Following the Money: The New Anti-Semitism?
By Jim Lobe and Charles Davis
May 04, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - In the 1976 docudrama about the
Watergate affair and the fall of Richard Nixon, All the President’s Men,
Bob Woodward’s source at the FBI, Deep Throat, tells him to “follow the money.”
To the Post editorial board in 2015, doing just that is problematic—and
probably anti-Semitic. Or at least that’s their charge in a piece published last
Friday entitled, “Argentina’s
President Resorts to Anti-Semitic Conspiracy Theories,” the Post
opens by asking:
What do lobbyists at the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee and the director of a
Washington think tank have to do with hedge-fund manager
Paul Singer
and the Argentine prosecutor, Alberto Nisman, who died mysteriously in
January? Well, according to Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de
Kirchner, they are all part of a “global modus operandi” that “generates
international political operations of any type, shape and color.”[Links
added]
The Post’s problem is that Kirchner posted a “rant”
on her website highlighting the fact that Paul Singer—whose hedge fund, Elliott
Management, is seeking to force Argentina to repay the full amount of its
defaulted debt—has contributed a whole lot of cash to the same neoconservative
organizations in Washington that have been tarring the South American nation as
a deadbeat ally of Iranian-backed terrorism. These same groups have also
uncritically promoted the work of prosecutor Alberto Nisman, who in 2006 issued
a highly controversial
900-page
indictment charging seven senior Iranian officials with ordering the 1994
bombing of the Jewish community center in Buenos Aires, the Argentine Israelite
Mutual Association (AMIA), that killed 85 people. Nisman died in his apartment
from a bullet to the head January 18, the night before he was set to testify
before the Argentine congress in support of new charges that Kirchner and her
foreign minister, Hector Timerman, had conspired with Tehran to quash
international arrest warrants against those same Iranians, including Supreme
Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and then President Ali Hashemi Rafsanjani, in
exchange for a favorable trade agreement.
Making the Links
In 2013, Inter Press Service (IPS) ran a two-part feature by
Charles (here
and
here) on the links between Singer and Nisman’s neoconservative fan club in
the United States. The Argentine press and the president herself
recently cited this work. The Post, however, plays dumb: “How do
Singer, AIPAC and
Mark Dubowitz of the
Foundation for Defense of Democracies [FDD] come into this?” it asks.
Mr. Singer—or “the Vulture Lord,” as Ms. Kirchner called
him—won a court battle on behalf of holders of Argentine debt last year; Ms.
Kirchner chose to default rather than pay. Mr. Dubowitz’s think tank has
published papers on Argentine-Iranian relations, while AIPAC has criticized
the Obama administration’s preliminary nuclear deal with Iran. Confused?
Conspicuously and no doubt consciously missing from the
Post’s retelling is the fourth sentence of Kirchner’s “rant”: “[Singer]
contributed to the NGO Foundation for the Defense of Democracies (FDD), $3.6
million from 2008 to 2014.” By leaving this out, the Post is better
able to pretend the only link between Singer and Dubowitz and Nisman is their
Judaism.
Argentina, whose politics are reputedly as byzantine and
Machiavellian as any country’s, does indeed have a history of anti-Semitism. Not
only did it offer a refuge to fleeing Nazis after World War II, but the military
junta that took power in 1976 included elements that extolled the Third Reich,
as eloquently retold by perhaps the most famous survivor of the junta’s torture
chambers, Jacobo Timerman (the foreign minister’s late father) in his 1981 book,
Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number.
Kirchner may indeed have a political interest in claiming that
an international conspiracy is defaming her government, but the evidence for
such a conspiracy in this case is much stronger than the Post suggests.
As noted above, millions of dollars have flowed from Singer’s pockets to the
various neoconservative groups whose advocacy of confrontation with Iran has
extended to attacking Argentina, in particular over its ties to the Islamic
Republic.
Singer, who sits on the board of the hawkish
Republican Jewish Coalition, turns out to be a generous funder of not only
FDD, but AIPAC and the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), as well as a number
of other right-wing groups and politicians that have stoked hostility toward
Iran. In 2010, for example, his personal and family foundations contributed a
combined $1 million to the American Israel Education Foundation, the fundraising
wing of AIPAC and the sponsor of its congressional junkets to Israel. The
$3.6 million he gave to FDD between 2008 and 2011, meanwhile, makes him the
group’s second largest donor during those three years. So, it’s pretty clear
that what ties AIPAC and FDD together is not only their anti-Iran efforts, but
also Paul Singer’s largesse. And that’s the link Kirchner highlights but the
Post leaves out.
