Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

Action

ceramic bowl

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

Action

Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

Action

David Grossman

Ben Heine

Action

Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

Action

Dove

Ben Heine

Action

Two birds

Hoda Jamal

Action

Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

Action

Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

Action

Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

Action

Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

Action

Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

Action

Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

Action

Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Archive for May, 2009

Dennis Ross in Aipac’s Pocket

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Phil Weiss brings word of a USA Today story which notes that Dennis Ross earned over $40o,000 last year in speaking fees, over half from Jewish organizations and $40,000 specifically at Aipac events.    If you add to this his senior role at the Aipac-affiliated think tank, Washington Institute for Near East Peace; his chairmanship of the Jewish People Policy Planning Institute (affiliated with the Jewish Agency and, as such, as quasi-[Israeli] government project), and his new book, Myths, Illusions, and Peace: Finding a New Direction for America in the Middle East, co-written with David Makovsky, a former writer for the right-wing Jerusalem Post and senior WINEP operative, it all points to someone so entwined in the pro-Israel policy apparatus that his analyses must be suspected of partisan bias.

In fact, many analysts suspect the reason Ross was denied the envoy role eventually given to George Mitchell is that he was too palsy with the pro-Israel lobby.  It’s no accident, for example, that JPPPI’s board features (former?) Mossad agent, Uzi Arad, currently Bibi Netanyahu’s national security advisor.  Arad played an integral role in the Larry Franklin spying scandal and until recently was barred from U.S. entry as a known foreign agent.

Ross only earned $10,000 or so for  his average speaking gig which is fairly modest considering his senior status.  That would mean he gives an average of forty of these speeches a year.  Meaning he spends a considerable amount of time and energy flacking around the country for a “liberal” pro-Israel policy perspective.  Keep in mind that for every right-wing nutcase like Michael Ledeen, it’s tremendously useful for Israel to have a presentable liberal voice like Ross or Martin Indyk.  That way they cover the waterfront.

Next time you see Ross’ name featured in a media story pontificating on the existential danger Iran poses to Israel, keep in mind on which side his bread is buttered.

Sen. Specter Withdraws from Pipes Anti-Muslim Conference

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Thank God there are a few D.C. politicians who can be embarrassed into doing the right thing. Arlen Specter had been hoodwinked by Daniel Pipes into addressing his conference on “lawfare,” the alleged phenomenon of Muslim intimidation of its opponents through lawsuits and other types of harassment.

Matt Duss reported on this and CAIR picked it up and ran a petition campaign attempting to educate the senator about the bedfellows with whom he was about to lie down. Word came yesterday from CAIR that Specter thought better and developed a sudden scheduling conflict that prevented his participation.

Now if we can only do the same with Chuck Schumer, who seems to believe that making cause with Jewish pogromists will help his political standing in New York.

Brit Tzedek: We’ve Got Your Back, Mr. President

Monday, May 18th, 2009

In my recent post, praising the Israel Policy Forum full page ad in the N.Y. Times encouraging President Obama to be direct and forthright during his meeting with Bibi Netanyahu, I neglected an initiative by Brit Tzedek.  It is a major petition campaign seeking 15,000 individuals to sign a statement demanding progress in Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, and encouraging the president to stand firm on this matter.

If you followed the results of today’s White House meeting, it’s clear that this will be a protracted struggle to bring the Israeli government to heel (along with the Palestinians). Bibi will, like his political mentor, Yitzchak Shamir, drag this out ten years if given half a chance. We must deny him that chance and support Pres. Obama in his efforts to energize the peace process, even if it means holding Bibi Netanyahu’s feet to the fire.

Obama, Bibi Meet–Earth Doesn’t Move

Monday, May 18th, 2009

A slightly different version of this was published at Comment is Free.

Quite a disappointing first White House meeting between Bibi Netanyahu and Barack Obama.  Each seemed to reiterate the standard rhetoric and pretty much talk past each other.  There was one area, Iran, in which Obama seemed to move closer to the Israeli position.  The president seems to have adopted an articulation favored by Iran envoy Dennis Ross and the Israelis, by which Iran will be given until the end of the year to accede to demands that it renounce its nuclear program.  If it does not do so, then in the next phase the U.S. will advocate harsher penalties and sanctions.  The final phase, of course, will be military action.

