Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, January/February
1998, Pages 78-80
Arab-American Activism
AL HEWAR CENTER PANEL EXAMINES U.S. AND ARAB
WORLD
The rapidly rising impatience in the Arab countries
with U.S. unwillingness to stop Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin
Netanyahu's deliberate destruction of the Israeli-Palestinian peace
process was vividly depicted by four speakers at a heavily attended
Al Hewar Center program on Oct. 12. The center, whose cultural and
political programing in both Arabic and English is aimed both at
the national capital area's large Arab-American community and, via
the media, at the Arab world, is situated in Vienna, VA.
Speakers in order of appearance were Dr. John Duke
Anthony of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations; Ambassador
Clovis Maksoud, director of the Center for the Global South at American
University in Washington, DC; executive editor Richard Curtiss of
the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs; and Washington,
DC media specialist Dr. Edmund Ghareeb, who moderated the program.
Laura Dorn Ghandour, managing editor of the center's bimonthly publication,
Al Hewar, provided opening and closing remarks.
Discussing his educational work with university faculty
members, students and also with members of Congress, Dr. Anthony
said his organization has taken 81 senators, representatives and
top members of their staffs to the Middle East. All but one of them
confided to Dr. Anthony their discomfort and concern with the intimidation
they experience from the Israel lobby. This intimidation comes not
only from the lobbyists of the American Israel Public Affairs Commitee,
Israel's Washington, DC lobby, but also from the media in Washington
and in their home districts, and even from members of their own
staffs. Dr. Anthony said congressional insiders estimate that 80
percent of the members of Congress now have former AIPAC interns
on their staffs.
This situation has arisen, Dr. Anthony explained,
because every year AIPAC brings into Washington congressional interns
from campuses all over the United States. Some are able to stay
on in congressional offices when their internships are completed,
while others use the contacts they established as interns both on
the Hill and in AIPAC offices to find full-time congressional positions
after they obtain their degrees.
Dr. Anthony's organization also conducts intern programs
which bring students concerned with the Arab Middle East to Washington
to work with congressional offices and advocacy groups, and also
sends journalism students to the Middle East to work with English-language
newspapers there. But the difference in scale between such programs
and the hundreds of internships funded by AIPAC and other pro-Israel
organizations is disheartening, Dr. Anthony pointed out.
The results already appear in a significant reduction
in congressional freedom of speech about Israel and the Middle East,
Dr. Anthony said. He cited the frequent references to Israel as
a working democracy by naive members of Congress when first- hand
observations reveal that democracy there works only for its Jewish
citizens. He cited also the attitude of "hubris" exhibited
on the Hill that the U.S. and Israel "can get away with anything
they want to and others have to like it or lump it."
He deplored the fact that people who are really experts
on the Arab world and Islam now face real obstacles in reaching
positions of influence in the government. This is particularly true
under the Clinton administration, which he described as the most
pro-Israel administration since the creation of Israel 50 years
ago.
Ambassador Maksoud, who formerly was Arab League
ambassador to the United Nations, elaborated on this theme, agreeing
that the U.S. conveys to Arab governments the unspoken message that
they have to accept American dictates "or you will lose."
Reaction among Arab states, unfortunately, is either
to confront the U.S. without adequate preparation or simply to accede
to U.S. wishes, he said. He described this as "immature confrontation
or premature accommodation."
As for non-Arab states, Ambassador Maksoud said, "every
single one of them seems to consider as a major concession whatever
minimal compliance with international legality or decency"
Israel chooses to offer. "Accepting the big falsehood of the
Oslo agreement has become the criterion of whether you are for peace,
or an enemy of peace," he said.
"What is the definition of an Arab moderate?"
Dr. Maksoud asked rhetorically. "It is the Arab who is willing,
even eager, to accommodate America's accommodation of Israel."
This, he said, "is creating deepening resentment about U.S.
policy."
Dr. Maksoud recommended that before undertaking "vertical
relationships with Russia, Europe and the U.S." there first
should be a "horizontal" common market among the Arab
states themselves.
Washington Report editor Curtiss said the Israel
lobby has come a long way since the days in 1947 when it successfully
defied the American foreign affairs establishment by persuading
President Harry Truman to put U.S. weight behind partitioning Palestine,
and in 1948 when it persuaded Truman to recognize Israel before
it defined its borders.
