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The Last Word On Chas Freeman?


Perhaps too much ink has already been spilled - or more accurately, bytes expended - on the Chas Freeman appointment.  For a relatively obscure appointee to an intelligence post that most of us probably have never given a moment's thought to and aren't likely to again, the subject has been blogged and flogged beyond recognition, touching on such blood-pressure-raising issues as the influence of the so-called "Israel Lobby," the scope of its influence, the "divided loyalties" of Israel's supporters, and the role of the United States in the Israel/Palestine conflict.  With the fallout over Ambassador Freeman's withdrawal and the debate sure to continue, I'm posting this clear-headed analysis by Freeman supporter, David Rothkopf, from Foreign Policy (via Jeffrey Goldberg) that shines a light through some of the heat generated on both sides.  Along the way, he makes some apt observations about the nature of the blogosphere, specifically responding to the anti-Freeman effort, but that apply equally to many of his defenders. 

Full disclosure:  Unlike Freeman's detractors, I can't say I was terribly moved one way or another by the prospect of his taking the position.  On balance, I found the arguments against him a bit more compelling, though not necessarily significant enough to scuttle the appointment.  While I am not opposed to diverse voices, including critics of Israeli policy, in the foreign policy/intelligence community, Freeman's writings and speeches struck me as excessively focusing blame on one side only.  Moreover, his "realist" perspective, carried to its logical extreme, offended my beliefs as to the moral dimension of foreign policy.  My not-so-strongly-held belief was reinforced by Freeman's intemperate statement withdrawing his name for consideration that seemed to justify the worst fears of his critics.  What I found more interesting, though, was the debate surrounding the appointment,  In particular, rather than engaging the substance of the critique that originated from diverse sources across the political spectrum, MJ Rosenberg and other "pro-Israel, pro-peace" advocates depicted the spectrum of opposition as a coordinated effort by the monolithic Israel Lobby, opposition to which is seen as necessarily for the good.  By lumping all criticism of Freeman together under the banner of his most reactionary foes, these commentators ape the methods of those they seek to oppose and perpetuate a narrative that does a disservice to their cause.  

That said, here is Mr. Rothkopf's post.

There was a lot I didn't like about the Chas Freeman debacle, but the thing I did not like most was the degree to which it offered apparent support to the "theories" of Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer. 

Freeman's own response to his lynching-by-blog cited the Israel lobby in language so full of anger that you can easily tell it was written in the heat of the moment. For those who would argue this proves he was too intemperate for the job, please. He was publicly pilloried, his exceptional career negated by arguments that were for the most part lies and distortions. He had been unable to respond publicly to them for weeks. Frustration built up. And frankly it is easy to see how and why he may have concluded that his downfall was proof of the existence of the Israel lobby. Personally, I have really been struggling with that issue for the past few days myself, wondering whether it was time to acknowledge that perhaps Walt was right.

Walt, needless to say, did a little victory dance as well, offering commentary that was supposedly focused on the injustice done to Freeman but which really was a smug "I told you so" laden with a list of co-conspirators with names so Jewish that I could hardly read it without cringing. He added his obligatory "some of my best friends are Jewish" sentence listing some Jewish supporters of Freeman and threw in his tired old "I am the one who is a real friend of Israel" trope saying, as he always does, "I really have the best interests of that country at heart and if they would only listen to me they would be much better off."

Freeman, I can forgive. He had every reason to be angry. Walt, not now, not ever, because whatever the pale intellectual merits of his hackneyed argument may be, he and Mearsheimer know full well that their prominence on this issue has come not because they have had a single new insight but rather because they were willing and one can only believe inclined to play to a crowd whose "views" were fueled by prejudice and worse. They may not be anti-Semites themselves but they made a cynical decision to cash in on anti-Semitism by offering to dress up old hatreds in the dowdy Brooks Brothers suits of the Kennedy School and the University of Chicago. They did what the most desperate members of academia do, they signed up to be rent-a-validators, akin to expert witnesses who support the defense of felons with specious theories served up on fancy diplomas. They would argue that they were daring to speak truth to power.  In reality they were giving one crowd in particular precisely what it wanted to hear.

