Breaking the Last Taboo
The United States of Israel?
By ROBERT FISK
Stephen Walt towers over me as we walk in the Harvard sunshine past Eliot
Street, a big man who needs to be big right now (he's one of two authors of an
academic paper on the influence of America's Jewish lobby) but whose fame, or
notoriety, depending on your point of view, is of no interest to him. "John and
I have deliberately avoided the television shows because we don't think we can
discuss these important issues in 10 minutes. It would become 'J' and 'S', the
personalities who wrote about the lobby - and we want to open the way to serious
discussion about this, to encourage a broader discussion of the forces shaping
US foreign policy in the Middle East."
"John" is John Mearsheimer, a political scientist at the University of Chicago.
Walt is a 50-year-old tenured professor at the John F Kennedy School of
Government at Harvard. The two men have caused one of the most extraordinary
political storms over the Middle East in recent American history by stating what
to many non-Americans is obvious: that the US has been willing to set aside its
own security and that of many of its allies in order to advance the interests of
Israel, that Israel is a liability in the "war on terror", that the biggest
Israeli lobby group, Aipac (the American Israel Public Affairs Committee), is in
fact the agent of a foreign government and has a stranglehold on Congress - so
much so that US policy towards Israel is not debated there - and that the lobby
monitors and condemns academics who are critical of Israel.
"Anyone who criticises Israel's actions or argues that pro-Israel groups have
significant influence over US Middle East policy," the authors have written,
"...stands a good chance of being labelled an anti-Semite. Indeed, anyone who
merely claims that there is an Israeli lobby runs the risk of being charged with
anti-Semitism ... Anti-Semitism is something no-one wants to be accused of."
This is strong stuff in a country where - to quote the late Edward Said - the
"last taboo" (now that anyone can talk about blacks, gays and lesbians) is any
serious discussion of America's relationship with Israel.
Walt is already the author of an elegantly written account of the resistance to
US world political dominance, a work that includes more than 50 pages of
references. Indeed, those who have read his Taming Political Power: The Global
Response to US Primacy will note that the Israeli lobby gets a thumping in this
earlier volume because Aipac "has repeatedly targeted members of Congress whom
it deemed insufficiently friendly to Israel and helped drive them from office,
often by channelling money to their opponents."
But how many people in America are putting their own heads above the parapet,
now that Mearsheimer and Walt have launched a missile that would fall to the
ground unexploded in any other country but which is detonating here at high
speed? Not a lot. For a while, the mainstream US press and television - as
pro-Israeli, biased and gutless as the two academics infer them to be - did not
know whether to report on their conclusions (originally written for The Atlantic
Monthly, whose editors apparently took fright, and subsequently reprinted in the
London Review of Books in slightly truncated form) or to remain submissively
silent. The New York Times, for example, only got round to covering the affair
in depth well over two weeks after the report's publication, and then buried its
article in the education section on page 19. The academic essay, according to
the paper's headline, had created a "debate" about the lobby's influence.
They can say that again. Dore Gold, a former ambassador to the UN, who now heads
an Israeli lobby group, kicked off by unwittingly proving that the Mearsheimer-Walt
theory of "anti-Semitism" abuse is correct. "I believe," he said, "that
anti-Semitism may be partly defined as asserting a Jewish conspiracy for doing
the same thing non-Jews engage in." Congressman Eliot Engel of New York said
that the study itself was "anti-Semitic" and deserved the American public's
contempt.
Walt has no time for this argument. "We are not saying there is a conspiracy, or
a cabal. The Israeli lobby has every right to carry on its work - all Americans
like to lobby. What we are saying is that this lobby has a negative influence on
US national interests and that this should be discussed. There are vexing
problems out in the Middle East and we need to be able to discuss them openly.
The Hamas government, for example - how do we deal with this? There may not be
complete solutions, but we have to try and have all the information available."
