Why Not a Probe of ‘Israel-gate’?
Special Report: As Official Washington fumes
about Russia-gate, Israel’s far more significant
political-influence-and-propaganda campaigns are
ignored. No one dares suggest a probe of
Israel-gate, says Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry
April 21,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The other day, I asked a longtime Democratic
Party insider who is working on the Russia-gate
investigation which country interfered more in
U.S. politics, Russia or Israel. Without a
moment’s hesitation, he replied, “Israel, of
course.”
Which
underscores my concern about the hysteria raging
across Official Washington about “Russian
meddling” in the 2016 presidential campaign:
There is no proportionality applied to the
question of foreign interference in U.S.
politics. If there were, we would have a far
more substantive investigation of Israel-gate.
The
problem is that if anyone mentions the truth
about Israel’s clout, the person is immediately
smeared as “anti-Semitic” and targeted by
Israel’s extraordinarily sophisticated lobby and
its many media/political allies for vilification
and marginalization.
So, the open secret of Israeli influence is
studiously ignored, even as presidential
candidates prostrate themselves before the
annual conference of the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee.
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump both appeared
before AIPAC in 2016, with Clinton promising to
take the U.S.-Israeli relationship “to the next
level” – whatever that meant – and Trump vowing
not to “pander” and then pandering like crazy.
Congress is no different. It has given Israel’s
controversial Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
a record-tying three invitations
to address joint sessions of Congress (matching
the number of times British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill appeared). We then witnessed
the Republicans and Democrats competing to see
how often their members could bounce up and down
and who could cheer Netanyahu the loudest, even
when the Israeli prime minister was instructing
the Congress to follow his position on Iran
rather than President Obama’s.
Israeli
officials and AIPAC also coordinate their
strategies to maximize political influence,
which is derived in large part by who gets the
lobby’s largesse and who doesn’t. On the rare
occasion when members of Congress step out of
line – and take a stand that offends Israeli
leaders – they can expect a well-funded opponent
in their next race, a tactic that dates back
decades.
Well-respected members, such as Rep. Paul
Findley and Sen. Charles Percy (both Republicans
from Illinois), were early victims of the
Israeli lobby’s wrath when they opened channels
of communication with the Palestine Liberation
Organization in the cause of seeking peace.
Findley was targeted and defeated in 1982; Percy
in 1984.
Findley
recounted his experience in a 1985 book,
They Dare to Speak Out: People and Institutions
Confront Israel’s Lobby, in which Findley
called the lobby “the 700-pound gorilla in
Washington.” The book was harshly criticized in
a New York Times review by Adam Clymer, who
called it “an angry, one-sided book that seems
often to be little more than a stringing
together of stray incidents.”
Enforced
Silence
Since
then, there have been fewer and fewer members of
Congress or other American politicians who have
dared to speak out, judging that – when it comes
to the Israeli lobby – discretion is the better
part of valor. Today, many U.S. pols grovel
before the Israeli government seeking a sign of
favor from Prime Minister Netanyahu, almost like
Medieval kings courting the blessings of the
Pope at the Vatican.
During
the 2008 campaign, then-Sen. Barack Obama, whom
Netanyahu viewed with suspicion, traveled to
Israel to demonstrate sympathy for Israelis
within rocket-range of Gaza while steering clear
of showing much empathy for the Palestinians.
In
2012, Republican nominee Mitt Romney tried to
exploit the tense Obama-Netanyahu relationship
by stopping in Israel to win a tacit endorsement
from Netanyahu. The 2016 campaign was no
exception with both Clinton and Trump stressing
their love of Israel in their appearances before
AIPAC.
Money,
of course, has become the lifeblood of American
politics – and American supporters of Israel
have been particularly strategic in how they
have exploited that reality.
One of Israel’s most devoted advocates, casino
magnate Sheldon Adelson, has poured millions of
dollars in “dark money” into political
candidates and groups that support Israel’s
interests. Adelson, who has advocated
dropping a nuclear bomb
inside Iran to coerce its government, is a Trump
favorite having donated
a record $5 million
to Trump’s inaugural celebration.
Of
course, many Israel-connected political
donations are much smaller but no less
influential. A quarter century ago, I was told
how an aide to a Democratic foreign policy
chairman, who faced a surprisingly tough race
after redistricting, turned to the head of AIPAC
for help and, almost overnight, donations were
pouring in from all over the country. The
chairman was most thankful.
