March 1997, pg. 41
People Watch
Former AIPAC Chairman Takes Over Democratic National
Committee
By Lucille Barnes
In 1992 an embarrassed American Israel Public Affairs Committee
(AIPAC) chairman David Steiner was forced to resign after
a contributor, Harry Katz, taped him boasting that AIPAC
was negotiating with the incoming administration of
President-elect Bill Clinton over who would be the next U.S.
secretary of state.
Steiners successor at AIPAC was Massachusetts Democratic
activist Steve Grossman. In January of this year Grossman
was named national chairman of the Democratic National Committee.
But friends of AIPAC no longer seem embarrassed to acknowledge that
the organization has progressed from negotiating to
dictating. As The Jewish Week of New York modestly put it
in its Jan. 17 issue, another top Jewish activist will be
playing a new role as Clinton II shifts into high gear.
And who might some of those other activists be? The Washington
Posts Al Kamen reported in one of his In
the Loop columns that Reginald Bartholomew, currently
U.S. ambassador in Italy, is being talked about for Israel,
where he was headed four years ago but didnt quite make it.
If he gets there, he will be the second U.S. Jewish envoy to the
Jewish state, replacing the first one, Martin Indyk. Indyk,
according to Kamin, is leading the mix for assistant secretary
of state for Middle East matters. But you read that in this
column last month. Kamen also reported that U.S. Ambassador to Turkey
Marc Grossman is looking to expand his portfolio to the
rest of Europe as assistant secretary for that region. Also looking
for a job in the State Department is James Rubin, an outspoken
friend of Israel who left his post as press spokesman for Madeleine
Albrights U.S. Mission to the U.N. to serve as foreign
policy spokesman for the Clinton-Gore campaign. One of his jobs
was to tell fellow friends of Israel that anything Bob Dole
promised to do for them, Clinton could do better. Hell fit
right in.
It makes you wonder whatever happened to those State Department
Arabists, who speak the language of 90 percent of the
people of the region, and embarrass Clinton administration officials
by pronouncing the names of Arabic people and places correctly,
and warning accurately about aspects of American made-in-Israel
policies that arent going to fly in the Islamic world. One
of the last of them just left, with the January retirement of former
Asst. Secretary for Near East Affairs Robert Pelletreau.
But dont worry, there still are lots of people in the State
Department who can pronounce some place names correctly.
After Palestinian Minister of Education Hanan Ashrawi suggested
recently that the U.S. no longer qualifies as an honest broker in
the peace process, State Department official Aaron David Miller,
who serves as deputy to peace talks czar Dennis Ross, who
also is Jewish, remarked angrily, I challenge her to produce
one good reason why were not qualified to broker an agreement
over Hevron!
Officials of Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahus
current cabinet all would agree on putting a v into
the name of the city Americans call Hebron and Palestinians call
Al Khalil, but not on much else these days. Israeli state prosecutor
Edna Arbel announced an investigation into Netanyahus
short-lived appointment of Roni Bar-On as attorney general.
Israeli Television had reported that Bar-On, formerly a lecturer
with the semi-cult I Am movement in Israel and a reputed
big-time gambler, was appointed by Netanyahu in return for a promise
by cabinet member Aryeh Deri, leader of Israels Shas
party, to support Netanyahus Hebron withdrawal agreement.
Bar-On, in turn, was to use his position to drop charges against
Deri, who is standing trial for fraud and embezzlement. Bar-On resigned
after 12 hours in office but Netanyahu, who branded the report a
complete fabrication, next demanded that the state-operated
television station reveal the source of the report. Other members
of the Netanyahu cabinet were not so dismissive. I dont
believe its correct, said Tourism Minister Moshe
Katzav. But if it is correct, the government does not
have the right to exist.
Industry and Trade Minister Natan Sharansky said, If
there was any kind of deal, I recommend to everyone involved to
admit it and resign, because this is an unprecedented crime. If
these allegations are true, Im very concerned about our whole
democratic regime. Said Internal Security Minister Avigdor
Kahalani, If the affair is in fact as it appears, undoubtedly
there is no place for this government.
The matter is more significant than the average government scandal
because advocates of Greater Israel are said to be looking
for a way to invalidate the Hebron withdrawal agreement by alleging
corruption in the government that signed it. If Netanyahu really
feels threatened, he might take up his Labor Party opponents on
their overtures for forming a national unity government
to carry out the final stages of an agreement with the Palestinians.
