The announcement last week by the United
States of the largest military aid
package in its history – to Israel – was
a win for both sides.
Israeli prime
minister Benjamin Netanyahu could boast
that his lobbying had boosted aid from
$3.1 billion a year to $3.8bn – a 22 per
cent increase – for a decade starting in
2019.
Mr Netanyahu has presented this as a
rebuff to those who accuse him of
jeopardising Israeli security interests
with his government’s repeated affronts
to the White House.
In the past weeks alone, defence
minister Avigdor Lieberman has compared
last year’s nuclear deal between
Washington and Iran with the 1938 Munich
pact, which bolstered Hitler; and Mr
Netanyahu has implied that US opposition
to settlement expansion is the same as
support for the “ethnic cleansing” of
Jews.
American president Barack Obama,
meanwhile, hopes to stifle his own
critics who insinuate that he is
anti-Israel. The deal should serve as a
fillip too for Hillary Clinton, the
Democratic party’s candidate to succeed
Mr Obama in November’s election.
In reality, however, the Obama
administration has quietly punished Mr
Netanyahu for his misbehaviour. Israeli
expectations of a $4.5bn-a-year deal
were whittled down after Mr Netanyahu
stalled negotiations last year as he
sought to recruit Congress to his battle
against the Iran deal.
In fact, Israel already receives
roughly $3.8bn – if Congress’s
assistance on developing missile defence
programmes is factored in. Notably,
Israel has been forced to promise not to
approach Congress for extra funds.
The deal takes into account neither
inflation nor the dollar’s depreciation
against the shekel.
A bigger blow still is the White
House’s demand to phase out a special
exemption that allowed Israel to spend
nearly 40 per cent of aid locally on
weapon and fuel purchases. Israel will
soon have to buy all its armaments from
the US, ending what amounted to a
subsidy to its own arms industry.
Nonetheless, Washington’s renewed
military largesse – in the face of
almost continual insults – inevitably
fuels claims that the Israeli tail is
wagging the US dog. Even The New York
Times has described the aid package as
“too big”.
Since the 1973 war, Israel has
received at least $100bn in military
aid, with more assistance hidden from
view. Back in the 1970s, Washington paid
half of Israel’s military budget. Today
it still foots a fifth of the bill,
despite Israel’s economic success.
But the US expects a return on its
massive investment. As the late Israeli
politician-general Ariel Sharon once
observed, Israel has been a US
“aircraft carrier” in the Middle East,
acting as the regional bully and
carrying out operations that benefit
Washington.
Almost no one blames the US for
Israeli attacks that wiped out Iraq’s
and Syria’s nuclear programmes. A
nuclear-armed Iraq or Syria would have
deterred later US-backed moves at regime
overthrow, as well as countering the
strategic advantage Israel derives from
its own nuclear arsenal.
In addition, Israel’s US-sponsored
military prowess is a triple boon to the
US weapons industry, the country’s most
powerful lobby. Public funds are
siphoned off to let Israel buy goodies
from American arms makers. That, in
turn, serves as a shop window for other
customers and spurs an endless and
lucrative game of catch-up in the rest
of the Middle East.
The first F-35 fighter jets to arrive
in Israel in December – their various
components produced in 46 US states –
will increase the clamour for the
cutting-edge warplane.
Israel is also a “front-line
laboratory”, as former Israeli army
negotiator Eival Gilady admitted at the
weekend, that develops and field-tests
new technology Washington can later use
itself.
The US is planning to buy back the
missile interception system Iron Dome –
which neutralises battlefield threats of
retaliation – it largely paid for.
Israel works closely too with the US in
developing cyberwarfare, such as the
Stuxnet worm that damaged Iran’s
civilian nuclear programme.
But the clearest message from
Israel’s new aid package is one
delivered to the Palestinians:
Washington sees no pressing strategic
interest in ending the occupation. It
stood up to Mr Netanyahu over the Iran
deal but will not risk a damaging clash
over Palestinian statehood.
Some believe that Mr Obama signed the
aid package to win the credibility
necessary to overcome his domestic
Israel lobby and pull a rabbit from the
hat: an initiative, unveiled shortly
before he leaves office, that corners Mr
Netanyahu into making peace.
