Nikki Haley: Neocon Heartthrob
By Jim Lobe
September 05, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- With the eviction of Steve Bannon
and Sebastian Gorka from the inner
precincts of the White House and
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson
besieged and taking fire from
virtually all sides,
neoconservatives – even the
NeverTrumpers among them – must be
quietly harboring renewed hopes that
their restoration may soon be within
reach.
And, as
should become clear Tuesday, those
hopes reside largely with the Trump
administration’s ambassador to the
United Nations, Nikki Haley, who’s
been on a tear against Iran for
several weeks now. Her campaign
culminated recently in her
unsubstantiated
claims—in
contradiction to the most recent
findings of her own State Department
and the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA), not to mention
Washington’s P5+1 partners—that
Tehran is not in full compliance
with the two-year-old Iran nuclear
deal, otherwise known as the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).
Why
Tuesday? Because Haley will give a
formal policy address on Iran policy
at Neocon Central, the
American Enterprise Institute
(AEI). That’s the same “think tank”
that acted as the Bush
administration’s principal
cheerleader for the 2003 Iraq
invasion and provided the Pentagon
with a number of its “scholars” as
consultants to put together the
totally failed strategy that
followed Washington’s conquest of
Baghdad. Who can forget the
machismo-filled
“black coffee briefings”—featuring
the likes of then-Defense Policy
Committee chair Richard Perle,
serially mistaken Iran “experts”
Michael Rubin, Michael Ledeen, and
Reuel Marc Gerecht (the last two now
with the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies), and former CIA
director James Woolsey—that
bolstered the propaganda blitz about
Saddam Hussein’s alleged ties to
al-Qaeda, his enormous WMD
factories, his fast-developing
nuclear weapons program, and the
gratitude which we should all feel
toward the tremendous sacrifices and
promise of Ahmad Chalabi as the
George Washington of Iraq? If ever
there was a highly developed “echo
chamber” for going to war in modern
U.S. foreign policy, it was AEI that
provided the initial shouting
points. All of that makes the title
of Haley’s impending address,
“Beyond the Echo Chamber:
Considerations on U.S. Policy Toward
Iran,”
especially ironic, not to say
ominous.
Haley,
who has hardly been camera-shy since
her appointment and will no doubt
get an additional media boost from
her demands Monday that the UN
Security Council take much stronger
action against North Korea following
its latest nuclear test, clearly has
her eyes set on higher office, no
doubt including the presidency
itself. As the country’s most
influential national-security
reporter, The New York Times’
David Sanger,
noted
just a few days ago, she appears to
be the front-runner to succeed an
increasingly beleaguered and
publicity- and media-averse
Tillerson should he or Trump decide
that it’s not worth his sticking
around. A total foreign-policy
novice just eight months ago, Haley
could soon find herself running U.S.
foreign policy, at least to the
extent that the State Department
remains a factor in the
policy-making compared to the
Pentagon and the White House itself.
A Darling of the Neocons
As
noted by Phil Weiss
in April, Haley had become been a
darling of the neocons well before
she arrived at Turtle Bay. Part of
the credit or blame belongs to her
close ties to fellow South
Carolinian Sen. Lindsay Graham, long
a neoconservative favorite for his
staunch defense of Israel,
belligerence toward Iran and Russia,
and chronic interventionist
instincts, especially as regards the
U.S. military. It’s not coincidental
that
her most influential adviser,
by all accounts, is David Glaccum,
who served for years as Graham’s
chief counsel.
Not coincidentally, however, neocon
hopes may lie as well with the
generous political funding provided
to Haley by Sheldon Adelson, the
GOP’s and Trump’s single biggest
donor.
Between
May and June, 2016, Sheldon Adelson
contributed $250,000
to Haley’s 527 political
organization, A Great Day, funds
that
she used
to target four Republican state
senate rivals in primaries. (Only
one was successfully defeated.)
Adelson was the largest contributor
to her group, which raised a total
of $915,000. The next largest donor,
Koch Industries, contributed
$50,000.
Perhaps
Adelson gained an unusual interest
in South Carolina’s state senate,
but it seems more likely the
investment was a show of support for
Haley’s hawkish pro-Israel
positions. Adelson, who is also the
largest donor to the extreme
right-wing Zionist Organization of
America (ZOA), has long pushed
stridently anti-Iran positions,
suggesting in late 2013 that
Washington
detonate a nuclear weapon
in Iran’s territory unless Tehran
complied with demands that it
completely abandon its nuclear
program.
And, as
Weiss wrote, Haley had come through
for Adelson already in 2015, when
she signed without any reservation the
first law against boycotts of Israel—
about the same time as Adelson
convened an anti-BDS summit in
Las Vegas.
Courting AIPAC
Although she
reiterated
support for the eventual, if
hypothetical, creation of a
Palestinian state in February when
Trump himself put that traditional
position very much in doubt, her
tenure at the UN has been
characterized by staunch support for
Israel against virtually any
criticism. At the annual policy
conference of the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) in
March she became the “belle at the
ball,” as Weiss put it,
by serving up the kind of red meat
that gets them going:
I wear heels. It’s not for a
fashion statement. It’s because
if I see something wrong, we’re
going to kick them every single
time. So how are we kicking?
