Whose War?
Pat Buchanan
A CONSERVATIVE CIVIL
WAR?
US Flag-Waving Traditional Conservatives Vs. US/Israel
Flag-Waving Neo-Cons + Fundamentalist
Zionists
With the overall context in mind, of the march to war by the American Establishment,
this lengthy article from Pat Buchanan in The American Conservative published 24
March, is full of information and insights - even if the focus is too often
blurred by the blinders of the traditional American conservative world-view.
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WHOSE WAR?
: A
neoconservative clique seeks to ensnare
our country in a series of wars
that are not
in America’s
interest.
by Patrick J. Buchanan
The War Party may have gotten its war. But it has
also gotten something it did not bargain for. Its membership lists and
associations have been exposed and its motives challenged. In a rare moment in
U.S. journalism, Tim Russert put this question directly to Richard Perle: “Can
you assure American viewers ... that we’re in this situation against Saddam
Hussein and his removal for American security interests? And what would be the
link in terms of Israel?”
Suddenly, the Israeli connection is on the
table, and the War Party is not amused. Finding themselves in an unanticipated
firefight, our neoconservative friends are doing what comes naturally, seeking
student deferments from political combat by claiming the status of a persecuted
minority group. People who claim to be writing the foreign policy of the world
superpower, one would think, would be a little more manly in the schoolyard of
politics. Not so.
Former Wall Street Journal editor Max Boot kicked off
the campaign. When these “Buchananites toss around ‘neoconservative’—and cite
names like Wolfowitz and Cohen—it sometimes sounds as if what they really mean
is ‘Jewish conservative.’” Yet Boot readily concedes that a passionate
attachment to Israel is a “key tenet of neoconservatism.” He also claims that
the National Security Strategy of President Bush “sounds as if it could have
come straight out from the pages of Commentary magazine, the neocon bible.” (For
the uninitiated, Commentary, the bible in which Boot seeks divine guidance, is
the monthly of the American Jewish Committee.)
David Brooks of the Weekly
Standard wails that attacks based on the Israel tie have put him through
personal hell: “Now I get a steady stream of anti-Semitic screeds in my e-mail,
my voicemail and in my mailbox. ... Anti-Semitism is alive and thriving. It’s
just that its epicenter is no longer on the Buchananite Right, but on the
peace-movement left.”
Washington Post columnist Robert Kagan endures his
own purgatory abroad: “In London ... one finds Britain’s finest minds
propounding, in sophisticated language and melodious Oxbridge accents, the
conspiracy theories of Pat Buchanan concerning the ‘neoconservative’ (read:
Jewish) hijacking of American foreign policy.”
Lawrence Kaplan of the New
Republic charges that our little magazine “has been transformed into a forum for
those who contend that President Bush has become a client of ... Ariel Sharon
and the ‘neoconservative war party.’”
Referencing Charles Lindbergh, he
accuses Paul Schroeder, Chris Matthews, Robert Novak, Georgie Anne Geyer, Jason
Vest of the Nation, and Gary Hart of implying that “members of the Bush team
have been doing Israel’s bidding and, by extension, exhibiting ‘dual
loyalties.’” Kaplan thunders:
The real
problem with such claims is not just that they are untrue. The problem is that
they are toxic. Invoking the specter of dual loyalty to mute criticism and
debate amounts to more than the everyday pollution of public discourse. It is
the nullification of public discourse, for how can one refute accusations
grounded in ethnicity? The charges are, ipso facto, impossible to disprove. And
so they are meant to be.
What is going on here? Slate’s Mickey Kaus nails
it in the headline of his retort: “Lawrence Kaplan Plays the Anti-Semitic
Card.”
What Kaplan, Brooks, Boot, and Kagan are doing is what the Rev.
Jesse Jackson does when caught with some mammoth contribution from a Fortune 500
company he has lately accused of discriminating. He plays the race card. So,
too, the neoconservatives are trying to fend off critics by assassinating their
character and impugning their motives.
Indeed, it is the charge of
“anti-Semitism” itself that is toxic. For this venerable slander is designed to
nullify public discourse by smearing and intimidating foes and censoring and
blacklisting them and any who would publish them. Neocons say we attack them
because they are Jewish. We do not. We attack them because their warmongering
threatens our country, even as it finds a reliable echo in Ariel
Sharon.