The
October Surprise Mystery
Israel’s involvement in U.S. politics also can
be covert. For instance, the evidence is now
overwhelming that the Israeli government of
right-wing Prime Minister Menachem Begin played
a key role in helping Ronald Reagan’s campaign
in 1980 strike a deal with Iran to frustrate
President Jimmy Carter’s efforts to free 52
American hostages before Election Day.
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Begin
despised Carter for the Camp David Accords that
forced Israel to give back the Sinai to Egypt.
Begin also believed that Carter was too
sympathetic to the Palestinians and – if he won
a second term – would conspire with Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat to impose a two-state
solution on Israel.
Begin’s
contempt for Carter was not even a secret. In a
1991 book, The Last Option, senior
Israeli intelligence and foreign policy official
David Kimche explained Begin’s motive for
dreading Carter’s reelection. Kimche said
Israeli officials had gotten wind of “collusion”
between Carter and Sadat “to force Israel to
abandon her refusal to withdraw from territories
occupied in 1967, including Jerusalem, and to
agree to the establishment of a Palestinian
state.”
Kimche
continued, “This plan prepared behind Israel’s
back and without her knowledge must rank as a
unique attempt in United States’s diplomatic
history of short-changing a friend and ally by
deceit and manipulation.”
But
Begin recognized that the scheme required Carter
winning a second term in 1980 when, Kimche
wrote, “he would be free to compel Israel to
accept a settlement of the Palestinian problem
on his and Egyptian terms, without having to
fear the backlash of the American Jewish lobby.”
In a
1992 memoir, Profits of War, former
Israeli intelligence officer Ari Ben-Menashe
also noted that Begin and other Likud leaders
held Carter in contempt.
“Begin
loathed Carter for the peace agreement forced
upon him at Camp David,” Ben-Menashe wrote. “As
Begin saw it, the agreement took away Sinai from
Israel, did not create a comprehensive peace,
and left the Palestinian issue hanging on
Israel’s back.”
So, in
order to buy time for Israel to “change the
facts on the ground” by moving Jewish settlers
into the West Bank, Begin felt Carter’s
reelection had to be prevented. A different
president also presumably would give Israel a
freer hand to deal with problems on its northern
border with Lebanon.
Ben-Menashe was among a couple of dozen
government officials and intelligence operatives
who described how Reagan’s campaign, mostly
through future CIA Director William Casey and
past CIA Director George H.W. Bush,
struck a deal
in 1980 with senior Iranians who got promises of
arms via Israel in exchange for keeping the
hostages through the election and thus
humiliating Carter. (The hostages were finally
released on Jan. 20, 1981, after Reagan was
sworn in as President.)
Discrediting History
Though
the evidence of the so-called October Surprise
deal is far stronger than the current case for
believing that Russia colluded with the Trump
campaign, Official Washington and the mainstream
U.S. media have refused to accept it, deeming it
a “conspiracy theory.”
One of
the reasons for the hostility directed against
the 1980 case was the link to Israel, which did
not want its hand in manipulating the election
of a U.S. president to become an accepted part
of American history. So, for instance, the
Israeli government went to great lengths to
discredit Ben-Menashe after he began to speak
with reporters and to give testimony to the U.S.
Congress.
When I
was a Newsweek correspondent and first
interviewed Ben-Menashe in 1990, the Israeli
government initially insisted that he was an
impostor, that he had no connection to Israeli
intelligence.
However, when I obtained documentary evidence of
Ben-Menashe’s work for a military intelligence
unit, the Israelis admitted that they had lied
but then insisted that he was just a low-level
translator, a claim that was further
contradicted by other documents showing that he
had traveled widely around the world on missions
to obtain weapons for the Israel-to-Iran arms
pipeline.
Nevertheless, the Israeli government along with
sympathetic American reporters
and members of the U.S. Congress
managed to shut down any serious investigation
into the 1980 operation, which was, in effect,
the prequel to Reagan’s Iran-Contra
arms-for-hostages scandal of 1984-86. Thus, U.S.
history was miswritten. [For more details, see
Robert Parry’s America’s
Stolen Narrative; Secrecy
& Privilege;
and
Trick or Treason.]