In a pre-meeting interview, Obama even conceded a military solution could not be ruled out:

Israelis have been intently parsing Mr. Obama’s language for any sign that he might ultimately be supportive if Israel declared that Iranian nuclear progress left it no choice but to attack. In the Newsweek interview, Mr. Obama was asked how he would talk to Mr. Netanyahu about the possibility of Israeli military action against Iran, and whether he was keeping all options open.

“I don’t take options off the table when it comes to U.S. security, period,” the president said.

This will delight the Israeli intelligence-military echelons who are itching for an Iran attack.  It is no different than the policy of the previous administration.  But Bush’s approach to Iran was so belligerent, that many had hoped for a muscular response from Obama that rejected or at least minimized the possibility of a military attack.

I’ve written previously here about an intense perception management campaign waged in the U.S. by Israel to prepare the ground for such an Israeli attack.  Israeli diplomats and intelligence officers intimately involved with such a project will see Obama’s pronouncements as a clear victory.

During his remarks, Netanyahu clasped his hands together prayerfully as if to reinforce the the American president how sincere he was in his belief in peace.  It came across to me as slightly obsequious, the mark of a vassal beseeching his master.  But I cannot see any area in which Netanyahu reached out to the U.S. position.  He refused to use the phrase “two state solution.”  Instead he said:

“I want to make clear we do not want to govern the Palestinians,” Netanyahu said today. But he did not mention a Palestinian state as the ultimate goal of future negotiations. For peace talks to begin, he said, the Palestinians would have to recognize Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state and “allow Israel the means to defend itself,” a phrase that is often code for territorial concessions in the West Bank.

“We are ready to do our share,” said Netanyahu, who took office at the end of March at the head of a fragile and sharply hawkish governing coalition. “We hope the Palestinians are willing to do their share as well.”

If you consider the fact that Bibi had withdrawn the demand for Palestinian recognition of a Jewish state, the fact that he’s raised it anew cannot be seen as a good sign.  This is Bibi the wooden, tin-eared ideologue, not the pragmatist who would endorse a two-state solution that Ehud Barak promised us a few days ago.

Obama did restate his support for a two state solution and call for a settlement freeze.  But there was absolutely no response from Bibi.  It’s as if the words were never spoken.  This is the Israeli modus operandi.  They hear the words they want to hear and disregard whatever is inconvenient.

The next few weeks bring Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak and Mahmoud Abbas to Washington and take Obama to Cairo, where he will make a major address to the world’s Muslims about relations between Islam and the west.  Frankly, I’d hoped that the president would come out of today’s meeting with an agenda which he could build on in these future initiatives.  But I see no momentum, no set of ideas on which he can build based on today’s developments.  He will have to go to Cairo and start all over in order to build any consensus with the Arab world.

Obama did indirectly endorse the Saudi 2002 peace initiative.  But he did so in such a way that Bibi could also embrace the sentiment, which means it was quite an insubstantial reference:

Obama and Netanyahu expressed a desire today to bring other Arab nations into any future Israeli-Palestinian peace process. The tactic has been tried before without results.

…The administration is counting on Mubarak, an autocratic ruler unpopular in his own country but an important regional player, to lobby Arab nations in favor of recognizing Israel, perhaps through a modified Arab peace proposal that softens the so-called right of return.

Netanyahu today said he welcomed more Arab participation to “buttress” future Israeli-Palestinian negotiations. Obama said “there’s an extraordinary opportunity here” for greater involvement by Arab states, which he said are “looking to break the long-standing impasse, but not sure how to do it.”

“The Palestinians are going to have to do a better job of providing the security Israel needs to accept a two-state solution,” Obama said. “The other Arab states have to be more supportive and be bolder in seeking potential normalization with Israel,” adding that “I will deliver that message to” Mubarak and Abbas next week.

I thought it took a heap of chutzpah to call on Palestinians to provide Israel security, and for Arabs to recognize Israel without mentioning an Israeli withdrawal to pre-67 boundaries.  Instead, Obama merely called for a settlement freeze.  If you weigh Obama’s priorities, you will see that he demanded much from the Arab side and very little from the Israeli side, which is what we’ve become used to expecting from most American presidents.

But all is not lost.  This is a first skirmish in a long struggle for Israeli-Arab peace.  No one expected Bibi would make this easy for the Americans.  There will be many more battles to come in which Obama will have a chance to make his mark.