Hopes have been raised by an expected
meeting at the United Nations in New
York on Wednesday. But their first talks
in 10 months are planned only to
demonstrate unity to confound critics of
the aid deal.
If Mr Obama really wanted to pressure
Mr Netanyahu, he would have used the aid
agreement as leverage. Now Mr Netanyahu
need not fear US financial retaliation,
even as he intensifies effective
annexation of the West Bank.
Mr Netanyahu has drawn the right
lesson from the aid deal – he can act
against the Palestinians with continuing
US impunity.
- See more at: http://www.jonathan-cook.net/2016-09-19/palestinians-lose-in-us-military-aid-deal-with-israel/#sthash.fL4Eq28N.dpuf
Key
Neocon Calls on US to Oust Putin
A prominent neocon paymaster, whose outfit
dispenses $100 million in U.S. taxpayers’
money each year, has called on America to
“summon the will” to remove Russian
President Putin from office, reports Robert
Parry.
By
Robert Parry
October 10, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News"
- The neoconservative president of the
U.S.-taxpayer-funded National Endowment for
Democracy [NED] has called for the U.S.
government to “summon the will” to engineer
the overthrow of Russian President Vladimir
Putin, saying that the 10-year-old murder
case of a Russian journalist should be the
inspiration.
Carl Gershman, who has headed NED since its
founding in 1983, doesn’t cite any evidence
that Putin was responsible for the death of
Anna Politkovskaya but uses
a full column in The Washington
Post on Friday to create that impression,
calling her death “a window to Vladimir
Putin, the Kremlin autocrat whom Americans
are looking at for the first time.”
Gershman wraps up his article by writing:
“Politkovskaya saw the danger [of Putin],
but she and other liberals in Russia were
not strong enough to stop it. The United
States has the power to contain and defeat
this danger. The issue is whether we can
summon the will to do so. Remembering
Politkovskaya can help us rise to this
challenge.”
That Gershman would so directly call for the
ouster of Russia’s clearly popular president
represents further proof that NED is a
neocon-driven vehicle that seeks to create
the political circumstances for “regime
change” even when that means removing
leaders who are elected by a country’s
citizenry.
And
there is a reason for NED to see its job in
that way. In 1983, NED essentially took over
the CIA’s role of influencing electoral
outcomes and destabilizing governments that
got in the way of U.S. interests, except
that NED carried out those functions in a
quasi-overt fashion while the CIA did them
covertly.
NED
also serves as a sort of slush fund for
neocons and other favored U.S. foreign
policy operatives because a substantial
portion of NED’s money circulates through
U.S.-based non-governmental organizations or
NGOs.
That makes Gershman an influential neocon
paymaster whose organization dispenses some
$100 million a year in U.S. taxpayers’ money
to activists, journalists and NGOs both in
Washington and around the world. The money
helps them undermine governments in
Washington’s disfavor – or as Gershman would
prefer to say, “build democratic
institutions,” even when that
requires overthrowing democratically elected
leaders.
NED
was a lead actor in the Feb. 22, 2014 coup
ousting Ukraine’s elected President Viktor
Yanukovych in a U.S.-backed putsch that
touched off the civil war inside Ukraine
between Ukrainian nationalists from the west
and ethnic Russians from the east. The
Ukraine crisis has become a flashpoint for
the dangerous New Cold War between the U.S.
and Russia.
Before the anti-Yanukovych coup, NED was
funding scores of projects inside Ukraine,
which Gershman had identified as “the
biggest prize” in a Sept. 26, 2013 column
also published in The Washington Post.
In
that column, Gershman wrote
that after the West claimed Ukraine,
“Russians, too, face a choice, and Putin may
find himself on the losing end not just in
the near abroad but within Russia itself.”
In other words, Gershman already saw Ukraine
as an important step toward an even bigger
prize, a “regime change” in Moscow.
Less than five months after Gershman’s
column, pro-Western political activists and
neo-Nazi street fighters – with strong
support from U.S. neocons and the State
Department – staged a coup in Kiev driving
Yanukovych from office and installing a
rabidly anti-Russian regime, which the West
promptly dubbed “legitimate.”
