08/0/05 "Direland"
-- -- Here's what the stories in today's
Washington Post and New
York Times on the new indictments of the
two AIPAC spies aren't telling you: their
espionage was principally about helping to prepare an
attack by Israel on Iran. And one of the Israeli embassy
officials who knows all about AIPAC's role in helping plan
the attack on Iran has been whisked out of the country and
out of the reach of U.S. prosecutors, the Israeli daily Ha'aretz
reports this morning.
The neo-cons in the Pentagon had long
been arguing for an attack on Iran to take out its nuclear
facilities that had the potential to be converted for
development of nuclear weapons. Wolfie's man Doug Feith
had been particularly assiduous in pressing the case for a
"forward strategy" against Iran. Feith's views
are madly extremist, and Jim Zogby collected them in an
April profile of Feith that
should scare the pants off of anyone rational. (Feith's
been a major activist for years with the viciously
anti-Arab crazies of the ZOA, the Zionist Organization of
America).
When, for purely electoral reasons with
the Iraq occupation going so disastrously, the White House
decided against a direct attack by the U.S. on Iran, the
neo-cons went to Plan B -- an attack on Iran by proxy,
from Israel. The principal classified documents leaked to
Israel through AIPAC -- the leaks that that began the
investigation of the AIPAC spy ring, which has been going
on now for over a year -- concerned Iran. They were leaked
by Feith's deputy, Larry Franklin, also now under a
five-count indictment for spying.
The plan for an Israeli attack on Iran
has been long envisioned -- both in Washington and by
Sharon's government -- but this attack is now in a highy
advanced state of planning and could come as quickly as
Sharon snaps his fingers to order it. Back
on March 13, the London Times -- in a report that
was largely ignored in the U.S. -- reported that:
"The inner cabinet of Ariel Sharon, the Israeli prime
minister, gave 'initial authorisation' for an attack at a
private meeting last month on his ranch in the Negev
desert,"
The London Times went on to
describe how "Israeli forces have used a mock-up of
Iran’s Natanz uranium enrichment plant in the desert to
practise destroying it. Their tactics include raids by
Israel’s elite Shaldag (Kingfisher) commando
unit and airstrikes by F-15 jets from 69 Squadron, using
bunker-busting bombs to penetrate underground facilities. The
plans have been discussed with American officials who are
said to have indicated provisionally that they would not
stand in Israel’s way if all international
efforts to halt Iranian nuclear projects failed...."
And, the Times added, "US officials warned last week
that a military strike on Iranian nuclear facilities by
Israeli or American forces had not been ruled out should
the issue become deadlocked at the United Nations."
Just a few weeks before that
revelation of the concretization of Israeli plans for the
Iran attack, Bush let the cat out of the bag in an
off-the-cuff remark captured by London's Daily
Telegraph, in a February 18 article headlined, "AMERICA
WOULD BACK ISRAEL ATTACK ON IRAN." The
Telegraph reported that Bush said:
"Clearly, if I was the leader of Israel and I'd
listened to some of the statements by the Iranian
ayatollahs that regarded the security of my country, I'd
be concerned about Iran having a nuclear weapon as well.
And in that Israel is our ally, and in that we've made a
very strong commitment to support Israel, we will support
Israel if her security is threatened."
Noting that Bush had gone
off the reservations and failed to follow his handlers'
brefing to stick to the agreed-on script, the Telegraph
dryly noted: "His comments appeared to be a departure
from the administration's line that there are no plans to
attack at present and that Washington
backs European diplomatic efforts. The remarks may
have reflected Mr Bush's personal thinking on an issue
causing deep concern in Washington...." Bush's
slip-of-the-tongue that revealed his real intentions was
front-page news in Le Monde and other European dailies --
but got no attention in the Stateside major media.
At the time Feith's deputy
Franklin (and, today's indictments say, two other as yet
unidentified Pentagon officials) were passing the
classified documents on Iran to AIPAC for transmission to
Israel, the White House had not yet given the green light
to Sharon -- indeed, the Iran attack was in a holding
pattern pending the outcome of negotiations over Teheran's
nuke capacity being led by the European powers
which, unlike the U.S., have diplomatic relations with the
Islamic Republic of Iran.