I still maintain that ultimately, Obama’s leadership combined with the historical weight of this conflict will militate toward agreement.  It may not happen with Bibi, who I believe is little more than a recalcitrant puppet of the Israeli hard-right.  But perhaps, as happened with Yitzchak Shamir, who was driven from office when he proved unable to work successfully with George H.W. Bush, Bibi will be swept from power and a more pragmatic leader will take the reins who will see more eye to eye with the American president.  At any rate, the unremitting pressure of a U.S. administration that demands Israel come to agreement with her neighbors will prove more than any resistant Israeli politician can bear.  Peace will come.

Jeffrey Goldberg, Willing Tool of Israel’s Perception Management Campaign for Iran War

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

Here and in Comment is Free I wrote about the Israeli ‘perception management’ campaign here in the U.S. to persuade us that war with Iran is both necessary, inevitable, and salutary for the world.  This campaign takes many and varied forms.

Jeff Goldberg is too smart for that.  He’s a talented enough writer to pen his own propaganda subtly advocating war with Iran.  What I don’t get is that in this U.S. political climate in which a Democratic administration is ascendant and the foreign policy message is pragmatism, deliberation and negotiation, Goldberg has thrown his lot in with Netanyahu and the Jewish rejectionists.  I guess he knows which side his bread is buttered on and he’s managed to find a publishing niche at The Atlantic and N.Y. Times as Bibi’s amanuensis.

Goldberg has a new Bibi profile in the Times Week in Review which is utterly horrendous.  He even goes so far as to call Iran Amalek, which is interesting in that Obama’s Jewish opponents in the last election likened HIM to Amalek and Haman, two of the Jewish people’s most potent existential bogeymen.  This is suave and effective pro-war propaganda and therefore we must expose the noxious role Goldberg plays in the Israeli campaign.

Goldberg’s reporting is telling not only for what it INCLUDES, but for what it OMITS.  Goldberg acknowledges Bibi’s reputation for cynically throwing over his allies when it’s expedient to him and concedes there are those who believe the politician is using such an approach on Iran (besides exploiting the issue in order to delay dealing with the Palestinian morass).  But then he immediately dismisses this possibility by saying Bibi is firm and sincere (with no proof provided):

But this [theory of Bibi's cynicism] is to misread both the prime minister and this moment in Jewish history.

Note the invocation of “Jewish history,” which both elevates and distorts the true meaning of the Iranian threat.  First, Iran’s alleged threat has little, if anything to do with JEWISH history, though perhaps a tad more to do with ISRAELI history.  The conflation of the two is a deliberate misrepresentation on the part of pro-Israel writers like Goldberg.  Second, it is arguable that Iran is little more than a chapter in Israel’s history and certainly arguable that Iran now or in the near future can play any role as an existential threat to Israel.  To paraphrase Walter Mondale’s riposte to Ronald Reagan during a presidential debate: that’s what Jeff Goldberg won’t tell you.  I just did.

“Amalek,” in essence, is Hebrew for “existential threat.” Tradition holds that the Amalekites are the undying enemy of the Jews. They appear in Deuteronomy, attacking the rear columns of the Israelites on their escape from Egypt. The rabbis teach that successive generations of Jews have been forced to confront the Amalekites: Nebuchadnezzar, the Crusaders, Torquemada, Hitler and Stalin are all manifestations of Amalek’s malevolent spirit.

If Iran’s nuclear program is, metaphorically, Amalek’s arsenal, then an Israeli prime minister is bound by Jewish history to seek its destruction, regardless of what his allies think.

Here, once again, Goldberg engages in a willful propaganda campaign demonizing Iran. When you invoke a religious injunction as he has done, you withdraw Israeli policy from a volitional, political space and transfer it to the realm of theological obligation. This is not far from the craziness of the settler movement, which divorces settlements from any political context and insulates them from debate, walling them off in a religious domain that can neither be questioned nor rationally analyzed.

Even if we debate this issue in religious terms, where is the evidence that Iran IS Amalek? Have Iranians expressed a desire to exterminate the Jewish people? Have they even expressed a desire to exterminate physically the Israeli people?

Muslims have a right to blame Israel for its oppression of the Palestinians. They have a right to be angry with Israel for its policies. They do NOT have a right to set off a nuclear weapon on Israeli soil or kill Israeli civilians. They don’t have the ability (nor the desire, I would claim) to do the former, and to the extent that they have done the latter they should be condemned. But such condemnation must always be understood in context of aggressive Israeli policies toward Palestinians.