Looking back over the history of U.S.-Israeli
relations, it is clear that Israel exercised
significant
influence over U.S. presidents since its
founding in 1948,
but the rise of Israel’s right-wing Likud Party
in the 1970s – led by former Jewish terrorists
Menachem Begin
and
Yitzhak Shamir
– marked a time when Israel shed any inhibitions
about interfering directly in U.S. politics.
Much as
Begin and Shamir engaged in terror attacks on
British officials and Palestinian civilians
during Israel’s founding era, the Likudniks who
held power in 1980 believed that the Zionist
cause trumped normal restraints on their
actions. In other words, the ends justified the
means.
In the 1980s, Israel also mounted spying
operations aimed at the U.S. government,
including those of intelligence analyst Jonathan
Pollard, who
fed highly sensitive documents to Israel and –
after being caught and spending almost three
decades in prison – was paroled and welcomed as
a hero inside Israel.
A History
of Interference
But it
is true that foreign interference in U.S.
politics is as old as the American Republic. In
the 1790s, French agents – working with the
Jeffersonians – tried to rally Americans behind
France’s cause in its conflict with Great
Britain. In part to frustrate the French
operation, the Federalists passed the Alien and
Sedition Acts.
In the
Twentieth Century, Great Britain undertook
covert influence operations to ensure U.S.
support in its conflicts with Germany, while
German agents unsuccessfully sought the
opposite.
So, the
attempts by erstwhile allies and sometimes
adversaries to move U.S. foreign policy in one
direction or another is nothing new, and the
U.S. government engages in similar operations in
countries all over the world, both overtly and
covertly.
It was the CIA’s job for decades to use
propaganda and dirty tricks to ensure that pro-U.S.
politicians were elected or put in power in
Europe, Latin America, Asia and Africa, pretty
much everywhere the U.S. government perceived
some interest. After the U.S. intelligence
scandals of the 1970s, however, some of that
responsibility was passed to other
organizations, such as the
U.S.-funded National Endowment for Democracy
(NED) and the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID).
NED,
USAID and various “non-governmental
organizations” (NGOs) finance activists,
journalists and other operatives to undermine
political leaders who are deemed to be obstacles
to U.S. foreign policy desires.
In
particular, NED has been at the center of
efforts to flip elections to U.S.-backed
candidates, such as in Nicaragua in 1990, or to
sponsor “color revolutions,” which typically
organize around some color as the symbol for
mass demonstrations. Ukraine – on Russia’s
border – has been the target of two such
operations, the Orange Revolution in 2004, which
helped install anti-Russian President Viktor
Yushchenko, and the Maidan ouster of elected
pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych in 2014.
NED president Carl Gershman, a neoconservative
who has run NED since its founding in 1983,
openly declared that Ukraine
was “the biggest prize”
in September 2013 — just months before the
Maidan protests — as well as calling it an
important step toward ousting Russian President
Vladimir Putin. In 2016, Gershman
called directly for regime change
in Russia.
The
Neoconservatives
Another
key issue related to Israeli influence inside
the United States is the role of the neocons, a
political movement that emerged in the 1970s as
a number of hawkish Democrats migrated to the
Republican Party as a home for more aggressive
policies to protect Israel and take on the
Soviet Union and Arab states.
In some
European circles, the neocons are described as
“Israel’s American agents,” which may somewhat
overstate the direct linkage between Israel and
the neocons although a central tenet of neocon
thinking is that there must be no daylight
between the U.S. and Israel. The neocons say
U.S. politicians must stand shoulder to shoulder
with Israel even if that means the Americans
sidling up to the Israelis rather than any
movement the other way.
Since
the mid-1990s, American neocons have worked
closely with Benjamin Netanyahu. Several
prominent neocons (including former Assistant
Defense Secretary Richard Perle, Douglas Feith,
David Wurmser, Meyrav Wurmser and Robert
Loewenberg) advised Netanyahu’s 1996 campaign
and urged a new strategy for “securing the
realm.” Essentially, the idea was to replace
negotiations with the Palestinians and Arab
states with “regime change” for governments that
were viewed as troublesome to Israel, including
Iraq and Syria.
By
1998, the Project for the New American Century
(led by neocons William Kristol and Robert Kagan)
was pressuring President Bill Clinton to invade
Iraq, a plan that was finally put in motion in
2003 under President George W. Bush.
