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Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Joint Appeal for Peace

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Archive for June, 2008

Shin Bet Offers Palestinian Journalist ‘Gitmo Treatment’

Monday, June 30th, 2008
mohammed omer gaza photojournalistMohammed Omer, Gaza photojournalist roughed up by Shin Bet

If you’re an award-winning Gaza journalist, the Shin Bet has a message for you: get out and don’t come back.  Inter-Press Service photographer Mohammed Omer just won the distinguished Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism in London.  He traveled to Jordan on his way home and stopped to coordinate his return with Israeli authorities.  Once he was given proper approvals he went to the Allenby Bridge to cross into the Occupied Territory.  Here is what happened:

Accompanied by Dutch diplomats, Omer passed through the Jordanian side of the border without incident. However, after arrival on the Israeli side, trouble began. He informed a female soldier that he was returning home to Gaza. He was repeatedly asked where Gaza was, and told that he had neither a permit nor any coordination to cross.

Omer explained that he did indeed have permission and coordination but was nevertheless taken to a room by Israel’s domestic intelligence agency the Shin Bet, where he was isolated for an hour and a half without explanation.

“Eventually I was asked whether I had a knife or gun on me even though I had already passed through the x-ray machine, had my luggage searched, and was in the company of Dutch diplomats,” Omer said.

His luggage was again searched, and security then proceeded to go through every document and paper he had on him, taking down the names and numbers of the European parliamentary officials he had met.

The Shin Bet officials then started to make fun of the European parliamentarians, and mocked Omer for being “the prize-winning journalist”.

The Gazan journalist was repeatedly asked why he was returning to “the hell of Gaza after we allowed you to leave.” To this he responded that he wanted to be a voice for the voiceless. He was told he was a “trouble-maker”.

The security men also demanded he show all the money he had on him, and particular attention was paid to the British pounds he was carrying. His Gellhorn prize money had been awarded in British pounds but he was not carrying the entire sum on him bodily, something the investigators refused to believe.

After being unable to produce the prize money, he was ordered to strip naked.

“At first I refused but then I had an M16 (gun) pointed in my face and my clothes were forcibly removed, even my underwear,” Omer said.

At this point Omer broke down and pleaded for an end to such treatment. He said he was told, “you haven’t seen anything yet.” Every cavity of his body was searched as one of the investigators pinned him down on the floor, placing his boot on Omer’s neck. Omer began vomiting, and fainted.

When he came round his eyelids were being forcibly opened and his eardrums probed by an Israeli military doctor, who was also armed. He was then dragged along the floor by his feet by the Shin Bet officials, with his head repeatedly banging on the floor, to a Palestinian ambulance which had been called.

“I eventually woke up in a Palestinian hospital with the doctors trying to reassure me,” Omer told IPS.

Reuters adds to the story that Omer’s ribs were broken during his manhandling.

This, of course, is not the first time that Palestinians accompanied by western diplomatic personnel have been roughed up.  It’s not even the first time that western diplomatic personnel themselves have been roughed up by Israeli goons masquerading as representatives of the security apparatus.  The last time something like this happened, the prime minister’s office was abject in apologizing and swearing something like this wouldn’t happen again.  Well guess what–it has.

What’s the Israeli explanation?  They have many, all of which appear lame:

A spokeswoman at the Israeli Foreign Press Association said she was unaware of the incident.

Lisa Dvir from the Israeli Airport Authority (IAA), the body responsible for controlling Israel’s borders, told IPS that the IAA was neither aware of Omer’s journalist credentials nor of his coordination.

“We would like to know who Omer spoke to in regard to receiving coordination to pass through Allenby. We offer journalists a special service when passing through our border crossings, and had we known about his arrival this would not have happened.

“I’m not aware of the events that followed his detention, and we are not responsible for the behaviour of the Shin Bet.”

So you have a rogue Shin Bet answerable to no one taking it upon itself to brutalize Palestinian journalists merely because they’ve distinguished themselves by winning an international journalism prize.  Of course, what the Shin Bet really wants is for Gaza’s best journalists to leave Gaza and never return so there will be no one to report to the world on Israel’s behavior there.  They’ve already prohibited Israeli journalists from reporting there.  Much too uncomfortable to have Israelis knowing from their own journalists about the hell that Israel is making there.

One wonders whether the Shin Bet and CIA are sharing “interrogation techniques” in the hunt for dangerous “Islamist terrorists” like Mohammed Omer.  I suppose Omer should be happy he didn’t receive the treatment recently accorded another Gaza photojournalist, Fadel Shana–a flechette blade to the neck courtesy of an IDF tank, severing his spinal cord and killing him instantly.