And this time the boys have cried “wolf” once too often. It is
not working. As Kaus notes, Kaplan’s own New Republic carries Harvard professor
Stanley Hoffman. In writing of the four power centers in this capital that are
clamoring for war, Hoffman himself describes the fourth
thus:
And, finally, there is a loose
collection of friends of Israel, who believe in the identity of interests
between the Jewish state and the United States. … These analysts look on foreign
policy through the lens of one dominant concern: Is it good or bad for Israel?
Since that nation’s founding in 1948, these thinkers have never been in very
good odor at the State Department, but now they are well ensconced in the
Pentagon, around such strategists as Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Perle and Douglas
Feith.
“If Stanley Hoffman can say this,” asks Kaus, “why can’t Chris
Matthews?” Kaus also notes that Kaplan somehow failed to mention the most
devastating piece tying the neoconservatives to Sharon and his Likud
Party.
In a Feb. 9 front-page article in the Washington Post, Robert
Kaiser quotes a senior U.S. official as saying, “The Likudniks are really in
charge now.” Kaiser names Perle, Wolfowitz, and Feith as members of a pro-Israel
network inside the administration and adds David Wurmser of the Defense
Department and Elliott Abrams of the National Security Council. (Abrams is the
son-in-law of Norman Podhoretz, editor emeritus of Commentary, whose magazine
has for decades branded critics of Israel as anti-Semites.)
Noting that
Sharon repeatedly claims a “special closeness” to the Bushites, Kaiser writes,
“For the first time a U.S. administration and a Likud government are pursuing
nearly identical policies.” And a valid question is: how did this come to be,
and while it is surely in Sharon’s interest, is it in America’s
interest?
This is a time for truth. For America is about to make a
momentous decision: whether to launch a series of wars in the Middle East that
could ignite the Clash of Civilizations against which Harvard professor Samuel
Huntington has warned, a war we believe would be a tragedy and a disaster for
this Republic. To avert this war, to answer the neocon smears, we ask that our
readers review their agenda as stated in their words. Sunlight is the best
disinfectant. As Al Smith used to say, “Nothing un-American can live in the
sunlight.”
We charge that a cabal of polemicists and public officials
seek to ensnare our country in a series of wars that are not in America’s
interests. We charge them with colluding with Israel to ignite those wars and
destroy the Oslo Accords. We charge them with deliberately damaging U.S.
relations with every state in the Arab world that defies Israel or supports the
Palestinian people’s right to a homeland of their own. We charge that they have
alienated friends and allies all over the Islamic and Western world through
their arrogance, hubris, and bellicosity.
Not in our lifetimes has
America been so isolated from old friends. Far worse, President Bush is being
lured into a trap baited for him by these neocons that could cost him his office
and cause America to forfeit years of peace won for us by the sacrifices of two
generations in the Cold War.
They charge us with anti-Semitism—i.e., a
hatred of Jews for their faith, heritage, or ancestry. False. The truth is,
those hurling these charges harbor a “passionate attachment” to a nation not our
own that causes them to subordinate the interests of their own country and to
act on an assumption that, somehow, what’s good for Israel is good for
America.
The Neoconservatives
Who are the neoconservatives? The
first generation were ex-liberals, socialists, and Trotskyites, boat-people from
the McGovern revolution who rafted over to the GOP at the end of conservatism’s
long march to power with Ronald Reagan in 1980.
A neoconservative, wrote
Kevin Phillips back then, is more likely to be a magazine editor than a
bricklayer. Today, he or she is more likely to be a resident scholar at a public
policy institute such as the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) or one of its
clones like the Center for Security Policy or the Jewish Institute for National
Security Affairs (JINSA). As one wag writes, a neocon is more familiar with the
inside of a think tank than an Abrams tank.
Almost none came out of the
business world or military, and few if any came out of the Goldwater campaign.
The heroes they invoke are Woodrow Wilson, FDR, Harry Truman, Martin Luther
King, and Democratic Senators Henry “Scoop” Jackson (Wash.) and Pat Moynihan
(N.Y.).
All are interventionists who regard Stakhanovite support of
Israel as a defining characteristic of their breed. Among their luminaries are
Jeane Kirkpatrick, Bill Bennett, Michael Novak, and James Q.