Iran is NOT Amalek.  The children of Israel did nothing we know of to deserve Amalek’s murderous attacks.  That is how the Bible justifies the genocidal command to annihilate Amalek.  Iran, and Muslims, while they have no right to kill Israelis, certainly have a right to denounce them in strong terms.  This is far from Amalek.  And that is the danger of abusing theological categories for political purposes.  What Bibi is doing is a toxic distortion of Jewish history.  As a Jew who loves and studies the history of my people, I deeply object to his falsifications.

We know what happens when politicians attempt to impose political solutions on scientific or medical problems (think Terri Schiavo).  Virtually the same thing happens when political partisans impose religion on politics.  You abuse both religion AND politics and destroy the ability for your society to see plainly the issues at hand.

In the following passage, the best I can say for Goldberg is that it is Bibi who lies about Iran’s record instead of the reporter:

“Iran has threatened to annihilate a state…”

Iran has not launched a war against a neighbor in generations and isn’t about to start now.  Iranian radicals have stated that Israel should “disappear.”  Certainly a noxious concept, but where is the claim that Iran will do the deed?  This is an inconvenient fact that Bibi would have you gloss over.

Here again Bibi invokes Nazi analogies that hold no water:

…One lesson of history is that “bad things tend to get worse if they’re not challenged early.”

This is the case only if you are talking about Adolph Hitler and Nazi Germany.  But this is not true if you are talking about a dispute between two countries which each have legitimate interests and grievances to adjudicate.  Iran is NOT Nazi Germany.  Precipitate action of the sort Bibi advocates will not stop evil, it will only turn a dangerous situation into a maelstrom of regional violence and possibly war.

Bibi and his political handlers have been tremendously active devising preposterous scenarios for Iranian domination of Israel and the region.  Here is an entertaining sample:

Mr. Netanyahu doesn’t believe that Iran would necessarily launch a nuclear-tipped missile at Tel Aviv. He argues instead that Iran could bring about the eventual end of Israel simply by possessing such weaponry. “Iran’s militant proxies would be able to fire rockets and engage in other terror activities while enjoying a nuclear umbrella,” he said. This could lead to the depopulation of the Negev and the Galilee, both of which have already endured sustained rocket attacks by Hamas and Hezbollah.

To believe this delusional scenario, you have to imagine Hezbollah and Hamas not only fully armed with medium range, accurate missiles to hit the Negev and Galilee, you have to imagine the two movements fully unleashed to launch such a massive attack on Israel.  There are no circumstances in which I can imagine either condition unless Israel itself has launched a pre-emptive strike against Iran.  Ironically, it is Israeli aggression that could launch the kind of depopulation Bibi is prepared to blame on Iran.

The narischkeit continues:

…A nuclear Iran “would embolden Islamic militants far and wide, on many continents, who would believe that this is a providential sign, that this fanaticism is on the ultimate road to triumph.”

Muslim Pakistan has nuclear weapons yet somehow this prospect has never happened.  Even Islamists in Pakistan do not talk of using their nuclear weapons in any other way than to defend against an attack from India.

At this point in the essay, Goldberg enters new and even more pernicious territory.  He begins:

To understand why Mr. Netanyahu sees Iran as a new Amalek, it is essential to understand two aspects of his intellectual and emotional development: The scholarship of his father, and the martyrdom of his older brother…

Yonatan, who was killed while leading the 1976 raid on the Entebbe airport in Uganda to free Israeli captives of Arab and German hijackers, is perhaps the most venerated figure in the post-Warsaw Ghetto Jewish martyrology…

Since when is the death of an IDF officer in combat martyrdom?  Since when do we use such loaded religious terms (“martyrology” is another term from the Jewish prayer book) to describe what is, in reality, a death on behalf of a nation and not a religion.  Once again here we see Goldberg slipping sacralizing concepts into political discourse.  And once again, this is noxious and unacceptable misappropriation of religion for partisan political purposes.

Goldberg also slips the Warsaw ghetto into the discussion in order to elevate Yonatan’s death from a mere combat casualty to a religious sacrifice in service to the fight against Nazis everywhere, whether they be in the Warsaw ghetto, Entebbe or Teheran.  This is deeply twisted, dishonest journalism and Jewish historiography.

We have explored in depth here the hysterical views Bibi’s father holds towards Arabs.  You won’t find a word of this in Goldberg’s piece.  Instead, you will find a celebration of Ben Zion Netanyahu’s historical scholarship minus any of its noxious political repercussions.

