmudic recognition that "property is funda-mentally
a social object. . . subject to social control." The
team of Corcoran and Cohen that traipsed in and out of
the White House became famous; tagged the "gold dust
twins," they lived in a much-publicized "little red
house" on R Street in Georgetown. Corcoran was the
suave and articulate front man, Cohen the withdrawn,
bespectacled genius who would ponder late into the
night considering how to fit what it was they were
doing into the framework of the Constitution. They
took on one project after an-other; after drafting the
Securities and Exchange Act of '934, they worked on
the Public Utility Holding Act of 1935, the Federal
Communications Act, the bill establishing the
Tennessee Valley Authority, the Wagner Act, the
Minimum Wage Act. While Frankfurter set the tone and
while the glib Corcoran did the talking at the White
House and on Capitol Hill, Cohen did the work. While
Colien would never admit that he wrote much of the
most important New Deal legislation, in fact, said Joe
Rauh, "Ben was the intellectual leader of this thing.
Even Felix would call him for advice." Cohen, a
remarkably self-effacing man, insisted otherwise,
saying, "Corcoran was no slouch, you know."
More prestigious advice came from another Jew, Louis
Dembitz Brandeis, who had been sitting on the Supreme
Court since 1916. He transmitted counsel on how to
make this or that constitutional, pressing his
long-held philos-ophy that, the larger corporations
became, the more dan-gerous their bigness was to the
public weal.

Cohen, Frankfurter, and Brandeis were but the top
echelon. Other Jews joined the New Deal apparatus. Abe
Fortas was assigned to the new SEC; Mordecai Ezekiel
was sent in as the Agriculture Department's economist;
Henry Morgenthau, Jr., ("Henry the Morgue," to the
ebullient F.D.R.) became Secretary of the Treasury;
Charles Wyzanski went to the Labor Department; Isador
Lubin took over the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in
effect becoming F.D.R.'s economist; David Niles became
the first of what is by now a line of special White
House "point men" for handling minorities' affairs;
the young Joe Rauh became part of it, after serving as
a law clerk first to Justice Cardozo, then to
Frankfurter after his appointment to the court; and
there were Bernard Baruch, David Lilienthal, and Sam
Rosenman (the man who coined the words for it all,
"New Deal"), to name a few others. top of page



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Removed at the request of the copyright holder. You
may still view this article at the copyright holder's
website. 
Click this link:
Israel's Hold Over the US Government -- How it
Neutralizes US Candidates & The Totally Unfair
Uniqueness of Press & Political Israeli Relationship




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Jewish Numbers Grow at the State Department

Salon Magazine ZINE Feb 13th Jonathan Broder top of
page

Once a WASP preserve, the State Department may soon be
dominated by WJMs (white Jewish males).

BY JONATHAN BRODER, Feb. 13, 1997

WASHINGTON -- following the recent revelations about
Madeleine Albright's Jewish roots, the new U.S.
Secretary of State faces a new conundrum: All her top
candidates for a slew of senior positions in the State
Department are Jewish -- and male.

A number of foreign policy experts have been quick to
note the exquisiteness of the irony. "It suggests that
we've come a long way in this country from the days
when the foreign service was reserved for a very WASPy
elite," says former National Security Council Middle
East advisor Richard Haass, who now directs foreign
policy studies at the Brookings Institution.

But it also poses problems for Albright. If all the
Jewish candidates are appointed, Albright could draw
fire from other minorities and women, not to mention
pro-Arab critics of Washington's Mideast policy and
anti-Semites of various stripes.

"I'm sure this will feed all the black helicopter
kooks who think all this is a Jewish conspiracy," said
one Jewish foreign policy analyst who asked not to be
identified.

Albright already has promoted two Jewish appointees to
senior positions: Special Middle East coordinator
Dennis Ross is now Albright's senior counselor, a
position that extends his trouble-shooting
responsibilities well beyond the Middle East and gives
him an office on the State Department's prestigious
seventh floor. Meanwhile, the position of
undersecretary of State for economic affairs has gone
to Stuart Eizenstadt, previously ambassador to the
European Community and the administration's point man
on determining the extent of Jewish assets in Swiss
banks.