Wilson.
Their publications include the Weekly Standard, Commentary, the
New Republic, National Review, and the editorial page of the Wall Street
Journal. Though few in number, they wield disproportionate power through control
of the conservative foundations and magazines, through their syndicated columns,
and by attaching themselves to men of power.
Beating the War
Drums
When the Cold War ended, these neoconservatives began casting about
for a new crusade to give meaning to their lives. On Sept. 11, their time came.
They seized on that horrific atrocity to steer America’s rage into all-out war
to destroy their despised enemies, the Arab and Islamic “rogue states” that have
resisted U.S. hegemony and loathe Israel.
The War Party’s plan, however,
had been in preparation far in advance of 9/11. And when President Bush, after
defeating the Taliban, was looking for a new front in the war on terror, they
put their precooked meal in front of him. Bush dug into it.
Before
introducing the script-writers of America’s future wars, consider the rapid and
synchronized reaction of the neocons to what happened after that fateful
day.
On Sept. 12, Americans were still in shock when Bill Bennett told
CNN that we were in “a struggle between good and evil,” that the Congress must
declare war on “militant Islam,” and that “overwhelming force” must be used.
Bennett cited Lebanon, Libya, Syria, Iraq, Iran, and China as targets for
attack. Not, however, Afghanistan, the sanctuary of Osama’s terrorists. How did
Bennett know which nations must be smashed before he had any idea who attacked
us?
The Wall Street Journal immediately offered up a specific target
list, calling for U.S. air strikes on “terrorist camps in Syria, Sudan, Libya,
and Algeria, and perhaps even in parts of Egypt.” Yet, not one of Bennett’s six
countries, nor one of these five, had anything to do with 9/11.
On Sept.
15, according to Bob Woodward’s Bush at War, “Paul Wolfowitz put forth military
arguments to justify a U.S. attack on Iraq rather than Afghanistan.” Why Iraq?
Because, Wolfowitz argued in the War Cabinet, while “attacking Afghanistan would
be uncertain … Iraq was a brittle oppressive regime that might break easily. It
was doable.”
On Sept. 20, forty neoconservatives sent an open letter to
the White House instructing President Bush on how the war on terror must be
conducted. Signed by Bennett, Podhoretz, Kirkpatrick, Perle, Kristol, and
Washington Post columnist Charles Krauthammer, the letter was an ultimatum. To
retain the signers’ support, the president was told, he must target Hezbollah
for destruction, retaliate against Syria and Iran if they refuse to sever ties
to Hezbollah, and overthrow Saddam. Any failure to attack Iraq, the signers
warned Bush, “will constitute an early and perhaps decisive surrender in the war
on international terrorism.”
Here was a cabal of intellectuals telling
the Commander-in-Chief, nine days after an attack on America, that if he did not
follow their war plans, he would be charged with surrendering to terror. Yet,
Hezbollah had nothing to do with 9/11. What had Hezbollah done? Hezbollah had
humiliated Israel by driving its army out of Lebanon.
President Bush had
been warned. He was to exploit the attack of 9/11 to launch a series of wars on
Arab regimes, none of which had attacked us. All, however, were enemies of
Israel. “Bibi” Netanyahu, the former Prime Minister of Israel, like some
latter-day Citizen Genet, was ubiquitous on American television, calling for us
to crush the “Empire of Terror.” The “Empire,” it turns out, consisted of Hamas,
Hezbollah, Iran, Iraq, and “the Palestinian enclave.”
Nasty as some of
these regimes and groups might be, what had they done to the United
States?
The War Party seemed desperate to get a Middle East war going
before America had second thoughts. Tom Donnelly of the Project for the New
American Century (PNAC) called for an immediate invasion of Iraq. “Nor need the
attack await the deployment of half a million troops. … [T]he larger challenge
will be occupying Iraq after the fighting is over,” he wrote.
Donnelly
was echoed by Jonah Goldberg of National Review: “The United States needs to go
to war with Iraq because it needs to go to war with someone in the region and
Iraq makes the most sense.”
