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Archive for November, 2011

In Eulogy of ‘Martyred’ Revolutionary Guard Commander, Tehran Mayor Concedes Enemies Killed Him

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011
hassan moghadam funeral

IRG Brig Gen. Hassan Moghadam's funeral

Yet another confirmation has surfaced from Iranian sources that Revolutionary Guard Maj. Gen. Hassan Moghadam, the “father” of the nation’s missile program, was killed in an Israeli inspired terror attack.  Prof. Muhammad Sahimi reports that in the eulogy he delivered for the senior commander, who was killed two days ago in a massive explosion of a Shehab III missile at a base outside Tehran, Mayor Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, who was himself an air force commander, spoke reverently of the “martyr:”

“We did not know you well, but those who knew killed you.”

Prof. Sahimi says that these words are interpreted within Iran as an admission that “foreign forces” killed him.  Putting this together with claims by my own Israeli source, a “western source” quoted by Time Magazine, and the Guardian’s attribution to a former Iranian government source that the attack was the handiwork of Israel in collaboration with the Mujahadeen al-Khalq–and you have almost ironclad confirmation of my original report of two days ago.

In this added report by Radio Free Europe’s Iran correspondent, she quotes another section of the Mayor’s eulogy which calls Moghadam a “martyr,” another allusion to his killing at the hands of Iran’s enemies:

Martyrdom was Hassan’s right, but the news of it was shocking.”

Earlier today, the BBC’s Julian Marshall interviewed me for NewsHour (not PBS Newshour), which you may listen to here.  Originally I was on at 20 minutes after the hour.  So you may still be able to catch the interview on the radio as well.

One statement I made during the interview bears repeating: from the point of view of Israeli intelligence they hit a Daily Double.  They destroyed a missile, the Shehab III, which is capable of hitting Israel, and is allegedly to be fitted for nuclear warheads as well.  They eliminated an arch nemesis responsible not only for the Iranian missile program, but also for supplying missiles to all of Iran’s proxies, who are destined to take revenge on Iran’s behalf should Israel ever attack it.  For the Mossad, it was an exceedingly good day (at least in their view).

But the truth is, as I’ve said repeatedly, this black ops strategy will be ineffectual, just as a frontal military assault on Iran’s nuclear facilities would be futile.  The Mossad (and likely the CIA) are collaborating on a policy which is designed as a “filler.”  The U.S. and Israel know that with all their bellyaching about the Iranian menace to civilization, they’d look like fools unless they did something.  They refuse to put together an offer that would be attractive enough to Iran to get it to divert from its current path.  Which leaves the west with no choice but to engage in various forms of sabotage in an effort to plug the wholes in the dyke that is Iran’s possible headlong rush toward nuclear status.

A word to the Obama administration and Congress: if you remove the MEK from the U.S. terror list, then you’ll be giving these murderers a license to kill.  Though of course in this event they’ll become “our” killers.  Which will distinguish them from their killers, Al Qaeda and the like.  Someone will have to explain to me the difference between hard-core terrorists who murder on our behalf and those who murder on behalf of radical Islam.  To me, they’re birds of a feather.

And remember as well what happened to the Afghan mujadadeen who we funded and supplied with missiles against the Soviets.  Now they are our most fierce enemies (eg. the Haqqani network).  There will come a time when the Ayatallohs may longer rule Iran.  Then there will be a battle to determine the nation’s destiny.  The funding, weapons and expertise we offer these monsters will then be turned on the very reformers who are now trying to turn Iran into a democratic country.  What will we say to Iran then?

I’m utterly charmed by the MEK’s disavowals of involvement in the attack.  They even obliquely alluded to me in this letter to the NY Times.  The only reason they’re not doing what Ehud Barak did in crowing that there should be many more such attacks, is that it tends to discredit their well-heeled U.S. campaign to be removed from the Treasury Department’s terror list.  In an interview I did today, the interviewer noted an important point: if MEK is removed from the terror watch list then the CIA can collaborate with it in the same way the Mossad does.  Though I’m no expert on such matters, I’d imagine the former is precluded from doing so with any groups on the list.  That’s why former CIA directors like Jim Woolsey are so hot to get MEK off and taking oodles of cash to lobby on behalf of delisting.  One also has to wonder where the hundreds of thousands they’re spending on getting U.S. pundits behind their cause is coming from.  I’d bet at least some of it is from the Mossad.