This story was also covered by Democracy Now.  Thanks to reader Ellen Rosner for tipping me off to the story.

Burner Warned Off J Street

Monday, June 30th, 2008

Matt Stoller at Open Left reports that Seattle area Congressional candidate Darcy Burner told him that she received a phone call from an AIPAC representative warning her against accepting an endorsement from J Street, the dovish American-Jewish peace lobby:

Darcy Burner…told me that she got a call from people affiliated with the conservative Jewish political group AIPAC.  They told her to distance herself from the new pro-peace group J Street, which they said is full of radical leftists who believe in capitulation to the forces of the Arab world who would overrun and destroy Israel.

I have calls in to Burner’s staff and have e-mailed Stoller to ask for further clarification about precisely who spoke to Burner.  I can’t imagine that an AIPAC staff member would be foolish enough to state in such a bald-faced way what they probably believe, but would not want to make publicly known.

In fact, I have spoken to someone in a position to know a bit more about what actually happened. This person likely has his own partisan agenda and so his perspective needs to be vetted as well.  But the story he tells is that a local Burner volunteer who is also an AIPAC volunteer warned her of the dangers of affiliating with J Street.  This supporter was supposedly doing her a favor in telling her how dangerous it could be to her campaign to get into bed with such a group.

My take on this, before getting more explicit background information from the principles, is that an overzealous AIPAC supporter took it upon himself to get in Burner’s face on this matter.  AIPAC wants to get as far away from this story as it can and doesn’t even concede explicitly that the person who warned Burner was affiliated with it.

Whatever did happen, I think this indicates that J Street is getting under the skin of precisely the people whose skin it should be getting under.  I wouldn’t be surprised if we hear more stories like this on the campaign trail.  We need to be vigilant to head off such threatening behavior if it does rear its ugly head.

There is one misconception in Stoller’s report:

AIPAC’s people are backing Darcy’s opponent, Dave Reichert…

AIPAC doesn’t officially endorse candidates.  In fact, one of the things you’ll hear them screaming about is that they are in fact non-partisan.  It’s a crock really, but in combatting AIPAC I think you have to at least publicly describe the way they operate as they themselves do.  So AIPAC wields its political power through independent pro-Israel PACs which dole out money to candidates.  The PACs are run by AIPAC donors and so are an indirect extension of AIPACs political reach.

It’s likely that pro-Israel PACs will be funding Reichert’s campaign, though we’ll have to follow the money trail to see to what extent this is true.  By the way, if pro-Israel PACs DO support Reichert, they’ll be cozying up to one of the Hagee-style evangelical extremists who, as a candidate, proudly and publicly states that America is a Christian nation.

Also, I’ll be very curious to see how much, if anything, the pro-Israel PACs give to Burner.  If they shut her out, it will speak volumes about AIPAC’s real feelings about J Street.  If they don’t, then they’ll be smarter and more sophisticated than I’ve hitherto given them credit.  In fact, if any reader out there either keeps track of such information or knows groups that might, please let me know.

Laura Rozen’s Iran MoJo Convo: Will Bush or Olmert Drop the Big One?

Sunday, June 29th, 2008

Do you wake up in a cold sweat at night wondering whether George Bush or Ehud Olmert will drop the big one on Nantanz and what the implications will be for the rest of us?  If so, Mother Jones’ Laura Rozen is the answer to your prayers.  She has put together an interesting collection of Iran experts and posed the question: will Israel or the U.S. attack Iran?  Her panel includes Daniel Levy, Trita Parsi, Yossi Melman and Danny Postel among others.  The prevailing view among them is that there will not be such an attack–at least not in the foreseeable future (though some panelists see a possibility of such an attack in the longer term).

The perspective closest to my own was that of Danny Postel who wrote:

None of us can be certain at this point whether the US or Israel will attack Iran, but I read recent signs as being just ominous enough that I’d rather err on the side of being too worried than of not being worried enough. Even that paragon of cool sobriety The Economist now concludes that Israel’s recent maneuvers suggest that it might not be bluffing. One thing we do know is that the intellectual runway is being slicked for an attack. John Bolton has floated the suggestion that Israel will attack after the November elections but before the next president takes office, while Daniel Pipes has evoked the same scenario, only with the US doing the job…Norman Podhoretz not only “prays” that Bush will bomb Iran but has personally urged the president to do so in a private meeting between the two. (Bush, according to Podhoretz, “gave not the slightest indication of whether he agreed,” but “listened very intently” and “looked very solemn.”) The writing on the wall looks deadly serious to me. I’d rather fall for the hawks’ propaganda than awake one morning to find out that I’d underestimated the threat. But even if it is just posturing, it’s a very dangerous game with potentially cataclysmic consequences.

