McCarthyism Comes
to Europe and the Levant:
The Zionist
Targeting of Lebanon's Dr. Ibrahim Mousawi
By Franklin Lamb in Beirut and Ann El
Khoury in Sydney
You've done
enough. Have you no sense of decency, sir,
at long last? Have you left no sense of
decency?
-- Joseph
Welch to Senator Joseph McCarthy, April 1954
20/01/08 "ICH"
--- - In a US Senate hearing just over
fifty years ago, Boston lawyer Joseph Welch
famously rebuked Senator Joseph McCarthy
with these now immortal words. They have
been immortalized because they have helped
furnish what we understand McCarthyism to
mean: extreme, mean and unreasonable
persecution of people by means of
witch-hunts and other tactics including
guilt by association or through simple
prejudice. This is done in order to achieve
a political objective of silencing dissent
and preventing the public from learning
inconvenient truths.
In the human drama of Middle East theaters
and in the wider context of the current Bush
administration-spearheaded endless war, the
New McCarthyism involves the mobilization of
the global 'war on terror', in which we see
once again the manipulation of fear and the
corruption of public discourse in pursuit of
narrowly partisan gain – chief among them,
the Likudnik Israel-first hawks of the
neoconservatives in the US and Israel.
The foot-soldiers of the Likud lobby around
the world are applying pressure to stop
people from attending academic and activist
conferences. As with the McCarthyism of half
a century ago, today's Middle East Studies
McCarthyism perpetrated by the Likud Lobby
is also a threat to our liberty, to academic
freedom, and to basic, fundamental
democratic rights and responsibilities.
A network of right-wing Zionist activists
has intensified its online campaign based on
a melange of distorted or provably false
charges against critics of Israel. Zionist
media 'megaphone' the charges, stoking the
furor. When mainstream media ultimately
notices, it generally focuses its coverage
only on the furor rather than investigating
and reporting the truth about the false
charges.
McCarthyism 2.0: The War On Terror
After the collapse of the USSR, there were
expectations in many quarters that there
would be a 'peace dividend'. The military
industrial complex had burgeoned during the
Cold war, and vested interests therein were
not going to give up their power, privilege
and profit from war so readily, if at all.
Yet after the WTC attacks on Sept 11, 2001,
a generalized 'war on terror' was sold to a
stupefied electorate. Right out of the Red
Scare playbook of the Cold War morphed the
War on Terror playbook, with 'terrorist'
substituted for communist as the new post
cold war evil. With the scope widened, the
demonization of the Arab/Muslim as the new
monolithically conceptualized enemy
commenced, and extended to the criminalizing
of dissent and charity-giving: even social
activists have been called terrorists or
terrorist sympathizers.
Cynical campaigns to confound and confuse
and whip up hysteria and ratchet up racism
have abounded. Israeli-financed websites
like Act of America, by their propagandist,
the former Saad Haddad and Antoine LaHood
operative, the Maid of Darkness, Bridgette
Gabriel, spew obscene racist hatred against
Americans and others of Arab or Muslim
origin that would likely give even McCarthy
pause.
During the current administration, Bush has
amplified an explicitly anti-Muslim message
by repeatedly using the term "Islamic
fascism" to describe America's purported
enemies (including both the Hezbollah-led
resistance in Lebanon and that of Hamas in
Palestine).
The demonizing campaigns and venal
ideological assaults of the Likudniks have
involved bullying, intimidation and
mistreatment of those who dare to contest
the Israeli hawk worldview and version of
the Middle East. In many cases they involve
active government and lobby harassment to
ensure a climate that is forcefully
conducive to the Israeli version of events.
One method of silencing involves the
all-purpose slander of the anti-Semitism
accusation that has been elasticized to
non-sensicality. A new 'working definition'
promoted by some Israel lobbyists seeks to
confuse anti-Semitism with anti-Zionism,
such that today it would also apply to
Gandhi, Desmond Tutu, and Albert Einstein.
According to Arthur Neslen in 'When an
anti-Semite is not an anti-Semite', the
definition would even apply to Israel's own
PM:
What do
Einstein, Mahatma Gandhi, Ehud Olmert and
myself all have in common? We could each be
censured for racism according to the
European Union Monitoring Centre's "working
definition of anti-Semitism" which was
recently adopted by the National Union of
Students as official policy.
