06/20/05 "ANTIWAR" - -
The Downing
Street memos
have created such a stir that even Congress is rubbing its
eyes and awakening from its long slumber to ask questions
about the Iraq war: a
hearing [video link] convened by antiwar Democrats,
chaired by Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.), has created quite
a lot of buzz,
generating headlines
and howls of outrage from all the usual
suspects,
as well as from the Washington Post's Dana
Milbank and surprise, surprise! Howard
"The Scream" Dean. Milbank snarks:
"In the Capitol basement
yesterday, long-suffering House Democrats took a trip to
the land of make-believe. They pretended a small
conference room was the Judiciary Committee hearing room,
draping white linens over folding tables to make them look
like witness tables and bringing in cardboard name tags
and extra flags to make the whole thing look
official."
It is "make believe" to act as
if government officials can be held accountable by the
people, or even some of their elected representatives. If
it isn't "official," it isn't real.
Milbank's condescending tone speaks
volumes about the arrogance
of the Washington Establishment, a hauteur that permeates
the Imperial
City like the heavy scent of incense burning on the
altar of Empire. It is, as Milbank's piece confirms,
bipartisan in nature. For example, the other day I called
Rep. Nancy
Pelosi's office and asked for a copy of Pelosi's
amendment to the military spending bill that would require
the president to issue a report card, of sorts, on our
"strategy for success" in Iraq. The woman I
spoke to immediately adopted an imperious tone and
informed me that "the public" doesn't get to see
these things until after they're introduced and
debated. The bipartisan
Washington worldview draws a sharp line of demarcation
between the rulers and the ruled. And when this snippy
little intern informed me that, no, it was impossible, you
could hear the triumph in her voice, as if to assert that
even she, a lowly apparatchik, didn't have to kowtow to
"the public." (The upshot of that incident: when
I insisted, she switched me to Pelosi's press office,
where a brusque male assured me he'd be e-mailing the text
of the amendment shortly. It never arrived.)
The same imperiousness permeates
Milbank's piece, which is shot through with words like
"playmates," and phrases such as "dress-up
game," but mixed in with the pink froth is a small,
albeit potentially lethal, dose of poison:
"The session took an awkward
turn when witness Ray McGovern, a former intelligence
analyst, declared that the United States went to war in
Iraq for oil, Israel and military bases craved by
administration 'neocons' so 'the United States and Israel
could dominate that part of the world.' He said that
Israel should not be considered an ally and that Bush was
doing the bidding of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.
"'Israel is not allowed to be
brought up in polite conversation,' McGovern said. 'The
last time I did this, the previous director of Central
Intelligence called me anti-Semitic.' Rep. James P. Moran
Jr. (D-Va.), who prompted the question by wondering
whether the true war motive was Iraq's threat to Israel,
thanked McGovern for his 'candid answer.'
"At Democratic headquarters,
where an overflow crowd watched the hearing on television,
activists handed out documents repeating two accusations
that an Israeli company had warning of the Sept. 11,
2001, attacks and that there was an 'insider trading scam'
on 9/11 that previously has been used to suggest
Israel was behind the attacks."
Thanks to the Internet and the miracle
of streaming video, we don't have to depend on
"reporters" of the Milbankian persuasion anymore
to tell us what McGovern said: we can go see and hear for
ourselves. So click on this
link, go to about an hour and forty minutes into the
hearing, and listen for yourself. There was nothing the
least bit "awkward" in what McGovern said. Rep.
Jim Moran asked him a perfectly reasonable question
if it
wasn't about WMD, or links
to al-Qaeda, then why did we go to war with Iraq?
McGovern,
a former CIA analyst, came up with a perfectly reasonable
answer: the "OIL" syndrome, or Oil, Israel, and
the Logistical "base" that figures prominently
in neoconservative
[.pdf file] politico-military strategy for the "liberation"
of the Middle East. The oil factor is not even debatable,
and surely American military
preeminence in the region, as well as the refusal
of the U.S. to forswear any effort to build permanent
bases in Iraq, lends credence to the
"logistical" part of the equation. As for the
role played by Israel and its American amen corner in
ginning up this war, McGovern didn't quote Goebbels,
he cited Brent
Scowcroft, who famously
said of Bush:
"Sharon just has him wrapped
around his little finger. I think the president is
mesmerized. When there is a suicide attack [followed by a
reprisal] Sharon calls the president and says, 'I'm on the
front line of terrorism,' and the president says, 'Yes,
you are
' He [Sharon] has been nothing but
trouble."