Walt doesn't exactly admit to being shocked by some of the responses to his work
- it's all part of his desire to keep "discourse" in the academic arena, I
suspect, though it probably won't work. But no-one could be anything but angered
by his Harvard colleague, Alan Dershowitz, who announced that the two scholars
recycled accusations that "would be seized on by bigots to promote their
anti-Semitic agendas". The two are preparing a reply to Dershowitz's 45-page
attack, but could probably have done without praise from the white supremacist
and ex-Ku Klux Klan head David Duke - adulation which allowed newspapers to lump
the name of Duke with the names of Mearsheimer and Walt. "Of Israel, Harvard and
David Duke," ran the Washington Post's reprehensible headline.
The Wall Street Journal, ever Israel's friend in the American press, took an
even weirder line on the case. "As Ex-Lobbyists of Pro-Israel Group Face Court,
Article Queries Sway on Mideast Policy" its headline proclaimed to astonished
readers. Neither Mearsheimer nor Walt had mentioned the trial of two Aipac
lobbyists - due to begin next month - who are charged under the Espionage Act
with receiving and disseminating classified information provided by a former
Pentagon Middle East analyst. The defence team for Steven Rosen and Keith
Weissman has indicated that it may call Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley to the stand.
Almost a third of the Journal's report is taken up with the Rosen-Weissman
trial, adding that the indictment details how the two men "allegedly sought to
promote a hawkish US policy toward Iran by trading favours with a number of
senior US officials. Lawrence Franklin, the former Pentagon official, has
pleaded guilty to misusing classified information. Mr Franklin was charged with
orally passing on information about a draft National Security Council paper on
Iran to the two lobbyists... as well as other classified information. Mr
Franklin was sentenced in December to nearly 13 years in prison..."
The Wall Street Journal report goes on to say that lawyers and "many Jewish
leaders" - who are not identified - "say the actions of the former Aipac
employees were no different from how thousands of Washington lobbyists work.
They say the indictment marks the first time in US history that American
citizens... have been charged with receiving and disseminating state secrets in
conversations." The paper goes on to say that "several members of Congress have
expressed concern about the case since it broke in 2004, fearing that the
Justice Department may be targeting pro-Israel lobbying groups, such as Aipac.
These officials (sic) say they're eager to see the legal process run its course,
but are concerned about the lack of transparency in the case."
As far as Dershowitz is concerned, it isn't hard for me to sympathise with the
terrible pair. He it was who shouted abuse at me during an Irish radio interview
when I said that we had to ask the question "Why?" after the 11 September 2001
international crimes against humanity. I was a "dangerous man", Dershowitz
shouted over the air, adding that to be "anti-American" - my thought-crime for
asking the "Why?" question - was the same as being anti-Semitic. I must,
however, also acknowledge another interest. Twelve years ago, one of the Israeli
lobby groups that Mearsheimer and Walt fingers prevented any second showing of a
film series on Muslims in which I participated for Channel 4 and the Discovery
Channel - by stating that my "claim" that Israel was building large Jewish
settlements on Arab land was "an egregious falsehood". I was, according to
another Israeli support group, "a Henry Higgins with fangs", who was "drooling
venom into the living rooms of America."
Such nonsense continues to this day. In Australia to launch my new book on the
Middle East, for instance, I repeatedly stated that Israel - contrary to the
anti-Semitic conspiracy theorists - was not responsible for the crimes of 11
September 2001. Yet the Australian Jewish News claimed that I "stopped just
millimetres short of suggesting that Israel was the cause of the 9/11 attacks.
The audience reportedly (and predictably) showered him in accolades."
This was untrue. There was no applause and no accolades and I never stopped
"millimetres" short of accusing Israel of these crimes against humanity. The
story in the Australian Jewish News is a lie.
So I have to say that - from my own humble experience - Mearsheimer and Walt
have a point. And for a man who says he has not been to Israel for 20 years - or
Egypt, though he says he had a "great time" in both countries - Walt rightly
doesn't claim any on-the-ground expertise. "I've never flown into Afghanistan on
a rickety plane, or stood at a checkpoint and seen a bus coming and not known if
there is a suicide bomber aboard," he says.