Only recently, a Spanish forum launched in
July last year from the Madrid Social Forum
has been subject to a hijacking of its
agenda by underhanded means as a result of
Zionist pressuring of the Spanish
government. Initially, the Spanish Foreign
Ministry pledged organizational and
financial support for Forum for a Just
Peace, which was to be held in Madrid from
the 14-16th December, enabling the
participation of Spanish, Palestinian,
Lebanese, Jordanian, Iraqi and Israeli civil
society representatives who had endorsed the
conference.
A refusal by the International Committee to
accept the Foreign Ministry stacking of the
Conference with ideological zionists was met
with the Spanish government response to shut
down the conference venue and to send the
police to evict the participants. This has
effectively shut down the Forum for a Just
Peace.
Challenging censorship of Middle East
reality
Academia is an important and potentially
powerful sphere within which to challenge
power, and to posit alternatives.
Successful, effective and popular academics
are particularly targeted by the
Israeli-hawk Likud Lobby in the USA and
Europe because they succeed with bringing
more people to ask why only one side of the
Middle East conflict is being presented as
the only side.
As Robert Fisk notes, the scare-mongering
conveniently justifies occupation and feeds
into war-mongering in service of resource
theft and land expropriation in the Middle
East:
Because it's
really all about shutting the reality of the
Middle East off from us. It's to prevent the
British and American people from questioning
the immoral and cruel and internationally
illegal occupation of Muslim lands. And in
the Land of the Free, this systematic
censorship of Middle East reality continues
even in the country's schools.
Campaigns against academics are often
coordinated or facilitated through such
groups as Campus Watch, FrontPage, CAMERA
and various think tanks (tank-thinks) that
validate the Likudnik-Zionist doctrinal
framing of the Middle East. They have been
mounted with mixed results against
Professors Nadia Abu El-Haj (she was granted
tenure at Barnard College this year), Joseph
Massad, Debbie Almontaser, Tariq Ramadan,
Juan Cole, Rashid Khalidi, Norman
Finkelstein, Stephen Walt and John
Mearsheimer, Hamid Dabashi, Sami al-Arian
and Israeli academics Ilan Pappe and Tanya
Reinhart, who both chose exile from Israel
in protest to their former country's
policies.
"There certainly is a sense among faculty
and grad students that they're being
watched, monitored," says Zachary Lockman,
president of the Middle East Studies
Association. "People are always looking over
their shoulder, feeling that whatever they
say--in accurate or, more likely, distorted
form--can end up on a website. It definitely
has a chilling effect."
Campaigns have typically involved
intimidatory tactics and defamatory
allegations, demonstrably proved baseless.
The scurrilous attacks on Norman
Finkelstein, for example, have laid bare the
desperate lengths the Likud Lobby and such
representatives as Alan Dershowitz are
driven to smear and slander challengers.
Finkelstein was ultimately denied tenure.
Ultra-zionist Israel Lobby groups are
attempting to intimidate publishers of Joel
Kovel's book Overcoming Zionism: Creating
a Single Democratic State in
Israel/Palestine and to cripple its
distribution. Tariq Ramadan, who Time
magazine listed as one of the 100 most
likely innovators of the 21st century, was
repeatedly denied a visa for entry to teach
in the US on spurious grounds.
Freedom of expression in media and even
academe does not apparently include the
freedom to duly and freely criticize Israeli
policies. Zionist hijacking of these spaces,
like the McCarthy trials, has all too often
been dishonest and abusive. In the past
year, lobby groups such as Campus Watch have
been behind the so-called Islamo-Fascism
Awareness Week (IFAW) from October 22-26.
Other campaigns have included vitriolic
smear campaigns against the Khalil Gibran
International Academy. The slander and
intimation ultimately worked: Debbie
Almontaser resigned, all on the flimsy
accusation of a t-shirt that had the Arabic
word intifada on it---worn by someone else.
The Targeting of Dr. Ibrahim Mousawi
Recently the Zionists have been targeting
Lebanon's Ibrahim Mousawi, trying to prevent
him from speaking or traveling to other
countries.
Who is Dr. Ibrahim Mousawi?
Born in Lebanon's picturesque and fertile
Bekaa Valley village of Nabysheet, Mousawi
is a student of Politics, English Literature
and Religion. A former school Headmaster, Ibrahim
received his MA in English literature from
The Lebanese University, his BA in
Journalism from The Lebanese University, and
earned his MA in Political Science from The
American University of Beirut in 2003. He
earned his PhD in Political Islam from
Birmingham University-Britain 2007. The
title of his dissertation was
Compatibility between Islam and democracy;
Shiism and democracy under Wilayat Al-Faqih,
Iran as a case study.