Support Tikun Olam

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011

This week’s news from Iran and the original reporting and scoops you read here about it hopefully will persuade you of the importance of supporting my work.  The Ford Foundation doesn’t give me grants.  The EU doesn’t know I exist.  I haven’t written a book and there are no royalties pouring in.  It’s just you, my readers, who enable me to do this work (and a very supportive wife!).

There’s a Paypal button in the right sidebar which I encourage you to click and make as generous a donation as you can to support my work.  Peace and justice doesn’t come cheap.  And exposing the moral and political turpitude of the miscreants of the world is something that demands a commitment from those like you who believe in this mission.  Step up and help.  Now.  Please.

UPDATE: Thanks to everyone who’s responded and contributed.  Your support is appreciated!

Maariv Features Interview on Iran Missile Attack, National Security Issues and Censorship

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011
richard silverstein maariv interview

caption: 'Censorship greatly harms Israeli democracy. It destroys transparency and enables concealment of Shin Bet and Mossad mistakes.' (photo: Erica Schultz/Seattle Times)

I’m grateful to Tal Schneider, a foreign news reporter for Maariv who interviewed me earlier today for the newspaper’s Daily Interview feature.  It’s a profile of a newsmaker in interview format.  For Hebrew readers, she captured my ideas exceedingly well and I was pleased with the result.

Sometimes the TV interviews, in which they edit snippets of my ideas into tiny sound bytes, leave something to be desired.  Not to mention that in “packaging” me for their audience, they tend to play up the more lurid, sensational aspects, which isn’t at all how I see myself or how I want my audience to see me.  This blog isn’t tabloid fodder, though it may be easier to sell it to a broad audience in that fashion as if it were.

For the fashionistas among you, in this photo I’m wearing the Jewish Voice for Peace Hope T-shirt.

Former Iranian Official Confirms Mossad Sabotage Behind Missile Blast

Monday, November 14th, 2011
Shahab iii missile

Shahab III missile, of the type which exploded killing 17 IRG personnel including commander of Iran

The Guardian’s Julian Borger quotes a former Iranian government official as conceding that the explosion at an Iranian missile base was the work of the Mossad, news I was the first to report here based on a confidential authoritative Israeli source:

Speaking to the Guardian on condition of anonymity, however, a former director of an Iranian state-run organisation with close links to the regime, said: “I believe that Saturday’s explosion was part of the covert war against Iran, led by Israel.”

The former official compared Saturday’s incident to a similar blast in October 2010 at an IRGC missile base near the city of Khorramabad. “I have information that both these incidents were the work of sabotage by agents of Israel, aimed at halting Iran’s missile programme,” he said.

I note Borger’s report credits Karl Vick’s Time Magazine report based on a western intelligence official (likely American) who also claimed it was Mossad handiwork. But Borger doesn’t credit Tikun Olam as the first source in the world to report this. Based on Julian Assange’s decision to renounce the so-called authorized biography Borger wrote of him, I can see why he might’ve made such a decision. As far as the MSM is concerned, Rodney Dangerfield had it about right: we don’t get no respect.

Another indication that the IRG are lying regarding their contention that the explosion was the result of an accident is the arrest in Iran of Hassan Fathi, a source for a BBC Persia report, who contradicted the official claim that the mishap occurred in an ammunition depot (you may sign a petition here calling for his release). Instead Fathi said it happened at a missile base. Borger reports that the blast involved a Shahab III missile whose redeployment was being overseen by Maj. Gen. Hassan Moqqadam, the senior IRG commander who supervised much of Iran’s overall missile program.

Borger also notes the distinct possibility that Iran will begin affecting its own form of retaliation for such attacks against Israeli and U.S. targets. He also quotes a western expert on the Iranian nuclear program who says killing supposed key figures in Iranian military programs doesn’t do as much harm as the Mossad would like to think:

Michael Elleman, an expert on Iran’s ballistic missile programme at the International Institute for Strategic Studies said he doubted that Moghaddam’s death, accidental or otherwise, would have a decisive impact. “Given the sophisticated and disciplined engineering management structure applied to Iran’s missile efforts, the loss of any one person should result in minimal damage to the overall programme,” he said.