Goldberg endorsed “the Ledeen Doctrine” of
ex-Pentagon official Michael Ledeen, which Goldberg described thus: “Every ten
years or so, the United States needs to pick up some small crappy little country
and throw it against the wall, just to show we mean business.” (When the French
ambassador in London, at a dinner party, asked why we should risk World War III
over some “shitty little country”—meaning Israel—Goldberg’s magazine was not
amused.)
Ledeen, however, is less frivolous. In The War Against the
Terror Masters, he identifies the exact regimes America must
destroy:
First and foremost, we must bring
down the terror regimes, beginning with the Big Three: Iran, Iraq, and Syria.
And then we have to come to grips with Saudi Arabia. … Once the tyrants in Iran,
Iraq, Syria, and Saudi Arabia have been brought down, we will remain engaged.
…We have to ensure the fulfillment of the democratic revolution. … Stability is
an unworthy American mission, and a misleading concept to boot. We do not want
stability in Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and even Saudi Arabia; we want things
to change. The real issue is not whether, but how to
destabilize.
Rejecting stability as “an unworthy American mission,”
Ledeen goes on to define America’s authentic “historic
mission”:
Creative destruction is our
middle name, both within our society and abroad. We tear down the old order
every day, from business to science, literature, art, architecture, and cinema
to politics and the law. Our enemies have always hated this whirlwind of energy
and creativity which menaces their traditions (whatever they may be) and shames
them for their inability to keep pace. … [W]e must destroy them to advance our
historic mission.
Passages like this owe more to Leon Trotsky than to
Robert Taft and betray a Jacobin streak in neoconservatism that cannot be
reconciled with any concept of true conservatism.
To the Weekly Standard,
Ledeen’s enemies list was too restrictive. We must not only declare war on
terror networks and states that harbor terrorists, said the Standard, we should
launch wars on “any group or government inclined to support or sustain others
like them in the future.”
Robert Kagan and William Kristol were giddy
with excitement at the prospect of Armageddon. The coming war “is going to
spread and engulf a number of countries. … It is going to resemble the clash of
civilizations that everyone has hoped to avoid. … [I]t is possible that the
demise of some ‘moderate’ Arab regimes may be just round the
corner.”
Norman Podhoretz in Commentary even outdid Kristol’s Standard,
rhapsodizing that we should embrace a war of civilizations, as it is George W.
Bush’s mission “to fight World War IV—the war against militant Islam.” By his
count, the regimes that richly deserve to be overthrown are not confined to the
three singled-out members of the axis of evil (Iraq, Iran, North Korea). At a
minimum, the axis should extend to Syria and Lebanon and Libya, as well as
‘“friends” of America like the Saudi royal family and Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak,
along with the Palestinian Authority. Bush must reject the “timorous counsels”
of the “incorrigibly cautious Colin Powell,” wrote Podhoretz, and “find the
stomach to impose a new political culture on the defeated” Islamic world. As the
war against al-Qaeda required that we destroy the Taliban, Podhoretz
wrote,
We may willy-nilly find ourselves
forced … to topple five or six or seven more tyrannies in the Islamic world
(including that other sponsor of terrorism, Yasir Arafat’s Palestinian
Authority). I can even [imagine] the turmoil of this war leading to some new
species of an imperial mission for America, whose purpose would be to oversee
the emergence of successor governments in the region more amenable to reform and
modernization than the despotisms now in place. … I can also envisage the
establishment of some kind of American protectorate over the oil fields of Saudi
Arabia, as we more and more come to wonder why 7,000 princes should go on being
permitted to exert so much leverage over us and everyone else.
Podhoretz
credits Eliot Cohen with the phrase “World War IV.” Bush was shortly thereafter
seen carrying about a gift copy of Cohen’s book that celebrates civilian mastery
of the military in times of war, as exhibited by such leaders as Winston
Churchill and David Ben Gurion.
A list of the Middle East regimes that
Podhoretz, Bennett, Ledeen, Netanyahu, and the Wall Street Journal regard as
targets for destruction thus includes Algeria, Libya, Egypt, Sudan, Lebanon,
Syria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Hezbollah, Hamas, the Palestinian Authority,
and “militant Islam.”
Cui Bono? For whose benefit these endless wars in a
region that holds nothing vital to America save oil, which the Arabs must sell
us to survive? Who would benefit from a war of civilizations between the West
and Islam?
Answer: one nation, one leader, one party. Israel, Sharon,
Likud.
