May 1989, Page 33
Letters to (and from) the Editors
Plastic Bullets
Dear Editors:
Sometimes what an object is called has a great deal to do with
how it is perceived. Note how innocuous "plastic bullet"
sounds.
If these bullets break apart upon hitting a target they should
be called "dum dum" bullets. This will evoke a much stronger
image, especially among the older generation.
Weren't there international conventions against the use of dum
dum bullets? Isn't there a body where this outrage can be exposed
and condemned?
Rudolph Meyers, New Braunfels, TX.
Antidote to Myths and Facts
To the Editors:
Most of us who write about Middle East issues receive frequent
mail and phone calls asking us to please respond to various widely
published arguments by spokesmen for Israel. Few of us are able.
I have a modest proposal:
One of the most powerful and effective tools of the pro-Israel
campaign to win the hearts and minds of the American public is a
tiny booklet called Myths and Facts. The booklet is updated
and republished annually by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee
(AIPAC) and its adjunct, the Near East Report.
Myths and Facts contains a brief rebuttal to every recurring
argument that is embarrassing to Israel. For example, if a daily
newspaper criticizes the amount of American aid to Israel, Israel's
supporters need look no further than Myths and Facts to
find a simplistic but effective reply.
A day or so later the newspaper will typically receive a dozen
or more angry letters, all arguing that Israel is America's only
reliable ally in the Middle East and the only democracy in the area,
and that America's support of Israel is a bargain because of all
the intelligence and other benefits supposedly received in return.
Myths and Facts can be found in any public library and on
the private book shelves of almost every official or self-annointed
spokesman for Israel. Almost without exception, published arguments
defending Israel's actions can be traced to this single source.
My proposal: American Educational Trust should contract with a
recognized Middle East scholar to compile and edit the truth about
these vital issues in a form that can be used by spokesmen for America.
Call this one, Facts—The Truth about the Middle East.
Invite respected authors and researchers to submit brief, signed
papers on the same issues.
The booklet could be sold through the AET Book Club and distributed
free to libraries and reliable spokesmen. Like the Israeli version,
this American version would be updated and distributed annually.
But instead of consisting mainly of half-truths and evasions, AET's
booklet would contain documented facts and would include sources
and a bibliography, perhaps in a separately bound optional section
to keep the costs down. A loose-leaf version could facilitate frequent
updates and help control costs.
With Facts at hand, Americans who wish to respond to silly
news stories or outrageous commentary will be armed with material
for an effective rebuttal. Surely a sponsor can be found to support
such a project.
Jim Ennes, Jr., Woodinville, WA
Dear Mr. Ennes:
Your own book, Assault on the Liberty, has long been our reference
work on that 1967 event. Now perhaps we can return the favor. We'll
undertake the project.
How ambitiously, and with how large a print run, will depend
upon how accurate your last sentence turns out to be. Sponsors,
ahoy.
Oliver North and Israel
To the Editors:
Thank you for your excellent copies of "From the Hebrew Press.
. " and please keep the Washington Report coming. I hope that
you will eventually be in a position to publish the truth about
Col. North's Israeli contact's death in an air crash in Mexico last
November.
Jean Cootes, Princeton, NJ.
Dear Mrs. Cootes:
The story put out after the death of Amiram Nir, formerly an
aide to then Prime Minister Shimon Peres, in the crash of a chartered
aircraft in western Mexico, was that Israel had suffered adverse
weather and was fearful of losing some European markets for its
avocados. Therefore, it was purchasing huge amounts of Mexican avocados
to ship into those European markets as Israeli products. Why an
arms merchant would be involved with avocados might depend upon
what was to be used to pay for the avocados. In fact, the manner
in which Nir associates kept the press from interviewing the two
survivors of the crash in a Mexican hospital shows that there is
a story to be told. Perhaps it will be like some of those involving
Israel in Panama and in other Central American countries. In Panama,
strongman Noriega, through Israelis on his staff, reputedly pays
for Israeli weapons with narcotics. What the Israeli aides do with
the narcotics is a mystery. It's certain, however, that they don't
send them back to Israel. Presumably they are sold somewhere along
the way to raise dollars to send to Israel as reimbursement for
the weapons. From that perspective, perhaps it's not so confusing
to find an Israeli weapons dealer flying around the very areas of
Mexico which are considered a major source of the marijuana and
other contraband smuggled into the US from Mexico.