But the
follow-on plans to go after Syria and Iran were
delayed because the Iraq War turned into a
bloody mess, killing some 4,500 American
soldiers and hundreds of thousands of Iraqis.
Bush could not turn to phase two until near the
end of his presidency and then was frustrated by
a U.S. intelligence estimate concluding that
Iran was not working on a nuclear bomb (which
was to be the pretext for a bombing campaign).
Bush also could pursue “regime change” in Syria
only as a proxy effort of subversion, rather
than a full-scale U.S. invasion. President
Barack Obama escalated the Syrian proxy war in
2011 with the support of Israel and its
strange-bedfellow allies
in Saudi Arabia and the other Sunni-ruled Gulf
States, which hated Syria’s government because
it was allied with Shiite-ruled Iran — and
Sunnis and Shiites have been enemies since the
Seventh Century. Israel insists that the U.S.
take the Sunni side, even if that
puts the U.S. in bed with Al Qaeda.
But
Obama dragged his heels on a larger U.S.
military intervention in Syria and angered
Netanyahu further by negotiating with Iran over
its nuclear program rather than
bomb-bomb-bombing Iran.
Showing
the Love
Obama’s
perceived half-hearted commitment to Israeli
interests explained Romney’s campaign 2012 trip
to seek Netanyahu’s blessings. Even after
winning a second term, Obama sought to appease
Netanyahu by undertaking a three-day trip to
Israel in 2013 to show his love.
Still,
in 2015, when Obama pressed ahead with the Iran
nuclear agreement, Netanyahu went over the
President’s head directly to Congress where he
was warmly received, although the Israeli prime
minister ultimately failed to sink the Iran
deal.
In
Campaign 2016, both Clinton and Trump wore their
love for Israel on their sleeves, Clinton
promising to take the relationship to “the next
level” (a phrase that young couples often use
when deciding to go from heavy petting to
intercourse). Trump reminded AIPAC that he had a
Jewish grandchild and vowed to move the U.S.
Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
Both
also bristled with hatred toward Iran, repeating
the popular falsehood that “Iran is the
principal source of terrorism” when it is Saudi
Arabia and other Sunni sheikdoms that have been
the financial and military supporters of Al
Qaeda and Islamic State, the terror groups most
threatening to Europe and the United States.
By
contrast to Israel’s long history of playing
games with U.S. politics, the Russian government
stands accused of trying to undermine the U.S.
political process recently by hacking into
emails of the Democratic National Committee —
revealing the DNC’s improper opposition to Sen.
Bernie Sanders’s campaign — and of Clinton
campaign chairman John Podesta — disclosing the
contents of Clinton’s paid speeches to Wall
Street and pay-to-play aspects of the Clinton
Foundation — and sharing that information with
the American people via WikiLeaks.
Although WikiLeaks denies getting the two
batches of emails from the Russians, the U.S.
intelligence community says it has high
confidence in its conclusions about Russian
meddling and the mainstream U.S. media treats
the allegations as flat-fact.
The U.S. intelligence community also has accused
the Russian government of
raising doubts in the minds of Americans
about their political system by having RT, the
Russian-sponsored news network, hold debates for
third-party candidates (who were excluded from
the two-party Republican-Democratic debates) and
by having RT report on protests such as Occupy
Wall Street and issues such as “fracking.”
The
major U.S. news media and Congress seem to agree
that the only remaining question is whether
evidence can be adduced showing that the Trump
campaign colluded in this Russian operation. For
that purpose, a number of people associated with
the Trump campaign are to be hauled before
Congress and made to testify on whether or not
they are Russian agents.
Meanwhile, The Washington Post, The New York
Times and other establishment-approved outlets
are working with major technology companies on
how
to marginalize independent news sources
and to purge “Russian propaganda” (often
conflated with “fake news”) from the Internet.
It
seems that no extreme is too extreme to protect
the American people from the insidious Russians
and their Russia-gate schemes to sow doubt about
the U.S. political process. But God forbid if
anyone were to suggest an investigation of
Israel-gate.
Investigative reporter Robert Parry broke many
of the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated
Press and Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his
latest book,
America’s Stolen Narrative,
either in print
here or as an
e-book (from
Amazon and
barnesandnoble.com).
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.