In
reaction to the coup and the ensuing
violence against ethnic Russians, the voters
of Crimea approved a referendum with 96
percent of the vote to leave Ukraine and
rejoin Russia, a move that the West’s
governments and media decried as a Russian
“invasion” and “annexation.”
The
new regime in Kiev then mounted what it
called an “Anti-Terrorism Operation” or ATO
against ethnic Russians in the east who had
supported Yanukovych and refused to accept
the anti-constitutional coup in Kiev as
legitimate.
The
ATO, spearheaded by
neo-Nazis from the Azov battalion
and other extremists, killed thousands of
ethnic Russians, prompting Moscow to
covertly provide some assistance to the
rebels, a move denounced by the West as
“aggression.”
Blaming Putin
In
his latest column, Gershman not only urges
the United States to muster the courage to
oust Putin but he shows off the kind of
clever sophistry that America’s neocons are
known for. Though lacking any evidence, he
intimates that Putin ordered the murder of
Politkovskaya and pretty much every other
“liberal” who has died in Russia.
It
is a technique that I’ve seen used in other
circumstances, such as the lists of
“mysterious deaths” that American
right-wingers publish citing people who
crossed the paths of Bill and Hillary
Clinton and ended up dead. This type of
smear spreads suspicion of guilt not based
on proof but on the number of acquaintances
and adversaries who have met untimely
deaths.
In
the 1990s, one conservative friend of mine
pointed to the Clintons’ “mysterious deaths”
list and marveled that even if only a few
were the victims of a Clinton death squad
that would be quite a story, to which I
replied that if even one were murdered by
the Clintons that would be quite a story –
but that there was no proof of any such
thing.
“Mysterious deaths” lists represent a type
of creepy conspiracy theory that shifts the
evidentiary burden onto the targets of the
smears who must somehow prove their
innocence, when there is no evidence of
their guilt (only vague suspicions). It is
contemptible when applied to American
leaders and it is contemptible when applied
to Russian leaders, but it is not beneath
Carl Gershman.
Beyond that, Gershman’s public musing about
the U.S. somehow summoning “the will” to
remove Putin might — in a normal world
— disqualify NED and its founding president
from the privilege of dispensing U.S.
taxpayers’ money to operatives in Washington
and globally. It is extraordinarily
provocative and dangerous, an example of
classic neocon hubris.
While the neocons do love their tough talk,
they are not known for thinking through
their “regime change” schemes. The idea of
destabilizing nuclear-armed Russia with the
goal of ousting Putin, with his 82 percent
approval ratings, must rank as the nuttiest
and most reckless neocon scheme of all.
Gershman and his neocon pals may fantasize
about making Russia’s economy scream while
financing pro-Western “liberals” who would
stage disruptive protests in Red Square, but
he and his friends haven’t weighed the
consequences even if they could succeed.
Given the devastating experience that most
Russians had when NED’s beloved Russian
“liberals” helped impose American “shock
therapy” in the 1990s — an experiment that
reduced average life expectancy by a full
decade — it’s hard to believe that the
Russian people would simply take another
dose of that bitter medicine sitting down.
Even if the calculating Putin were somehow
removed amid economic desperation, he is far
more likely to be followed by a much
harder-line Russian nationalist who might
well see Moscow’s arsenal of nuclear weapons
as the only way to protect Mother Russia’s
honor. In other words, the neocons’ latest
brash “regime change” scheme might be their
last – and the last for all humanity.
A
Neocon Slush Fund
Gershman’s arrogance also raises questions
about why the American taxpayer should
tolerate what amounts to a $100 million
neocon slush fund which is used to create
dangerous mischief around the world. Despite
having “democracy” in its name, NED appears
only to favor democratic outcomes when they
fit with Official Washington’s desires.
If
a disliked candidate wins an election, NED
acts as if that is prima facie evidence that
the system is undemocratic and must be
replaced with a process that ensures the
selection of candidates who will do what the
U.S. government tells them to do. Put
differently, NED’s name is itself a fraud.
