Lobbying for Armageddon
By Sarah Posner
08/03/06 "AlterNet"
-- -- In a perfect world, a reporter at last week's press
conference with George Bush and Tony Blair would have asked
Bush, in the presence of his principal European ally, if he
believes the European Union is the Antichrist.
Although it sounds like the kind of Pat Robertson lunacy that
makes even the wingnuts run for the nearest exit, it's a
question Bush should be forced to answer. Bush and other leading
Republicans have lined up behind a growing movement of Christian
Zionists for whom a European Antichrist figures prominently in
an end-times scenario. So they should be forced to explain to
the rest of us why they're courting the votes of people who
believe our allies are evil incarnate. Could it be that the
central requirement for their breathlessly anticipated
Armageddon -- that the United States confront Iran -- happens to
dovetail so nicely with the neoconservative war agenda?
At the center of it all is Pastor John Hagee, a popular
televangelist who leads the 18,000-member Cornerstone Church in
San Antonio, Texas. While Hagee has long prophesized about the
end times, he ratcheted up his rhetoric this year with the
publication of his book, "Jerusalem Countdown," in which he
argues that a confrontation with Iran is a necessary
precondition for Armageddon and the Second Coming of Christ. In
the best-selling book, Hagee insists that the United States must
join Israel in a preemptive military strike against Iran to
fulfill God's plan for both Israel and the West. Shortly after
the book's publication, he launched Christians United for Israel
(CUFI), which, as the Christian version of the powerful American
Israel Public Affairs Committee, he said would cause "a
political earthquake."
At CUFI's kick-off banquet at the Washington Hilton, attended
by over 3,500 members, Republican support for both Hagee's
effort and his drumbeat for war with Iran were on full view.
Republican National Committee Chair Ken Mehlman
told the group that "no regime is more central to the global
jihad" than Iran. Just two days before, Newt Gingrich and John
McCain made the rounds of the Sunday talk shows to sound the
same message, leading Benny Elon, a member of the Israeli
Knesset, to comment to the Jerusalem Post that their
remarks originated with Hagee. Rick Santorum and Sam Brownback
also addressed the group, and Bush sent
words of support to the gathering. Republicans, and even
some Democrats, spoke at CUFI events to show their "support for
Israel." But while public and media attention was on the
fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, Hagee's focus continued
to be on Iran.
While the crisis at the Israel-Lebanon border drew more
mainstream media attention to CUFI's activities, Hagee's
supporters have long known that leading Republicans are
listening. Rabbi Daniel Lapin, a prominent Jewish ally of the
evangelical right (and friend of Jack Abramoff) has said that
Hagee "without question, yes, absolutely" has the ear of the
White House. Hagee's annual Night to Honor Israel at his church
has drawn prominent Republicans, including Tom DeLay, who was
the keynote speaker in 2002.
Although Republicans would never admit it -- they claim their
support for Christian Zionists like Hagee is based on their own
support for Israel -- it is clear that they know they need the
votes of this constituency to win. In the same way that Karl
Rove courted conservative evangelicals in 2004 by appealing to
their homophobia, Republican campaign rhetoric for 2006 and 2008
has already shown signs of playing to voters who have been
hearing hype for a war with Iran for months -- at church.
While Washington insiders wonder what it means when
Republicans like Mehlman and presidential aspirants Gingrich and
McCain finger Iran as the central player in an epic clash of
civilizations, Hagee already has spent months mobilizing the
shock troops in support of another war. As diplomats, experts
and pundits debate how many years Iran will need to develop a
viable nuclear weapon, Hagee says the mullahs already possess
the means to destroy Israel and America. And although Bush
insists that diplomatic options are still on the table, Hagee
has dismissed pussyfooting diplomacy and primed his followers
for a conflagration.
Hagee wields "a very large megaphone" that reaches "a very
large group of people," said Rabbi James Rudin of the American
Jewish Committee, who has studied the Christian right for 30
years. With CUFI, the pastor has exponentially expanded the
reach of his megaphone beyond his television audience. Thanks to
the viral marketing made possible by the hundreds of evangelical
leaders who have signed on to his new organization, his
warmongering has rippled through megachurches across America for
months. Hagee calls pastors "the spiritual generals of America,"
an appropriate phrase given his reliance on them to rally their
troops behind his message.
The CUFI board of directors includes the Rev. Jerry Falwell,
former Republican presidential candidate and religious right
activist Gary Bauer, and George Morrison, pastor of the
8,000-member Faith Bible Chapel in Arvada, Colo., and chairman
of the board of Promise Keepers. Rod Parsley, the Ohio
televangelist who is rapidly becoming a major political player
in the Christian right, signed on to be a regional director.
