-Caveat Lector-

http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/search/s_126234.html
Neocons like Goldberg, Reiland are imperialists

By Bill Ravotti

Monday, March 31, 2003

National Review’s Jonah Goldberg and his neoconservative allies have not
been shy about criticizing those on the Left who resort to character
assassinations against their opponents in an effort to stifle debate. Yet, it
is Goldberg & Co., whining like little schoolgirls, now are using the “anti-
Semitic” card in an effort to intimidate those who dare question the
influence of Israel on U.S. foreign policy.

Goldberg has targeted four prominent Catholics — Robert Novak, Pat
Buchanan, Chris Matthews, and Rep. James Moran (one can only imagine
his private thoughts of the Pope) — who have suggested that one of the
reasons the Bush administration has targeted Iraq is for the benefit of
Israel’s security interests. Wherever one stands on this issue, it should at
least be open for debate. While attacking all, Goldberg’s ire is directed
most toward Buchanan and his so-called well- established “Jewish
problem.” Goldberg charges Buchanan with blaming Jews for the war with
Iraq with his attacks on “neoconservatives,” a phrase Goldberg described
as a code word for “Jewish conservatives.”

Goldberg is twisting words and facts to fit his own agenda. It is his blame
game that is fact-free in an effort to demonize his opponents instead of
debating them head on.

To say one attacks neoconservatives because they are Jewish is false, and
Goldberg knows this. Neoconservative is a term that has been used for
some time, and it has never been used exclusively for “Jewish
conservatives.” The most ardent may be evangelical Christians like Pat
Robertson and Jerry Falwell, and some are Catholics like William Bennett
and Michael Novak — the designated ‘neocon theologian’ when needed to
lecture Pope John Paul II on the Catholic definition of a just war. Newt
Gingrich, a non-Jew, was the most visible spokesman before his own self-
destruction, and the neocon strategy is often laid out in the pages of
National Review and The Weekly Standard, whose columnist include both
Jews and non-Jews.

Yes, there are many neoconservative Jews (and non-Jews) inside and
outside the Bush administration who, as Buchanan says, “harbor a
passionate attachment to a nation not our own that causes them to
subordinate the interests of their own country and to act on an
assumption that, somehow, what’s good for Israel is good for America.”
Richard Perle is the most passionate inside the administration and his ties
to Israel have been well known for over 20 years. However, engaging Perle
does not equate to blaming all Jews or a hatred of another country;
rather, it represents a sincere conviction to the sovereignty of one’s own
country, keeping the U.S. out of other peoples conflicts and putting the
national interests of America First. What is so un-American about this and
will the real "Blame America First" crowd stand up?

It is also well known that Israel’s Ariel Sharon, for a variety of reasons,
wanted this war with Iraq and wants the U.S. to disarm Iran, Syria, and
Libya next. Fair enough, I don’t blame Sharon for wanting the U.S. to fight
a war if he thinks it will benefit Israel. However, Sharon is not our
commander and chief and our leaders should not be using U.S. foreign
policy or troops for the national security of a foreign state, especially
when it could be detrimental to us in the long run.

Does Buchanan have a “Jewish problem”? Absolutely not. Does he have a
“neoconservative problem”? You bet, and so do I.

The neoconservatives are some of the most arrogant and power- hungry
people around. Far from believing in liberation, they seek to conquer to
rule. Norman Podhoretz, editor of Commentary, seeks an “imperial mission
for America, whose purpose would be to oversee the emergence of
successor governments in the region" and to “find the stomach to impose
a new political culture on the defeated” Islamic world. Is this liberation?

The neoconservatives have an utter disdain for the sovereignty of other
nations and believe they have been granted the divine authority to utilize
the U.S. military to tear down and recreate the Middle East in their own
image, as some sort of utopian ‘yes-man’ democratic colony. William
Bennett, a day after 9/11, wanted to invade Lebanon, Libya, Syria, Iraq,
Iran, and China. Goldberg, who never got close to the military himself,
thinks this of U.S. foreign policy, “Every 10 years or so, the United States
needs to pick up some small crappy little country and throw it against the
wall just to show we mean business.” Some, including Trib columnist Ralph
Reiland, have called for a “War of Civilization” between the Arab world and
the U.S. and Israel with “Iraq as the first step.” Ironically, this is the same
War of Civilization that al-Qaida’s bin Laden seeks.

This neoconservative doctrine is an imperialistic recipe designed for
disaster, and destined to lead America into the twilight zone of perpetual
war for an illusionary peace with a global coalition of ever- expanding
enemies.

Bill Ravotti, a financial consultant, is a former Republican candidate for
Congress who served as Pennsylvania chairman of Buchanan for President
2000. He lives in Franklin Park.
Forwarded for your information.  The text and intent of the article
have to stand on their own merits.
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