Whether the likelihood of an attack is low or high, the entire saber-rattling exercise is deeply disturbing.

One of my hopes is that with an Obama Administration (if that happens) at least 1/2 of the insanity of the current Israel & U.S. policy approaches to Iran will be eliminated. That just leaves a hot-headed Israel to worry about.

What most worries me about Israeli policy options is that they went into the Lebanon war with precisely the same delusions about what they could accomplish. An Iran adventure would be virtually the same type of situation: much ballyhoo about eliminating the Iranian nuclear threat, a strike of limited success, then Iranian blowback that turns the region into a smoking ruin.

If Israel was stupid enough to sink into the Big Muddy in Lebanon, what’s to hold them back from doing the same in Iran?

While I detest Ehud Barak politically, I’m hoping that he’ll be a far stronger, wiser & more strategic defense minister than Amir Peretz was during the Lebanon misadventure. While Barak rattles sabers with the best (or worst) of them, perhaps he has just enough saychel (“common sense”) to know what Israel can and cannot achieve with the military option regarding Iran.

What I especially like about the MoJo Convo concept is getting together the best progressive minds on a specific knotty political problem and giving them space to talk about it. On top of that, allowing readers to participate in the conversation as well and then allowing the panelists to interact with each other online and with readers–well, this idea is beyond cool.

I think this should be done a lot more often on other types of subjects.  For example, I’d like to see a group of similar Jewish intellectuals discuss the topic of “what is pro-Israel” in the context of the presidential campaign.  I know a lot of people have been writing about this lately including me, but having everyone get together in one place to discuss it would be really neat.

I was thinking of creating a blog composed of progressive Jews writing about the presidential campaign discussing issues pertinent to American Jews–including but not limited to Israel.  I had even solicited a group of bloggers to do it.  But it never got off the ground.

Malcolm Hoenlein to Iranians: ‘We Come in Peace, Earthlings’

Friday, June 27th, 2008


Malcolm Hoenlein delivered a strange video address to the people of Iran recently which you’ll find on YouTube.  It reminds me a little of those old science fiction movies in which the president makes a television address to invading Martians telling them that we are a peaceful people and wish them no harm.  This is one bizarre performance.

After thinking about this a little more, it occurs to me that this is precisely the type of address that George Bush would deliver on the eve of bombing Tehran.  Imagine the sheer megalomania of Hoenlein arrogating to himself the role of explicating U.S. policy and American Jewish attitudes toward that country.  He has the sheer chutzpah to make comments like the following:

We know that the people of Iran do not support Ahmadinejad…

Whether or not the majority of Iranians support Ahmadinejad (and how would Hoenlein know that they don’t?), they certainly do not support whatever Hoenlein is trying to sell them.

And further:

We want to help you, we want to work with you, we want to support you in your effort to have a better life; to have a government that reflects your positions, your interests, and can help contribute to a different kind of region in the Middle East; to a different kind of world at large.

…This effort to achieve a nuclear capacity at any cost…[stems from] a misguided desire on their part to achieve hegemony and to foster their own extremist religious and ideological goals.

We hope the people of Iran understand that we reach out to you, we care about you.  We want to do nothing that harms you or hurts you.  We understand that this [Ahmadinejad] is not the voice of the people of Iran.

Does Hoenlein seriously believe that this will persuade Iranians that their leaders are making a grievous error in pursuing a nuclear weapon (if they indeed are doing so?).

This feeble performance begs many questions: why does Malcolm Hoenlein think any Iranian gives a flying fig what he has to say?  Has the Conference of Presidents ever done anything to earn the trust or respect of Iranians?  How does Hoenlein expect that his message will be heard by Iranians?  Does he expect they’ll broadcast it on their nightly news?  Will he set up his own Persian version of Radio Marti (Radio Tehran?) and beam it directly to his Iranian audience?

So let’s dispense immediately with the likelihood that Hoenlein has even an ounce of credibility with any Iranian.  Has he pulled this stunt in order to impress his own constituency (i.e. hard-line American Jewish leaders who are gunning for war against Iran)?  If so, what is he trying to prove to them?  That he’s put American Jewry’s best foot forward in attempting to persuade Iranians that we mean them no harm but that it’s those dreadful ayatollahs we aim to exterminate?

Trying to plumb Hoenlein’s thinking is a little like spelunking through the mind of Marty Peretz: it’s deep and dark in there and hard to figure out which way is up or down. But this is the quality of American Jewish “leadership” these days. The troglodytes lumber through halls of power roaring for Iranian and Palestinian blood disguising their true agenda with fake deferential speeches like this one. Woe unto a people with leaders such as these. Who appointed them to represent us? All I can say is: not in my name. Not in my name does this man speak.