In fact, Yossi Beilin, the Israeli Labor Partys dovish
contender for leadership, may already be pushing events in that
direction. Beilin, Likud legislator Michael Eitan and six
other senior leaders from both parties already have worked out what
they call a common plan for the remaining phases of negotiations.
The approach jibes with Netanyahus remark to U.S. Jewish donors
recently that he is seeking to bring the majority of the Jewish
people of Israel to agreement on the best balance between
Palestinian needs and Israeli needs.
Ehud Barak, Beilins rival for Labor Party leadership,
objected, saying the destructively ambiguous plan gives
Netanyahu political cover from Labor. He suggested, too, that Netanyahu
will use the ostensible Israeli consensus to set dictates
to the Palestinians and then blame them for the breakdown
in negotiations. Actually it may turn out to be hard to blame the
Palestinians for a breakdown that may occur before either the Israelis
or the honest brokers see fit to offer them a place
at the negotiating table.
Americas Jewish weekly press seems to be having a hard time
deciding who is a Jew in the case of new U.S. Secretary
of State Madeleine Korbel Albright. The Washington Jewish Week,
whose pages were confidently counting her in just a few weeks
ago, ran this puzzler by staff writer Jordana Willner in its Jan.
2 issue: In 1948, 11-year-old Albright, whose father, Joseph
Korbel, was a Czech diplomat, arrived with her family in Colorado,
fresh from a European childhood in Prague, London, Belgrade and
a Swiss boarding school. Korbel had been sentenced to death in absentia
for alleged crimes against the communist-controlled state. Because
of their flightsfirst from Nazism, then from Communismthere
is speculation that Albright is Jewish. Other reports indicate that
she was born Roman Catholic and became Episcopalian when she married
ex-husband Joseph Medill Patterson Albright, a newspaper
heir.
The WJWs biographical sketch ends right there. So
is she or isnt she?
We guess it wont depend on what the hard-nosed rabbinate
in Israel would decide, but instead on WJWs consultant
on political correctness. When so many of the incoming officials
at the Clinton State Department are Jewish, is it PC to have a Jewish
secretary of state as well, just to be sure the Arabs are thoroughly
intimidated. Or would such piling on stir up the great American
unwashed and thus not be PC after all? Well have to renew
our subscription to the WJW to find out.
Actually, if there were any Arabists left at the State
Department, they could help by pointing out that the generally accepted
anthropological definition of an Arab is anyone whose language
of choice is Arabic and who considers himself an Arab. Maybe
the simplest thing to do would be to ask the ladyor wait and
see how she pronounces Al Khalil.
All the worlds problems arent confined to Washington
or Hevron. Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi has gotten himself
in a pickle with nearly everybody. Many Arab heads of state consider
him an incorrigible reprobate who gives the whole neighborhood a
bad name. Now the radical Islamists who would like to overthrow
those same Arab heads of state are said to be calling him a modernizing
moderate. The problem is said to be that when Qaddafi mixed some
Islam with some Marxism to produce his Green Book, he didnt
please either extreme and may have produced a home-grown Islamist
resistance among Libyan tribesmen who (like most Americans) never
had much use for people living in the capital anyway. Fortunately
for the Libyan strongman, he still has the right enemies in the
United States. Israel-leaning Peter Rodman of the Nixon Center
for Peace and Freedom in Washington, DC told the Washington Times
that Qaddafi is marginalized and isolated
a shrunken
Qaddafi. Daniel Pipes, editor of the Middle East
Quarterly, which is recommended reading by AIPAC, told the Washington
Times that in Islamic terms, [Qaddafi] has virtually left
the faith by denying the validity of the hadith in his passion to
get back to the original purity, as he sees it, of the Quran
itself. Sounds good, and well be completely convinced
when we hear a little more of this from Muslims themselves. Meanwhile,
with enemies like the ones hes made in Washington, maybe the
Libyan big guy can start making new friends in the Middle East.
One, of course, is Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan,
who arrived in Tripoli this January for his third visit in 12
months. Qaddafi awarded Minister Farrakhan a $250,000 human rights
prize during his previous Libyan visit in August 1996. So far the
U.S. Treasury Department has denied Farrakhans applications
to accept the money, and an earlier $1 billion that Qaddafi pledged
to the Nation of Islam during Farrakhans first visit in January
1996.