Believe me I don't lightly come to the ultimate conclusion that this incident should not change my view of their work. I was appalled by the mob mentality generated by the blog debate on the Freeman nomination. It produced some serious misgivings on my part regarding even being involved in the blogosphere because so much of what passes for discourse in this world is undistilled opinion and emotion designed to bind and stir up like-minded audiences. The rest is more like grafitti than thoughtful commentary, designed to leave a wannabe commentator's mark on the side of a passing issue.

There is no doubt that a small group of virulent supporters of Israel were at the heart of the movement to undo Freeman. This group was very effective in getting its message out and in mobilizing some in the government such as Speaker Pelosi and Senator Schumer to become their advocates. That in this instance, this small group acted to lobby on behalf of what they viewed as the interests of both Israel and the United States cannot be denied. But here is where the Walt argument starts to break down for me. The implication is that because these people had an interest in Israel, they put that interest before that of the United States, and I know for a fact that many of the people listed by Walt as Freeman's attackers certainly do not. Walt self-servingly implies that because some argue for strong U.S. support for Israel that means they are not putting America's interests first -- whereas it is also possible (and I think for the most part true) that these people feel that it is precisely because they put U.S. interests first that they end up advocating a close relationship with our most dependable ally in the Middle East. 

You want to debate whether Israel is a good ally? Fine. I'm ok with that. It even seems like a reasonable thing to do on an on-going basis as far as I am concerned.

My problem comes with the implication that those who support Israel are necessarily twisted by dual loyalties into positions that undermine the interests of the United States whereas those whose position is essentially to step back from America's historically strong support for Israel are "realists" who somehow have the best interests of the U.S. at heart...that somehow Walt & Co. are better Americans. 

That's the insidious heart of this. (Although there is almost something comical about arguing that it is "realist" to bank on the benefits that will accrue from better relations with Arab regimes that are notoriously willing to say one thing publicly today and do something entirely different later on and which are, in a number of case, at serious risk of being toppled. This is precisely the brand of "realism" that led to our successful support of the Shah, Pinochet, Marcos, Suharto, and a host of other leaders who have permanently tarnished America's reputation in the world. )       

Furthermore, of course, there are several other problems with the Walt argument that remain even after the events surrounding Freeman's appointment. First, is related to an earlier point: The implication that when the U.S. government supports Israel it's because of the actions of this lobby and not because it is actually in the interests of the United States to support Israel. There is the notion that support for Israel comes from a monolithic group rather than one that is not only ethnically, geographically, economically, and otherwise diverse but one that holds a variety of nuanced views on a host of issues regarding Israel and the Middle East. 

There is also the idea that somehow this group is so powerful that it is dictating policy rather than trying to influence it like every other lobbying group in Washington, that somehow it is privileged or more successful among interest groups. More successful than the farm lobby in winning government appropriations? Hardly. And our farm subsidies because they are so hugely distortionary to trade are a source of tensions in a host of relations worldwide. More effective than a Cuba lobby that has gotten the United States to support a ridiculous, failed policy for 50 years? Not. (We allow more open exchange with North Korea than we do with Cuba, an impoverished, literally crumbling nation with no strategic significance whatsoever.) More inclined to put cultural considerations first than any of this country's national or ethnic special interest groups? Come on. Why, why, why, you have to ask yourself would you want to single out this lobby for special criticism? And why, if your purpose was to argue for a different U.S. policy in the Middle East, would you choose to focus your efforts on attacking the people who support an opposing view rather than on the merits of the policy you advocated? What makes the idea of this particular lobby more sinister than all those farmers or Cubans or African-Americans or gays or union members or Arabs or Taiwanese or Christians? 