Delving into the scholarship, this is how Goldberg summarizes it:

Benzion Netanyahu argued that Spanish hatred of Jews was not merely theologically motivated but based in race hatred (the Spanish pursued the principle of limpieza de sangre, or the purity of blood) that reached back to the ancient world.

If the reporter’s characterization is accurate, there are several problems here.  First, to posit that Spanish hatred of Jews is NOT inspired by Christianity; but instead goes farther back in Spanish consciousness to “the ancient world,” you’d have a slightly inconvenient matter to explain.  Why was the history of Jews in (pre-Christian) Moorish Spain relatively benign and even fruitful?  How do you explain the good relations between Moors and Jews, the integration of Jewish poets, scholars, bankers and political advisors into the fabric of Muslim Spain?

This is, of course, Netanyahu refuses to acknowledge because his “narrative” suggests that Arabs harbor deep-seated hatred of Jews.

Goldberg suggests another deeply distressing notion embedded in the elder Netanyahu’s historical work:

The only rational response to such sentiment, in the Netanyahu view, is militant Jewish self-defense.

Now, that’s an interesting phrase.  Clearly, one man’s “militant self-defense” is another’s “militant offense.”  If you read my earlier posts about Netanyahu’s contemporary views of Arabs you will understand that “self-defense” has nothing to do with his world-view.  From his perspective, there is no point in self-defense since Arabs are perfidious through and through.  You might as well show them who’s boss by hanging a few in the village square to let them know what’s in store if they step out of line (and yes, this is an example of something he actually believes).

Not a peep from Goldberg about these notions.  I wonder why?

In the following passage, Goldberg’s peroration reaches the level of pure megalomania:

…Destiny has chosen the Netanyahus to expose and battle anti-Semitism — before it reaches the point of genocide.

How many leaders in history have had similar views of their own “chosenness,” their own personal destiny to lead their people to greatness or some other major national achievement?  I say beware the one who believes his political career is fated.  They are the ones who will lead their peoples and the world into the maelstrom.  This is deeply scary stuff.  And what especially distresses me is that Goldberg has absolutely no journalistic distance from it.  He is essentially Bibi’s stenographer putting the great man’s words into a  public forum.

At the conclusion of his profile, Goldberg attempts to draw lessons for Bibi’s meeting with Obama.  They are riddled with odd notions:

[If Iran achieves nuclear weapons] it would mean that the 30-year-struggle between America and Iran for domination of the Persian Gulf will be over, with Persia the victor.

I had no idea the U.S. was struggling for “domination” of the Persian Gulf?  Did you?  Certainly, I was aware that we have struggled with the Iranians in 1979 and that since then relations have been fraught with conflict.  But a struggle for regional domination?  That’s Goldberg’s locution.  Not mine and not anyone else’s I know.

One of the most disturbing passages in this essay is the following:

…By the end of this year, if no progress is made, Mr. Netanyahu will seriously consider attacking Iran.

Given the access that Goldberg has been provided, we can be sure that this threat is genuine and an expression of Israeli intent.  This means that, considering Bibi knows the U.S. opposes an Israeli strike, that Israel is prepared to go to war against America’s express directive.  I don’t think such a thing has ever happened in the entire history of U.S.-Israel relations.  Unless you count the Sinai war, after which Eisenhower hectored Israel and her allies into an abject retreat.

In publishing this piece, the N.Y. Times has allowed itself to be co-opted by the Israeli propaganda machine advocating war against Iran.  This is a terribly sad development in the Times’ journalistic history.

Chuck Schumer to Address Pro-Settler Rally

Sunday, May 17th, 2009
Chuck Schumer cozies up to the Jewish wingnuttery

Chuck Schumer cozies up to the Jewish wingnut classes

Yesterday, I posted about Arlen Specter being an honored guest and speaker at a Daniel Pipes anti-Muslim conference.  But Jewschool has done me one better reporting that Chuck Schumer will address an Israel Independence Day rally sponsored by the right-wing National Council of Young Israel.  Apparently, Chuck hasn’t read any of the not-so-fine print in the rally poster which includes these lovely slogans:

♦ Jerusalem–united forever, never to be divided again
♦ No to a PA/Hamas terror state!
♦ No to the surrender of any part of Eretz Yisrael
♦ No to the expulsion of Jews from Judea and Samaria

Among the sterling Jewish groups sponsoring this proud expression of love for Israel are the wingnut pro-settler Hebron Fund (“your home for Jewish pogroms”), Ateret Cohanim (the settler yeshiva and sponsor of Palestinian land thefts), Americans for a Safe Israel and Arutz Sheva (settler radio–”all hate, all the time”).