But
that shouldn’t come as a surprise since NED
was created in 1983 at the urging of Ronald
Reagan’s CIA Director William J. Casey, who
wanted to off-load some of the CIA’s
traditional work ensuring that foreign
elections turned out in ways acceptable to
Washington, and when they didn’t – as in
Iran under Mossadegh, in Guatemala under
Arbenz or in Chile under Allende – the CIA’s
job was to undermine and remove the
offending electoral winner.
In
1983, Casey and the CIA’s top propagandist,
Walter Raymond Jr., who had been moved to
Reagan’s National Security Council staff,
wanted to create a funding mechanism to
support outside groups, such as Freedom
House and other NGOs, so they could
engage in propaganda and political action
that the CIA had historically organized and
paid for covertly. The idea emerged for a
congressionally funded entity that would
serve as a conduit for this money.
In
one undated letter to then-White
House counselor Edwin Meese III, Casey urged
creation of a “National Endowment,” but he
recognized the need to hide the strings
being pulled by the CIA. “Obviously we here
[at CIA] should not get out front in the
development of such an organization, nor
should we appear to be a sponsor or
advocate,” Casey wrote.
The
National Endowment for Democracy took shape
in late 1983 as Congress decided to also set
aside pots of money — within NED — for the
Republican and Democratic parties and for
organized labor, creating enough bipartisan
largesse that passage was assured.
But
some in Congress thought it was important to
wall the NED off from any association with
the CIA, so a provision was included to bar
the participation of any current or former
CIA official, according to one congressional
aide who helped write the legislation.
This aide told me that one night late in the
1983 session, as the bill was about to go to
the House floor, the CIA’s congressional
liaison came pounding at the door to the
office of Rep. Dante Fascell, a senior
Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs
Committee and a chief sponsor of the bill.
The
frantic CIA official conveyed a single
message from CIA Director Casey: the
language barring the participation of CIA
personnel must be struck from the bill, the
aide recalled, noting that Fascell consented
to the demand, not fully recognizing its
significance – that it would permit the
continued behind-the-scenes involvement of
Raymond and Casey.
The
aide said Fascell also consented to the
Reagan administration’s choice of Carl
Gershman to head NED, again not recognizing
how this decision would affect the future of
the new entity and American foreign policy.
Gershman, who had followed the classic
neoconservative path from youthful socialism
to fierce anticommunism, became NED’s first
(and, to this day, only) president. Though
NED is technically independent of U.S.
foreign policy, Gershman in the early years
coordinated decisions on grants with Raymond
at the NSC.
For
instance, on Jan. 2, 1985, Raymond wrote to
two NSC Asian experts that “Carl Gershman
has called concerning a possible grant to
the Chinese Alliance for Democracy (CAD). I
am concerned about the political dimension
to this request. We should not find
ourselves in a position where we have to
respond to pressure, but this request poses
a real problem to Carl.
“Senator [Orrin] Hatch, as you know, is a
member of the board. Secondly, NED has
already given a major grant for a related
Chinese program.”
Neocon
Tag Teams
From the start, NED became a major
benefactor for Freedom House, beginning with
a $200,000 grant in 1984 to build “a network
of democratic opinion-makers.” In NED’s
first four years, from 1984 and 1988,
it lavished $2.6 million on Freedom House,
accounting for more than one-third of its
total income, according to a study by the
liberal Council on Hemispheric Affairs that
was entitled “Freedom House: Portrait of a
Pass-Through.”
Over the ensuing three decades, Freedom
House has become almost an NED subsidiary,
often joining NED in holding policy
conferences and issuing position papers,
both organizations pushing primarily a
neoconservative
agenda, challenging countries deemed
insufficiently “free,” including Syria,
Ukraine (in 2014) and Russia.
Indeed, NED and Freedom House often work as
a kind of tag-team with NED financing
“non-governmental organizations” inside
targeted countries and Freedom House
berating those governments if they crack
down on U.S.-funded NGOs.
For
instance, on Nov. 16, 2012, NED and Freedom
House
joined together to denounce
legislation passed by the Russian parliament
that required recipients of foreign
political money to register with the
government.