Tikun Olam Changes Themes

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

Yesterday, with the invaluable help of Jonathan of Digital Toast, I changed this blog’s WordPress theme.  I’ve been considering doing this for some time for many reasons.  After reviewing hundreds of WP themes I found Living OS Upsilon, which I think is quite wonderful because one of its main features incorporates a WP Smoothgallery slideshow plugin and allows you to display rotating images in the blog banner.

For some time, I’ve wanted to redesign my banner to feature a specifically Jewish theme.  Upsilon allows me to load a series of images and highlight what I find special or unique in Jewish art, culture, or politics in image form.

The only downside is that as far as I can tell you pretty much have to figure out the theme and how it works on your own.  While the plugin author has created a wonderful tool, his willingness to interact with users is quite limited in my experience.  I’m not sure why that is though there may be many legitimate reasons.  It does make for some frustration though if you’re not up to the task technically.  Which is why Jonathan has proven himself indispensable in sorting through some of the technical challenges.

For anyone thinking of switching to Upsilon or one of its related themes a few hints.  The Recent Events portion of the main page banner is controlled through the Sidebar2 in the widget section.  Also, the WP Footnote plugin conflicts with the Slideshow feature (thanks for figuring that out, Jonathan!).  Anyone who’s using the former will have to disable it until/unless the author can resolve the issue.

If anyone reading this has css experience, I’d like to widen the post display area and narrow some of the side borders.  I’d love some help changing those dimensions.

Several readers have told me they’ve found it difficult to figure out how to post a comment from a post displaying on the main page.  To do that, look at the line just under the post title that displays the post date.  You will see an small icon with the upper half of a body in profile along with a number (the number of comments for that post).  Click on the icon and this will open the comment box.  Alternatively, you can also click on the post title & will find the comment box at the bottom of the post.

Please let me know if you have any other comments or issues with the new theme.  Let me know if you discover any technical problems as well.

UNICEF Refuses Leviev Money, Foxman Accuses UN Group of Supporting Boycott

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

I’ve been following Adalah’s energetic, months-long campaign against Russo-Israeli diamond baron Lev Leviev with great interest. Not so much because I agree with Adalah’s politics regarding the I-P conflict, but because I find Leviev’s political, commercial and religious interests to be so odious. Through an imaginative, tenacious campaign they have nipped at Leviev’s heels all over the globe where he maintains commercial interests. Most recently they persuaded Dubai to refuse to allow him to open a new jewelry outlet there.

But Adalah’s greatest coup thus far has been persuading UNICEF to refuse to accept future gifts from Leviev. An activist from the human rights group noticed that Leviev’s website boasts of his sponsorship of a Cannes gala whose proceeds went to the charity. That prompted a letter to UNICEF director and (ironically) former Bush cabinet officer Ann Veneman, and a long deliberation process which included a UNICEF delegation visiting the Palestinian villages, Jayous and Bilin, most damaged by Leviev’s settlement building activities. The final result was this letter (pdf) to Adalah:

UNICEF will not consider partnerships–direct or indirect–with Mr. Leviev of any of his corporate entities, and will not accept financial or other support that we know is from him or his corporate entities.

This in itself is a significant achievement as it puts Israeli companies which profit from building settlements on notice that they risk becoming pariahs in certain circles for their support of the Occupation.  But just as important has been Adalah’s provocation of the that lumbering Jewish dinosaur, Abe Foxman, who has come to Leviev’s defense with a blistering, and error-filled attack on UNICEF.  When you provoke Abe Foxman’s ire you know you’ve really poked the Israel lobby in the eye:

The ADL…urged…UNICEF to reconsider its decision to reject donations from a Jewish philanthropist…”The decision not to accept assistance from Mr. Leviev smacks of selective political discrimination,” said Abraham H. Foxman…”This decision only gives legitimacy to those who would seek to promote a boycott of the State of Israel and its supporters.”

Ah, the dreaded creature, The Boycott, rears its ugly head yet again.  It seems to be the shibboleth of the moment for the Israel lobby.  There’s only one problem.  UNICEF has an Israel chapter and gladly accepts funds from Israeli donors.  Hmm, Abe, you’ll have to do better next time.

Abe utilizes another tried and true Israel lobby tactic: the “double standard:”

…The [ADL]…not[ed] that the fund has a history of accepting aid from other questionable partners, including the International Islamic Relief Organization [IIRO], which was designated as a terrorist organization by the U.S. Treasury Department in 2006 because of its links to Al Qaeda.