Surely Milbank recalls these remarks,
since they were reported
in his paper: but I guess he just forgot about it,
just like he forgot to mention McGovern's reference to
Scowcroft. An even lower blow, however, is the reference
to leafleting that might have been the work of anyone except
the groups
organizing the hearing.
This sort of juxtaposition is a shoddy
rhetorical device, utilized to discredit anyone who
challenges the conventional wisdom: to even mention this
kind of tinfoil
hattery in the same breath as the
subject of the
hearings, and McGovern's remarks, is a cheap
intellectual package deal. Israel's role as one of the
chief agitators behind the drive to war is not really in
dispute: the neoconservatives and the Israeli lobby (or do
I repeat myself?) were certainly pushing
for war with Iraq long before 9/11, and this was noted not
only by Pat
Buchanan but also by Michael
Kinsley, intelligence expert James
Bamford, and retired General Anthony
Zinni. Are all these people anti-Semites? Before a
single shot had even been fired, Prime Minister Sharon was
already nominating Syria and Iran as the next
candidates up for "regime change," albeit
not too loudly. Should we pretend not to know this?
Greg
Mitchell, editor of Editor and Publisher, takes
offense at Milbank's superciliousness in the face of so
much human
suffering brought on by this war and wonders how a
hearing exposing the fantasy "intelligence"
conjured by this administration could itself be
characterized as "make believe." In the Bizarro
World moral universe of Washington, D.C., where war
is peace and freedom
is slavery, joviality is the response to 1,700-plus
deaths and 40,000 wounded in the service of a lie.
Worse than Milbank, however, is Howard
Dean, whose reputation
for over-the-top remarks is only enhanced by his reaction
to Milbank's smear:
"We disavow the anti-Semitic
literature, and the Democratic National Committee stands
in absolute disagreement with and condemns the
allegations."
What allegations? Who distributed the
literature? There are no answers to these questions,
apparently, at least none that are forthcoming. If he
really thinks Republicans are the
root of all evil, does he believe they would be above
planting such leaflets as an attempt at disruption. The
remarkably incurious Dean who has recently
characterized Republicans as "pretty much a white
Christian party," and as people who "never
worked a day in their lives" continued his
hyperbolic streak by having this to say about Ray
McGovern's remarks at the hearing:
"As for any inferences that the
United States went to war so Israel could 'dominate' the
Middle East or that Israel was in any way behind the
horrific September 11th attacks on America, let me say
unequivocally that such statements are nothing but vile,
anti-Semitic rhetoric."
I don't recall anybody at the hearing
saying that Israel was behind the 9/11 terrorist attacks:
not that Dean ever let facts get in the way of his
emotional outbursts, which are mostly calculated attempts
at demagoguery that invariably fail. McGovern, it should
be noted, was merely citing Brent Scowcroft: is Dean
saying that, aside from being "white Christians"
who "never worked a day in their lives,"
Republicans in the Scowcroft mold are also neo-Nazis?
It looks like Dean's tenure as DNC
chairman is going to be one long Dean
scream or maybe not that long, on second thought.
He's alienated the moderates, who don't like the tone of
his attacks on Republicans, and now he's turning off his
antiwar base, which mistakenly
believes he's some kind of a maverick. Is it too much to
hope that he'll soon be put out to pasture? It may be only
a rumor
that the Republicans are paying his salary, but if so he's
certainly earned a raise.
Rep. Conyers had his
own response to the Milbank smear, and while a bit
more spirited, focused, and accurate than Dean's,
nonetheless exhibited the same political cowardice when it
came to Ray McGovern's remarks:
"To give such emphasis to 100
seconds of a 3 hour and five minute hearing that included
the powerful and sad testimony (hardly mentioned by
Milbank) of a woman who lost her son in the Iraq war and
now feels lied to as a result of the Downing Street
Minutes, is incredibly misleading."
Conyers furthermore describes McGovern's
comments as "making an anti-Semitic assertion"
a grave accusation and a totally inaccurate statement,
one that the congressman doesn't even believe. If he does
believe it, how come he didn't point that out in the
remaining hour and 20 minutes of the hearing? Instead, he
just sat there and nodded agreement.
Yes, the Israeli lobby is powerful, and
Conyers has every reason to fear it; but show a little
courage, congressman: Mrs.
Sheehan and all the other mothers who have lost sons
and daughters in this seemingly inexplicable war deserve
answers. They need to know why and how their beloved
progeny were sacrificed on the altar of the war god. To
collaborate in the smear of those who are giving honest
answers does them and all of us a great
disservice.
