Washington Report, June 16, 1986, Page 7b
Commentary
Whom the Gods Would Destroy...
Four years ago when the American Educational Trust, publisher
of the Washington Report, was established, a midnight assailant,
wielding a brick, beat to the ground the then director of AET's
speakers bureau as he was parking his car behind his home. The assailant
threw the AET officer's wallet back to him untouched, but kept his
address book. The same night the then editor of the Washington
Report received a telephone threat that he was "riding
for a big fall."
The Washington Report spoke for all of us in a May 17,1982
editorial entitled "Intimidation Will Get You Nowhere"
when it declared that "whatever happens to individuals, the
newsletter will keep being published and the other activities of
the organization will continue to be carried out." We thought
of it then as an exchange of messages.
Almost four years to the day after those first assaults our editorial
associate, Robert Hazo, received a 5 a.m. harassing phone call.
When he arrived at his office later in the morning he found it had
been ransacked and vandalized sometime between 3 and 6 a.m.
Albert Mokhiber, who keeps score on "threat and violence"
reports from American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee members,
says it was the 56th such incident reported to him in 1986 alone.
We're not sure, therefore, whether this latest message was addressed
to Mr. Hazo as an articulate Arab American, a consultant to ADC,
or a valued AET associate. What's important is that we're sending
back a message, and some questions.
Lack of funding forced us to close our speakers bureau two years
ago. We're going to reopen it, as announced on the back page of
this issue, Somehow we're going to provide an informed and distinguished
speaker to tell every American who asks exactly how our country
is being isolated abroad and subverted at home by the "Israel
firsters" among us.
As for this newsletter, normally we reprint in our Other Voices
section some of the more positive reporting from other U.S.
periodicals about Middle Eastern issues. In this issue, however,
we're going to join the national dialogue on terrorism. Terrorism
over here. We're reprinting as much as we can from a shocking series
of articles in the Village Voice based upon interviews with
members and ex-members of the Jewish Defense League. What we can't
fit into this issue we'll try to cram into a later one. Because
these Jewish stormtroopers use obscene and racist language in commenting
about desecration of churches, clearing "Jews for Jesus"
off the streets of New York with stun guns, bombing Arab Americans,
shooting at foreign diplomats, and routinely intimidating anyone
who criticizes Israel, we ignored the series when it began. But
since receiving the latest message we've decided none of our readers
should miss a word of what the dialogue's all about.
Executive Director Thomas Dine told the audience at the American
Israel Public Affairs Committee's national convention this year
that U.S.-Israeli cooperation is now so "excellent" that
"we are no longer talking about a transformation in the relationship,
we are talking about a revolution." Why, then, did the Israelis
pay Jonathan Pollard to provide them U.S. technological and military
secrets? Why, when Secretary of State Shultz asked his friend and
confidant, Prime Minister Peres, whether the Pollard case was an
aberration, did Peres lie to Shultz instead of admitting, as everyone
now knows, that it was not? Why, when President Reagan invited 35
Jewish leaders to the White House to beg for their help in salvaging
something of America's credibility with Middle East moderates, did
only 14 show up, and only three of those offer to help? Why is the
extremist element in the U.S. pro-Israel "community,"
as Mr. Dine calls it, resorting to violence to silence patriotic
Americans who call attention to these things? And why do "respectable"
members of that pro-Israel "community" acquiesce, by their
silence, in terrorism against Israel's American critics?
In an election year is the killing of Americans at home by pro-Israel
extremists not as serious as the killing of Americans abroad by
pro-Palestinian extremists? It's not a hypothetical question. Alex
Odeh, an Arab-American poet and father, has been killed by a bomb
in an ADC office in California. Two Boston policemen were wounded
dismantling a bomb at an ADC office in Boston. There have been no
Presidential messages to the families, no resolutions about domestic
terrorism, and no indictments. Is it Rambo Reagan abroad, and Ronald
MacWimp at home?
Obviously Israel's supporters think so. They're riding high in
Washington today, and bragging about it. Here's a verbatim excerpt
from Tom Dine's remarks to his cheering AIPAC followers in April:
"The whole story of this revolution in strategic cooperation
cannot yet be told because many of the most important steps are
in an embryonic stage and both countries feel that greater progress
can be achieved without an undue burden of publicity. Let me, however,
share with you what Secretary of State George Shultz recently explained.
He said the point of strategic cooperation is, and I quote, 'To
build institutional arrangements so that eight years from now, if
there is a Secretary of State who is not positive about Israel,
he will not be able to overcome the bureaucratic relationship between
Israel and the U.S. that we have established.' Think about that.
For a Secretary of State to feel that way—think about how
far we have come."
When patriotic Americans think about it they may give up on a President
who doesn't want them to know what deals he's making in their name
with Israel, even though he's snubbed by Israel's American friends.
And a weak Secretary of State seeking to curry personal favor with
America's pro-Israel media by binding his successors to a bizarre
foreign alliance they almost certainly will reject as not in America's
interest. And an American lobbyist who brags about his success in
conspiring on behalf of a foreign country with U.S. leaders behind
the backs of the American people.
Don't give up on America, however, Just last January, on the basis
of his Reagan Administration access, Michael Deaver was depicted
on the cover of Time magazine as Washington's most successful
lobbyist. Using the same criteria, right now AIPAC clearly is Washington's
most successful lobby.
The timeless lesson in Deaver's fall is expressed in the saying
Quem Juppiter vult perdere dementat prius—whom
God would destroy, he first makes mad. The question is, who is mad?
Israel's friends, deliberately trashing the fruits of 100 years
of selfless labor by Americans in the Middle East? The Congress,
Secretary of State and President who not only don't care, but even
threaten to take us out of NATO if Western Europeans won't share
our pro-Israel bias? The journalists, Jewish and Gentile, who understand
but don't speak out?
If it's yes to all of the above, then the American people themselves
would be mad to tolerate this sordid betrayal indefinitely. We're
betting our lives that they won't.
—Richard Curtiss |