Washington Report, August 12, 1985, Page 3
Policy
Other Hostages: The State Department Arabists
By Andrew I. Killgore
Is the United States served by its professional diplomats, selected
with such care that hardly one applicant out of a hundred is accepted
into the Foreign Service? Specifically, are our diplomatic officers
in the Middle East telling it like it is in their reports back to
Washington? Or are they playing to prejudices back home, shading
their analyses to avoid controversy? With increasing numbers of
Americans being kidnapped and killed in the Middle East, a question
arises. Does the U.S. Government understand the realities of the
area? If not, is reporting from our Embassies in the Arab countries
at fault?
We Americans assume that Russian diplomats in Washington do this,
exaggerating every maladjustment in American society and turning
blips in our economy into depressions, one of which, in Marxist
dogma, foredooms the capitalist system. Certainly Moscow's official
pronouncements about the United States seem to reflect such lopsided
reporting. We also assume, however, that free and democratic America
welcomes the unvarnished truth in reports and analyses sent back
to Washington by its diplomats from overseas.
No Room for Rambos
Well, it's a complicated story, especially where the Middle East
is concerned, but "welcomes" is hardly the right word. The
truth is that diplomacy is not a macho business. Compromise and accommodation
are constant goals. Zealousness is frowned upon. Besides, a good team
player swims with the prevailing tide, not against it. If the subject
is emotion-laden, as with the Arab-Israeli dispute, and officers reporting
on it from the Middle East are "State Department Arabists,"
then bucking the pro-Israel tide in Washington is deemed suicidal.
Syndicated columnist Joseph Kraft may have been the first to give
a pejorative twist to the "State Department Arabist" label
applied to officers who had specialized in Arabic language and area
studies. About 1971 Kraft wrote a widely distributed essay that,
on one level, seemed fair enough. The Arabists were described as
genuinely liking Arabs. He managed to intimate, however, that this
might stem from unworthy motives, such as anti-Semitism.
Another unusual distinction for Kraft is that he "fired"
a distinguished American Ambassador to an Arab country. This Arabist
Ambassador learned, not from the State Department, but from a Kraft
column in the International Herald Tribune, that he was
being dismissed by Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. The Ambassador
and Kissinger had disagreed over a matter of protocol having serious
implications. This calculated humiliation of the Ambassador—who
by any objective standard had been absolutely right in the disagreement—taught
the other Arabists a clear lesson: Keep your mouth shut.
Some years earlier Israeli Foreign Minister Golda Meir had publicly
complained about "low-level fanatics in the State Department."
Except for these, she complained, relations between Israel and the
United States would be a lot better than they were. The Arabists
joked about this among themselves, saying that if they could just
steer clear of Mrs. Meir and her supporters they might someday be
"high-level fanatics." Still, the private joshing had
a nervous edge.
Quite apart from Israeli officials and Zionist publicists taking
pot shots at Arabists, however, all Foreign Service officers remember
the fate of the "Old China Hands" nearly 40 years ago.
These Foreign Service officers were blamed for "losing"
China when Mao Tse-Tung won the Chinese civil war. Although they
had only reported the truth from China as they saw it, many lost
their reputations and their jobs. Perhaps the best known of them
was John Paton Davies, who had to go to South America and sell furniture
for a living.
The Ministry of Fear
Senator Joseph McCarthy was a bizarre phenomenon. He charged there
were 86 Communists in the State Department. Before the hysteria inspired
by that wild charge subsided, many diplomats had quit or been forced
out, while books by "leftists" had literally been withdrawn
from official libraries abroad. None of McCarthy's charges were proven
because, in fact, they were false. Neither politicians nor Presidents
were trampled in any rush to defend our diplomats, however. It taught
surviving diplomats another lesson. Avoid getting involved in controversy,
at all costs. McCarthy and McCarthyism were eventually discredited,
and charges that a few Foreign Service officers reporting from China
"lost" one-fourth of mankind to Communism were eventually
seen as ludicrous. But the State Department Arabist label still
hurts, and badly. Perfectly valid arguments that the United States
must improve its relations with the Arab world to protect its own
national interests tend to be dismissed as anti-Israel, especially
if they are advanced by Arabists. If such arguments are persisted
in, charges of being "emotional" or "not a team player"
can stunt a career.
In a sense the Arabists are also hostages, just as airline passengers
recently were in the Middle East. Several outstanding officers,
including Ambassadors, have been killed in the ever-widening reverberations
of the Arab-Israel dispute. This does not count 260 U.S. Marines
who have died in Lebanon, nor does it number the diplomats, military
personnel and business people still certain to be killed.
Those Arabists not killed or injured suffer psychologically from
remaining silent when they feel our Middle East policy must be changed
before it claims more unnecessary victims. But their careers suffer
when they speak out. One outstanding Ambassador warned the State
Department repeatedly during the first Reagan term that Syria could
not safely be ignored in a U.S.-brokered agreement providing the
withdrawal of Israeli military forces from Lebanon. He was ignored
and the agreement failed. Those praising that flawed agreement were
absolutely wrong. They are still on active duty. The Ambassador
was absolutely right. He has retired.
If the U.S. media turned its investigative powers on the precarious
situation of Foreign Service Arabists, Israel and its Lobby in the
U.S. would be deeply disturbed. But all Americans would be safer,
and true American interests would be well and honestly served.
Andrew I. Killgore, former US Ambassador to Qatar, retired after
32 years in the Foreign Service. He is now a political and economic
consultant in Washington, D.C., and also president of the American
Educational Trust. |