Which brings me back to another theme you’ve read here before, the U.S.-Israel massive campaign of terror against Iran is not a policy. It’s a substitute for a policy. It’s a sign of how desperate and hopeless the state of international affairs is regarding Iran. There is no engagement with Iran, which seems to suit both sides just fine. In the absence of a policy, violence and mischief fill the vacuum. But killing even hundreds of Iranian commanders, scientists, etc. won’t deter Iran from its goals nor will it prevent a nuclear weapon if that is the nation’s mission. If there is any way to do this, it must be through mutual agreement. If there is no chance for that, then there will be an Iranian nuclear weapon (if that is indeed Iran’s goal). The only way to prevent such a development is through a massive military assault on Iran aiming to overthrow the Ayatollahs and institute a so-called democratic, western-backed regime as we did in Iraq. In other words, it ain’t gonna happen.

Only in the wacky world of Israeli politics does a campaign of terror by the nation’s spy works killing scores if not hundreds of Iranians, allow the Israeli political echelon to argue that it doesn’t need to go to war, which would kill hundreds or thousands of times more than the terror operations do.  In a deeply twisted sense, these acts of assassination, sabotage and cyberwarfare become a more moral choice (or at least a less morally objectionable one) than the alternative.  It’s a strange moral calculus: if we kill enough Iranian generals and scientists then we can argue that we’re doing our part against the Iranian madmen, and not have to do even worse.

Last night, Maariv reporter Tal Schneider interviewed me for the paper’s weekly Q&A column (Hebrew), which profiles a newsmaker. Our conversation ran over much of this territory, but also covered the general themes of secrecy, national security, freedom of information, the public’s right to know–all the bread and butter issues of this blog. She did a great job of presenting my ideas to her readers. I’m gratified by the exposure that offered.

I’m befuddled and even a bit angered by Israeli commenters here who ask whether I don’t feel responsible for bringing Iran and Israel that much closer to armed conflict. Not only is this blaming the messenger, it fundamentally misunderstands reality. ISRAEL is the one who’s bringing itself and the region closer to conflict. I didn’t plant that bomb and sabotage that missile. Israel and its MEK henchmen did it (and by the way, in all the coverage, let’s not lose sight of MEK involvement as well–Mossad could not have done this alone). So blaming me shows a misplaced sense of things.

I’m also waiting for apologies from the hordes of “friends of Israel” who swore up and down that this story, my source and I were frauds. I may be waiting for quite a while.

Egyptian Arrest of Author of Eilat Terror Attack in Sinai Proves Israel Lied in Blaming Gazans

Monday, November 14th, 2011

Despite reams of nonsense published by the likes of Eli Lake and Avi Issacharoff in the Washington Times and Haaretz respectively, regurgitating IDF talking points that the Eilat terror attacks were planned and orchestrated by the Popular Resistance Committees in Gaza–Idan Landau, Alex Fishman and I knew otherwise.  We said the attacks were carried out by Egyptian militants based in Sinai.  We said that killing 30 Gazans merely because the Israeli government couldn’t take revenge on Egypt and needed to take revenge on someone, was criminal.  Issacharoff even sneered at my talking of this as a potential war crime.  Well, who’s sneering now?

Egypt announced today that it had arrested the ringleader of the Eilat attack…in El Arish.  Precisely where we knew the attack originated–in the Sinai.  The alleged mastermind of the assault committed similar terror attacks in that region.  There is no mention he has any connections to Gaza, though I suppose it may be possible that he might be involved in the lucrative smuggling trade between Egypt and Gaza.  Congratulations to Alex Fishman and Idan for sticking with this story till the bitter end and not giving an inch to the lies of the Israeli military-intelligence apparatus.  There may once have been an IDF that believed in tohar neshek and fought justly to defend its country (though many would disagree).  Today’s IDF is a hollow shell of its former self.

You’ll recall that the IDF also invaded (yes, that’s what it’s called when armed soldiers cross into the territory of a neighboring country and kill its police) Egypt in hot pursuit of the attackers and killed five Egyptian policemen as a result.  Barak was forced to publicly apologize for that gaffe though Israel at first resisted mightily.  It did that as part of a deal to free Ilan Grappel, an Israeli-American accused by Egypt of spying.