"Today the Israel lobby is America's foreign
affairs establishment," Curtiss said. "Let's ignore Madeleine
Albright, whom the Israeli press describes as Jewish because she
was born to a Jewish mother, She was raised a Catholic and became
an Episcopalian. In America you are what you say you are, so that's
that. But she's secetary of state because she was appointed by President
Clinton who, according to U.S. Jewish community newspapers, got
about 85 percent of the Jewish vote in 1992 and perhaps 88 percent
of the Jewish vote in 1996.
"Bill Clinton doesn't have to run again, but
his loyal vice president, Al Gore, does. And Gore is not going to
let Clinton, or Madeleine Albright, do anything to alienate the
Israel lobby." Curtiss said. Naming the pro-Israel advisers
in nearly every Clinton administration foreign policymaking position,
including Assistant Secretary of State for Near East Affairs Martin
Indyk, Middle East peace talks "czar" Dennis Ross, his
deputy, Aaron David Miller, White House national security adviser
Samuel Berger, his deputy John Steinberg and even State Department
spokesman James Rubin, Curtiss said:
"There's no reason why American Jews should not
be involved in the Middle East peace process. But it's unseemly,
to put it mildly, that every member of the U.S. Middle East
peace team is Jewish, without even token Christian or Muslim representation...
"By contrast, there are no Muslims in foreign
policymaking positions, in either the White House or the State Department,
no Muslims on the Supreme Court, no Muslims in the Clinton cabinet,
and no Muslims among the 535 members of Congress," Curtiss
said. "Yet the U.S. Muslim population outnumbers the U.S. Jewish
community and the former is growing steadily while the latter remains
static or may actually be declining."
Moderator Edmund Ghareeb discussed the problems of
U.S. media bias in reporting Middle East events. Agreeing with other
panelists, he noted also that "Arab governments appear willing
to accept that there is no alternative to accepting what the U.S.
says."
—Donna Bourne
CENTER FOR POLICY ANALYSIS ON PALESTINE GETS NITTY
GRITTY ON U.S. AID TO ISRAEL
The United States has provided Israel a total of $84.8
billion in grants and loans since 1949 at a cost to U.S. taxpayers
of $134.8 billion, according to executive editor Richard Curtiss
of the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs. Curtiss,
a retired U.S. foreign service officer, spoke on "True Lies
About U.S. Aid to Israel" Oct. 21 at the Center for Policy
Analysis on Palestine in Washington, DC. The figures, he pointed
out, do not include the $10 billion in U.S. loan guarantees provided
to Israel, because the ultimate cost of these guarantees to U.S.
taxpayers is as yet unknown. Nor have these figures been adjusted
for inflation.
The editor's talk was based upon information he obtained
from the USAID program and the Congressional Research Service for
the September/October issue of The Link, published by Americans
for Middle East Understanding in New York.1 In the talk
he covered the Israeli government's elaborate lobbying apparatus
that has made this extraordinary transfer of U.S. wealth to the
state of Israel possible.
Coordinating this lobbying effort is the American
Israel Public Affairs Committee, the Israeli government's principal
lobby in Washington, DC, with a budget of $15 million, 150 employees
and five or six registered lobbyists who personally visit all 535
members of Congress at least once a year. AIPAC in turn is backed
up by the Council of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations,
which coordinates efforts on behalf of Israel by 52 U.S. Jewish
groups, some of which have budgets considerably larger than AIPAC's.
Curtiss also cited from his book, Stealth PACs:
Lobbying Congress for Control of U.S. Middle East Policy,2
some of the deceptively named political action committees founded
by members of AIPAC's board of directors in various parts of the
United States. Some 126 pro-Israel PACs have been active over the
years, with never fewer than 50 available in every election cycle
since the late 1970s to pour millions of dollars into campaign funds
of members of Congress who support aid for Israel, and to fund opponents
for those who do not.
The speaker also revealed that Israel and its 5.8
million citizens have received from Germany some $31 billion in
restitution payments and various military assistance and research
grants, for a per capita average of $5,345.
That figure is in addition to the $14,630 per capita
Israelis had received from the U.S. government as of Oct. 31, 1997.
Curtiss said that providing that U.S. funding to Israel has cost
U.S. taxpayers $23,240 per Israeli, or $116,200 for every Israeli
family of five.
—Lucille Barnes
FOOTNOTES
1. A copy of the Link issue may be obtained from AMEU
by telephoning (212) 870-2053, or at no charge with a book order
by telephoning the American Educational Trust, publisher of the
Washington Report.
