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Nature & Politics
by Alexander Cockburn
First Bomb Carter; Then Nuke Iran: The Israel Lobby Trips and Tilts
Suppose the movers and shakers in the Israel lobby here--Abe Foxman,
Alan Dershowitz, and the rest of the crew--had simply decided to leave
Jimmy Carter's Palestine Peace Not Apartheid alone. How long
before the book would have been gathering dust on the remainder shelves?
Suppose even that Dershowitz had rounded up his unacknowledged
co-authors in all their tens of thousands and sallied forth to buy up
every copy of Carter's book and toss each one into the Charles River,
would not that have been a more successful suppressor than the
blitzkrieg strategy they did adopt?
Of course it would. For weeks now the lobby has hurled its legions into
battle against Carter. He has been stigmatized as an anti-Semite, a
Holocaust denier, a patron of former concentration camp killers, a
Christian madman, a pawn of the Arabs who "flatly condones mass murder"
of Israeli Jews. (This last was from Murdoch's New York Post
editorial, relayed to its mailing list by the Zionist Organization of
America.)
Any day now I expect some janitors at the Carter Center to resign,
declaring that they can no longer in all conscience mop bathrooms that
might have been used by the former President, their letter of protest
duly front-paged by the New York Times, just like the famous 14
members of the Carter Center's Board of Councilors. Actually there were,
at the time of resignations, 224 people on this board, where membership
is mostly a thank you for a financial donation to the center. So the
headlines could be saying, "Nearly 95 per cent of Carter Center Board
Members Back Former President."
But the assault on Carter is all to no avail. With each gust of abuse,
Carter's book soars higher and higher on the bestseller lists, reaching
number four on Amazon. This doesn't prove the lobby has no power. It
proves the lobby can be dumb. Adroit lobbying consists in preventing
unpleasing material from reaching the light of day. Lobbying thrives in
furtive darkness: slipping language into a bill at the last moment,
threatening to back a campaign opponent, making quiet phone calls to the
Polish embassy. Pressure is now being exerted on Farrar, Straus, and
Giroux to abandon its impending publication of Mearsheimer and Walt's
attack on the lobby.
The Israel lobby retains its grip inside the Beltway, but it's starting
to lose its hold on the broader public debate. Why? You can't brutalize
the Palestinian people in the full light of day, decade after decade,
without claims that Israel is a light among nations getting more than a
few serious dents. In the old days, Mearsheimer and Walt's tract would
have been deep-sixed by the University of Chicago and the Kennedy School
long before it reached its final draft, and Farrar, Straus and Giroux
wouldn't have considered offering a six-figure advance for it. Simon, &
Schuster would have told President Carter that his manuscript had run
into insurmountable objections from a distinguished board of internal
reviewers. But once a book by a former president with weighty
humanitarian credentials makes it into bookstores, it's hard to shoot it
down with volleys of wild abuse.
The trouble with the lobby and the Christian zealots who act as its echo
chamber is that they believe their own propaganda about Israel's
equitable social arrangements and immaculate political and legal record
in its relations with the Palestinians. Use the word apartheid and they
howl with indignation. The shock is about 30 years out of date. Israeli
writers have used the word apartheid to describe arrangements in the
occupied territories for years. Hundreds of prominent South African Jews
issued a statement six years ago making the same link.
As in so many things, conventional elite opinion lives in a bubble,
believing mere assertion and ranting about anti-Semitism will carry the
day. The New York Times featured a spectacularly disingenuous
hatchet job by its deputy foreign editor, Ethan Bronner, and another
assault by former Clinton-era Middle East negotiator Dennis Ross. The
latter rolled out the ritual accusations about Arafat's rejection of
Clinton's proposals in December 2000, which is nonsense, as Ross surely
knows. Clinton himself acknowledged in 2001 what later historians have
substantiated, that both sides accepted his proposals in principle,
while filing reservations. (Israel's amounted to 20 single-spaced pages.)
The Times' attacks were matched in the Washington Post by
Jeffrey Goldberg, formerly of the IDF and a notorious trafficker in
fictions, such as the supposed terror ties between Osama bin Laden and
Saddam Hussein. Amazon ran his vulgar ravings under the "Editorial
Reviews" heading--a space usually reserved for short blurbs from
Publishers Weekly and the like.
But if the lobby is fighting rearguard and increasingly futile actions
to suppress all discussion here of what Israel is doing to Palestinians,
it continues to exercise very serious clout in such enclaves of timidity
as the US Congress. Bush was not foolish in singling out Iran for
threats in his January 10 address. The Democratic reaction to Bush's
escalation against Iraq and Iran has mostly been confined to nervous
talk of "symbolic votes." This temperate posture is surely not
unconnected to the fact that the lobby's prime foreign policy task,
joined by Israeli hawks like Bibi Netanyahu, has been to rally support
for an assault on Iran.
What an irony! Desperate for an end to the war, the voters hand Congress
to the Democrats. Barely more than two months later Bush is kidnapping
Iranian diplomats from in their consulate in Irbil, Iraq--a calculated
provocation arousing scant tumult here. Bush is also deploying a larger
naval force to the Persian Gulf, as Israel plants stories about its
possible recourse to nuclear weapons. Some provocation, maybe a seizure
by the US of an Iranian tanker, is easy to imagine in February. In the
Congress, there's barely a whimper out of the Democrats amid these
terrifying prospects. It may have made a mess of its war against
Carter's book, but as a ferryman across the Styx toward Armageddon the
lobby is doing a competent job.
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