No, there is only one reason to argue that the Israel lobby is somehow special or of special significance. It is to suggest that American policy in the Middle East is being driven by the interests of an especially unsavory group of ultra-powerful people who are masters at manipulating Washington. And we know who they are right? Well, actually, we do...it's the oil companies. But therein lies my point. The "Israel Lobby" is a distraction, a distortion and a vessel in which to carry and by which to explain and even excuse the hatreds and prejudices of a small group. It distorts reality, implies coordination where there is none, implies consensus across a group of people with widely divergent views, misinterprets the actions of a few as a plan of the many, overstates the influence of those it argues are involved, indicts the motives associated with a whole class of ideas enabling them to be dismissed before they are fairly considered, and seeks to argue that normal behavior in a democracy is somehow sinister for one group when it is healthy for others. Further, it tars opponents as members of a lowly lobby while reserving the intellectual and moral high ground for the views of Walt & Co. -- "you lobby, we are patriots." 

Did a small group of misinformed, intellectually intolerant individuals stir up a wave of criticism of Chas Freeman that distorted his record to the point that it was impossible for him to assume the role for which he was nominated? Yes. Are many associated with historical support for Israel? Yes. In so doing did they lead to a great disservice being done to Freeman and to the U.S. government? Also yes. But is it fair to say that they represented the views of the broad spectrum of people who support a strong U.S. relationship with Israel? No. Is it fair to say that all were part of an orchestrated attack? No. Further, while I hate what happened, as Americans we must defend the right of the Freeman opponents to lay out their views...and many of those concerns, the ones based on facts, were perfectly legitimate to raise. The problem is when political leaders cave to the sentiments of the electronic mob. In so doing, it is they and not the critics of the choice who debase the process and rob the government of the diversity of perspectives it needs. The actions and arguments of some members the anti-Freeman crowd disgusted me. But it was in the capitulation to them that the greatest disservice was done.             


23 Comments

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I found Mr. Rothkopf's piece to be incredibly refreshing and I appreciate your decision to post it in full AG. Now, here's a special treat.
Professor Mearshmeir, who has made such a name for himself with the whole Israel Lobby debate stifling gig--as so splendidly described by Rothkopf-- just turned down an invitation to debate the whole Freeman shenanigans with David Harris, the chairman of the American Jewish Committee. So here's a guy making gobs of money on the Israel Lobby meme and driving the fans of the whole stifling debate thingie wild declining to debate Mr. Harris, who of course comes right out of the belly of the beast of that so-called Lobby. My shabbat present to you AG. Read it and giggle. You cannot make this stuff up. Cheers.

Bruce

http://sev.prnewswire.com/publishing-information-services/20090313/DC8353613032009-1.html

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Is that irony or hypocrisy?

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Both MJ and David Harris have letters in today's NYT.

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Thanks for the heads up:
link to the letters.
But how about that one by Sophie Stein in Larchmont, now does her comment sound familiar or what?

You know, often when I read the NYT letter section, this strange thing happens: I see like every opinion on topic I've spent hours reading on this site, but well said and more succinctly so that they only take like 5 minutes to read. Then I get depressed about how much time I spent reading the same thing over and over here, heh.

(A tip for fellow subscribers who might not know about it: if you ever want to cite something you've read in the paper version, the easiest way to find it on the website is to click on "Today's Paper" button at the top of the Times' home page. Then on that page, there are links to take you down to the different dead tree version's sections and the articles in order from each section. I am getting into the habit of using those urls, because they all have tags at the end that let them know how many people are using that feature, I'd like to see more people support the original daily published, edited product.)

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My not-so-strongly-held belief was reinforced, however, by his intemperate statement withdrawing his name for consideration.

Same here! But I was coming from a place where I thought, from looking at his record, that he'd probably be quite good for the job! His withdrawal statement showed me that he was suited to and used to ambassador-type positions, and not up to the task of the hardball D.C. power games. (Reminded me of both Richard Clarke and George Tenet in certain ways.) It all worked out for the better in a way, as he'll be happier not in the position, and now he's got the name recognition where more people will be interested in and consider what he says in the future.