More on Contragate
To the Editors:
Again, thank you for another valuable issue—the March one
which came yesterday.
I am especially pleased that you are throwing the spotlight on
the actual people in the government who are skewing American foreign
policy in the Middle East. As the issues become dearer, they should
be held responsible and not allowed to work in the shadows. We are
all tired of the Iran-contra matter, but it must still be lit up
more. In particular, one question remains unanswered: At this late
date what secrets remain hidden which the government does not want
to come out in the North trial?
Two things have been mentioned: drugs in Central America and the
quid pro quos for the money given to aid the contras by foreign
governments. But these may not be the main secret. The final suspicion
(and it is at the moment apparently nothing more than that): one
foreign government apparently asked for the US to carry out a covert
action as its "reward."
Do we know which government this was and what it asked for? Could
it have been Israel? Could Israel have asked for the strike at the
PLO base in Tunis? Is this North's ace-in-the-hole to prevent having
to go to jail? And is this why Bush and Baker have been "nicer"
to the PLO, fearing this coming out?
Roy Finch, New Rochelle, NY.
Dear Prof. Finch:
We find it increasingly peculiar that the North trial focused
determinedly upon the contra issue when, unless we seriously misread
American public opinion, Americans are much more deeply disturbed
at the callousness of the Reagan administration's sales of destructive
weapons to the ayatollah's Iran, and the shortsightedness of trying
to ransom US hostages in this manner, thus virtually ensuring future
kidnappings and long incarcerations of Americans. We think it has
to do with the fact that Israelis were only on the periphery of
the contra violations, while they were the instigators and agents
of the arms-for-hostages folly. If there is anything else, we're
unaware of it so far.
Extending the Cultural Boycott of South Africa to Israel
To the Editors:
I have been informed by the leadership of what might best be described
as the "black consciousness movement" of Azania (South
Africa) that a formal call to include Israel in the "cultural
boycott" of South Africa will be issued from inside South Africa
within the next few weeks.
The Black Consciousness Movement was started under the leadership
of Steve Biko (whose life and murder by the Pretoria regime was
the basis for the film "Cry Freedom") and was the first
organization to call for a cultural boycott of South Africa.
This call, sent out especially to pop musical groups, eventually
generated the formation of "Artists United Against Apartheid."
The cultural boycott of South Africa was probably the first major
effort successfully to draw pop and rock musicians into an anti-racist
campaign.
The next logical step, which some of us have been struggling to
implement, has been the inclusion of the racist, colonial, settler,
Zionist regime of Israel in the cultural boycott.
Recently, a British pop-reggae band called UB40 spent some time
here in Hawaii. Known for the radical political content of many
of their songs, UB40 had a song go to no. 1 on the pop music charts
in the US in 1988.
UB40 has agreed to cancel their Israel tour (a loss of over $500,000)
in protest of the racist policies of the Zionist occupation forces
in Israel and in support of the intifadah of the indigenous Arab
youth of Palestine. Finally, the lines have been drawn. With UB40
setting an example, the call will be going out to all the major
pop and rock groups to honor the cultural boycott of South Africa-Israel
or risk being "boycotted" themselves.
UB40 has taken a very courageous stand. Those of us familiar with
the music business know only too well how dominant outright Zionists
and supporters of Israel are in the industry, Many of us remember
the near destruction of Miriam Makeba's career some 20 years ago
when she took a stand opposing Zionism and supporting the Palestinian
people's right to self-determination.
What we are saying is, from the frontlines of South Africa to the
frontlines of Palestine, apartheid-Zionism is racism. Support the
cultural boycott! Say "no" to Israel and South Africa!
Thomas C. Mountain, Hawaii Black History Committee, Kaneohe, HI.
Fiction Supplement for the Washington Report?
To the Editors:
I cannot tell you how much I admire the efforts of all involved
in preparing the Washington Report. In time, I am convinced, your
efforts will make a real difference, and, hopefully, your rewards
will be commensurate with your contribution.