I haven’t seen any signs of Haaretz or Avi Issacharoff eating crow over their mangling of this story.

Iran Missile Base Blast: Annals of Israeli Terror Redux

Sunday, November 13th, 2011

Yesterday’s report here based on an authoritative Israeli source, that the explosion which rocked an Iranian Revolutionary Guard missile base and killed one of the IRG’s top commanders, was the work of the Mossad and MEK, received a flurry of attention in the Israeli media.  I was cited by one of Israel’s pre-eminent intelligence correspondents, Ronen Bergman, in the Telegraph, and interviewed for two shows on Channel 10 (5PM news–7 minutes into the video, and Tzinor Layla) and the 6PM news on Channel 2.  While it’s exhilarating to get ones voice into the Israeli mainstream media, it takes a lot out of you when you have to do your interviewing between 3-4AM (due to the 10 hour time difference)!

One result has been a cascade of angry, sometimes menacing comments here from the Israeli audience claiming that my report was bogus, or that I hate Israel, or that I’m fomenting war against the Jewish people.  As to the first, it’s important to note that other independent sources are now coming forward confirming the substance of my source’s claim.  Time Magazine’s Israel correspondent features a boastful “western intelligence source” (cf., American):

For Israeli readers, the coy implication is that their own government was behind Saturday’s massive blast just outside Tehran. It is an assumption a Western intelligence source insists is correct: Mossad — the Israeli agency charged with covert operations — did it. “Don’t believe the Iranians that it was an accident,” the official tells TIME, adding that other sabotage is being planned to impede the Iranian ability to develop and deliver a nuclear weapon. “There are more bullets in the magazine,” the official says.

Former senior Mossad officer, Gad Shimron all but confirms the agency’s involvement in this Channel 10 TV interview (at 11:20 on the video–in Hebrew).

I especially like another objection by the pro-Israel crowd: that this wasn’t an act of terror because you don’t commit terror against a military target.  To which I reply: fine it’s not terror.  Then let’s just call it a naked act of military aggression why don’t we, a casus belli?  That’ll send us to war right now.  So which do you prefer?  Terror or naked act of aggression?  Either one is fine by me.

gen. hassan moqqadam

Senior Iranian Revolutionary Guard commander Hassan Moqqadam killed in likely Israeli bomb blast at Iranian missile base

In Israel, leading politicians are embracing the explosion as something like Divine Providence.  When Ehud Barak was asked for comment he said obliquely, and almost obscenely (my translation is more colloquial than the one offered in the linked article):

May there be many more.

Ronen Bergman further reports today on Hassan Moqaddam, the Iranian general who died in the explosion.  Aside from his key role in the development of the Iranian missile program (which included all those capable of hitting Israel, notably the Shihab III), he had played a key role in the transfer of Iranian weapons to its proxy allies.  He was supposedly a special favorite of Iran’s Ayatollah Khamenei.  Bergman also calls him one of Mahmoud al-Mabouh’s key contacts in arms transfers to Hamas, providing it many of the rockets in its arsenal.  You’d have to have been hibernating for the past half decade not to know that the Palestinian arms dealer met his untimely end at the tip of a Mossad needle in Dubai several years ago.

Further, the Syrian general Muhammad Suleiman, who served the same role of intermediary between Syria and Iran on behalf of Bashar al-Assad, was also mysteriously assassinated several years ago while relaxing at his oceanfront home.  Another major part of his role was to arrange for transfer of Iranian weapons to Hezbollah through Syrian territory.  In other words, the Mossad is systematically eliminating key figures among Iran’s proxy allies who would serve to amplify any Iranian reply to an Israeli attack.

Bergman pointedly notes the only remaining figure alive who served a similar role on behalf of Hezbollah is Hassan Lekis.  This is a pointed indirect warning from Israel’s Mossad to watch his back.  They have his eyes on him.

Nowhere does Bergman explicitly say Mossad killed Moqqadam or inspired the missile base explosion.  Perhaps he doesn’t feel able to say so if he does know due to Israeli military censorship.  But there is a strong subtext here that is: we did it and here’s why we did.