Were not quite sure why its illegal for Farrakhan to
accept money to do good things for his followers in the U.S., presumably
as a gesture to get Americans to say good things about Libya, when
its legal for former Pentagon official Richard Perle, who
has built his clout with friends of Israel in Congress into a vocation,
to accept fees from the Turkish government to lobby for Turkey and
Turkish causes in Bosnia and Cyprus. We happen to be for the Bosnians
ourselves, but were also for drug-free housing projects in
inner cities, in one of which we happen to live.
In fact, the U.S. government had Farrakhans Nation of Islam
followers on contract to provide security to the residents of several
housing projects until recently when Rep. Peter King, who
represents a heavily Jewish district in Long Island, NY, decided
to get a life for himself and his re-election prospects by demonizing
Farrakhan on a full-time basis. Now Farrakhans got more followers
because he has enemies like King, but it isnt paying very
well. Perles only followers are members of Congress like King,
but it pays very well indeed. As for us, we wonder why the Treasury
Department doesnt lighten up. The balance of payments could
use such an enormous shot in the arm. It would help cover 20 percent
of this years taxpayer gift to Israel. And, well give
you dollars to shekels, if Treasury called his bluff, Qaddafi might
pay the quarter-million but welch on the billion. Guess well
never know.
While on the subject of visits between North Africa and the U.S.,
the U.S. has embroiled itself in Algerias bloody politics
by arresting Anwar Haddam who, since his arrival in the U.S.
in 1992, has served as an American-based spokesperson for Algerias
Islamic Salvation Front. Haddam has a home in Northern Virginia
where, one day after his parole status in the U.S. expired,
the Immigration and Naturalization Service arrested him.
Haddam is one of 188 Islamists who won seats in Algerias
430-member legislature in the first round of a December 1991 election.
The second round, scheduled for January 1992, was never held because
Algerias military-backed government cancelled it after seeing
the Islamists were going to win a majority. Haddam initially fled
to France, from which he was expelled in 1992. The French say he
will be arrested if he returns to France, and we know what will
happen to him if he returns to Algeria. The Clinton administration
says the U.S. remains committed to talking to anyone who can
make a contribution to reconciliation in Algeria and that
Haddams arrest was not a policy decision. So what
kind of a decision was it? And where does Haddam go now? And what
do his American-citizen wife and three children, two of whom are
U.S. citizens, do next? Clearly the problem-making positions in
the Clinton II administration have been filled, but maybe the candidates
for problem-solving slots are still awaiting their security clearances.
Meanwhile, lawyers said to represent 1,500 French and Algerian
plaintiffs have filed a class-action suit against Haddam seeking
damages for crimes against humanity. If hes been
responsible for any of the many atrocities that have taken place
in Algeria while hes been living in the U.S., or any of those
that continue to take place while he sits in a detention cell in
Virginia, the plaintiffs have a point. But Eric Goldstein
of Human Rights Watch/Middle East says Haddam is being punished
for making statements that, if made by a U.S. citizen, would be
protected as free speech. If dialogue between the Algerian government
and Islamic militants is the only thing that is going to end the
slaughter of innocents in Algeria, we hope officials of the INS
detention center in Manassas are prepared to issue visiting privileges
to Algerian diplomats.
No People Watch column is complete without an update
on 42-year-old former U.S. Naval counterintelligence specialist
Jonathan Jay Pollard, now serving a life sentence in federal
prison in Butner, NC, for espionage on behalf of Israel. The
Jewish Week of New York reports that Pollard has reprimanded
newly arrived Israeli Ambassador Eliahu Ben-Elissar for not
doing enough for his release. In a Dec. 16 letter to Ben-Elissar
criticizing him for failing to respond to requests made Dec. 3,
Pollard asked the ambassador to instruct AIPAC to send
to all Jewish members of Congress a copy of a pro-Pollard article
by Holocaust writer Elie Wiesel, and to ask these legislators
to call for Pollards release.
Seems to us Pollard has one thing right and one thing wrong. Clearly
he understands where AIPAC gets its orders. What he doesnt
understand is that AIPAC might as well send those articles not just
to the Jewish members but to all members of Congress. Theyll
all obey their masters voice.