Indeed, Sharon has been everywhere the echo of his acolytes in
America. In February 2003, Sharon told a delegation of Congressmen that, after
Saddam’s regime is destroyed, it is of “vital importance” that the United States
disarm Iran, Syria, and Libya.
“We have a great interest in shaping the
Middle East the day after” the war on Iraq, Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz told
the Conference of Major American Jewish Organizations. After U.S. troops enter
Baghdad, the United States must generate “political, economic, diplomatic
pressure” on Tehran, Mofaz admonished the American Jews.
Are the
neoconservatives concerned about a war on Iraq bringing down friendly Arab
governments? Not at all. They would welcome it.
“Mubarak is no great
shakes,” says Richard Perle of the President of Egypt. “Surely we can do better
than Mubarak.” Asked about the possibility that a war on Iraq—which he predicted
would be a “cakewalk”—might upend governments in Egypt and Saudi Arabia, former
UN ambassador Ken Adelman told Joshua Micah Marshall of Washington Monthly, “All
the better if you ask me.”
On July 10, 2002, Perle invited a former aide
to Lyndon LaRouche named Laurent Murawiec to address the Defense Policy Board.
In a briefing that startled Henry Kissinger, Murawiec named Saudi Arabia as “the
kernel of evil, the prime mover, the most dangerous opponent” of the United
States.
Washington should give Riyadh an ultimatum, he said. Either you
Saudis “prosecute or isolate those involved in the terror chain, including the
Saudi intelligence services,” and end all propaganda against Israel, or we
invade your country, seize your oil fields, and occupy Mecca.
In closing
his PowerPoint presentation, Murawiec offered a “Grand Strategy for the Middle
East.” “Iraq is the tactical pivot, Saudi Arabia the strategic pivot, Egypt the
prize.” Leaked reports of Murawiec’s briefing did not indicate if anyone raised
the question of how the Islamic world might respond to U.S. troops tramping
around the grounds of the Great Mosque.
What these neoconservatives seek
is to conscript American blood to make the world safe for Israel. They want the
peace of the sword imposed on Islam and American soldiers to die if necessary to
impose it.
Washington Times editor at large Arnaud de Borchgrave calls
this the “Bush-Sharon Doctrine.” “Washington’s ‘Likudniks,’” he writes, “have
been in charge of U.S. policy in the Middle East since Bush was sworn into
office.”
The neocons seek American empire, and Sharonites seek hegemony
over the Middle East. The two agendas coincide precisely. And though neocons
insist that it was Sept. 11 that made the case for war on Iraq and militant
Islam, the origins of their war plans go back far before.
“Securing the
Realm”
The principal draftsman is Richard Perle, an aide to Sen. Scoop
Jackson, who, in 1970, was overheard on a federal wiretap discussing classified
information from the National Security Council with the Israeli Embassy. In Jews
and American Politics, published in 1974, Stephen D. Isaacs wrote, “Richard
Perle and Morris Amitay command a tiny army of Semitophiles on Capitol Hill and
direct Jewish power in behalf of Jewish interests.” In 1983, the New York Times
reported that Perle had taken substantial payments from an Israeli weapons
manufacturer.
In 1996, with Douglas Feith and David Wurmser, Perle wrote
“A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm,” for Prime Minister
Netanyahu. In it, Perle, Feith, and Wurmser urged Bibi to ditch the Oslo Accords
of the assassinated Yitzak Rabin and adopt a new aggressive
strategy:
Israel can shape its strategic
environment, in cooperation with Turkey and Jordan, by weakening, containing,
and even rolling back Syria. This effort can focus on removing Saddam Hussein
from power in Iraq—an important Israeli strategic objective in its own right—as
a means of foiling Syria’s regional ambitions. Jordan has challenged Syria’s
regional ambitions recently by suggesting the restoration of the Hashemites in
Iraq.
In the Perle-Feith-Wurmser strategy, Israel’s enemy remains Syria,
but the road to Damascus runs through Baghdad. Their plan, which urged Israel to
re-establish “the principle of preemption,” has now been imposed by Perle,
Feith, Wurmser & Co. on the United States.
In his own 1997 paper, “A
Strategy for Israel,” Feith pressed Israel to re-occupy “the areas under
Palestinian Authority control,” though “the price in blood would be
high.”
