November 05, 2019
"Information
Clearing House" -
In spite of the fact that Israeli snipers continue
to shoot scores of unarmed protesting Gazans every
Friday with virtually no coverage from the media,
there are some signs that the ability of Israel and
its friends to control the narrative regarding the
Jewish state’s appalling human rights violations is
beginning to weaken. To be sure, The Lobby still has
sharp teeth and is prepared to use them as in
last week’s report of a Florida high school
principal with 26 years of experience and an
otherwise impeccable record who was fired because he
said that “Not everyone believes in the holocaust.”
Questioning the established
view of Israel is long overdue. It was first
challenged by Illinois ex-congressman Paul Findley
in his
1985 book They Dare to Speak: People and
Institutions Confront Israel’s Lobby, but
received a considerable boost when two leading
academics John Mearsheimer of the University of
Chicago and Stephen Walt of Harvard
wrote The Israel Lobby And U.S. Foreign
Policy in 2006. Virtually overnight it became
acceptable in some circles to begin to discuss the
powerful influence that the Israel Lobby has over
foreign policy formulation in the United States.
More recently, the final taboo was broken when two
junior congresswomen began to talk about Israel’s
baleful influence and linked it to its obvious
source: the Benjamins. Jews and money and political
power exercised on behalf of Israel, something that
had been clear for many years but forbidden
territory, suddenly became a hotly debated issue,
even in some of the mainstream media.
Talking about money and
Israel has also freed up some other lines of
inquiry. Liberal Democratic critics of the Jewish
state’s human rights record, who were shut out by
the party leadership at the 2016 nominating
convention, have started to speak out and,
surprisingly, some of the candidates for the 2020
nomination have begun to test the waters by
suggesting that Israel’s behavior just might be a
whole lot better.
The recently concluded J
Street conference demonstrated that loving Israel
and all its works is hardly a rock-solid bipartisan
issue any more, at least for many Democrats who
actually believe in principles like freedom of
speech and democracy. J Street is a relatively
liberal Jewish group that promotes itself as being
pro-Israeli, pro-Palestinian and pro-American. It
keeps pushing a two-state solution for
Palestine-Israel, a ship that has sailed long ago
because expanding Israeli settlements have made such
an outcome inconceivable. Many, including myself,
regard J Street as a gatekeeper for Israel as it is
frequently rather timid in its criticisms, but it is
useful to have its voice out there.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
This year’s J
Street conference actually considered
cutting U.S. military aid to Israel to
force it to take steps to end its
occupation of the Palestinian West Bank.
It’s president Jeremy Ben-Ami led the
discussion by observing that “Our aid is
not intended to be a blank check.” Some
Democratic Party speaker/participants
like Senator Amy Klobuchar predictably
dodged the issue by saying “I think we
are at this moment and time where it is
not a good idea to negotiate these
things right now,” but Senator Michael
Bennet and Julian Castro said that they
would consider such a step. Castro noted
that it might be used if Israel sought
to annex the West Bank.
South Bend Mayor Pete
Buttigieg agreed and was also open to cutting aid to
stop settlement expansion, but to no one’s surprise
the most powerful endorsement of a shift in policy
came from Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, who also
reportedly received the loudest cheers from the
mostly young audience. Sanders suggested that part
of the current U.S. assistance should immediately go
to help alleviate Gaza’s humanitarian crisis. “My
solution is to say to Israel: you get $3.8 billion
every year, if you want military aid you’re going to
have to fundamentally change your relationship to
the people of Gaza, in fact I think it is fair to
say that some of that should go right now into
humanitarian aid.”
There have also been
suggestions of possible funding options made by
other Democrats who were not at the J Street
conference. Last week presidential candidate and
Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren
said that “Right now, Netanyahu says he is going
to take Israel in a direction of increasing
settlements, [but] that does not move us in the
direction of a two-state solution. It is the
official policy of the United States of America to
support a two-state solution, and if Israel is
moving in the opposite direction, then everything is
on the table…Everything is on the table.”