And for the first time in the State Department's
208-year history, Jews lead the list of contenders for
the six regional assistant secretary posts. According
to well- informed sources, they are:

Mark Grossman, currently U.S. ambassador to Turkey,
for assistant secretary for European affairs;
Princeton Lyman, currently the assistant secretary of
State for international organizations, and former Rep.
Howard Wolpe of Michigan, for assistant secretary for
African affairs; Stanley Roth, an aide to former Rep.
Steven Solarz of New York and a former staffer on the
National Security Council, for assistant secretary for
Asian affairs; Karl Indefurth, a former ABC News
correspondent who served as Albright's deputy at the
United Nations, for assistant secretary for South
Asia; Jeff Davidow, assistant secretary of State for
Latin American affairs, who is expected to stay on at
his post; Martin Indyk, currently U.S. ambassador to
Israel, for assistant secretary for Near Eastern
Affairs.

Having chosen (non-Jewish) diplomatic veterans Strobe
Talbott and Thomas Pickering as her No. 2 and No. 3,
respectively, Albright may come under fire in
diversity-conscious Washington for such a heavily
Jewish and all-male lineup. Her biggest challenge,
however, is likely to come with Indyk, who worked for
AIPAC, the pro-Israel lobby, and then headed the
pro-Israel Washington Institute for Near East Policy
before joining the administration.

"The Near East bureau always has prided itself in
having career professionals at the helm," says Robert
Kaplan, whose book, "The Arabists," examines the State
Department's stewardship of Middle East policy. Indyk,
appointed by President Clinton as his Middle East
advisor in 1993 and then as ambassador to Israel, "is
a political candidate," says Kaplan.

"In some circles," he adds, "there's a lot of
resentment that people like Ross, (his Jewish deputy
Aaron) Miller, and Indyk got so powerful in Near East
affairs." Such resentment may ultimately scotch
Indyk's chances at the post, which could go instead to
Ned Walker, a former deputy to Albright at the United
Nations and now U.S. ambassador to Egypt, or Chris
Ross, U.S. ambassador to Syria. Both of them are
Arabists.

If Middle Eastern politics end up getting in Indyk's
way, gender politics could decide who gets the
position as undersecretary of State for management.
Two male candidates are vying for the job, but
Albright is said to want to fill the slot with a
woman. Her top candidate: an assistant Interior
secretary for policy and management named Bonnie
Cohen.

Albright's newly uncovered Jewish past and the
prospect of so many Jews entering the State Department
has already occasioned some mordant humor in foreign
policy circles. For example:

Q: Why did Pamela Harriman have a stroke?

A: Someone leaned over at a party and told her
Madeleine Albright was Jewish.

Responding to concerns that there may be too many Jews
at the State Department, one foreign policy analyst
said: "What's there to worry about? After all, they're
all Reform anyway."

Jonathan Broder is Salon's Washington correspondent.
He also writes for the Jerusalem Report and is a
senior editor for the weekend edition of "All Things
Considered." top of page



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A Brief History of Jewish ZOG Actions in USA
Connections Between Jewish Involvement
World War One - World War Two - Communism - Millions
of Deaths in Russia
Penetration of USA - Immigration of Jews Requires
Immigration of Everyone
Subsequent "Trashing" of America's Stock of Humanity
Just to Allow Jewish Immigration
Original Postnet Publication of this Essay By
Anonymous Author
Every Fact in this Brief Description of Jewish History
is Confirmed by Articles in the Jew Watch library
top of page

Persistent promotion of bad ideas, from the founding
of Israel to liberal social causes, is the problem I
see with Jews who are political activists.