We’re kicking by, number one,
putting everybody on notice,
saying that if you have our
back—we’re going to have the
backs of our friends, but our
friends need to have our back
too. If you challenge us, be
prepared for what you’re
challenging us for, because we
will respond.
The next thing we did was we
said, the days of Israel-bashing
are over. We have a lot of
things to talk about. There are
a lot of threats to peace and
security. But you’re not going
to take our number one
democratic friend in the Middle
East and beat up on them. And I
think what you’re seeing is
they’re all backing up a little
bit. The Israel-bashing is not
as loud. They didn’t know
exactly what I meant outside of
giving the speech, so we showed
them.
So when they decided to try and
put a Palestinian [former
Palestinian Authority Prime
Minister and Bush administration
favorite Salam Fayyad] in one of
the highest positions [Special
Envoy to Libya] that had ever
been given at the U.N., we said
no and we had him booted out.
That doesn’t mean he wasn’t a
nice man. That doesn’t mean he
wasn’t good to America. What it
means is, until the Palestinian
Authority comes to the table,
until the U.N. responds the way
they’re supposed to, there are
no freebees for the Palestinian
Authority anymore.
So then they tested us again.
And a ridiculous report, the
Falk Report, came out. I don’t
know who the guy is or what he’s
about, but he’s got serious
problems. Goes and compares
Israel to an apartheid state. So
the first thing we do is we call
the secretary general and say,
this is absolutely ridiculous.
You have to pull it. The
secretary general immediately
pulled the report. And then the
director has now resigned.
Last thing. So for anyone that
says you can’t get anything done
at the U.N., they need to know
there’s a new sheriff in town.
You get the picture. It’s the kind
of attitude that one heard a lot at
those “black coffee briefings.”
Since
then, Haley has made attacking
Tehran at the world body—even making
a special trip to Vienna with the
apparent intention to press the IAEA
to make demands of Iran that go
beyond the letter of the JCPOA –a
top priority. Only the escalating
crisis over missile launches and
nuclear tests by North Korea—a
nation that, in contrast to Iran,
actually has nuclear weapons and the
means to deliver them—has consumed
more of her attention. And,
consistent with her actions as
governor, she has
most recently threatened
to slash U.S. funding to—and
possibly withdraw from—the UN Human
Rights Council if it follows through
on its mandate to publish a list of
international companies that do
business with Jewish settlements on
the West Bank by the end of the
year.
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Romancing AEI
Like
the “black coffee briefings” of
yore, AEI’s public programs
ordinarily involve panel discussions
or, perhaps, one featured speaker
followed by comments by selected
discussants. Single-speaker events
speeches are usually reserved for
important annual occasions, like the
presentation of the Irving Kristol
Award dinners to such recent winners
as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu (2015 – when he was
actively campaigning against the
JCPOA), David Petraeus (2010), and
Iraq War booster Bernard Lewis (2007
shortly after
he predicted
that Iran would launch a nuclear
attack on Israel on Aug 22, 2016).
Dick Cheney, a member of AEI’s board
of trustees, has been accorded the
platform there on a number of
occasions, most recently in
September 2015 at the height of the
congressional debate over the JCPOA,
which he denounced in the strongest
terms, suggesting that war with
Tehran might be a better option.
Indeed, that occasion was the last
one in which a single speaker at AEI
devoted an entire remarks to Iran.
Haley will now follow in his path,
albeit as an incumbent U.S.
official.
But
perhaps the most memorable of the
single-speech events at AEI was a
fierce attack
delivered by Newt Gingrich
one month into the Iraq invasion on
the State Department for gross
incompetence, especially compared to
the military. The former House
speaker, who was also a member of
the Defense Policy Board chaired by
AEI’s Perle and an AEI fellow at the
time, clearly used the occasion to
campaign for secretary of state to
replace the increasingly hapless
Colin Powell, then a victim of a
Cheney-Rumsfeld
“cabal,”
as Powell’s long-time chief of
staff, Col. Larry Wilkerson put it,
that, with AEI’s help, led the
charge to war within the
administration. The speech was
considered so over the top that it
ultimately backfired against
Gingrich, who was reduced to
uncharacteristic silence,
particularly after Powell’s deputy,
Richard Armitage, tartly
observed,
“It is clear that Mr. Gingrich is
off his meds and out of therapy.”
Haley will not likely make the same
mistake, but it’s a precedent worth
bearing in mind. After all, Adelson
spent $15 million on Gingrich’s
failed 2012 presidential campaign.
Jim Lobe served for some 30 years as
the Washington DC bureau chief for
Inter Press Service and is best
known for his coverage of U.S.
foreign policy and the influence of
the neoconservative movement.
http://lobelog.com
© 2017 The Lobe Log