The awakening
of the American public, triggered by the Downing Street
memos, is just the beginning of an educational process
that is going to take us in precisely the direction that
Chairman Dean and Rep. Conyers most fear. Now that the
American people have woken up to the fact that they were
lied into war, they naturally want to know: by whom? Who
are the liars, and how
did they manage to disguise their lies as "intelligence"?
The closer we get to the real answer,
the louder and more hysterical the
War Party becomes: charges of
"anti-Semitism" cloud the issue, and that's the
whole point. As Americans begin to understand who
was feeding the government false information about Iraqi
WMD and Saddam's nonexistent
links to the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and what their real
motive was, both Dean and Conyers may begin to understand
the dangers of defining "anti-Semitism" quite so
broadly.
Israel is a nation, and as such it
pursues its own unique national interests. In spite of
Israeli propaganda that defines
its objectives as synonymous with America's, the recent
rift in relations is hard to miss, and, in any case,
the underlying disparity of interests is merely coming to
the surface. The U.S. and Israel have been drifting apart
since the end of the Cold War, and Ray McGovern's denial
that the U.S. and Israel are really allies is based on
certain unpleasant facts
that Milbank can verify simply
by reading
his own
newspaper.
There is a very good reason why Israel
conducts covert operations in the U.S. up to and
including espionage. Israel's survival depends on American
financial, political, and military support.
The symbiosis of the "special
relationship" demands that the Israelis keep up a
constant effort to influence U.S. foreign policy, and who
could blame them if they launched an all-out effort to
rope us into war with Iraq and now Syria
and Iran?
As the Israelis push
into Kurdistan and use that nominal province of Iraq
as a base to launch operations against Damascus and Tehran
both rule restive Kurdish minorities it is
difficult to deny that Tel Aviv is well on its way to
dominating the Middle East. An acknowledgment of rising
Israeli power, far from being "anti-Semitic," is
a tribute to the strength of the world's only Jewish
nation, its entry into the great power pantheon.
The question is: does this really serve
American interests? It would seem Israel is the great
exception to the hegemonist
doctrine authored by Paul Wolfowitz, which avers that
the U.S. must seek to prevent any other nation from
achieving a position where they might challenge American
dominance in any region of the world. However, the decline
of neoconservative influence in this administration,
due in part to the disastrous
course of the war, may signal that this policy of putting
Israel first is imperiled if not ended.
It is only natural for Israel's American
lobby to protest that opposition to this rather odd policy
is "anti-Semitic." After all, we live in a
political culture where everyone hides behind their ethnic
identity to claim special status as a victim. An entire
class of Official
Victims has been elevated, by law and now by custom,
into an affirmative action aristocracy. As part of a
privileged class, they don't have to answer for their
foibles or excesses: it's all excused because, after all,
they've suffered. They have the right to be unreasonable,
to act out their "oppression," and even to
indulge in a little oppression of their own. If you
object, you're a "racist," you're the living
incarnation of Hitler, and now they're even reviving one
of their favorite
epithets
with obscure
historical references: Coughlinite!
I note in passing that the vocabulary of
the neoconservatives is resonant with the rhetoric of the 1930s
because most of them are unreconstructed leftists
who look back to that time of "national unity"
and a cozy alliance with the Soviet Union as a
kind of Golden Age, when they could simply accuse their
political enemies of being in league with Hitler and the
Mikado and that was the end of the argument. It was an
era of unparalleled state power heralding the rise of a
mighty American empire precisely the goals projected
by today's neocons, with their "big
government conservatism" and brazen
neo-imperialism.
As investigators move in on several
pending matters the
Plame affair, the upcoming
trial of Larry Franklin and the
AIPAC defendants, the inquiry into who fed the U.S.
with forged
documents allegedly proving that Saddam had procured
uranium from the African country of Niger
the education of the American people will proceed
apace. Israel's role as the progenitor of this war, as the
catalyst whose agents
planted phony "evidence" of Iraqi WMD, even as
they stole our secrets and passed them on to Tel Aviv, is
becoming more apparent by the day. Neither the hysterical
fulminations of a has-been presidential contender, nor the
equally shrill and unreasonable accusations of "Coughlinism"
coming from the neocons, will blunt the sharp question of
federal prosecutors as they dig out the truth about a
reckless cabal
that committed several crimes including espionage
[.pdf file] as they lured us with lies down the road
to war.
I should also address Rep.
Barney Frank's objections to what Ray McGovern said on
the panel. Barney says:
"The notion that United States
foreign policy is somehow being manipulated by Israel is
not only gravely mistaken, it is redolent of the sort of
conspiracy theories imputing hidden powers to the Jews
that have plagued the world for too long."