Israeli media reports like Bergman’s tend to recite a litany of achievements of the murdered individual, turning him into a veritable fiend of an enemy.  The implication is that in killing him they have rid the world of yet another Jew killer–and thank God for that.  Bergman cites Iranian eulogies which boast that the Iranian general single-handedly enabled Hezbollah to beat Israel in Lebanon and Hamas to beat Israel during Operation Cast Lead.  Any Israeli reading this will breathe a sigh of relief and harbor the lingering thought: next time they’ll lose to us because they won’t have this monster fighting for them.

No matter how evil the enemy may be (and in my opinion there is little that Iran or any of these dead men did that isn’t done by Israeli generals and Mossad killers), there is absolutely no chance of destroying him or even weakening him through such methods.  For every Moqaddam, there are ten who will take his place.  Yes, some may do their jobs worse than he did his.  But a good number may do it better (eg. Hassan Nasrallah).  And their zeal will be fortified by the memory of their martyred predecessors, just as Jewish zeal is fortified by remembrance of our martyrs.  In other words, this is a zero sum game.  An epic fail.

Just as an aside, I note the outrage that pro-Israel figures express against Hezbollah, blaming it for the bombings of the Israeli embassy and Jewish cultural center in Buenos Aires.  While I will on no account countenance the murder of innocent Jews by such means, it’s important to note that these tragic events occurred shortly after Israel had assassinated Abbas al-Musawi, the Hezbollah leader who preceded Hassan Nasrallah.  IF (and I note that the charges against them are only charges and not yet proven facts) Hezbollah or its Iranian ally were involved, from their point of view (though not mine) they had eminent reason to seek such revenge.

Which brings me to one of my main messages tonight: do not think that Israeli assassinations, bombings, cyberwarfare, etc. are risk-free and bear no price.  There is always a price.  You may have to pay it tomorrow or you may pay it next year.  But you will pay it.  And you don’t know what form that payment may take.  It may be a tiny innocent baby in a stroller.  It may be a cabinet minister.  It may be a lost UN vote.  But pay Israel will.

There are many foolish people in the world like Ehud Barak and Israeli commenters here who cheer these assassinations.  As if the more of them that happen the less dangerous Iran will be.  The less capable of destroying Israel and the Jewish people.  Those who feel this way can only see an unending war to the death between Gog and Magog, in which Israel is the Force of Good and Iran the force of Evil.  This may play well for the Book of Revelations and similar apocalyptic world views.  But it fails in the real world.

UPDATE: I’m proud to say I ate Haaretz’s lunch on this story.  They made the missile base blast their top story today referring to Time’s report (linked above) quoting a “western intelligence source” that Mossad was behind the attack.  When yesterday, they could’ve had an Israeli source telling them the same thing.  But it would’ve meant acknowledging my reporting, which apparently is verboten in the pages of Israel’s so-called quality liberal paper.  This is typically tepid, follow-the-leader stuff, not bold, challenging reporting.  It only hurts them that they shut themselves off from my contributions.  Others lead, they follow.

UPDATE I: My comments in the Update above were based on the English translation of the Haaretz article which I read first.  Israeli friends have sent me the original Hebrew version and it does indeed credit my work in that article (though it calls this blog, Brit Olam!).  So I apologize for my overhasty condemnation.  Instead I guess I blame the editor of the English edition and translator of the article, who thought my contribution wasn’t important enough to include in the English version.

The Guardian’s Julian Borger wrote two stories about the missile blast today and credited Time Magazine’s story (the second one to publish a claim of Mossad involvement) but left my original scoop out of the mix.  The MSM seems to have a congenital disposition to ignore us political bloggers for some strange reason.

Mossad-MEK May Have Bombed Iranian Missile Base, 40 Dead and Wounded

Saturday, November 12th, 2011
iran missile base sabotage blast

Blast at IRG

The face of the Israeli terror machine may have reared its ugly head again in the world. This time it may have produced yet another massive act of sabotage (Hebrew original) at an IRG missile base west of Teheran. During transfer of explosives at the Modarres (other sources say the base is called Sajad) garrison, which houses Shihab 3 (Israel Defense says the site is also responsible for development of the new Shihab 4) and Zelzal surface-to-surface missiles, an explosion ripped apart the base and killed anywhere from 14 to 40 soldiers depending on the source (UPDATE: the official number released by the IRG now is 17), and wounded an equal number, some severely.  Among the dead were a high level IRG officer, Major General Hassan Tehrani Moqaddam (more background here), the director of the IRGC Jihad Self-Sufficiency Organization, which directed base operations. The blast was felt as far away as Teheran, 25 miles distant. Those who experienced the explosion said it felt like an earthquake. Some say there were two explosions.