During the July
2006 War with Israel, Mousawi held the
position of editor in chief of Al-Intiqad
(Criticism), a weekly Hezbollah newspaper,
and was much sought after by international
reporters for information and his insights.
He appeared widely in the international
media and was critical of the destruction of
Lebanon and the Bush administration
providing Israel with a green light to
continue the slaughter while the
international community was calling for a
ceasefire.
Following the cessation of hostilities, the
Irish Anti-War Movement (IAWM) invited
Mousawi to address peace activists in
Belfast, Dublin and Galway about the summer
conflict. This October he was invited back
but was refused a visa without explanation.
When Irish Justice Minister Brian Lenihan
denied Mousawi entry to Ireland, it followed
Lenihan's meeting with a delegation from
Ireland's zionist lobby. In addition, the
Bush administration had pressured Ireland
into rejecting his visa application,
according to reports in the Irish media.
The IAWM issued a statement last month
denouncing the decision as "an outrageous
act of political censorship" and a
"disgraceful attack on the anti-war
movement" in Ireland.
"The ban makes nonsense of the frequent
claims by this [Irish] government that they
favor dialogue and international diplomacy
to resolve the problems of the Middle East,"
Richard Boyd Barret, the head of the IAWM,
said at the time.
"Anyone even remotely concerned with free
speech and the right to engage in open
political debate in this country should be
very alarmed that the US government is now
deciding what viewpoints can and cannot be
heard in Ireland," he added.
"I'm only involved in academia and media,"
Mousawi avers, adding that the only "crime"
he has ever committed is to openly express
his political views, which he insists remain
within the boundaries of legitimate
intellectual discourse.
"We should allow for open debate," Mousawi
told the Daily Star. "After all, I come and
I only say words. If my words are worth
hearing, people should give me the
opportunity to speak. If my words are
rubbish, it's worth the opportunity to
refute what I say, and to undermine my logic
if what I say is not logical."
"I'm a staunch defender of political
freedoms and freedom of speech," he adds.
In February 2005, just one week after the
assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik
Hariri, he invited five Rabbis to a
conference in Beirut and hosted them as
guests on his political talk show.
He also points out that Hezbollah was among
the first to condemn the 9/11 attacks as
'terrorism' as well as to condemn the murder
of Lebanon's PM Rafik Hariri.
"I believe governments and politicians have
failed to address the problems of the
people," he explains. "I believe there is
another role that we have to play at the
grassroots level, as NGOs and as members of
civil society. There is a lot of diplomacy
that could go on at this level. We don't
have to wait for officials to take the lead;
we have seen what they have brought: nothing
but disasters. So I want to highlight the
need to interact at this level."
Mousawi rejects the notion that there is a
'clash of civilization'. "I believe that all
over the world, people want the same things.
We all want to be with our families; we all
want to come back to our kids at the end of
the day and bring bread to their tables and
give them a good education, to live in
harmony and peace." Addressing the World
Against War International Peace Conference
in London last December, Mousawi told the
1200 delegates from 26 countries that he had
a two month old son named Issa (Jesus), and
one named Muhammad. "If I have another one I
will name him Moses", he added.
Mousawi occasionally writes for Beirut's
English language Daily Star and has
been a commentator for CNN, ABC, and CBS.
For many years, Mousawi has also worked
extensively with Americans and Europeans
arranging and interpreting interviews and is
considered one of the best-informed people
on political events in Lebanon and
Palestine.
"I would say that we are in the midst of a
war of terminology," Dr. Mousawi asserts.
"It is a war of definitions that we should
pay attention to."
Next Stop England
The Lobby next moved to bar Mousawi from
England, with Henry Grunwald, president of
the Board of Deputies of British Jews as
point man to lead the attack. Following the
Zionist Lobby's advisory to its affiliates,
apparently without bothering with fact
checking, Grunwald repeated the error that
went out internationally to pro-Zionist
media outlets that Mousawi is 'Director of
Al Manar, the Hezbollah News Service', or as
the Jerusalem Post claimed, "a senior
official of the Al Manar Channel". He in
fact was never in that position and ceased
working in the English language office
nearly two years ago.
The Lobby also lined up Baroness
Neville-Jones, the Shadow Security Minister
and former Chairman of the Joint
Intelligence Committee. The Baroness, who
has yet to criticize any of the atrocities
committed by Israel in Palestine or Lebanon,
apparently knows a threat to England when
she is told by the Lobby about one--never
mind the quality of her supplied facts.