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I'm sure that this will end up being a good career move and he'll now have a much wider audience for his views.

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Literary agent? Book deal? Stay tuned....

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AG (BTW, great moniker and great picture - brings up a lot of fun memories),

Regarding W&M:

For all the well-founded criticism of W&M, people miss a conclusion best (IMHO) presented by Massing in his article on the subject at the New York Review of Books (http://www.nybooks.com/articles/article-preview?article_id=19062) - yes, there is a loosely organized Israel lobby in US, that reflects positions of the right wing of Israeli political scene, and that exerts considerable influence on American policy, which is detrimental to US interests (see below on the latter). Your argument that it's not unique is true - but it doesn't overturn that conclusion; yes, there are other powerful lobbies, like farm, Cuban, etc. You ask:

But is it fair to say that they represented the views of the broad spectrum of people who support a strong U.S. relationship with Israel? No.
Agreed, but that's true of other entrenched lobbies as well.

Of course the lobby's existence and opposition to it and it's goals shouldn't drive one insane, as it did to e.g. our friend MJ. But denying not only poorly researched conclusions of W&M, but also well researched ones by e.g Massing, people risk placing themselves in the same bin.

There is one aspect of the original W&M article, which I find very disturbing (because it's IMHO true), and which rarely if ever gets mentioned in the heat of never-ending shouting matches. They state that Israel has been a net strategic asset to the US from it's independence till the fall of the Soviet Union in the early 90es, and that since then it became a net strategic liability. We all know how dangerous it is in any relationship (family, business, love, workplace - you name it) to behave like an asset long after you stopped being one. I guess this is the crux of Israel's problem vis-a-vis US, and the greatest threat to Israel - US relationship. When MJ gloats at the perspective of Obama the Savior putting evil Likudniks in their place, he might be reflecting the expectation that the new Administration might actually take stock of what are US national interests in the Middle East, and start acting in American national interests in this area, as it seems to be doing in some other aspects. If this happens, Israel will have to adapt one way or the other. Here's hope that both Israel and US will choose correctly.

All the best,

--Anatol

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Glad the avatar tickled your fancy. Actually, I chose the name and avatar a good while back, before I posted anything, when I assumed through past experience that I would specialize in sarcasm, irreverence and flame throwing. Oddly enough, that never happened. From the moment I joined this community, I've found myself trying to counter the "undistilled opinion and emotion designed to bind and stir up like-minded audiences." As a result, my name and avatar do not really match my online "persona."

I liked that Massey article. He took apart W&M while at the same time acknowledging and even illustrating the points that were obscured through the polemical inflammatory aspect.

I agree very much with your last paragraph. We shall see what happens.

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When MJ gloats at the perspective of Obama the Savior....

I stopped reading there.
.................................................

Of course, there's an Israel lobby . Why not? And it's completely entitled to oppose whomever it feels like opposing.If those who disagree with it on a particular issue fail to do as well, shame on them.

I thought Freeman would have been good at his job and that would have been good for my country. That's the only criterion I applied so I'm sorry the Lobby prevented Obama/and my country from having the benefit of this particular skilled employee.Sorry not resentful.

Freeman's qualification for that appointment is what it is and perhaps can't be all that well inferred from his comments after being forced to withdraw his nomination. But someone else will be found to replace him. As DeGaulle is endlessly quoted The graveyards are full of irreplaceable people.

Like the Lobby,Schumer and Pelosi were also entitled to their positions and activities. I'm disappointed that Obama made the tactical decision to let them win.

I expect he is too.

Just possibly the Israel Lobby did Israel a disfavor.

Obama would have had a particular reaction if the Lobby, after registering its disapproval had continued that while acknowledging Obama's right to choose his advisors it felt obliged to warn him to treat Freeman's advice with some reserve.

Now he'll have a somewhat different one. He's only human , after all. Not a Savior.