Even so, U.S. fingerprints
were all over the Israelis' Iran attack, which had
long been envisioned by U.S. policy-makers. The
respected Israeli daily Ha'aretz spelled it out
last September 13, reporting: "The
Clinton administration laid the foundation for that option
[of attacking Iran] by giving the Rabin government the
okay to purchase, with coupons, the F-15I (dubbed
"Thunder" in Israel). The Bush administration
will complete the task by agreeing to give Israel
air-to-surface munitions that will breach the mysteries of
the nuclear network in the depths of Isfahan and other
sites, far more concealed than the reactor that is on
worldwide display at Bushehr. What the Americans are
unable to do, because of European, United Nations and
Congressional pressure, Israel will do."
The indictment of the two
senior AIPAC staffers follows the indictment in may of
Feith's footpad Larry Franklin. Franklin worked in the
Office of Special Plans, run by then-Undersecretary of
Defense for Policy Douglas Feith, who reported to
then-Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz. The OSP
functioned as a "shadow" intelligence service on
Iraq, and provided much of the information to the White
House that was used to justify the American invasion of
Iraq. Some
wags have called it "Feith-based intelligence",
since much of that intelligence and information has now
been proven to be utterly false. At the beginning of
May, Franklin
was arrested by the FBI for the passing of classified
documents to two AIPAC staffers, who were then to pass
them to Israel. The documents in question concerned Iran.
One of the two
newly-indicted AIPACers isn't just anybody. Steve Rosen,
63, is the man who built AIPAC into the $40 million
dollar Capitol Hill powerhouse it is today. Buried in a
Washington Post profile of AIPAC from May 19 is the
skinny on Rosen as the power behind the scenes at AIPAC.
Said the Post:
"For more than two decades, Rosen
has been a mainstay of AIPAC and the architect of the
group's ever-increasing clout. Though Rosen was listed
below Executive Director Howard Kohr on AIPAC's
organizational chart, people familiar with AIPAC's history
say that Kohr is a protege of Rosen's and got that job
with his help. Kohr declined to be interviewed about
Rosen. 'He [Rosen] is a quiet guy,' said M.J. Rosenberg,
director of policy analysis for the Israel Policy Forum,
another pro-Israel group, and a former AIPAC employee.
'But everyone knows he's the brains behind the
outfit.'"
Now, just what is AIPAC, you may well
ask? AIPAC is the enforcer of the knee-jerk support for
the Israeli government which characterizes the political
and governing classes in this country, -- Israel is the real
third rail of American politics:
touch it with criticism, no matter how carefully couched,
and you die. Both the Democratic and Republican parties
fall all over themselves to
kiss AIPAC's boots -- because AIPAC and its well-filled
war-chest helps make sure they toe the line on Israel, and
has been responsible for the defeat of a significant
number of politicians over the years who dared to
criticize Israeli policies. Earlier this year, AIPAC
played a major role in destroying
the candidacy of Tim Roemer for chairman
of the DNC. There's an in-depth,
critical profile of AIPAC by RightWeb's Michael Flynn
that gives an in-depth look at AIPAC's
arm-and-leg-breaking political style. And the newly
indicted Rosen is The Man Behind the Curtain. Even though
he formally resigned from AIPAC, the organization is
paying his legal bills, and Rosen is still pulling the
strings.
The reason for putting some daylight
between Rosen and AIPAC is that the puissant political
arm-twister is deathly afraid it will be forced to
register as a foreign lobby, as the Jewish weeily The
Forward reported earlier this year. Americans don't
like the sight of their elected officials pocketing
campaign cash from foreign governments, and AIPAC fears
being forced to register formally as a lobbyist for Israel
would thus diminish their clout on Capitol Hill. Bush
won't make AIPAC register, and the spinless Democratic
Congressional leadership won't lead the charge to make
them do so either. But today's indictments of
string-puller Rosen and his AIPAC colleague for spying on
the U.S. gives progressives who want to see a peaceful,
two-state, land-for-peace solution between Israel and
Palestine a strategic opening to press loudly for AIPAC's
formal shil registration as a shil for the government that
built the Israeli Wall of Shame. It's a measure long past
due.
One of the Israeli diplomats the feds
want to question about the activities of the AIPAC spy
ring has been quietly spirited out of the country, Ha'aretz
reports this morning. "The Israeli diplomat in
Washington who met several times with Franklin has been
identified as Naor Gilon head of the political department
at the Israeli Embassy in Washington and a specialist on
proliferation issues. Gilon returned to Israel a few
days ago as part of a long-scheduled rotation according to
an Israeli official in Washington. U.S. investigators want
to question Gilon and other Israeli diplomats about their
contacts with Franklin officials said.," according to
the Israeli daily.