Or,
as NED and Freedom House framed the issue:
the Russian Duma sought to “restrict human
rights and the activities of civil society
organizations and their ability to receive
support from abroad. Changes to Russia’s NGO
legislation will soon require civil society
organizations receiving foreign funds to
choose between registering as ‘foreign
agents’ or facing significant financial
penalties and potential criminal charges.”
Of
course, the United States has a nearly
identical Foreign Agent Registration Act
that likewise requires entities that receive
foreign funding and seek to influence U.S.
government policy to register with the
Justice Department or face possible fines or
imprisonment.
But
the Russian law would impede NED’s efforts
to destabilize the Russian government
through funding of political activists,
journalists and civic organizations, so it
was denounced as an infringement of human
rights and helped justify Freedom House’s
rating of Russia as “not free.”
Another bash-Putin tag team has been The
Washington Post’s editors and NED’s
Gershman. On July 28, 2015,
a Post editorial and
a companion column by Gershman
led readers to believe that Putin was
paranoid and “power mad” in worrying that
outside money funneled into NGOs threatened
Russian sovereignty.
The
Post and Gershman were especially outraged
that the Russians had enacted the law
requiring NGOs financed from abroad and
seeking to influence Russian policies to
register as “foreign agents” and that one of
the first funding operations to fall prey to
these tightened rules was Gershman’s NED.
The
Post’s editors wrote that Putin’s “latest
move … is to declare the NED an
‘undesirable’ organization under the terms
of a law that Mr. Putin signed in May
[2015]. The law bans groups from abroad who
are deemed a ‘threat to the foundations of
the constitutional system of the Russian
Federation, its defense capabilities and its
national security.’
“The charge against the NED is patently
ridiculous. The NED’s
grantees in Russia last year ran
the gamut of civil society. They advocated
transparency in public affairs, fought
corruption and promoted human rights,
freedom of information and freedom of
association, among other things. All these
activities make for a healthy democracy but
are seen as threatening from the Kremlin’s
ramparts.
“The new law on ‘undesirables’ comes in
addition to
one signed in 2012 that gave
authorities the power to declare
organizations ‘foreign
agents’ if they engaged in any kind
of politics and receive money from abroad.
The designation, from the Stalin era,
implies espionage.”
However, among the relevant points that the
Post’s editors wouldn’t tell their readers
was the fact that Russia’s Foreign Agent
Registration Act was modeled after the
American Foreign Agent Registration Act and
that NED President Gershman had already
publicly made clear — in his Sept. 26, 2013
column
— that his goal was to oust Russia’s elected
president.
In
his July 28, 2015 column, Gershman further
deemed Putin’s government illegitimate.
“Russia’s newest anti-NGO law, under which
the National Endowment for Democracy … was
declared an “undesirable organization”
prohibited from operating in Russia, is the
latest evidence that the regime of President
Vladimir Putin faces a worsening crisis of
political legitimacy,” Gershman wrote,
adding:
“This is the context in which Russia has
passed the law prohibiting Russian democrats
from getting any international assistance to
promote freedom of expression, the rule of
law and a democratic political system.
Significantly, democrats have not backed
down. They have not been deterred by the
criminal penalties contained in the ‘foreign
agents’ law and other repressive laws. They
know that these laws contradict
international law, which allows for such
aid, and that the laws are meant to block a
better future for Russia.”
The
reference to how a “foreign agents”
registration law conflicts with
international law might have been a good
place for Gershman to explain why what is
good for the goose in the United States
isn’t good for the gander in Russia. But
hypocrisy is a hard thing to rationalize and
would have undermined the propagandistic
impact of the column.
Also undercutting the column’s impact would
be an acknowledgement of where NED’s money
comes from. So Gershman left that out, too.
After all, how many governments would allow
a hostile foreign power to sponsor
politicians and civic organizations whose
mission is to undermine and overthrow the
existing government and put in someone who
would be compliant to that foreign power?
And, if you had any doubts about what
Gershman’s intent was regarding Russia, he
dispelled them in his Friday column in which
he calls on the United States to “summon the
will” to “contain and defeat this danger,”
which he makes clear is the continued rule
of Vladimir Putin.
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). |