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"The actions and arguments of some members the anti-Freeman crowd disgusted me. But it was in the capitulation to them that the greatest disservice was done."
I tried real hard, and found part of Rothkopf's post I could agree with.

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What about this: "so much of what passes for discourse in this world is undistilled opinion and emotion designed to bind and stir up like-minded audiences. The rest is more like grafitti than thoughtful commentary, designed to leave a wannabe commentator's mark on the side of a passing issue"?

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"his positions, IMHO, went beyond criticism to outright hostility"

Really? Given that there were significant distortions about him, what's your insight into his such positions? I get that you take refuge in "morality trumps reality" if I may use that phrase here to point at your stated preference, but I don't know what significant hostility you know about... unless it's a sound bite taken out of context, aka a distortion.

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Actually, I wrote that portion in a bit of haste and on reflection agree that it was ill-phrased and have actually taken advantage of the new TPM tools to edit it out. What I meant to say was that in doling out responsibility for the mess that is the Middle East, Freeman seems to focus excessively on one party - Israel - as the source of conflict. As I said, I welcome criticism of Israel and do not shy from acknowledging its mistakes, but my interpretation of the history (influenced by my tribal affiliation, no doubt) leads me to a different conclusion. One area where I do think Freeman went over the top was in linking 9-11 to US policies toward Israel. http://sandbox.blog-city.com/chas_freeman_911_september_11.htm

I am a bit mystified by the assertion often made that Freeman's record was somehow distorted. Most everything I read about him used his own words and included links to the actual speeches and articles. (Don't hold me responsible for Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi).

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Your link is to utter bullshit. I can see why you'd have a bad impression of Freeman if you bought into that junk.

It also doesn't support your assertion as to focus.

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Not sure what's so utter bullshit about the link, but whatever. Are you suggesting the quotes are not accurate? Anyway, as I said, the merits of Freeman's views are of less concern to me than the debate his appointment engendered. Despite my disagreement with much of what he said, I wouldn't have lost sleep over the appointment - at least until reading the statement withdrawing from consideration.

As for the one-sided focus, I'll refer you to this speech - http://www.mepc.org/whats/mpc.asp (the relevant portion of which I'll cut and paste below). My impression of this speech is that there's a lot of talk about Israel's inability to find peace, it's talent for waging war, with nary a mention of nearly 60 years of history of Arab aggression against Israel (many will disagree with that interpretation - that's fine, we won't get anywhere with that). He also does not mention Israel's peace with Egypt, in which it returned the Sinai. Anyway, here it is; judge for yourself where the blame falls:

"Finally, let me allude briefly to the issue of Israel, a country that has yet to be accepted as part of the Middle East and whose inability to find peace with the Palestinians and other Arabs is the driving factor in the region's radicalization and anti-Americanism.

The talented European settlers who formed the state of Israel endowed it with substantial intellectual and technological superiority over any other society in the Middle East. The dynamism of Israel's immigrant culture and the generous help of the Jewish Diaspora rapidly gave Israel a standard of living equivalent to that of European countries. For fifty years Israel has enjoyed military superiority in its region. Demonstrably, Israel excels at war; sadly, it has shown no talent for peace.

For almost forty years, Israel has had land beyond its previously established borders to trade for peace. It has been unable to make this exchange except when a deal was crafted for it by the United States, imposed on it by American pressure, and sustained at American taxpayer expense. For the past half decade Israel has enjoyed carte blanche from the United States to experiment with any policy it favored to stabilize its relations with the Palestinians and its other Arab neighbors, including most recently its efforts to bomb Lebanon into peaceful coexistence with it and to smother Palestinian democracy in its cradle.

The suspension of the independent exercise of American judgment about what best serves our interests as well as those of Israelis and Arabs has caused the Arabs to lose confidence in the United States as a peace partner. To their credit, they have therefore stepped forward with their own plan for a comprehensive peace. By sad contrast, the American decision to let Israel call the shots in the Middle East has revealed how frightened Israelis now are of their Arab neighbors and how reluctant this fear has made them to risk respectful coexistence with the other peoples of their region. The results of the experiment are in: left to its own devices, the Israeli establishment will make decisions that harm Israelis, threaten all associated with them, and enrage those who are not.