I know I have some New York readers.  Can some of you get on this and make Chuck feel the heat over this utter stupidity with which he has associated himself.  It’s one thing (and bad enough) to be in bed with Aipac and the rest of the Israel lobby.  But to lower yourself to embracing Jewish fascists who think nothing of making a little pogrom in Hebron before breakfast–this is utterly insane.  Not to mention that the rally denounces a two state solution, which is supposedly the policy of the U.S. government led by a president who shares a political party with Schumer (the last I checked).

Oh and let’s not forget the angelic image of the suffering Jonathan Pollard that graces the rally poster as well.  Chuck is lending his good name to supporting a campaign to free the Jew who sold to Israel the American plan for a nuclear attack against Russia; only to have the Israelis give the plan to the former Soviet Union in return for freeing several scientists critical to Israel’s military technology interests.  I like the image of Chuck coddling Jewish spies for Israel.  Apparently this doesn’t hurt him within New York’s electoral politics.  But it should.

There’s nothing wrong in Schumer marking Israel’s Independence Day…but in such company?  Must you, Chuck??

Since it seems to be “Senators Going Wild” week in our nation’s capital, might I suggest a cool idea for some of our more impressionable pro-settler, pro-Israel types?  Every year, settlers on Purim dance in celebration at Baruch Goldstein’s grave.  Maybe we can get Aipac to organize one of their special Congressional junkets to mark the occasion.  Arlen and Chuck should definitely be high up on the list of invitees.  We should also add Jane Harman, Brad Sherman, Anthony Weiner and Gary Ackerman as they’re among the lobby’s most faithful supporters (though perhaps feting Goldstein is a bit too indiscrete even for them).

Obama on the Verge of First Meeting With Netanyahu: A Change is Gonna Come

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

The N.Y. Times has written a pitch-perfect article about the winds of change blowing from the White House regarding the Israel-U.S. relationship, on the verge of our new president’s first White House meeting with Bibi Netanyahu.  Over the past few years, you rarely see reportage this good on this subject in the Times.  And one of the chief reasons this report is so good is it wasn’t written by the Times’ Israel correspondent Ethan Bronner.  That’s a sad statement, but true.  Instead, it was written by Helene Cooper, who doesn’t seem to have as much of a Zionist axe to grind as Bronner does.

Usually, when the Times covers Israel-U.S. relations there are pro forma statements, acknowledgements of the importance of the Israel lobby and its significance as a political force in American Jewish life.  Reporters sound all the necessary notes before they attempt to say anything new, bold or challenging.  They quote from the usual suspects, the white male leaders like Abe Foxman, Martin Indyk, Dennis Ross, or David Harris and any host of others.

Partly because the subject of this story is that the times they are a changin’ in the Obama White House, Cooper dispensed with most of the standard narrative and rhetoric.  She chose to interview some pretty unusual sources considering this was the Times: Rashid Khalidi, Ali Abunimah, Daniel Levy and perhaps most striking of all, Chas. Freeman, who dispenses some serious wisdom.    And imagine a N.Y. Times report on Israel that refers to not one, but TWO Palestinian-American figures.  Astonishing.  During the Gaza war, it took nearly two full weeks before a single Arab voice was heard on the editorial page.

Here is one telling passage on the bracing new ‘eyes’ Obama will bring to the subject compared to the average American president:

“I think this president gets it, in terms of the suffering of the Palestinians,” said Charles W. Freeman Jr., a former United States ambassador to Saudi Arabia. “He gets it, which is already light years ahead of the average elected American politician.”

Mr. Obama’s predecessors, Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, came of age politically with the American-Israeli viewpoint of the Middle East conflict as their primary tutor, said Daniel Levy, a former Israeli peace negotiator. While each often expressed concern and empathy for the Palestinians — with Mr. Clinton, in particular, pushing hard for Middle East peace during the last months of his presidency — their early perspectives were shaped more by Israelis and American Jews than by Muslims, Mr. Levy said.