Abe is sloppy regarding this charge as well.  IIRO was NEVER designated a terrorist organization by the U.S.  One Saudi official of the group and two of its affiliates (in Indonesia and Philippines) were so designated.  Besides, if we keep in mind the Justice Department’s recent failed prosecution of the Holyland Foundation for being an alleged supporter of Islamic terror, the Bush Administration’s judgment of what is and what is not a legitimate Islamic charity is a tad suspect.  In addition, IIRO doesn’t contribute to UNICEF.  It is a UNICEF partner in delivering care to Saudi children.

Even the Bush Administration, hardly a supporter of Islamic terror, seems to understand the distinction as reported in the Jerusalem Post:

The U.S. government also noted the distinction between the head office and the international branches.

“We are monitoring the situation closely, but we also understand the difference between the IIRO main headquarters and its branches,” Carolyn Vadino, deputy spokeswoman for the U.S. mission to the U.N., wrote…

“It is the two branches in question that are designated and have ties to terrorists and at this time we have been assured that they are separate entities,” Vadino wrote.

Not surprisingly, Foxman has harvested a lot of these specious charges from right-wing pro-Israel sites like IMRA. This is yet another example of how the extremist wingnuts of Jewish life insinuate themselves into mainstream political discourse. Abe Foxman is the militant pro-Israel wingnuts’ best friend.

But this oblique slap in the face from Abe is what should have Adalah supporters smiling:

“At a time when children around the world are in desperate need of food, medical care, education and other aid, it is a sad day when UNICEF has to create unnecessary, arbitrary and discriminatory guidelines in a bid to satisfy the demands of an outside group with little vested concern in improving the lives of children,” said Mr. Foxman.

So what Abe would have UNICEF do is accept support from anyone who wishes to provide it: armaments manufacturers, cigarette companies, alcohol purveyors, and settlement builders.  Undoubtedly, this is the path that the ADL follows in accepting contributions for its activities.  Fortunately, UNICEF has determined that some donations are tainted with the stain of exploitation of children.  The charity has ethical standards for which the ADL sees no need.

Interesting that Foxman describes Adalah as having “no concern for improving the lives of children.”  Cleary, Adalah’s concern for the villagers of Bilin and Jayous confirms their dedication to the welfare of the children of these communities, many of whose families can no longer afford to send them to school because the new Separation Barrier has cut these farmers off from their fields and destroyed their livelihoods.

Perhaps what Foxman really means to say is that Adalah cares about Palestinian children, but they don’t count as legitimate objects of UNICEF’s concern.

For anyone wishing to see how the European glitterati flaunt their wealth, you can see a video of the Gala Magazine party which Leviev sponsored and which raised funds for UNICEF.

I haven’t written yet about this video which features a Leviev address to a large Chabad gathering.  In it, he speaks of his wealth as God-given and a sign that the Lord approves both of him and his actions.  In light of Leviev’s willingness to impoverish Palestinians in order to enrich himself, one has to question God’s judgment in pouring His favor on someone like Leviev.

Thanks to David Bloom for providing some of the research on which this post is based.

Sheldon Adelson: ‘Crazy Jewish Billionaire’

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

No, I didn’t say it. George Bush did. There is this and much more in Connie Bruck’s eye-opening New Yorker expose of Sheldon Adelson’s life as a right-wing political wheeler-dealer and gambling tycoon. The profile is highly unflattering though it does attempt to place some of Adelson’s philanthropy in a positive context. What follows are some of the most salient passages dealing with Adelson’s political commitments, especially those involving Israel.

Bruck describes in great detail Adelson’s campaign to end Ehud Olmert’s prime ministership so that he might replace him with his buddy, Bibi Netanyahu. Adelson doesn’t merely oppose Olmert in the conventional sense that someone might oppose a sitting prime minister. He loathes him. He accuses him of being a traitor and his government as being somehow illegitimate (all these are echoes of the extremist settler movement).  The following is a discussion of the full court press Adelson exerted on George Bush to scuttle the Annapolis summit because right wingers feared it would lead to negotiating away Jewish sovereignty over Jerusalem:

Adelson opposed both Olmert and the peace conference, which was held in Annapolis in late November. The Zionist Organization of America, to which Adelson is a major contributor, ran a full-page ad in the Times, headlined, “SECRETARY RICE: DON’T PROMOTE A STATE FOR PALESTINIANS WHILE THEIR 10 COMMANDMENTS PROMOTE TERRORISM AND ISRAEL’S DESTRUCTION.” The “10 Commandments” referred to the constitution of Fatah, Abbas’s party. “Osama Bin-Laden and Hamas would be proud of Abbas’ Fatah Constitution,” the ad stated.