Tragically, despite all the advantages and opportunities Israel has had over the fifty-nine years of its existence, it has failed to achieve concord and reconciliation with anyone in its region, still less to gain their admiration or affection. Instead, with each decade, Israel's behavior has deviated farther from the humane ideals of its founders and the high ethical standards of the religion that most of its inhabitants profess. Israel and the Palestinians, in particular, are caught up in an endless cycle of reprisal and retaliation that guarantees the perpetuation of conflict in which levels of mutual atrocities continue to escalate. As a result, each generation of Israelis and Palestinians has accumulated new reasons to loathe the behavior of the other, and each generation of Arabs has detested Israel with more passion than its predecessor. This is not how peace is made. Here, too, a break with the past and a change in course are clearly in order.

The framework proposed by Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah at Beirut in 2002 offers Israel an opportunity to accomplish both. It has the support of all Arab governments. It would exchange Arab acceptance of Israel and a secure place for the Jewish state in the region for Israeli recognition of Palestinians as human beings with equal weight in the eyes of God, entitled to the same rights of democratic self-determination and domestic tranquility within secure borders that Israelis wish to enjoy. The proposal proceeds from self-interest. It recognizes how much the Arabs would gain from normal relations with Israel if the necessary conditions for mutual respect and reconciliation could be created.

Despite the fact that such a peace is so obviously also in Israel's vital and moral interests, history and the Israeli response to date both strongly suggest that without some tough love from Americans, including especially Israel's American coreligionists, Israel will not risk the uncertainties of peace. Instead, it will persist in the belief, despite all the evidence to the contrary, that it can gain safety through the officially sanctioned assassination of potential opponents, the terrorization of Arab civilians, and the cluster bombing of neighbors rather than negotiation with them. These policies have not worked; they will not work. But unless they are changed, the Arab peace plan will exceed its shelf life, and Arabs will revert to their previous views that Israel is an ethnomaniacal society with which it is impossible for others to coexist and that peace can be achieved only by Israel's eventual annihilation, much as the Crusader kingdoms that once occupied Palestine were eventually destroyed.

Americans need to be clear about the consequences of continuing our current counterproductive approaches to security in the Middle East. We have paid heavily and often in treasure in the past for our unflinching support and unstinting subsidies of Israel's approach to managing its relations with the Arabs. Five years ago we began to pay with the blood of our citizens here at home. We are now paying with the lives of our soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines on battlefields in several regions of the realm of Islam, with more said by our government's neoconservative mentors to be in prospect. Our policies in Afghanistan and Iraq are adding to the threats to our security and well-being, not reducing them. They have added and are adding to our difficulties and those of allies and partners, including Israel. They are not advancing the resolution of these problems or making anyone more secure. They degrade our moral standing and diminish our value as an ally. They delight our enemies and dismay our friends.

In the interest of all, it is therefore time for a change of course. But, as Seneca remarked almost 2,000 years ago, "if a man does not know to what port he is steering, no wind is favorable." It is past time that we agreed on our destination and devised a strategy for reaching it. As events belatedly force us to come up with a workable approach to consequence management and lay a course to take us beyond it, Americans will need the advice of our partners in the GCC and others in the region.

If we pay no attention to the opinions and interests of these partners, we should not be surprised to discover that we have forfeited their friendship and cooperation. Without both, we cannot hope to manage and overcome the consequences of the series of policy disasters we have contrived or to devise new and effective policies. And we here, like our friends in the region and elsewhere, will all pay again for this failure, and pay heavily. We must not allow that to come to pass."

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Taking quotes out of context to mean what they don't mean in context is bullshit or lying.

Insinuating meaning not in a quote is bullshit or lying.