For example, regarding Israel and immigration, the
Jewish population of Palestine was small about 100
years ago, when the modern Zionist movement began, and
it wasn't a problem to the Arab majority. However, the
Zionists wanted to claim the territory for Jews, and
they wanted to have immigration of Jews to Palestine
from all over the world. To accomplish that, they
needed the cooperation of the Western Powers, and
England in particular. To influence England, prominent
Jews in the western countries lobbied their
governments to support a policy of making a new
country for Jews in Palestine. This was at a time when
colonialism by Western Powers was dying out, but an
exception was being made for the Jews. This was
decades before the Jews' difficulties in Nazi Germany.
One such prominent Jew was Supreme Court Justice Louis
Brandeis, who was neutral on the question of Zionism
when President Woodrow Wilson appointed him, but who
became a strong Zionist influence on Wilson during the
period when the US was deciding whether/when to enter
WW1. A German defeat in the war would enable England
to retain its jurisdiction in Palestine, and England
would then allow the Zionists to colonize Palestine.
As we know, WW1 started in 1914, was in stalemate by
the time the US entered the war in 1917, and the war
ended in 1918 with victory for England and defeat for
Germany. The US entry into the war was controversial
-- it took three years for interests who favored US
entry, such as the Zionists, to persuade the US to
enter it. Other notable interests in favor of our
entry into the war were bankers and merchants, who
stood to lose fortunes if England and France defaulted
on loans for war supplies. A German defeat was needed
to protect these "Merchants of Death", as they were
later called when the war and the US entry into it
were analyzed. A German defeat was also needed to
guarantee the Zionists' interests in Palestine.

When the Germans were defeated, the Jews in Germany
were seen as traitors because of their unique
connection with international interests that had
worked for Germany's defeat. This exascerbated
anti-Semitism which had existed in Germany for
centuries. So, the German Jews were in trouble. They
needed counties to emigrate to, and two such countries
were the the US and Palestine. Trouble was, the US was
passing laws for immigration restrictions about that
time, and Palestine lacked the infrastructure for
accepting large numbers of immigrants. The answer, in
the opinion of the Jews, was for the US to take in all
the Jewish immigrants that wanted to come. They
lobbied the US government during the interwar years
and during WW2, but the US retained immigration
restrictions and Jews blamed the US for some of the
Jewish losses during the war. Thay blamed the US, in
spite of the fact that even more Jews would have been
casualties if the US had not fought the war.

After the war, the Jews were determined to open up the
US borders, so that "never again" would the US fail to
take in anyone. In 1965 the "odious", "racist"
immigration restrictions were lifted during the LBJ
administration, when every special interest with a sob
story got their "rights" written into law. ( And now,
5 trillion dollars later, ... ) The issue of loyalty
is central to your question. Political groups in
America should work for American interests. Many of
the Jewish groups of a political nature in America
have ties to Israel. One of their activities is to
work for immigration of Jews from other countries to
the US and Israel, but in order to keep the US borders
open to Jews, the borders also have to be open for
everyone else, since we can't have discrimination. So,
the borders are open to the third world, and the third
world is invading. And, not to forget Palestine, now
that millions of Jews have immigrated there,
displacing Arabs, we find that we have made enemies
for ourselves there, since the Arabs perceive
something akin to an umbilical cord between the US and
Israel. top of page



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


FDR's Jewish/Zionist/USSR Controllers

"Roosevelt opened the offices of government as never
before to Jews. Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Samuel
Rosenman, Felix Frankfurter, Benjamin Cohen, David
Niles, Anna Rosenberg, Sidney Hillman, and David
Dubinsky were among his closest advisors in politics
and government. Rabbi Stephen Wise, the pre-eminent
spokesman for American Zionism, and his daughter
Justine Polier, were personal friends of Franklin and
Eleanor Roosevelt with as much access to the White
House as anyone." -- From "America, Franklin D.
Roosevelt and the Holocaust" By William J. vanden
Heuvel: Keynote address of the fifth annual Franklin &
Eleanor Roosevelt Distinguished Lecture, held Oct. 17,
1996 at Roosevelt University in Chicago.