If that is true, then Israel and its
American amen corner should have thought of that before
they launched an all-out campaign to bamboozle us into
war. Why is the burden of this policy and its horrific
consequences placed on its opponents instead of its
authors?
Rep. Frank said the question by U.S. Rep. James P. Moran
Jr. (D-Va.), "which gave prominence to the role of
Israel as one of the possible major factors behind the
invasion, and the answer by witness Raymond McGovern,
which not only blamed Israel for the war in substantial
part, but objected even to Congressman Moran's citing
Israel as an American ally, are both refuted by the
evidence discussed at the hearing itself."
Frank went on to say that "nothing in the Downing
Street memo in any way supports the allegation that the
war in Iraq was all an Israeli plot." There is more
than one "Downing Street memo," as the
congressman is doubtless aware, and in one
of them [.pdf file], the British ambassador to the
U.S. reports on a lunch with Paul Wolfowitz in which the
former deputy secretary of defense and intellectual
architect of this war argues that Saddam's atrocities
should be emphasized in the propaganda campaign preceding
the invasion. "A lot of work" had been done on
this during the reign of Bush I, said Wolfowitz. Meyer
added: "Wolfowitz thought that this would go a long
way to destroying any notion of moral equivalence between
Iraq and Israel."
America is preparing to invade the heart
of the Middle East, conducting bombing raids and killing
Iraqis in massive numbers, and Wolfowitz is worried about
the moral opprobrium attached to Israel? If this
doesn't reveal Israel-centric tendencies at the highest
levels of this administration, then one can only wonder
what would.
Frank goes on to say that the war came
about "not because of some secret deal with Israel,
but because of the foreign policy worldview of those in
charge of Bush administration national security who of
course did not include the nominal Secretary of State,
Colin Powell." Frank apparently excludes the
possibility that an important part of that worldview was
and is that Israel's interests must be pursued
even at America's expense. He points out that the U.S. is
now seemingly imposing a solution to the Palestinian
problem, ostensibly against Israel's wishes: he doesn't
mention that Israel's settlements
remain largely
intact, and that the "security
wall" continues to divide Palestinian communities
and encroach
on Palestinian land.
"The latest step in the
evolution of that policy was a decision by President Bush
over the objections of many in Congress, which I did
not share to provide direct aid to the Palestinian
Authority. I believe this was a constructive measure by
President Bush in pursuit of an overall peace, and it
hardly fits the notion that Israel is the master
string-puller of the United States government."
The political fortunes of a manipulative cabal may
change, but they did succeed in their mission: we are now
in Iraq and not
leaving anytime soon. Furthermore, the war seems to be
spreading
to Syria and perhaps even
Iran. Certainly, a lot of activity points in that
direction. No one is saying that the neoconservative
faction in this administration is "the master
string-puller" in the sense that they hold absolute
power in Washington: recent reverses, as Frank
underscores, are proof enough of that. However, if they
could manage to pull the strings just long enough to get
us into a war, that is another matter entirely.
The American people are beginning
to wake up, even as myriad voices try to lull them
back to sleep. Who lied us into war? Americans want to
know. The evidence, as it accumulates, is the final judge,
but Frank, Conyers (to some degree), and Dean want to rule
out a certain verdict in advance. They won't succeed. All
the cries of feigned outrage, the smears, and the forced
political correctness won't prevent the American people
from finally educating themselves and their alleged representatives
and taking action. The ongoing spectacle of death in
Iraq is generating a social and political backlash that is
going to sweep away the hypocrisy and ideological biases
that have dominated American politics for too long,
including the political correctness that places Israel on
a pedestal, as being somehow above criticism or, at
the very least, subject to a different standard.
NOTES IN THE MARGIN
By the way, the story about an Israeli
company having a "warning" about 9/11 originated
not in the fever swamps of the neo-Nazi movement, but with
a respected Israeli newspaper, Ha'aretz, which ran
a story saying that one or more New York employees of
Odigo received instant messages about half an hour before
the attacks. When I wrote to the reporter, Yuval Dror,
expressing my extreme skepticism about this story, he
assured me that the president of the company, a reputable
businessman, stands behind Ha'aretz's reporting. My
opinion: It looks like a planted story, put out there by
the Israelis themselves for whatever reason. The "insider
trading" story was run by the San Francisco
Chronicle and other mainstream newspapers and
later discounted,
but what that has to do with Israel is not at all
apparent, at least to me.