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I will link US foreign policy towards Israel as one of the primary motivations for 911. Seems like a no brainer to me. They sit in Saudi Arabia and they have no jobs, no women, no prospects and they sit around and watch palestian children killed by american armourments everyday. Thats whats on and fills their head. (and yes I have spent a little bit of time touring the middle east, I've seen their tv shows. Like Fox only less hot blonds and more blood and tanks).

So if Freeman implied something along these lines then its the damn truth and we are foolish to lose that veiwpoint.

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Yes, and the criticisms of Freeman I've seen so far have been distortions.

It may be that Freeman wasn't the right man for the job, but it's obvious that wrong arguments against him were effective.

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The Chas Freeman episode is the first word on this issue; never before have the actions, or even existence, of the Israeli Lobby been so openly discussed. AIPAC's Steve Rosen, now accused of spying for Israel and one of architects of Freeman's default, once observed: "A lobby is like a night flower, it thrives in the night and dies in the sun."

It's morning...

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• Israel. The commission disagreed as to how to characterize al-Qaida's motives for attacking the U.S., with Hamilton arguing that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the presence of U.S. forces in the Middle East were major contributors.

Unidentified members believed that "listing U.S. support for Israel as a root cause of al-Qaida's opposition to the United States indicated that the United States should reassess that policy," which those commission members did not want.

Ultimately, the panel made a brief statement noting that U.S. policy regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and Iraq are "dominant staples of popular commentary across the Arab and Muslim world."

Editor and Publisher

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The extremist wing of the non-existant Israel Lobby is happy to highlight the real danger of Freeman's appointment and proudly details their activities in support of purging him:

" ZOA's Role in Withdrawal of Chas W. Freeman's Appointment As Chairman, NIC

[IMRA: Distributed with permission from ZOA National President Morton A.
Klein]

MEMORANDUM

TO: Members of ZOA National Board & Selected
Friends of ZOA

FROM: Morton A. Klein
National President

RE: ZOA'S Role In The Withdrawal Of The
Anti-Israel, Pro-Arab, Pro-China Chas W. Freeman's Appointment As Chairman,
National Intelligence Council

DATE: March 11, 2008

"... The chairmanship of NIC is a major government posting that does not require Senate confirmation. The Council has a strong influence on the content of intelligence briefings presented to the President and the Council Chairman isoften called to brief the President directly."

........

"On February 25, the ZOA issued a widely-distributed press release which detailed at length Freeman's strong associations with Saudi Arabia and China and virulently anti-Israel words and deeds, including his claim that Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria rationalize Palestinian terrorism. The Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA) reported on our call for rescinding the Freeman appointment that day. We also issued an Action Alert, advising our members to contact their Members of Congress to urge them to sign on to the Congressional letter co-signed by ZOA Honoree Cong. Shelley Berkeley (D-NV) and Cong. Mark Kirk (R-IL) asking for an investigation of Freeman's past and
current activities on behalf of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Rep. Steve Israel (D-NY) also wrote to Edward Maguire, Inspector General of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), asking the Inspector-General to broaden the scope of the investigation into Freeman's background to include his activities with the Chinese National Offshore Oil Company, on whose advisory board Freeman sits.

The ZOA's role in calling for the rescission of Freeman's appointment was noted in the March 10 report in JTA by Eric Fingerhut, who observed that, "The Zionist Organization of America and the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs were the only Jewish organizations to come out publicly against the pick." (But of course ZOA did much more than send out a press release). ZOA's role was also noted in the Jewish Week's (New York) March 4 Washington blog, and in several other political blogs as well.

The co-directors of the ZOA's Government Relations office in Washington, Josh London and Dan Pollak, lobbied hard every day, educating Members of Congress about Freeman's anti-Israel, anti-American record, urging them to take up the issue with the Obama Administration and to sign on to the
Berkeley-Kirk letter. I personally phoned numerous Jewish communal and Congressional leaders repeatedly in recent days on the subject and was successful in getting Congressmen to add their name to the letter as well pledge to make calls to the White House.