2. A copy of the fourth edition of Stealth PACs
can be purchased from the AET
Book Club at $11.95 for one or $14.95 for two. For details see
catalog starting on p. 135 of this issue.
AAUG HOLDS 30TH ANNUAL CONVENTION
"Arabs, Arab Americans and the Global Community"
was the theme of the 30th anniversary convention of the Association
of Arab-American University Graduates (AAUG). This year's annual
conference was held at the Georgetown University Conference Center
in Washington, DC Oct. 31 through Nov. 2.
The convention opened with a roundtable review of
AAUG's past 30 years led by board member Afaf Mahfouz and a reception
hosted by Ambassador Mohammad bin Hussein Al-Shaali of the United
Arab Emirates.
Saturday's events began with a plenary session entitled,
"Globalization and the Arab World: Seeking Balance in a Turbulent
World." George Abed, of the International Monetary Fund, chaired
this session and addressed the changing global market and need for
investment in the Middle East by Arab expatriates.
Also speaking in this session were Eileen Kuttab,
Mohamed Sid-Ahmed and Michael Nojeim. Ms. Kuttab, founding member
of the Women's Studies Program at Bir Zeit University, discussed
the role of Arab women in their changing society. Mr. Sid-Ahmed,
a political analyst from Cairo, said that a resolution to the Palestinian-Israeli
conflict is necessary for significant advance to take place in the
Middle East. Mr. Nojeim, an assistant professor of political science
at Ohio University, delivered an informative lecture on the theory
of globalization.
Following the plenary session there were two concurrent
panels: "The Quest for Legitimacy, Democracy and Human Rights"
and "The Communication Revolution: Information at the Expense
of Knowledge?" The first panel was chaired by Elaine C. Hagopian,
professor emerita of sociology at Simmons College in Boston. Other
panelists were David Khairallah, adjunct professor at Georgetown
University Law Center, and Mona Makram-Ebeid, professor of political
science at the American University in Cairo.
The second concurrent panel on the communication revolution
included: Mazen Abu Ghazaleh, co-founder of CyberCafé from
New York; Issa Batarseh, a member of the Department of Electrical
and Computer Engineering at the University of Central Florida; Michael
Hudson of the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University;
and Samer Jabbour, a senior fellow in cardiology at Brigham and
Women's Hospital in Boston. Nabil Khoury of the Department of Emergency
Medicine at Henry Ford Hospital chaired this panel.
The luncheon lecturer, Ashok Swain, was introduced
by William W. Haddad, director of the Program in Asian Studies at
California State University. Swain, an assistant professor in the
Department of Peace and Conflict Research at Upsala University,
examined the politics of water in the Middle East and the conflicts
which will arise if water continues to become more scarce.
There were two more concurrent panels that day: "Issues
Facing Arab Americans" and "Social and Economic Transformation:
Risks and Benefits." Hala Maksoud, president of the American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), led the first panel which included
ADC media director Sam Husseini, ADC legal director Houeida Saad
and Washington, DC media analyst Edmond Ghareeb.
The panel on social and economic transformation in
the Middle East was chaired by AAUG president Nadia Hijab and included
Rogaia Mustafa Abusharaf of the Pembroke Center for Teaching and
Research on Women at Brown University; Moez Doraid, United Nations
Development Program; Rosina Hassoun of Michigan State University;
and Waleed A. Hazbun, Ph.D. candidate at Massachusetts Institute
of Technology.
The final panel of the convention was composed of
rapporteurs reporting on the presentations, voicing their concerns
about AAUG and discussing relations between Arab-American graduates
of different generations. The rapporteurs, all from universities
in the Cambridge, MA area, were: Mayssom H. Ali, Ra'eda Al-Zubi,
Amahl Bishara and Alan Shihadeh.
Master of ceremonies at the banquet that evening was
Clovis Maksoud, director of the Center for the Global South at American
University. He introduced the keynote speaker, Huda Gamal Abdel
Nasser, daughter of the late Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser,
who is currently a professor of political science at the University
of Cairo. She called for closer relations between Arabs living in
the Middle East and Arab Americans in the interest of future solidarity
and mutual understanding among the Arab peoples.
The final event of the AAUG convention was a Sunday
brunch at which Dr. Naseer Aruri, Chancellor Professor at the University
of Massachusetts, introduced Edward Said, of Columbia University,
as the keynote speaker. Dr. Said's address entitled, "Eighty
years After the Balfour Declaration," is covered on p. 19 of
this issue of the Washington Report.
—Stacy Tollison |