I don’t know about you, but I’m deeply frightened of a mega-billionaire who shares the political views of Daniel Pipes, David Horowitz, Charles Jacobs, Bibi Netanyahu and Natan Sharansky.  There’s no telling how much damage so much money can do in a political process.  The following passage describes Adelson’s nutty-as-fruitcake notion that Haim Saban, one of the AIPAC’s most significant donors, is anti-Israel; and the Fatah rump prime minister is a “terrorist.”  This is so redolent of Frontpagemagazine, Campus Watch and the David Project rhetoric–it’s scary:

In early November, the Prime Minister of the Palestinian Authority, Salam Fayyad, who is widely respected in Washington, was scheduled to appear with Tzipi Livni, Israel’s foreign minister, at the opening of the Saban Forum, an event in Jerusalem organized by the Brookings Institution’s Saban Center for Middle East Policy. Adelson phoned the event’s chair, Haim Saban, an Israeli-American businessman, and asked him to contribute to a campaign that he was organizing against the Olmert government; Saban declined. Adelson then asked if he would sign an ad; again, Saban refused. Whereupon, Adelson accused him of funding anti-Israel research at the Saban Center. Saban was surprised, but suggested that when the center’s director, Martin Indyk, was next in Las Vegas he and Adelson could talk. Not long afterward, Indyk met with Adelson at his office at the Venetian, on the Las Vegas Strip. According to a person familiar with what happened at the meeting, Adelson berated Indyk for hosting “terrorists” like Fayyad, who he said was a founder of Fatah. Indyk is said to have replied that Fayyad was never involved in terrorism and was not a member of Fatah, and that Adelson’s problem was really with Olmert, because he dealt with Fayyad. Adelson stood his ground, and declared that the Olmert government was an illegitimate government and should be thrown out.

Natan Shanransky is one of Adelson’s darlings.  The former’s One Jerusalem organization has also targeted Olmert with especially incendiary rhetoric.  What is important in the passage below is Bruck’s statement that Adelson is breaking a tacit understanding of American Jewish politics concerning Israel:

Historically, most mainstream American Jewish organizations don’t publicly oppose the government of Israel, but in the weeks before and after the Annapolis conference a number of groups were strongly critical. Among them was One Jerusalem, founded in 2000 to protest any peace accord that would include Israeli concessions on Jerusalem. One Jerusalem has received contributions from Adelson. A week before the Annapolis conference, One Jerusalem’s chairman, Natan Sharansky…announced a major campaign against any division of Jerusalem, and against the peace initiative. One Jerusalem referred to Annapolis as “the Munich Conference of the 21st century.” After Olmert asserted Israel’s right as a sovereign state to make decisions regarding its national security, One Jerusalem posted an article on its Web site, headlined, “OLMERT TO WORLD JEWRY: SHUT UP.” Later, as Olmert’s negotiations with Abbas continued, another piece announced, OLMERT DECLARES WAR ON ISRAEL.”

Again, what is especially noxious here is the notion that an elected Israeli prime minister does not have the right to set Israeli policy if it runs counter to a right wing notion of what it should be.  In other words, Adelson favors Israeli democracy when his man (Netanyahu) is running the show.  When he isn’t, then the other guy is a charlatan and traitor to the nation who should be destroyed like an insect.

Astonishingly and in another major break with American Jewish traditions, Adelson has not been shy in lashing out at AIPAC for being insufficiently faithful to an anti-Palestinian agenda:

…He learned that AIPAC was supporting a congressional letter, signed by more than a hundred and thirty members of the House of Representatives, that urged the Bush Administration to increase economic aid to the Palestinians, an initiative that the government of Israel also supported. Adelson was furious. AIPAC is not accustomed to being attacked publicly from the right; its critics generally charge that its conservative policies toward Israel favor the status quo over a peace accord. But AIPAC has traditionally insisted that it seeks to further a close American-Israeli relationship, whether the government of Israel is left, right, or center. In an interview with the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Adelson said of AIPAC’s support of aid for the Palestinians, “I don’t continue to support organizations that help friends committing suicide just because they want to jump.”

Bruck, whose husband, Mel Levine is a long-time AIPAC fixture, tacks a little too sympathetically to the AIPAC line that it supports Israeli government policy irrespective of ideological considerations.  On the contrary, AIPAC often sponsors legislation that exceeds, and even conflicts with stated Israeli policy.  But the notion that Adelson would thunder at the group for being too sympathetic to Palestinians is another eye-opener.