Wurmser, as a resident scholar at AEI, drafted joint war plans for
Israel and the United States “to fatally strike the centers of radicalism in the
Middle East. Israel and the United States should … broaden the conflict to
strike fatally, not merely disarm, the centers of radicalism in the region—the
regimes of Damascus, Baghdad, Tripoli, Tehran, and Gaza. That would establish
the recognition that fighting either the United States or Israel is
suicidal.”
He urged both nations to be on the lookout for a crisis, for
as he wrote, “Crises can be opportunities.” Wurmser published his U.S.-Israeli
war plan on Jan. 1, 2001, nine months before 9/11.
About the
Perle-Feith-Wurmser cabal, author Michael Lind
writes:
The radical Zionist right to which
Perle and Feith belong is small in number but it has become a significant force
in Republican policy-making circles. It is a recent phenomenon, dating back to
the late 1970s and 1980s, when many formerly Democratic Jewish intellectuals
joined the broad Reagan coalition. While many of these hawks speak in public
about global crusades for democracy, the chief concern of many such
“neo-conservatives” is the power and reputation of Israel.
Right down the
smokestack.
Perle today chairs the Defense Policy Board, Feith is an
Undersecretary of Defense, and Wurmser is special assistant to the
Undersecretary of State for Arms Control, John Bolton, who dutifully echoes the
Perle-Sharon line. According to the Israeli daily newspaper Ha’aretz, in late
February,
U.S. Undersecretary of State
John Bolton said in meetings with Israeli officials … that he has no doubt
America will attack Iraq and that it will be necessary to deal with threats from
Syria, Iran and North Korea afterwards.
On Jan. 26, 1998, President
Clinton received a letter imploring him to use his State of the Union address to
make removal of Saddam Hussein’s regime the “aim of American foreign policy” and
to use military action because “diplomacy is failing.” Were Clinton to do that,
the signers pledged, they would “offer our full support in this difficult but
necessary endeavor.” Signing the pledge were Elliott Abrams, Bill Bennett, John
Bolton, Robert Kagan, William Kristol, Richard Perle, and Paul Wolfowitz. Four
years before 9/11, the neocons had Baghdad on their minds.
The Wolfowitz
Doctrine
In 1992, a startling document was leaked from the office of Paul
Wolfowitz at the Pentagon. Barton Gellman of the Washington Post called it a
“classified blueprint intended to help ‘set the nation’s direction for the next
century.’” The Wolfowitz Memo called for a permanent U.S. military presence on
six continents to deter all “potential competitors from even aspiring to a
larger regional or global role.” Containment, the victorious strategy of the
Cold War, was to give way to an ambitious new strategy designed to “establish
and protect a new order.”
Though the Wolfowitz Memo was denounced and
dismissed in 1992, it became American policy in the 33-page National Security
Strategy (NSS) issued by President Bush on Sept. 21, 2002. Washington Post
reporter Tim Reich describes it as a “watershed in U.S. foreign policy” that
“reverses the fundamental principles that have guided successive Presidents for
more than 50 years: containment and deterrence.”
Andrew Bacevich, a
professor at Boston University, writes of the NSS that he marvels at “its fusion
of breathtaking utopianism with barely disguised machtpolitik. It reads as if it
were the product not of sober, ostensibly conservative Republicans but of an
unlikely collaboration between Woodrow Wilson and the elder Field Marshal von
Moltke.”
In confronting America’s adversaries, the paper declares, “We
will not hesitate to act alone, if necessary, to exercise our right of
self-defense by acting preemptively.” It warns any nation that seeks to acquire
power to rival the United States that it will be courting war with the United
States:
[T]he president has no intention
of allowing any nation to catch up with the huge lead the United States has
opened since the fall of the Soviet Union more than a decade ago. … Our forces
will be strong enough to dissuade potential adversaries from pursuing a military
buildup in hopes of surpassing or equaling the power of the United
States.
America must reconcile herself to an era of “nation-building on a
grand scale, and with no exit strategy,” Robert Kagan instructs. But this Pax
Americana the neocons envision bids fair to usher us into a time of what Harry
Elmer Barnes called “permanent war for permanent peace.”