Make no mistake: Singer and Elliott Management stand to make
as much as $2 billion if they can collect full value on the debt they bought for
pennies on the dollar after the country’s 2001 default. About 93 percent of
Argentina’s bondholders agreed to accept a fraction of what they were originally
owed (a fact the Post also conveniently omitted). But Singer—who has
done this sort of thing before with other nations that have defaulted on their
debt—sued in U.S. court to recover the full amount, a move the Kirchner
government has fought every step of the way. The Obama administration and the
International Monetary Fund, as well as most of Latin America and Washington’s
closest European allies, have also sided with Argentina, viewing Singer’s
actions as a threat to the international financial system.
The Iranian “Connection”
What has this got to do with Nisman, though? His allegations
of Iranian direction in the 1994 bombing in Buenos Aires—and subsequent charges
that the Kirchner government was trying to cover up that involvement so as to
not undermine its growing economic relations with the Tehran—proved quite useful
in another arena: the court of public and congressional opinion. According to
IPS’s
Gareth Porter, Nisman’s 2006 indictments were based virtually entirely on
the testimony of a long-discredited former Iranian intelligence officer and
several members of the cult-like Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK), an Iranian opposition
group that fought alongside Saddam Hussein’s forces in the Iran-Iraq war.
But the claims have undoubtedly been useful to Singer’s cause.
“We do whatever we can to get our government and media’s attention focused on
what a bad actor Argentina is,” Robert Raben, executive director of the American
Task Force Argentina (ATFA)
explained to The Huffington Post. ATFA, a group Singer helped create with
other hold-out creditors in 2007, spent at least $3.8 million dollars over 5
years doing whatever it could to paint Argentina as a pariah, according to IPS.
Connecting the Kirchner government to Iran has clearly furthered that purpose.
“Argentina and Iran: Shameful Allies” was the headline of one
ATFA ad that ran in Washington newspapers back in June 2013 as the Obama
administration was considering whether to file an amicus brief with the U.S.
Supreme Court in Argentina’s favour. The ad featured adjoining photos of
Kirchner and outgoing President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad connected by the question,
“A Pact With the Devil?”
“What’s the TRUTH About Argentina’s Deal with Iran?” asked
another
very flashy full-page ad featuring unflattering photos of Kirchner and
Hassan Rouhani published in the Post’s front section shortly
thereafter. The ad included excerpts of letters denouncing the joint
investigation from members of Congress, including
Mark Kirk
(R-IL) who received more than $95,000 from employees of Singer’s firm, Elliott
Management, in the 2010 election. The signer of one letter urging the
administration against siding with Argentina, former Rep. Michael Grimm
(R-NY)—who after his re-election in 2014 pleaded guilty to federal tax evasion
and resigned shortly thereafter—received $38,000 in campaign contributions from
Elliott in 2012, nearly twice as much as his next largest donor.
Singer’s generosity also appears to have produced results in
the think tank world, with Dubowitz’s FDD leading the way. In May 2013, as ATFA
was running the Kirchner-Ahmadinejad ad, FDD
release an English-language summary of a new “ground-breaking” report by
Nisman detailing “Iran’s extensive terrorist network in Latin America.” (In an
extended exchange with ProPublica
here and
here, Jim pointed out the summary’s many serious holes, leaps of logic, and
other weaknesses.) The report triggered a flood of op-eds by FDD fellows and
fellow-travellers at other neo-conservative organizations, as well as a series
of hearings held by the House Homeland Security Subcommittee. According to FDD’s
vice president, Toby Dershowitz, the report provided:
a virtual road map for how Iran’s long arm of terrorism
can reach unsuspecting communities and that the AMIA attack was merely the
canary in the coal mine. …The no-holds-barred, courageous report is a ‘must
read’ for policy makers and law enforcement around the world and Nisman
himself should be tapped for his guidance and profound understanding of
Iran’s terrorism strategy.
Nisman’s death, on the eve of his testimony before the
Argentine Congress about his charges against Kirchner and Timerman (since
dismissed by two courts), produced another outpouring of articles by FDD fellows
recalling the prosecutor’s tireless efforts to document Iran’s alleged
involvement in the AMIA bombings and Kirchner’s purported courtship of Iran.
Within a month, FDD
announced the establishment of an “Alberto Nisman Award for Courage.” “We
must pay careful attention to the detailed Iranian playbook he left behind and
from it, heed important lessons in counter-terrorism and law enforcement,”
Dershowitz said in the announcement. (For an interesting take on Nisman’s work,
see
“Why Nisman is No Hero in Argentine Bombing Case” by Argentine journalist
Graciela Mochkofsky published last month in The Forward.)