Ynet raises the possibility that it was a deliberate act of sabotage on not just a missile base, but an intelligence facility. Teheran Bureau says the IRG is telling the Iranian media that the incident was not an act of terror, but purely an industrial accident.  An Iranian who worked at the base for several months and was interviewed by Iranian media discounted the likelihood of an act of sabotage since security at the base was extremely strict.

However, an Israeli source with extensive senior political and military experience provides an exclusive report that it was the work of the Mossad in collaboration with the MEK.  Israeli media is humming with similar reports and Channel 10′s intelligence correspondent went so far as to say, a bit coyly perhaps:

If it was the work of western intelligence it was a high successful and impressive achievement.

It is widely known within intelligence circles that the Israelis use the MEK for varied acts of espionage and terror ranging from fraudulent Iranian memos alleging work on nuclear trigger devices to assassinations of nuclear scientists and bombings of sensitive military installations. A similar act of sabotage happened a little more than a year ago at another IRG missile base which killed nearly 20.  In the murky world of Israel-Iran relations, where it’s often hard to tell the difference between information, misinformation and disinformation, either explanation may be true. But my source has never been wrong so far in the reports he’s offered.

It is, of course, ironic that the same MEK is paying key political players in U.S. life hundreds of thousands of dollars to lobby on behalf of removing it from the Treasury Department terror list. I suppose when a terror group is harming your enemy then it’s no longer a terror group, eh? Certainly if there was another power than the Mossad willing to pay more for them to attack Israel and the U.S., guess who they’d be wreaking havoc on?

To give you an idea of the level of brainwashing Israelis undergo thanks to willing collusion between military correspondents and the intelligence services, this is how the Hebrew Ynet report describes the MEK and its collusion with Mossad and others:

Though the reliability of this report can’t be substantiated, it should be remembered that the Iranian opposition [by this they mean MEK and not the Green movement] fulfills an important role in revealing secret Iranian installations and serves as a pipeline for publication of secret intelligence. There is an assumption that western intelligence services pass on to them intelligence in order to “launder” it and expose it to the world.

An unsuspecting Israeli would find nothing in this passage unduly alarming. But those analysts who’ve followed the various shenanigans and frauds perpetrated by Mossad and MEK in the past understand the truth that is concealed here: that the information fed to MEK is fraudulent. But by laundering and having an ostensibly Iranian group release it, it has more credibility among the world press.

The irony of such acts of terror committed by the Mossad is that they supposedly relieve pressure to attack Iran head on with a military strike to knock out its nuclear targets.

On a related subject, Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann (Turner Overdrive), attempting to outdo her rivals in fawning obeisance to Israeli interests, claimed that with Iran’s alleged nuclear ambitions:

The table is being set for worldwide nuclear war against Israel.

Frankly, I don’t know who’s worse, the mystic, megalomaniacs in Tel Aviv plotting a military strike against Teheran or their enablers within the far-right confines of the Republican Party.

Occupy Wall Street Stifled Solidarity With Gaza Flotilla After Dan Sieradski Query

Saturday, November 12th, 2011

At first I thought this issue was much ado about very little, but the various ways in which Dan Sieradski, co-founder of Occupy Judaism, has attempted to deflate or deflect the controversy he started, and the disingenuousness of the arguments he’s used to defend his actions, have made it a very important one.  As the Gaza flotilla boats were steaming toward Palestine, someone tweeted on the @OWS Twitter feed:

“We support and would like to express #solidarity to #FreedomWaves #Palestine #ows”.

According to Sieradski, he then either tweeted or asked a member of the OWS General Assembly to look into the tweet.  Though he protests loudly that the subsequent deletion of the tweet was not his doing, he clearly disagreed with the tweet and believed it would be harmful to OWS, as his subsequent statements have confirmed.  Methinks he doth protest too much.