You know, perhaps better than I, that there is a great lack of
knowledge and sympathy for Arabs in general, and Palestinians in
particular, among our countrymen here in America. This leads me
to wonder whether fictional stories about Arabs, Palestinians, and
the Middle East might be a good tool to assist in developing more
understanding among Americans.
With this in mind I have written a story, a copy of which is attached
hereto. I wonder if you might find time to read it, and tell me
honestly what you think. I even had the perhaps far-fetched idea
that you might at some point consider including a supplement to
your regular Washington Report containing only fiction. I hope you
will not consider me presumptuous.
Larry Ison, Gordonsville, VA.
Dear Mr. Ison:
First, we think your short story is wonderful. Obviously it's
based upon your own personal experience of the incredible bonding
that once took place between idealistic young Arabs and Americans,
before Zionists poisoned the well for both.
It's not presumptuous at all to think about a fiction supplement
to the Washington Report. We think about it, wistfully, all the
time. We would like to make it a regular eight pages, include original
writing or translations of writing by both American and Middle Eastern
authors, and collect and republish them in book form as we go. To
fund it requires about two full-page ads per issue, 12 issues per
year, in the Washington Report, or an outright gift of
$15,000 to cover 12 such supplements. Sponsors in this case could
be corporations, foundations, or individuals. You think it's a good
idea. We think it's a great one. Perhaps some other reader or readers
will come up with the means to realize it. Meanwhile, we'll optimistically
hold on to your manuscript.
More WR Covers of the Intifadah—Not Iran
To the Editors:
The Washington Report has been instrumental in informing the American
public about the Arab-Israeli situation as well as the US government
policy and actions concerning that situation.
The intifadah is still raging and the death, injury, and arrest
numbers steadily climbing. The kids are younger, the women have
joined the men in demonstrating and stone throwing (so unusual for
Palestinian matrons!). The bullets now are directed to heads, chests,
necks, and to the backs of fleeing youngsters. The houses are being
blown up, as usual, and not only in the West Bank and Gaza. The
incursions into Lebanon, which started long before the attack on
Lebanon in 1982, are devastating the south and destroying the fragile
government—all in conjunction with the infamous South Lebanese
Army, a gang of traitors paid by Israel.
Having said that, I want to add I firmly believe Iran is a major
threat to all countries of the Middle East, including and above
all, Israel. It is a deadly enemy of the US, and our hostages and
airplanes are exposed to its vicious, mindless fanaticism.
But, as an enthusiastic reader of the Washington Report and an
admirer of its writers, photographers, and volunteer workers, I
must say I am surprised to see the Iranian situation jumping to
the covers of the publication. I feel very strongly that the Palestinian-Israeli
story must remain on the front burner, because we, in the US, bear
such a heavy responsibility for the establishing and nurturing of
the state of Israel, as well as for arming its aggressive military
and supporting its terroristic government.
I would very much like to see the pictures of the intifadah on
the covers of the Washington Report again. A picture is powerful
information all by itself. The Vietnam War pictures on television
and in the newspapers proved it.
The onslaught on the Palestinians of the West Bank and Gaza—and
on south Lebanon—continues. It should continue to be brought
home to the American people by every means at your disposal, as
starkly as the stark reality itself.
Margaret Ison, Gordonsville, VA.
Dear Mrs. Ison:
This issue's cover is for you.
Congressional Subscription Request
To the Editors:
Thank you for the complimentary subscription of the Washington
Report on Middle East Affairs. We find it extremely informative
and interesting, and we greatly appreciate receiving it. In fact,
the issues are often in great demand. Therefore, I would like to
ask if you would be so kind as to put me down for an additional
complimentary subscription.
Thank you for your kind assistance.
Don Ritter, US House of Representatives, 15th District, Pennsylvania
Dear Congressman Ritter:
It's in the mail, a personal donation from one of your constituents.
Keep It Up!
To the Editors:
Keep up the fine work! Your excellent publication should be required
reading for all freshman congressmen! Maybe America's 40-year nightmare
in the Middle East can have an ending after all. Maybe America can
develop a Middle East policy in Washington instead of using the
Israeli import.
David G. Dill, Baraboo, WI |