Although FDD clearly lent itself with gusto to Singer’s
efforts to tar Argentina and Kirchner with the Iranian brush, AIPAC has been
more reserved. It has focused on the issue of Iranian terrorism in its own
tireless drive to promote sanctions legislation and a policy of confrontation
against the Islamic Republic. In 2010, however, the same year in which Singer
and his foundation contributed $1 million to the premier pro-Israel lobby,
Nisman was featured on a panel entitled, “Dangerous
Liaisons: Iran’s Alliances With Rogue Regimes” at the group’s annual policy
conference.
AEI Joins In
As for AEI, Singer would find it attractive not only for its
pro-Israel hawkishness and long-standing hostility toward Iran and leftist
governments everywhere, but also to its domestic agenda: a hands-off policy
toward Wall Street. In other words, he may have had several reasons to give the
group $1.1 million in 2009—its second-biggest donor that year—and another $1.2
million over the next two. Whatever his reasons, those who received those
millions surely (and demonstrably) knew well enough not to upset their
benefactor. And AEI fellow
Roger Noriega,
a former senior Bush administration official, has certainly pushed the
Argentina-Iran/Nisman connection.
As Charles
reported in 2013, Noriega has himself been paid at least $60,000 by Elliott
Management since 2007—the same year AFTA was founded—to
lobby on the issue of “Sovereign Debt Owed to a U.S. Company.” In 2011, he
published an article on AEI’s website citing Nisman’s AMIA indictment and
denouncing Iran’s offer to cooperate with Argentina in investigating the AMIA
bombing as “shocking, in light of Tehran’s apparent complicity in that attack.”
The article—“Argentina’s
Secret Deal With Iran?”—cited secret documents suggesting that Tehran and
Buenos Aires had recently renewed their cooperation on nuclear development as
part of a deal “brokered and paid for” by Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez.
Two years later, Noriega and Jose Cardenas, a contributor to
AEI’s “Venezuela-Iran Project,” co-authored a seven-page policy brief on AEI’s
website entitled
“Argentina’s Race to the Bottom,” which, among other things, charged that
Kirchner’s government was “casting its lot with rogue governments like those in
Venezuela and Iran.” Noting that two-way trade with Iran had grown from $339
million in 2002 to $18.1 billion in 2011, the article asserted:
…[T]he Kirchner government has been turning its back on
its historical alliances and increasingly tilting its economic relationships
toward countries of dubious international standing where rule of law is less
of a concern.
And a week after FDD announced its Nisman Award for Courage,
Noriega was back at it with an article headlined
“Argentina’s Kirchner Reeling from Scandal.” The piece called for a
“credible international investigation into Nisman’s case…to ensure that his
10-year search for the truth was not in vain and that justice is attained not
only for his family but also for the victims of the 1994 AMIA bombing.” In a
veiled reference to Singer’s quest, he wrote:
From ongoing battles with bondholders playing out in a New
York courtroom to pressuring critical news outlets through threats and
intimidation to failed attempts to jumpstart a flagging economy, the
Kirchner administration cannot end soon enough for many Argentines.
Candidates lining up to replace Kirchner in the October elections will
likely position themselves as far away from the kirchnerista record
as possible. A new administration will have ample opportunity – and likely
significant public support – to chart a new economic course. That means
reconciling with international financial institutions and markets, restoring
trust among foreign investors, and rooting out corruption.
Perhaps Noriega is simply interested in tarring Argentina with
the Iranian brush in keeping with his long-standing crusade against any Latin
American government that defies Washington’s writ. But like others engaged in
this campaign, he and his organization have been paid generously by a very
wealthy individual with a clear financial stake in seeing that Argentina’s
current government is excised from the community of respectable nations, at
least until it pays what he thinks he is owed.
If the Post had “followed the money,” it perhaps
would not have been so “confused” by the connections Kirchner highlighted
between Singer and those who have attacked her government over its allegedly
nefarious relations with Iran. Ignoring Deep Throat’s advice and acting as if
that trail of money doesn’t exist allowed the paper to better roll out the
powerful charge of anti-Semitism. In truth, it’s not the president of
Argentina’s supposed bigotry that offends, though, but the powerful enemies
she’s made (and how much they’re worth).
Jim Lobe is the Washington Bureau Chief of the international
news agency, Inter Press Service, Jim Lobe is best known for his coverage of
U.S. foreign policy. http://www.lobelog.com