The one thing I detest more than anything else in progressive politics is litmus tests.  The Jewish community has litmus tests coming out the yazoo.  Reference Jonathan Tobin’s smug comment at a GA panel dealing ironically with the subject of “civility in Israel discourse” in the community, that “everyone” agrees that Jewish Voice for Peace is not a legitimate part of the debate.

What Sieradski has done to the Occupy Wall Street movement is introduce a litmus test regarding Israel-Palestine designed to pre-empt criticism of the protest by the mainstream Jewish community.  In tweet after tweet and in interviews he’s repeatedly said that the Gaza flotilla was a dangerous issue for OWS and that embracing it would leave the latter open to attack by the Jewish right.  Sieradski’s presumption is that OWS must do everything in its power to avoid criticism by the Jewish right-wing even if that means stifling political speech.  Here he speaks to Mondoweiss about the controversy:

…The tweet was immediately picked up by the Republican Jewish Coalition and the Jewish Internet Defense Force, among others, and began making its rounds about the net.

The ramifications I imagine begin with a mountain of press attacking OWS as being anti-Israel and pro-terrorism. Whereas beating back false charges of antisemitism was easy because the movement is not antisemitic, were the movement to embrace an explicitly pro-Palestinian agenda, it would be impossible to counter charges that the movement is anti-Israel.

Why is support for the Gaza flotilla “pro-Palestinian,” but not “pro-Israel?”  And what does it say about Sieradski’s approach that Israeli Palestinians have joined such flotillas?  Are they anti-Israel for doing so?  And if they are, how does he justify claiming he supports equal rights for Israeli Palestinians?  Hey, if someone wants to call Occupy Wall Street “anti-Israel” for supporting the flotilla that’s a fight I’m glad to join.  Those are terms worth fighting for.

He further argues:

No matter how much we as individuals may reject such a framing, supporting the breaking of the Gaza blockade will surely be labeled as enabling the flow of arms into Gaza…

Well, sure it will be “labeled” as such by Commentary and the RJC, but isn’t that a fight we should be prepared for?  Why should we be afraid of this?  If the Jewish far right wants to argue that breaking an illegal siege against the 1.5 million civilians of Gaza equals promoting terrorism, I’ll take those odds and join the fray.

Objectively, there are scores of ways to ensure no weapons or arms enter Gaza, that could be used to promote terror against Israel.  Besides, currently WITH the siege Gaza militants get all the weapons they need to attack Israel.  How does the Gaza siege have any impact against terror?  It doesn’t.

This statement by Sieradski really gets me hot under the collar:

…We all know that mainstream media does not handle nuance well when it comes to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

So because it may be hard for OWS to explain to obtuse media reporters why it published a single tweet supporting the Flotilla, that means it should avoid the issue like the plague?  What is the purpose of our political activism?  Is it to take the easy, safe way to advance our goals or take the just and right way, even if it makes our lives a bit more difficult?

He claims that Occupy Boston’s march on the Israeli consulate has “even” made it into the Israeli press.  What is wrong with that?  And even if the Israeli press is attuned only to claims of anti-Semitism within the movement and misunderstands the motives, isn’t that grounds for intensifying our own pressure and outreach on the Israeli media to get the story right?  Hell, that’s what I do every day in this blog and in my research for the posts I write.  I yell and scream whenever Israeli reporters get issues wrong.  A lot of them don’t like me for it.  But I’ve got their grudging, if not respect, then at least attention.  That’s how the OWS movement needs to approach this issue.  We’ve got to fight for our values, not calibrate how we can avoid criticism or controversy.  Sieradski has this all wrong.

Sieradski proceeds to claim that the OWS tweet in effect forced the movement to “pick sides.”  I presume the sides he’s talking about are Israel and Palestine.  But how in God’s name does a tweet supporting Freedom Waves indicate you’ve taken a position against Israel?  I support Israel AND the Gaza flotilla.  I dare anyone to argue that doing the latter causes you reject Israel (as opposed to Israeli policy)?  You can see how Sieradski has quickly ditched his progressive values and gotten himself stuck in a thorn-bush from which it’s very hard to extricate oneself.