The ZOA leaders and members can therefore derive special satisfaction on a positive outcome on an important matter affecting Israel and the American-Israeli relationship"
http://www.imra.org.il/story.php3?id=43109

Note that the recipients of the crowing email are "Selected Friends".

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AG, just ran across this post. Reading Freeman, I was with him until we got to this point:

"We have paid heavily and often in treasure in the past for our unflinching support and unstinting subsidies of Israel's approach to managing its relations with the Arabs. Five years ago we began to pay with the blood of our citizens here at home. We are now paying with the lives of our soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines on battlefields in several regions of the realm of Islam, with more said by our government's neoconservative mentors to be in prospect."

This linkage between 9/11, the Iraq War, the war in Afghanistan ... and our support for Israel...strikes me as dubious. To be sure, the IP conflict is always lumped as another exemplar of the U.S.'s anti-Arab and anti-Muslim stance...or the U.S. exploitation of the Arab/Muslim world.

U.S. support of Israel began as a desire to counter the USSR in a region that was ONLY important to the U.S. because of oil, as Rothkopf says (more or less). Oil is the decisive cause for our presence there, not Israel. This is shown, for example, in our decapitation of the Iranian regime in 1952. The reason was our desire to control oil, not support Israel. It's shown in the first Gulf War in which Israel was asked not to retaliate even when Scuds were fired. This is not to say that some Jewish groups didn't think these actions were "good for Israel," but this far from saying that the Israel Lobby "caused" them to take place.

But here's where Rothkopf's argument gets interesting, when he says: "My problem comes with the implication that those who support Israel are necessarily twisted by dual loyalties into positions that undermine the interests of the United States whereas those whose position is essentially to step back from America's historically strong support for Israel are "realists" who somehow have the best interests of the U.S. at heart...that somehow Walt & Co. are better Americans.

That's the insidious heart of this. (Although there is almost something comical about arguing that it is "realist" to bank on the benefits that will accrue from better relations with Arab regimes that are notoriously willing to say one thing publicly today and do something entirely different later on and which are, in a number of case, at serious risk of being toppled. This is precisely the brand of "realism" that led to our successful support of the Shah, Pinochet, Marcos, Suharto, and a host of other leaders who have permanently tarnished America's reputation in the world. )"

The Left has caught a bad case of "realism." But "realism" in foreign affairs is most often associated with our alliances of strategic convenience with unsavory regimes. Is this really what the Left wants to do? Get real--and down--with all those autocrats? Maybe so. Is this really better than its alliance with the imperfect democracy, Israel?

(This is why, until recently, you found progressive bloggers here often singing the praises of Iran with lots of "the cup's half full" types of statements. You know, they are SORT of a democracy. They really have a lot to offer the U.S. (unlike Israel, for example). The economy really is in good shape. If only they could hold free elections, an ally would bloom. Strangely, they felt they had to praise these regimes in order to argue against the U.S. bombing or invading or toppling them. But surely there's a middle position between love and hate here.)

But the other piece that's always perplexed me is this: If it's not in America's self-interest to be allied with Israel, what ARE America's real self-interests in the region? Not much ink is spilled on this question. The answer that's mostly tossed off is something like...the free flow of oil.

Well, the problem with this answer is that our interest in oil is really what got us into this ME mess to begin with. It IS the reason we originally obstructed democracy in Iran. It is why we went into Kuwait and then stationed our troops in Saudi Arabia. It is the reason Bush II walked arm in arm with Saudi kings and princes. And when we buy oil from these countries, aren't we, in effect, propping up the autocratic regimes, giving them the money they need to buy the arms to keep themselves in power?

Oil doesn't flow freely when revolutions are occurring. So if we're following our true national self-interests in the regime, we'd loathe to foment any sort of social disruption that might disrupt the flow of oil.

Israel isn't the reason we've parked ourselves in the ME; oil is. So pursuing our "true" self interest in the region might NOT be the liberation from this regional conflict progressives envision.

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Armchair Guerrilla

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