Hi All,
                  If imminent death sharpens the mind wonderfully, is 
retirement a prelude? This little gem suggests it is at least a wonderful spur 
to clearing the conscience.
       Enjoy,
      Bob.



      May 21, 2004  
      Senator Hollings Is Right 
      It's all about Israel  
      by Justin Raimondo 
      Isn't it funny how politicians have to wait until just before going into 
retirement to say what they really think about Israel and its influence over 
Washington policymakers?

      Congressman Lee Hamilton (D-Indiana), formerly the senior Democrat on the 
House International Relations Committee, waited until after announcing his 
departure from Congress to attend a symposium on the Middle East where he noted 
that his congressional colleagues are "not even-handed" when it comes to the 
Israeli-Palestinian conflict "for political reasons." Rep. Hamilton went on to 
say:

      "Israeli leaders understand our system very, very well [and] because they 
understand our system they can exploit it." 

      Rep. Sonny Callahan (R-Alabama) earned the ire of Tel Aviv's lobby by 
opposing "emergency aid" to Israel. In a speech on the House floor, a clearly 
angered Callahan lashed out at the Amen Corner:

      "I am going to offer amendments as we go through the bill to strike all 
of the aid to Israel that was included here without any request from Israel, 
without any request from the administration, without any requests from anybody. 
But someone within this beltway decided since we were going to have a 
supplemental bill, they were going to get some pork in it for Israel."

      Please note that Callahan did this only after announcing his retirement 
plans. Now Senator Ernest Hollings, whose legendary disdain for political 
correctness has gotten him in trouble before, has joined the ranks of the 
belatedly honest, and said what a few others - such as Michael Kinsley, Pat 
Buchanan, and myself - have said all along. In an op-ed piece first published 
in the Charleston Post and Courier, the senator, having just announced his 
retirement, took up the question of why are we in Iraq, and came up with this 
answer:

      "Now everyone knows what was not the cause. Even President Bush 
acknowledges that Saddam Hussein had nothing to do with 9/11. Listing the 45 
countries where al-Qaida was operating on September 11 (70 cells in the U.S.), 
the State Department did not list Iraq. Richard Clarke, in Against All Enemies, 
tells how the United States had not received any threat of terrorism for 10 
years from Saddam at the time of our invasion. . Of course there were no 
weapons of mass destruction. Israel's intelligence, Mossad, knows what's going 
on in Iraq. They are the best. They have to know. Israel's survival depends on 
knowing. Israel long since would have taken us to the weapons of mass 
destruction if there were any or if they had been removed. With Iraq no threat, 
why invade a sovereign country? The answer: President Bush's policy to secure 
Israel."

      Hollings goes on to identify "a domino school of thought that the way to 
guarantee Israel's security is to spread democracy in the area," naming deputy 
Defense Secretary and chickenhawk-in-chief Paul Wolfowitz, neoconservative 
hardliner and Francophile Richard Perle, and former psychiatrist and deranged 
warmonger Charles Krauthammer. He furthermore goes on to savage George W. Bush, 
whose sole thought since taking office, according to Hollings, has been 
reelection, with a radical tilt toward Israel by U.S. policymakers a key part 
of the game plan:

      "Spreading democracy in the Mideast to secure Israel would take the 
Jewish vote from the Democrats. You don't come to town and announce your Israel 
policy is to invade Iraq. But George W. Bush, as stated by former Treasury 
Secretary Paul O'Neill and others, started laying the groundwork to invade Iraq 
days after inauguration. And, without any Iraq connection to 9/11, within weeks 
he had the Pentagon outlining a plan to invade Iraq. He was determined."

      Hollings has been roundly denounced and his remarks attributed to 
"anti-Semitism" by Israel's amen corner in the U.S. But there is nothing secret 
about the open effort by the Republican party to capture the Jewish vote. The 
whole idea of politics, after all, is mobilizing various interest groups around 
a particular candidate and building a majority coalition. Pandering to ethnic 
blocs is a grand American political tradition: it comes with being a nation of 
immigrants, which is something we're all supposed to glory in. Every ethnic 
group of any numerical significance is pandered to, in some way, and 
politicians are always making ethnic-based appeals. The Republican party's 
outreach to the Hispanic community is pursued to the point where our President 
often bursts into long stretches of Spanish (perhaps because it makes him sound 
less inarticulate, at least to those who have no idea what he's saying). Why 
shouldn't he reach out to Jewish voters, too? 

      By calling attention to the obvious, Senator Hollings stands condemned as 
an "anti-Semite."

      I'll tell you what else is obvious: the benefits accrued to Israel on 
account of the invasion and occupation of Iraq. The annexation of significant 
portions of the West Bank, and now the attack on Gaza, have both received what 
amounts to the imprimatur of an American President. While Israeli "advisors" 
teach their American pupils the basics of running an occupation, the next 
target on Ariel Sharon's wish list, Syria, is hit with sanctions, and 
accusations that Damascus is aiding the Iraqi insurgency. 