After meeting with leaders of the British
Chamber of Deputies, she felt "Mousawi's
presence is not conducive to the public
good," and that he might "preach hate" if he
were allowed in. Yet the Baroness claimed
not to know much about Mousawi except that
he was (once again!) the fantasy
non-Director of Al Manar Television—hardly a
promising basis for an informed decision to
bar someone from a country!
Unwilling to correct her misinformation, the
Baroness' press release cascaded into
headlines for other Zionist outlets
internationally who were quite prepared to
repeat it.
The Jerusalem Post ran a headline
which blared 'Hezbollah television station
editor's entry into Britain angers Jewish
leaders' and the Jewish Chronicle and
Forward followed suit with the Jewish
Chronicle of 11/16/07 headlining 'Ban
Hezbollah man from UK!'
The Baroness is known in Britain for her
persistence. She enlisted her fellow Zionist
Conservative Party Chairman David Cameron,
who was already under Zionist pressure, to
ask England's new Prime Minister Gordon
Brown to deny Mousawi entry to Britain,
apparently because he did "not trust the
'Arabists' in the Home Office to do a proper
job".
"Are you aware that the Irish government
recently refused entry to Ibrahim Mousawi,
head of Hezbollah's viciously anti-Semitic
TV station, Al-Manar?", Cameron tsk tsked to
the British premier during Question Time in
the House of Commons.
"And just what approach will Her Majesty's
government take when Mr. Mousawi attempts to
enter the UK to speak at a conference?"
Cameron demanded. Brown demurred, apparently
sensing that Cameron, not for the first
time, had his facts wrong.
In 2002 AIPAC
member and advisor Jeffrey Goldberg appeared
in Beirut and interviewed Mousawi among
others. Cloaking his extreme Zionism,
Goldberg posed as a journalist and wrote a
substantially false article for the New
Yorker issue of October 14, 2002,
implying that Mousawi was anti-Semitic.
Caught in his lies, the record was
clarified and Mousawi vindicated but the
New Yorker never did apologize nor
retract Goldberg's allegations.
Answering the
Lobby charges of anti-Semitism, Mousawi
categorically denies the accusation that he
has even thought of promoting "anti-Semitic"
views. "I would challenge anyone to provide
evidence of any word that I have said that
is hateful or anti-Semitic," he says, adding
that he himself has been a victim of
discrimination and has therefore made a
special effort to eschew any form of
prejudice.
"I have nothing against Jews. I have nothing
against any human being, whether because of
religion, gender or political affiliation,"
he explains. "I'm a human being who believes
in dignity, independence and freedom. I'm a
bridge-builder and I've always been an
advocate of dialogue and discussion."
Mousawi's Views
Mousawi affirms the view that in the Middle
East the struggle is not with Judaism but
with Zionism. Zionism is understood in much
of the Middle East as an ideology that is
the enemy of Judaism, Islam and
Christianity, and an ideology that informed
the theft of Palestine from its rightful
inhabitants who are overwhelmingly
Christians and Muslims.
And what of the views Cameron and his
Zionist marionettes so strongly felt would
not be conducive to the public good?
Mousawi at the London Conference, as
reported by the Daily Star:
Yes, we believe
in religion, but this does not bring us to a
place where we do not respect others or we
do not recognize others If religion is not
going to make me a better human being who
cares for any human being, I don't need it.
... [Religion] is not to make me fanatic,
irresponsible, or feel that I'm deemed to
salvation while others are going to hell.
No, this is not what we want. If you are
really a true believer, you should care for
any human being, whoever he is, wherever he
lives.
During his speech, Mousawi also had a
response for those who would question the
idea of inviting a Hezbollah media man to an
anti-war event.
Who can talk
about [the need to] stop the wars and
[achieve] peace more than those who are
suffering from the occupation and the
atrocities and the massacres and the
aggressions? We want genuine peace. We don't
want compromises and we don't want to go
again and again to the same vicious cycle
every 10 years or five years, where you make
a temporary settlement and you end up with
another war coming. The roots of the
problem, the roots of the cause of the
problem, should be addressed.
Affirming
Hezbollah's right to resist occupation and
denying that the group engages in terrorism,
Mousawi argues:
Hezbollah is a
legitimate resistance group that is fighting
to regain occupied land like the Shebaa
Farms and to secure the return of prisoners
held by Israel.
Many people try to demonize the resistance,
but resistance is the right of people under
occupation.
If there wasn't an occupation, there
wouldn't be resistance. I would support any
nation or people if they were occupied and
exercising their right to resist an
occupying force.