Click for the Internet Resource for this Eleanor
Roosevelt Distinguished Lecture as of December 16,
1998.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Haaretz: America Pro-Jewish No Matter Which Party
Candidate

Archived under "fair use" provision of the copyright
law at the scholarly website www.jewwatch.com only for
scholarly, research, and educational use from its
article on the web on August 3, 2004 at
www.haaretz.com at its URL:
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/458487.html.

w w w . h a a r e t z . c o m 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Last update - 09:44 01/08/2004
Another president who won't budge the Middle East
By Nathan Guttman

BOSTON - Even though there are still three months
before the presidential elections in the United
States, one fact is already clear - no matter who
wins, the stance of the White House regarding the
conflict in the Middle East will continue to be
unequivocably pro-Israeli. George Bush supports the
disengagement plan, as does John Kerry. Bush agrees to
the inclusion of the settlement blocs in a permanent
agreement, as does Kerry. Bush thinks there is no room
for the Palestinian refugees in Israel, and Kerry
agrees. The next American administration, Republican
or Democrat, will continue to support, without
hesitation, the policies of the government of Israel.
On the matter of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,
Bush and Kerry are identical twins.

The path of the Democratic candidate John Kerry toward
the formulation of his stance on Israel says a great
deal about the political pressures in the United
States. During his 20 years in the Senate, Kerry has
always been considered pro-Israel, and no one can
point to a single instance where he diverged from this
stance. Still, in the early stages of the race, the
Jewish-American community saw him as a somewhat
problematic candidate. This stemmed from a number of
comments pointed out by rivals within his own party.

During the primaries, Kerry said in a speech to a
group of Arab-Americans, that the separation fence
being constructed by Israel is problematic. In an
earlier interview, Kerry suggested that former
president Jimmy Carter or former Bush Sr. secretary of
state James Baker may serve as mediators in the Middle
East if he is elected president. He also expressed
support for the Geneva Accord after it was signed. His
opponents recall that during the 1990s Kerry described
Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat as a
"diplomat" and commended him for the change he had
undergone once he became a negotiator in peace talks.

While these opinions diverted from the official stance
of the government of Israel, they are all within the
mainstream political discourse. After all, even Colin
Powell lauded the Geneva Accord, the Bush
administration (and the High Court of Justice in
Israel) have criticized the route of the separation
fence, and as for Baker and Carter, despite their
critical stance of the government of Israel, they are
remembered as great mediators of the Camp David
agreements and of the Madrid Conference.

But in the current American political reality there is
no room for nuances. The minute Kerry was marked as
problematic from Israel's point of view, his aides
became concerned that they might lose Jewish votes -
and no less important, Jewish contributions - to the
Bush camp. Kerry understood the message and made a
turnaround, changing his mind about Baker and Carter,
noting that Arafat cannot be a partner in any future
negotiations, declaring the separation fence as
"legitimate," and stopping references to the Geneva
Accord. More importantly, Kerry has made it clear in
his political manifesto and in talks with
representatives of the Jewish community, that in no
way will he pressure Israel or raise new initiatives
without first consulting its government.

Thus, the good news is that the next man to sit in the
White House will do nothing contrary to the view of
the government of Israel. The not-so-good news is that
no matter who is elected, the Middle East is
guaranteed a further four years of standstill.

It is true, however, that it is difficult to trust the
declarations of presidential candidates. George Bush,
if elected, will be in his second term and will
therefore feel free to take action and may even be
surprising. It is also worth remembering that despite
Kerry's declarations, Democratic presidents have the
tendency to involve themselves well above their heads
in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But if one
chooses to believe politicians, the 2004 presidential
elections in the United States are not heralding a
breakthrough in the Middle East.

In Kerry's camp they claim the novelty he offers is in
the approach. Contrary to Bush, Kerry wants to be more
involved, he wants to cooperate in an international
formula, and he promises to be different from Bush in
demanding that Saudi Arabia will be more answerable
for its actions. The emphasis is on differences of
style, not substance.

The enormous support Israel enjoys in the United
States guarantees that in future election campaigns
the candidates will take a clearly pro-Israeli stance
and support, without flinching, the government of
Israel. This may not augur a solution to the conflict,
but it is conducive for the return to normalcy in
Jewish-American politics. The matter of Israel was
removed from the agenda when both candidates convinced
the Jews that support is unequivocal. Now the Jewish
community can go back to focusing on matters that once
used to be determining issues in elections - welfare,
health, separation of religion and state, and
safeguarding of human rights.


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