“I think that Barack Obama, on this issue as well as many other issues, brings a fresh approach and a fresh background,” Mr. Levy said. “He’s certainly familiar with Israel’s concerns and with the closeness of the Israel-America relationship and with that narrative. But what I think might be different is a familiarity that I think President Obama almost certainly has with where the Palestinian grievance narrative is coming from.”

And while Cooper gives voice to those who expect great things and changes from Obama, she doesn’t gloss over the question marks, the disappointments both in the past and possibly in the future. It’s a bracing, but sobering portrait. The Times at its best, which it almost never is regarding its Israel coverage.

The last and most astute word goes to Chas. Freeman:

Mr. Freeman…said he still believed that Mr. Obama would go where his predecessors did not on Israel. Mr. Obama’s appointment of Gen. James L. Jones as his national security adviser — a man who has worked with Palestinians and Israelis to try to open up movement for Palestinians on the ground and who has sometimes irritated Israeli military officials — could foreshadow friction between the Obama administration and the Israeli government, several Middle East experts said.

The same is true for the appointment of George J. Mitchell as Mr. Obama’s special envoy to the region; Mr. Mitchell, who helped negotiate peace in Northern Ireland, has already hinted privately that the administration may have to look for ways to include Hamas, in some fashion, in a unity Palestinian government.

Mr. Obama’s meeting with Mr. Netanyahu, while crucial, may only preview the beginning of the path the president will take, Mr. Freeman said.

“You can’t really tell anything by what happened to me and the fact that he didn’t step forward to take on the skunks,” he said, referring to his own appointment controversy and Mr. Obama’s silence amid critics’ attacks. “The first nine months, Nixon was absolutely horrible on China. In retrospect, it was clear that he had every intention to charge ahead, but he was picking his moment. He didn’t want to have the fight before he had to have the fight.”

“I sense that Obama is picking his moment,” Mr. Freeman said.

I’ve written several times here that I sense Obama is refusing to sweat the small stuff in his battles with the Israelis, which may explain why he didn’t publicly denounce the Gaza war, defend Freeman, why he dropped the charges against Rosen and Weissman, and why he restored Uzi Arad’s visa.  These are small skirmishes in a much larger war.  If he’s waiting for his moment, chooses it wisely, and executes well when the time comes, then all the skirmishes will be forgotten.  Then Obama will take his place on the stage of world history as the president who took the bull by the horns and vanquished the age-old monstrous beast that is the ongoing Israeli-Arab conflict.

In the title of this post, I invoked that wonderful 1963 Sam Cooke song, A Change is Gonna Come, written in another tumultuous and decisive era, the civil rights movement.  My only hope is that all the hope and optimism of that song can come to fruition during an Obama presidency.  Just as we then tackled the injustices perpetrated on African-Americans in this country over two centuries and made our country the better for it, we need to conquer the injustices perpetrated over more than a century in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  The time has come, the time is now.  Will you lead us, Mr. President?

About to Meet Bibi, Jews Say: ‘We’ve Got Your Back, Mr. President!’

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

ipf-nyt-adIsrael Policy Forum purchased a full page ad in today’s N.Y. Times that attempted to lay the groundwork for the upcoming first meeting between Barack Obama and Bibi Netanyahu in their new roles.  The text was remarkable not for what it said.  The sentiments repeated tried and true rhetoric from the American Jewish peace movement about a two state solution, ending violence, freezing settlements, promoting Israel-Syria negotiations, etc.  What was important was the headline:

Yes You Can, Mr President–achieve a two state solution…We Support You.

The message was clear.  We support our president, we don’t support the other guy.  It is an unheard of development in the Jewish community–to be forced to chose between an Israeli prime minister and a president.  For the Israel lobby there is never any difference between the two, because our interests as Americans and Israel’s interests are one and the same.

One unintended and important achievement of the new Israeli rightist government is to put the lie to this fake notion.  America’s interests are in a stable, peaceful Middle East.  An Israel that furthers this goal will share American interests.  An Israel that stubborning resists every American prescription for compromise as Bibi is doing, is headed for a fall.  And that fall can’t come soon enough.

Of course, we need to proceed to the next stage which is a demand to return to 1967 borders, sharing Jerusalem as capital of two states, and grappling with the Right of Return.  That is when the shit will really hit the fan and we’ll see what kind of resolve this president really has.  More power to him.  He’s got a tough row to hoe.

Performance Optimization WordPress Plugins by W3 EDGE