Noam Chomsky, America's foremost moral philosopher and linguistics academic - so
critical of Israel that he does not even have a regular newspaper column - does
travel widely in the region and acknowledges the ruthlessness of the Israeli
lobby. But he suggests that American corporate business has more to do with US
policy in the Middle East than Israel's supporters - proving, I suppose, that
the Left in the United States has an infinite capacity for fratricide. Walt
doesn't say he's on the left, but he and Mearsheimer objected to the invasion of
Iraq, a once lonely stand that now appears to be as politically acceptable as
they hope - rather forlornly - that discussion of the Israeli lobby will become.
Walt sits in a Malaysian restaurant with me, patiently (though I can hear the
irritation in his voice) explaining that the conspiracy theories about him are
nonsense. His stepping down as dean of the Kennedy School was a decision taken
before the publication of his report, he says. No one is throwing him out. The
much-publicised Harvard disclaimer of ownership to the essay - far from being a
gesture of fear and criticism by the university as his would-be supporters have
claimed - was mainly drafted by Walt himself, since Mearsheimer, a friend as
well as colleague, was a Chicago scholar, not a Harvard don.
But something surely has to give.
Across the United States, there is growing evidence that the Israeli and
neo-conservative lobbies are acquiring ever greater power. The cancellation by a
New York theatre company of My Name is Rachel Corrie - a play based on the
writings of the young American girl crushed to death by an Israeli bulldozer in
Gaza in 2003 - has deeply shocked liberal Jewish Americans, not least because it
was Jewish American complaints that got the performance pulled.
"How can the West condemn the Islamic world for not accepting Mohamed cartoons,"
Philip Weiss asked in The Nation, "when a Western writer who speaks out on
behalf of Palestinians is silenced? And why is it that Europe and Israel itself
have a healthier debate over Palestinian human rights than we can have here?"
Corrie died trying to prevent the destruction of a Palestinian home. Enemies of
the play falsely claim that she was trying to stop the Israelis from collapsing
a tunnel used to smuggle weapons. Hateful e-mails were written about Corrie.
Weiss quotes one that reads: "Rachel Corrie won't get 72 virgins but she got
what she wanted."
Saree Makdisi - a close relative of the late Edward Said - has revealed how a
right-wing website is offering cash for University of California at Los Angeles
(UCLA) students who report on the political leanings of their professors,
especially their views on the Middle East. Those in need of dirty money at UCLA
should be aware that class notes, handouts and illicit recordings of lectures
will now receive a bounty of $100. "I earned my own inaccurate and defamatory
'profile'," Makdisi says, "...not for what I have said in my classes on English
poets such as Wordsworth and Blake - my academic speciality, which the website
avoids mentioning - but rather for what I have written in newspapers about
Middle Eastern politics."
Mearsheimer and Walt include a study of such tactics in their report. "In
September 2002," they write, "Martin Kramer and Daniel Pipes, two passionately
pro-Israel neo-conservatives, established a website (www.campus-watch.org) that
posted dossiers on suspect academics and encouraged students to report behaviour
that might be considered hostile to Israel... the website still invites students
to report 'anti-Israel' activity."
Perhaps the most incendiary paragraph in the essay - albeit one whose contents
have been confirmed in the Israeli press - discusses Israel's pressure on the
United States to invade Iraq. "Israeli intelligence officials had given
Washington a variety of alarming reports about Iraq's WMD programmes," the two
academics write, quoting a retired Israeli general as saying: "Israeli
intelligence was a full partner to the picture presented by American and British
intelligence regarding Iraq's non-conventional capabilities."
Walt says he might take a year's sabbatical - though he doesn't want to get
typecast as a "lobby" critic - because he needs a rest after his recent
administrative post. There will be Israeli lobbyists, no doubt, who would he
happy if he made that sabbatical a permanent one. I somehow doubt he will.
Robert Fisk writes for the Independent.
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