Some Democrats who have
benefited particularly from the Benjamins remain
unconvinced, however, believing as they do that
Israel has a permanent license to tap the U.S.
treasury. Reliable Zionist toady Joe Biden, who was
also not at J Street and probably would not be
caught dead near it, responded to a question on
cutting aid
by saying that “…the idea that we would draw
military assistance from Israel, on the condition
that they change a specific policy, I find it to be
absolutely outrageous. Anyway, no I wouldn’t
condition it and I think it’s a gigantic mistake.”
Coming at the Israel human
rights issue from another direction is
H.R.2407, a bill introduced by Congresswoman
Betty McCollum (D-MN) in April. The legislation
would amend the Foreign Assistance Act to ensure
that none of the aid given to Israel could be used
to arrest and detain children. An earlier version of
McCollum’s bill in 2017 died at the end of that
congressional session and this year’s bill will
likely suffer a similar fate, but it is a sign that
perceptions are changing, even in a largely bought
and subservient Congress.
Unfortunately the Trump
Administration continues to embrace Israel ever more
tightly and it is hard to find a Republican
politician who will in any way criticize the special
relationship even when it manifestly serves no U.S.
interest. The White House continues to promote its
completely dead peace plan, though it is on hold
until the upcoming Israeli election in December. In
any event, everyone involved in the planning process
as part of the team assembled by presidential
son-in-law Jared Kushner is both Jewish and Zionist,
as are most of the relevant players at the state
department like Assistant Secretary of State for
Near Eastern Affairs David Schenker. The U.S.
Ambassador to Israel David Friedman works harder at
being an apologist for the Jewish state’s many
crimes more than as a representative for American
interests. Gentiles who are at least peripherally
engaged in Middle Eastern developments like Mike
Pompeo and Mike Pence tend to be Christian Zionists,
meaning that there is little room for dissenting
views and a disengaged Donald Trump often seems to
be going along for the ride, though he understands
that pandering to Israel is certainly a lot easier
than opposing it.
One might reasonably suggest
that even though change is in the air, the process
of disencumbering from the Israeli grip will be both
long and painful. For the present, the U.S.
government policy on the Middle East is both shaped
and managed by Zionists working on behalf of Israel
both from inside and outside the system. That is one
compelling reason why the handling of the
Palestinian issue since President Trump took office
is best described as both driven by Israeli
interests alone and morally shameful.
The Trump administration has
been unusually effective in working to
systematically dismantle the Palestinian state and
make the Palestinians a non-people, something that
many Israeli leaders have been urging for decades.
This push to make the Palestinians go away has been
achieved through a variety of actions: taking
Jerusalem off the table; removing settlements from
any discussion; changing U.S. policy as it relates
to assistance provided to Palestinian refugees;
supporting Congress in changing U.S. law related to
families of Palestinians killed or imprisoned by
Israel; and, acting to delegitimize and shut down
the offices of both the Palestine Liberation Office
and Palestinian Authority. Moreover, the Trump
Administration’s endorsement of Israel’s annexation
of the Golan Heights suggests that a similar move by
the Jewish state over the West Bank would also meet
with White House approval.
America’s support of Israel
is both morally wrong and, worse, contrary to actual
U.S. interests. It behooves all of us who care about
the well-being of the United States to speak up and
support those brave individuals in the Democratic
Party who are pushing for change. Those of us who
actually believe that Palestinians are “endowed by
their creator with certain inalienable rights”
should be particularly active since our country’s
endorsement of Israel’s inhumanity makes us
Americans complicit in the war crimes. In this
struggle, we are all Palestinians.
Philip M. Giraldi, Ph.D.,
is Executive Director of the Council for the
National Interest, a 501(c)3 tax deductible
educational foundation (Federal ID Number
#52-1739023) that seeks a more interests-based U.S.
foreign policy in the Middle East. Website is
councilforthenationalinterest.org, address
is P.O. Box 2157, Purcellville VA 20134 and its
email is
inform@cnionline.org.
This article was originally published by "Unz"
- -
Do you agree or disagree? Post
your comment here
==See Also==
Note To ICH Community
We ask that you assist us in
dissemination of the article published by
ICH to your social media accounts and post
links to the article from other websites.
Thank you for your support.
Peace and joy