      Hollings is absolutely on the mark about the real reasons for this war, 
even if his speculation about a GOP effort to go after the Jewish vote misses 
the real point. What Bush is after isn't primarily the Jewish voter, but 
holding onto and expanding the much larger "born again" Christian 
fundamentalist bloc, a significant proportion of which is fanatically devoted 
to Israel - even over and above American interests - for wacky theological 
reasons. When Hollings called Prime Minister Sharon "the Bull Connor of 
Israel," it wasn't the Jewish vote Rep. Joe Wilson (R-SC) was after when he 
demanded that Hollings apologize. South Carolina is Pat Robertson country, 
where the dispensationalist Christian heresy has deep roots - and even deeper 
political implications when it comes to this administration's foreign policy.

      "Certainly, discussing and questioning policy is the right and duty of 
all responsible leaders. But when the debate veers into anti-Jewish 
stereotyping, it is tantamount to scapegoating and an appeal to ethnic hatred," 
says Abraham H. Foxman, National Director of the Anti-Defamation League. 

      But why shouldn't America's satellites avidly seek to manipulate and even 
control the Imperial Hegemon? After all, we hold their fate in our hands. 
That's what being an Empire is all about. Without American military and 
economic support, Israel could not and would not exist: one false move on the 
part of Washington, and the Jewish state would flounder and fall on the rocks 
of demographic reality and rising Arab nationalism. 

      Special interest groups of all ethnic and religious persuasions do their 
best to decisively influence U.S. foreign policy: why should Jews (and their 
"born again" Christian allies) be any different? 

      "This is reminiscent," raves Foxman, "of age-old, anti-Semitic canards 
about a Jewish conspiracy to control and manipulate government." If one so much 
as looks cross-eyed at Ariel Sharon, Abe Foxman is reminded of Kristallnacht, 
but the point is that, if I were Foxman I wouldn't pull this "age-old canard" 
business too often. Instead of fighting anti-Semitism, Foxman's weird 
insistence on re-imagining half-forgotten anti-Jewish caricatures can only 
encourage it. But, then again, if anti-Semitism went out of business, so would 
Foxman's organization. It's funny how that works..

      Jonah Goldberg, who is obviously engaged in some kind of contest with 
Foxman to see who can do the best Al Sharpton imitation, notes the names 
Wolfowitz, Perle, and Krauthammer, and whines:

      "Funny how the only names are Jewish. What? Jeanne Kirkpatrick doesn't 
count? Jack Kemp? Bill Bennett? I wonder why."

      Perhaps because Kirkpatrick is a figure from another era, and only played 
a supporting role in the propaganda campaign that lied us into war. Jack Kemp 
was never a major figure, and his views on Iraq seem decidedly ambivalent, at 
best. As for Blackjack Bill, his reputation would certainly not have encouraged 
Americans to take his advice and gamble on committing our troops to a risky 
occupation, and so, understandably, he didn't take center stage in the prewar 
debate.

      Wolfowitz, on the other hand, is not only a high government official but 
also the intellectual author of this administration's policy of preemptive 
global hegemony. As Richard Clarke and Bob Woodward reveal, the Deputy 
Secretary of Defense was the earliest and most persistent advocate of war with 
Iraq: Wolfowitz wanted to take Baghdad before bothering with Kabul. 

      As for the legendary Richard Perle, the neocon "Prince of Darkness," his 
style - and the numerous scandals in which he's been embroiled, all of them 
very high profile and exceptionally smarmy - ensures his prominence. A 
spotlight seems to follow him about, like a shadow.

      Is it really necessary to point out the reasons for Krauthammer's 
prominence? Surely his was one of the loudest and most militant voices raised 
in support of this war, and certainly his position on the op-ed page of the 
Washington Post automatically lends his words a certain weight. In concert with 
Bill Safire and David Brooks over at the New York Times, Krauthammer 
constitutes a crucially important link in the neocon Iron Triangle of the 
American punditocracy.

      If all these names are Jewish, then so what? Just as many Jews, if not 
more, figure prominently in the antiwar camp. Goldberg, being a clever chap, 
realizes this, and so falls back on trying to switch the blame from the War 
Party to the Bushies:

      "Fritz Hollings is defending himself saying that he can provide quotes 
from Jews in America and Israel to support his position. I'm sure he can to 
some extent. But so what? His charge isn't that Jews support democracy in the 
Middle East to secure Israel's security (and because they support democracy). 
His charge is that Bush went to war to placate those Jews. The quotes he needs 
to prove his point aren't from Jews in Tel Aviv, they're from White House 
officials in Washington."