Pollards Canadian current wife, Esther Zeitz Pollard,
meanwhile has attacked an Israeli plan not to insist on Pollards
freedom, but instead to make a deal with the Clinton administration
to have Pollard transferred to an Israeli jail. Maybe its
one thing to spy for the place but something else altogether to
have to live there. Nevertheless, the Israeli Knesset has passed
a law authorizing the government of Israel to make the deal. Mrs.
Pollards Citizens for Justice for Jonathan Pollard, Canada,
states, however, that the plan is obscene in conception and
an insult to Israeli National Honor.
The Washington Jewish Week reports that two prominent American
Jewish leaders, Rabbi Alexander M. Schindler, past president
of the Jewish Reform movements Union of Hebrew Congregations,
and Israel Singer, secretary-general of the World Jewish
Congress, visited Pollard recently and then called for commutation
of his life sentence.
His crime of spying on the United States, a nation that has
been so good to the Jewish people and to Israel, cannot be justified
on any grounds; it has rightly earned the condemnation of the vast
majority of the Jewish community, the two leaders said. But
enough is enough
After more than a decade of imprisonment,
Mr. Pollard, who is now eligible for parole, deserves to have his
sentence commuted.
Schindler told the Washington Jewish Week that his meeting
with Pollard shows that Jews who are associated with the political
center and left support Pollards release just as much as do
Jews on the right.
The American Jewish community is just a cheering section
on one side or the other, Schindler said. It is up to
the governments of Israel and America to work out the situation.
Rabbi Schindler didnt add that a lot of Americans, this writer
included, were under the impression that it all had been
worked out, with a promise that Pollard would be released sometime
after November 1996 if the American Jewish community would become
a cheering section for Clintons reelection in that same month.
So far nothings happened except for some anonymous press leaks
that Clinton was down on U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno for
not being a team player.
Washington Report readers will recall that we told you at
the beginning of Renos term four years ago that her top assistant,
Philip Heymann, was fired after he tried to route a recommendation
for clemency for Pollard around her and directly to the White House.
So was she not a team player then, or does Clinton mean shes
not being a team player all over again? Or both? Anyway, it appears
shes now trying to join the team by bashing the Saudis. At
least its a start.
Every now and then were surprised at the freedom of expression
exercised in the weekly Jewish press, which is written for the faithful,
and not for skeptics. Describing the problems in Hebron between
its 400 Jews and 150,000 Palestinians, Ina Friedman, The
Jewish Week of New Yorks Israel correspondent, wrote in
the Jan. 10 issue: Long used to free movement throughout Hebron,
the settlers used to lash out at Palestinians quickly when they
felt threatened, vandalizing property and assaulting people. But
now they are already bunkered down, rarely leaving the compound
and then only accompanied by soldiers. Compared to whats
gone before, that sounds like the peaceable kingdom to us. Lets
hope this new order is extended to those dozens of additional West
Bank settlements in the next year and a half.
Even more intriguing was the Dec. 20 statement to the Jerusalem
Post by Binyamin Netanyahus communications director, David
Bar Illan. I think in general he [Netanyahu] is no longer
[in favor of] a whole-land-of-Israel movement, Bar Illan said.
I dont think he feels that there is any chance of the
Land of Israel remaining completely under the exclusive rule of
Israel. I think that what has made him realize that the Land of
Israel dream is no longer viable at this point is just the facts
on the ground.
Equally significant was Bar Illans statement that Netanyahu
is making demilitarization a condition for the existence of any
entity. Whether you call it a state or not is not the important
thing. 4" Then, speaking for himself, Bar Illan added, I
want a state, but I want it to be limited here and there.
Netanyahu said the next day that he was very angry
with his spokesman, according to Yediot Ahronot, Israels
largest daily, which reported that Netanyahu demanded Bar Illan
make clear that the remarks were his private assumptions.
On the other hand, Bar Illan wasnt fired. In fact, he had
one more thing to say on the subject. Its quite frightening
to see the power your words have once youre in a government
position, he confessed.
Well certainly agree that its been quite frightening
ever since Netanyahu stepped into his present governmental shoes.
In fact, sartorially speaking, it seems to us that although hes
clearly too big for his britches, hes definitely much too
small for that footwear. |