The Munich
Card
As President Bush was warned on Sept. 20, 2001, that he will be
indicted for “a decisive surrender” in the war on terror should he fail to
attack Iraq, he is also on notice that pressure on Israel is forbidden. For as
the neoconservatives have played the anti-Semitic card, they will not hesitate
to play the Munich card as well. A year ago, when Bush called on Sharon to pull
out of the West Bank, Sharon fired back that he would not let anyone do to
Israel what Neville Chamberlain had done to the Czechs. Frank Gaffney of the
Center for Security Policy immediately backed up Ariel
Sharon:
With each passing day, Washington
appears to view its principal Middle Eastern ally’s conduct as inconvenient—in
much the same way London and Paris came to see Czechoslovakia’s resistance to
Hitler’s offers of peace in exchange for Czech lands.
When former U.S.
NATO commander Gen. George Jouwlan said the United States may have to impose a
peace on Israel and the Palestinians, he, too, faced the charge of appeasement.
Wrote Gaffney,
They would, presumably, go
beyond Britain and France’s sell-out of an ally at Munich in 1938. The “impose a
peace” school is apparently prepared to have us play the role of Hitler’s
Wehrmacht as well, seizing and turning over to Yasser Arafat the contemporary
Sudetenland: the West Bank and Gaza Strip and perhaps part of Jerusalem as
well.
Podhoretz agreed Sharon was right in the substance of what he said
but called it politically unwise to use the Munich analogy.
President
Bush is on notice: Should he pressure Israel to trade land for peace, the Oslo
formula in which his father and Yitzak Rabin believed, he will, as was his
father, be denounced as an anti-Semite and a Munich-style appeaser by both
Israelis and their neoconservatives allies inside his own Big Tent.
Yet,
if Bush cannot deliver Sharon there can be no peace. And if there is no peace in
the Mideast there is no security for us, ever—for there will be no end to
terror. As most every diplomat and journalist who travels to the region will
relate, America’s failure to be even-handed, our failure to rein in Sharon, our
failure to condemn Israel’s excesses, and our moral complicity in Israel’s
looting of Palestinian lands and denial of their right to self-determination
sustains the anti-Americanism in the Islamic world in which terrorists and
terrorism breed.
Let us conclude. The Israeli people are America’s
friends and have a right to peace and secure borders. We should help them secure
these rights. As a nation, we have made a moral commitment, endorsed by half a
dozen presidents, which Americans wish to honor, not to permit these people who
have suffered much to see their country overrun and destroyed. And we must honor
this commitment.
But U.S. and Israeli interests are not identical. They
often collide, and when they do, U.S. interests must prevail. Moreover, we do
not view the Sharon regime as “America’s best friend.”
Since the time of
Ben Gurion, the behavior of the Israeli regime has been Jekyll and Hyde. In the
1950s, its intelligence service, the Mossad, had agents in Egypt blow up U.S.
installations to make it appear the work of Cairo, to destroy U.S. relations
with the new Nasser government. During the Six Day War, Israel ordered repeated
attacks on the undefended USS Liberty that killed 34 American sailors and
wounded 171 and included the machine-gunning of life rafts. This massacre was
neither investigated nor punished by the U.S. government in an act of national
cravenness.
Though we have given Israel $20,000 for every Jewish citizen,
Israel refuses to stop building the settlements that are the cause of the
Palestinian intifada. Likud has dragged our good name through the mud and blood
of Ramallah, ignored Bush’s requests to restrain itself, and sold U.S. weapons
technology to China, including the Patriot, the Phoenix air-to-air missile, and
the Lavi fighter, which is based on F-16 technology. Only direct U.S.
intervention blocked Israel’s sale of our AWACS system.
Israel suborned
Jonathan Pollard to loot our secrets and refuses to return the documents, which
would establish whether or not they were sold to Moscow. When Clinton tried to
broker an agreement at Wye Plantation between Israel and Arafat, Bibi Netanyahu
attempted to extort, as his price for signing, release of Pollard, so he could
take this treasonous snake back to Israel as a national hero.
Do the
Brits, our closest allies, behave like this?
Though we have said
repeatedly that we admire much of what this president has done, he will not
deserve re-election if he does not jettison the neoconservatives’ agenda of
endless wars on the Islamic world that serve only the interests of a country
other than the one he was elected to preserve and
protect.
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