I don't believe anyone wants to have wars.
But in this part of the world, we have for
decades been the victims of occupation and
war."
A durable
peace, Mousawi argues, "cannot happen unless
the core issues are addressed in a just
way." This is the same message Mousawi has
presented to journalists and conferences all
over the world.
More than a decade ago at an international
conference in Stuttgart, Germany in 1997,
Mousawi demonstrated a grasp of the essence
of the major religions and drew applause
from the international audience when he
spoke about what being a Muslim meant to
him:
When I say that
I am a Muslim, I am saying that I am a
Christian and I am saying that I am a Jew,
for we all believe in the same God, we are
all the sons and daughters of Abraham and we
are all of the Book and revere the wisdom of
all the Prophets.
Mousawi tells his audiences that war is the
biggest terrorism and that the central
teachings of the three Abrahamic religions
admonish all to build bridges not walls. His
ideas are in the tradition of a long line of
Shia scholars and human rights advocates
including the Shia clerics Mohammad Mahdi
Shamseddine, Imam Musa Sadr, and Sayeed
Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah — all known for
their life's work for social welfare and
their calls for dialogue and ecumenism work
with Christians and all sects.
Overcoming Zionism
Challenging the bias (at best) and
disinformation of the presented univocality
of the Zionist narrative serves justice. In
1954 the tipping point came with Welch's
rebuke. In our own era, Zionism is
increasingly being criticized and spurned
even by former adherents, with more Israelis
questioning its ideological underpinnings.
As has often been noted, debate is often
freer in Israel than it is in the United
States. Most notably, some of the children
of the high-profile Zionist founders of the
state of Israel have turned their backs on
this legacy, including the grandson of the
right-wing PM Menachem Begin, 32 year-old
Avinadav Begin, seen regularly protesting at
the West Bank side of the Apartheid Wall
over the past few years. In addition to
Menachem Begin's grandson, we also have no
less than the Irgun-steeped Ehud Olmert's
daughter Dana attending a rally during the
war on Lebanon.
Avrum Burg, a former Knesset speaker, Shimon
Peres' protégé, and Israel Agency director
has also recently had his bombshell book
released, Defeating Hitler, and left the
country to take up French citizenship. Burg
is in favor of abrogating the Law of Return,
compares Israel to Germany and sees the end
of the Zionist enterprise.
Many prominent international figures outside
of Israel have been moved to speak up for
Palestine and argue for sanctions. South
Africans Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Ronnie
Kasrils and British doctor Colin Green, for
example, cogently make the case for
boycotting apartheid and supporting justice
for all who live in the land of Canaan.
Yet this free debate among advocates of
peace and justice in the Middle East such as
Mousawi is being muzzled. While European law
keep some Israeli generals and Ministers
from visiting or grounded on runways lest
they be arrested for war crimes upon
alighting, visiting Lebanese, Palestinian
and other scholars from the Arab and Muslim
world are being denied entry, their voices
stifled.
Howard Zinn has recently lent his support to
set up The Committee for Open Discussion of
Zionism
http://www.codz.org/ , formed in
response to the active stifling and
suppression of alternative views on
Israel/Palestine and Zionism in the United
States and beyond. CODZ sees the IFAW as:
... a
well-organized campaign to silence dissent
on campus and to get people to look at all
Muslims as "Islamo-Fascists," creating a
dangerous atmosphere for Muslim students who
have sustained so much hate and abuse since
9/11. IFAW seeks to solidify the "you're
either with us or you're against us" call of
the Bush administration, to equate any
questioning of Zionism with support for
terrorism, and to further beat the drums for
war on Iran.
The Zionist attack on Mousawi in part of the
general Zionist campaign against Hezbollah
and its supporters, institutions, staff, as
well as anyone who seeks discussions with
the movement. It is not only about Dr.
Mousawi. Many scholars who work for
Hezbollah affiliated institutions has been
subjected to harassment and campaigns to
deny them the right to speak at Conferences,
to hold interviews, engage in dialogue and
to travel to the US and sometimes England
and parts of Europe.
In the pursuit of justice, the growing
debate on Zionism, both in the Middle East
and beyond, is a much needed, urgent and
legitimate one." All people of good
will should support Dr. Mousawi's right to
free speech, not least so that, in the words
of John Berger, "Never again will a single
story be told as though it's the only one."
Franklin Lamb is doing research in
Lebanon and can be reached at
fplamb@gmail.com.
Ann El Khoury is a researcher in Sydney,
Australia. Her site is at
www.peoplesgeography.com
.