For Hagee's new project, his influence in Washington is
probably less important than his influence over his audience.
With the clout of his listeners, he can serve Bush
administration hawks by firing up grassroots support for a
military strike against Iran. Over 700,000 people purchased his
book, "Jerusalem Countdown," and countless more have heard him
promote it on Christian radio and television programming.
Dramatic, doomsday advertising has been heard by listeners of
Christian media as well as on Sean Hannity and Bill O'Reilly's
radio programs. The pages of "Jerusalem Countdown" provide a
peculiar mix of biblical prophecy, purported inside information
from Israeli government officials and a mixed-up, pared-down
lesson in nuclear physics.
"I wrote this book in April 2005, and when people read it,
they will think I wrote it late last night after the FOX News
report," says the author without a trace of irony. "It's that
close to where we are and beyond."
Hagee speaks simultaneously to two audiences about Iran's
nuclear capabilities: one that fears a terrorist attack by Iran
and another that embraces a biblically mandated apocalypse. To
impress the fearful, he mimics Bush's deceptions about Iraq's
capacity to attack the United States with weapons of mass
destruction, Condoleezza Rice's warnings of mushroom clouds, and
Dick Cheney's dissembling about an alliance between Saddam
Hussein and al-Qaida. Comparing Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad to Hitler, Hagee argues that Iran's development of
nuclear weapons must be stopped to protect America and Israel
from a nuclear attack. Preying on legitimate worries about
terrorism, and invoking 9/11, he vividly describes a supposed
Iranian-led plan to simultaneously explode nuclear suitcase
bombs in seven American cities, or to use an electromagnetic
pulse device to create "an American Hiroshima."
When addressing audiences receptive to Scriptural prophecy,
however, Hagee welcomes the coming confrontation. He argues that
a strike against Iran will cause Arab nations to unite under
Russia's leadership, as outlined in chapters 38 and 39 of the
Book of Ezekiel, leading to an "inferno [that] will explode
across the Middle East, plunging the world toward Armageddon."
In Hagee's telling, Israel has no choice but to strike at Iran's
nuclear facilities, with or without America's help. The strike
will provoke Russia -- which wants Persian Gulf oil -- to lead
an army of Arab nations against Israel. Then God will wipe out
all but one-sixth of the Russian-led army, as the world watches
"with shock and awe," he says, lending either a divine quality
to the Bush administration phrase or a Bush-like quality to
God's wrath.
But Hagee doesn't stop there. He adds that Ezekiel predicts
fire "upon those who live in security in the coastlands." From
this sentence, he concludes that there will be judgment upon all
who stood by while the Russian-led force invaded Israel, and
issues a stark warning to the United States to intervene: "Could
it be that America, who refuses to defend Israel from the
Russian invasion, will experience nuclear warfare on our east
and west coasts?" He says yes, citing Genesis 12:3, in which God
said to Israel: "I will bless those who bless you, and I will
curse him who curses you."
To fill the power vacuum left by God's decimation of the
Russian army, the Antichrist -- the head of the EU -- will rule
"a one-world government, a one-world currency and a one-world
religion" for three and a half years. (Hagee adds that "one need
only be a casual observer of current events to see that all
three of these things are coming into reality." The "demonic
world leader" will then be confronted by a false prophet,
identified by Hagee as China, at Armageddon, the Mount of
Megiddo in Israel. As they prepare for the final battle, Jesus
will return on a white horse and cast both villains -- and
presumably any nonbelievers -- into a "lake of fire burning with
brimstone," thus marking the beginning of his millennial reign.
Hagee doesn't fear a nuclear conflagration, but rather God's
wrath for standing by as Iran executes its supposed plot to
destroy Israel. A nuclear confrontation between America and
Iran, which he says is foretold in the Book of Jeremiah, will
not lead to the end of the world, but rather to God's renewal of
the Garden of Eden. But Hagee is ultimately less concerned with
the fate of Israel or the Jews than with a theocratic Christian
right agenda. When Jesus returns for his millennial reign, he
tells his television audience, "the righteous are going to rule
the nations of the earth When Jesus Christ comes back, he's not
going to ask the ACLU if it's all right to pray, he's not going
to ask the churches if they can ordain pedophile bishops and
priests, he's not going to ask if it's all right to put the Ten
Commandments in the statehouses. He's not going to endorse
abortion, he's going to run the world by the word of God The
world will never end. It's going to become a Garden of Eden, and
Christ is going to rule it."
Sarah Posner has covered the religious right for The
American Prospect, The Gadflyer, and AlterNet. This article is
adapted from
"Pastor Strangelove," which appeared in the June 2006 issue
of The American Prospect.
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