I believe that Israel is strong enough that it can withstand the depredations of even people as rich and potentially politically dangerous as Adelson.  But passages like the following do give one pause:

When Adelson was merely rich, he wrote checks for causes that he favored and for politicians whom he supported. Occasionally, he demanded to be heard. But he did not expect to play a significant role in U.S. foreign policy, or in Israel’s strategic decisions, or in the fate of a sitting Israeli Prime Minister. That was before he acquired many billions of dollars. (He has assets of twenty-six billion dollars, according to a Forbes list published in March.) His political expenditures and his expectations have increased proportionately. Not long after Bush’s encounter with Adelson last October [in which Adelson railed against Condi Rice's Annapolis agenda], an Israeli government representative said that Bush, describing it to another Israeli official, had remarked wryly, “I had this crazy Jewish billionaire, yelling at me.”

The problem with a character like Sheldon Adelson is that both his personality and views are so extreme as to invite caricature.  But you don’t have to caricature someone who thinks like this.  The subject has done it for you:

He said that in the waning days of the McCarthy era there were a number of appeals-board hearings of scientists who had had their clearances revoked, and he took down their testimony. “The scientists had been invited to a ‘soirée,’ ” he continued, his voice tinged with sarcasm. “You know, these wine-and-celery affairs, wine-and-cheese affairs—and me, I wanted hot dogs and hamburgers and pastrami sandwiches.” The crowd chuckled appreciatively. “Little did they know that these were Communist-infiltrated cells. . . . But every one of them had the same story,” he said. “They went to soirées, and the conversation consisted of why they were here on earth. And I said to myself, ‘These guys are . . . the greatest scientists in history, and they’re asking themselves, Why are they here on earth? . . . This is the most ridiculous thing I ever heard of. There have been countless billions of people that have lived since the Neanderthal man, and not one person has ever found out why they’re here on earth, with any degree of certainty—don’t they know that?’ ”

Still, he tried to put himself in their place. He imagined himself at a “corned-beef soirée,” trying to figure out why he was here on earth. First, he thought it was to feel good, but then he decided that that was too selfish. What about helping others? “If I make other people feel good, I feel good!” He added, “I literally, mentally, went like”—he paused, brushing his hands together in a dismissive gesture—“it’s over with! I don’t have to think about that issue ever again in my life.”

Helping others is the key to the meaning of life…imagine that.  After reading this profile. if you really believe that Sheldon Adelson’s life is governed by this principle you should have your head examined.

Until I read this article, I had no idea Adelson thirsts to bring gambling to Israel.  Of all the things that Israel needs, it needs gambling like a hole in the head.  Thankfully, the idea of gambling is repulsive to Orthodox Jews making it difficult to see how he will ever succeed in his dream of relieving poor Israelis and other Middle Easterners of their hard-earned savings.

Bruck spends considerable time discussing Adelson’s foray into tabloid journalism with the founding of HaYom, a free competitor to other Israeli dailies.  I was tickled by the fact that an Olmert representative refused to call HaYom a newspaper.  Instead he called it “printed matter.”  The paper is known for its incessant shilling for Bibi Netanyahu and its lurid diatribes against Olmert.

To my recollection, it is entirely unprecedented for an American Jew to meddle directly in internal Israeli politics.  That’s why the following passage shook me:

…Adelson had met with two ministers in Olmert’s coalition government—Avigdor Liberman, of the right-wing Israel Beytenu Party, and Eli Yishai, of the ultra-Orthodox Shas Party—to try to persuade them to leave the coalition, a move that would likely bring down the Olmert government. In February, pamphlets were delivered to the synagogues attended by Shas voters throughout Israel, urging them to tell Yishai to leave the government. A spokesman for Shas said that the pamphlets were distributed by One Jerusalem, which is funded in part by Adelson. (One Jerusalem denies involvement.) Liberman left the government in January. He said that he did not discuss his departure with Adelson…

Right, and pigs can fly.

The following passage describes how cynical and monomaniacally pro-Israel is Adelson’s politics:

Pooya Dayanim, a Jewish-Iranian democracy activist based in Los Angeles, chatted with Adelson. Recalling their conversation, Dayanim observed that Adelson was dismissive of Reza Pahlevi, the son of the former Shah…because, Adelson said, “he doesn’t want to attack Iran.” According to Dayanim, Adelson referred to another Iranian dissident at the conference, Amir Abbas Fakhravar, whom he said he would like to support, saying, “I like Fakhravar because he says that, if we attack, the Iranian people will be ecstatic.” Dayanim said that when he disputed that assumption Adelson responded, “I really don’t care what happens to Iran. I am for Israel.”

Adelson wants to invade Iran and topple the ayatollahs solely to benefit Israel.  Of course, Adelson neglects to consider that attacking Iran might actually harm Israel in the long-run given the potentially negative long-term impact of such a military adventure.  How many ways can we spell S-C-A-R-Y?