      If the idea is to prove Washington's willingness to go along with Ariel 
Sharon in spite of American interests, how about quotes from the President of 
the United States and U.S. government officials in response to Israel's 
outright annexation of parts of the West Bank, and the IDF's current rampage 
through Gaza? Having endorsed the Israeli Lebensraum (marketed to world opinion 
as a "withdrawal," albeit a partial one), our President couldn't bring himself 
to condemn an Israeli attack on a peaceful Palestinian demonstration that 
killed 10 children and wounded 50, aside from urging "restraint." Bush has 
consistently referred to Israel's "right of self-defense" to excuse each and 
every bloody incursion into Palestinian territory, no matter how brutal - and 
no matter how much it ratcheted up tensions between the American army of 
occupation and its sullen Iraqi charges. 

      As Israel rampages through the Holy Land with unholy determination to 
dominate and drive out any who stand in her way, and the promise of a pipeline 
from Iraq's oil fields in Mosul to Haifa comes closer to reality, the key 
question, cui bono? - who benefits? - demands an answer. Last year, former 
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, now Finance Minister, told a group 
of British investors:

      "It won't be long when you will see Iraqi oil flowing to Haifa. It is 
just a matter of time until the pipeline is reconstituted and Iraqi oil will 
flow to the Mediterranean."

      Philip Giraldi, a former CIA officer, now a partner in Cannistraro 
Associates, writes in the current issue of The American Conservative that 
"There are rumors that the deservedly moribund pipeline project to send Iraqi 
oil to Haifa may again be on the table." 

      But the oil is just the gravy on the meatloaf, or perhaps the dessert 
that comes after the main course, which is Israel's improved geopolitical 
position as a result of the Iraq war. Syria is outflanked, and now under U.S. 
sanctions, while the rest of the Arab world is psychologically demoralized, 
politically destabilized, and militarily defeated. Bush and Sharon - or, from 
the Arab viewpoint, Sharon and Bush - are masters of all they survey. Arab 
democrats, secular nationalists, and moderates in the region are more isolated, 
and even more powerless, than ever: only Osama bin Laden's followers are 
overjoyed to see that their leader's warning of an invasion of "Crusaders and 
Zionists" has proved prescient. 

      What irks American patriots, not a few conservatives among them, is that 
Sharon and the Israelis have shown no restraint: they are utterly heedless of 
the effect of their policies on the ground in Iraq. We undertook a vast project 
of social and political engineering in Iraq largely on Israel's behalf, only to 
see that they don't feel the least bit obligated to spare us the consequences 
of their actions. Surely such ingratitude contributes to rising resentment 
against the catalytic role of Israel's supporters - both in and out of 
government - in dragging us into Iraq.

      Senator Hollings is right: this war was, and still is, all about 
protecting Israel's security and plans for expansion - at our expense. Not 
surprisingly, the catcalls are coming from the same people who say any 
reference to "neoconservatives" - up until recently a word that had entered the 
American political lexicon (sometime in the 1970s) without a hint of ethnic 
overtones - is really a "code word" for Jews. What they hope to accomplish is 
to close down all debate on a question the War Party would just as soon not see 
raised. But that question - why are we in Iraq? - is one that urgently requires 
explaining. Jonah Goldberg may persist in applying rules of political 
correctness that he would never otherwise invoke, but I would urge critics of 
Israel to take some solace in the words of John Derbyshire, Goldberg's 
colleague at National Review, who invokes what he calls:

      "Derbyshire's First Law": Anything - anything whatsoever - that a Gentile 
says about Jews or Israel will be taken as rabidly antisemitic by somebody, 
somewhere."

      NOTES IN THE MARGIN

      Speaking of neocons trying to shut down all debate: I see that Michael 
Rubin, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, and formerly of 
the Office of Special Plans, is attributing rising resentment against the 
neocons for pushing us into this war to a grand conspiracy involving The 
Nation, Lyndon LaRouche, Louis Farrakhan, and - me. He writes:

      "Louis Farrakhan subsequently adopted the theme. 'All of the agenda of 
the neo-conservatives was to bring President Bush in line with Israel and use 
the power of the American military to destroy the real and perceived enemies of 
Israel,' said Farrakhan on May 3, 2004. Pat Buchanan and Justin Raimondo have 
pursued the theme in the pages of The American Conservative."

      So, let's see if I get this straight: Karen is a LaRouchie, I'm a 
follower of Farrakhan (hey, that's a sun-tan!), and so is Pat Buchanan. What's 
next? I can hardly wait for the revelation that Ernest Hollings is really a 
former prison guard at Treblinka, or, more likely, Martin Bormann himself.

      What drugs were they doing in the Office of Special Plans, anyway? Put 
down the crack pipe, Rubin, and check yourself into a rehab program. 


     

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