Here is Adelson’s prescription for ending the Palestinian demographic threat to Jewish predominance in Israel as offered at a conference hosted by Israeli president Shimon Peres:

At a formal dinner attended by more than a hundred senior officials of various Israeli and Jewish organizations, guests were offered the opportunity to tell Peres what they considered the biggest challenge facing the Jewish people. Adelson, according to Ha’aretz, declared, “I think Jews should have lots of sex. That is the solution to our demographic problem.”

The more I think about this, the more I think Adelson’s psyche is worth a once over from Jon Stewart or even Al Franken, in his pre-political days:

Adelson has not been shy about his new wealth. According to a guest at a reception in Washington a few years ago, Adelson remarked to President Bush, “You know, I am the richest Jew in the world.” He also introduced himself that way to a former Israeli official recently. The investment banker Ken Moelis said that when he saw Adelson not long ago he was surprised to hear him refer to himself as “Sheldon Adelson III.” “I said, ‘I never realized your father was Sheldon Adelson II,’ ” Moelis recalled. “And he said, ‘He wasn’t! But I’m the third-richest American!’ ”

Adelson is also dabbling in American electoral politics through the creation of the 527, Freedom’s Watch, an offshoot of the Republican Jewish Coalition:

As Adelson began to focus on the 2008 Presidential election, he apparently decided that his recent megabillionaire status would allow him to play a more prominent role than he had in the past. In early 2007, at a meeting in Florida of the Republican Jewish Coalition, Adelson and many of his allies resolved to create Freedom’s Watch. As a nonprofit 501(C)(4), the organization can raise and spend unlimited amounts of money from wealthy individuals without any disclosure…

Some conservatives have heralded Adelson as their answer to George Soros, the financier who has donated large sums to the liberal advocacy group MoveOn.org, and there were press reports that Adelson might spend two hundred million dollars on the 2008 elections. Last summer, Freedom’s Watch spent fifteen million dollars on a nationwide ad campaign supporting the troop surge in Iraq, and in the fall it held a conference on radical Islam and Iran. But then Freedom’s Watch seemed to recede, and, in April, articles in Mother Jones and the Times suggested that the organization had been so plagued by infighting, and by micromanaging on the part of its prime benefactor, Adelson—who since its inception had reportedly contributed some thirty million dollars—that it might not be a player in this fall’s elections, after all…In late April, however, Freedom’s Watch reappeared, running ads against Democrats in special elections…

I know that Barack Obama is prepared for the racist mud that someone like Adelson is prepared to fling at him.  But $200-million worth of it still scares the hell out me.

J Street Condemns Silence of Israel Lobby in Face of Peace Prospects

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008


J Street’s first major New York Times ad tweaks the Israel lobby for turning its back on promising new Israeli peace initiatives with its Arab neighbors:

When Israel Goes to War Supporters Rally…

When Israel Negotiates Why the Deafening Silence?

A new ceasefire has been brokered between Israel and Hamas. Israel and Syria are quietly resuming diplomatic contacts…And Israeli and Palestinian leaders are negotiating to establish two states living side by side…

If Israel had gone to war this week established pro-Israel organizations would have rallied to its side. There would have been ads, press releases, fundraising appeals and political speeches.

When Ariel Sharon planned the Gaza withdrawal, the Conference of Presidents actually opposed him until he put on a full court press and converted the group to at least tepidly supporting what was, after all, official Israeli government policy.  The Israel lobby was also tepid in its support for the Annapolis peace conference.  The same thing is happening now during what is arguably a more important period offering prospects for peace.

Why are AIPAC, the ADL, the AJC and President’s Conference AWOL when the prospect of peace looms?  Because they’re opposed to any Israeli compromises for peace.  And at the risk of repeating the obvious, they’re essentially Likudniks in their political orientation whether they admit it or not.  Rather than compromise or negotiation, they’d prefer that the IDF invade Gaza to quell Hamas.  Rather than negotiate with Lebanon or Syria, they’d rather that Israel would sit tight and wait till the Arabs sued for peace on Israel’s terms.  Of course all of this is a delusion since this will never happen.  Israel doesn’t have the luxury of waiting and time is not on its side.  But don’t tell the Israel lobby that since their stock in trade involves promoting the notion of Israel triumphant, victorious and supreme.

If you have not already done so, I urge you to sign the ad, contribute and do what you can to support J Street.  If the Israel lobby doesn’t speak for you–and their silence in the face of peace opportunities speaks volumes–then allow J Street to speak for you.  It is that still, small voice our High Holiday liturgy speaks of–a voice of reason and conscience.