If Andrew Breitbart, the Republican Jewish Coalition, Commentary and others would attempt to make hay out of this–gei gesunt.  They’re welcome.  Aren’t we big boys and girls enough to respond in kind and defend ourselves?  Sieradski even argues we should back off the issue because these extremists will “make hay” out of the fact that OWS “supports terror.”  Hey that’s what these people DO.  It doesn’t mean you back off your values because you’re going to have to get into the ring with a bunch of bullies and fight back against a little pummeling from them.  I’m willing to take my stand on an issue like this.  And a principled one it would be.  Supporting the Gaza flotilla should in no way harm OWS.  It is in no way anti-Israel or anti-Zionist.

Sieradski has even called those supporting Freedom Waves “fringe extremists” trying to “take over an economic movement.”  This despite the fact that he claims to oppose the Gaza siege.  It makes absolutely no sense.  So either Sieradski is a liberal Zionist schizophrenic or there’s some sort of personal animus between him and those supporting the Flotilla that explains his inexplicable hostility to a tweet that seems politically kosher to me.

Speaking of schizophrenia, try to parse the contradictions in this statement:

 I personally am very troubled by efforts to focus this movement on opposing the Israeli occupation.

Which is not to say that I support the Israeli occupation or the violation of Palestinian rights, or that I believe Palestinians and their issues should be excluded from this movement.

On the one hand he says he’s troubled by a tweet that focuses OWS on opposing the Israeli Occupation.  On the other hand he says Palestinians and “their issues” (aren’t their issues also Israeli issues?) shouldn’t be excluded from OWS.  I can’t think of a more disjointed, confused statement than that.

In another passage from his Mondoweiss interview he, in a typically disjointed way, ends up supporting U.S. military aid to Israel because it provides jobs to American workers:

U.S. military aid to Israel…supports the defense manufacturing sector, putting money in the pockets of working class Americans that, in turn, re-enters our economy.

When he gets himself into such hot water I almost feel sorry for him.  He’s clearly in over his head when he both opposes and supports the military aid in the same sentence.  But again, if you don’t have well-thought out, consistent views on a subject, then don’t take it on as your major issue and make yourself look foolish.

Sieradski even gets a dig in against Jewish Voice for Peace, one of the most courageous of American Jewish peace groups on the Israeli-Palestinian issue.  He sniffs at the attempt to equate the “occupy” in OWS with the Occupation:

I fear JVP’s recent call to “Occupy the Occupiers” is just one such example of this moving in a direction that could have negative consequences for the Jewish community and its involvement in OWS.

I’m sorry Dan, but if OWS has to tiptoe around issues because YOU say it’s bad to take a stand on them, then what good is the overall movement it represents?  I’m personally sick and tired of the Shah Shtill types who hold their finger to their lips as if you’ll wake the baby if you talk about Israel-Palestine.  We’re all grown ups here.  This isn’t going to cause an apocalypse that will wipe out the world as we know it.  It’s just an issue of elementary justice of interest to many American progressives.

In a bid for complete disclosure, I’m not a fan of Sieradski nor he of me.  In fact, he recently weighed in support of the pro-Israel hasbarist Adam Holland, by calling me a “douchebag.”  And yes, you tend not to forget such dyspeptic comments.  So some may take my criticism as personally motivated.  But it’s not.  As I wrote above, I intended NOT to write about this until I saw the disingenuous explanations he began offering for his actions.  That’s what motivated me to speak out.

There’s a strange thing that happens with some Jews, even those like Sieradski who call themselves “progressive.”  They’re rad when it comes to any other issue but Israel.  But the latter gives them conniptions.  What’s strange about Sieradski is that he does hold progressive views even on issues related to the Occupation and Palestinian rights.  But the make or break issue for him is Nakba and Right of Return.

He holds the odd belief that if Israel accepts ROR it will mean the destruction of Israel. He even tweeted that it would mean “creating 7 million new [Israeli] refugees.”  I’ve got news for Dan.  You can have the “right” views on every issue, but if you don’t understand the implication of rejecting ROR for your progressive value system, then you’re headed into trouble.  Your values are at war and you have further contemplation in order to bring them into alignment.  Until then, you’re being false to yourself, to Israel and especially to Palestinians.

Sieradski would protest that he is progressive in every way.  He supports equal rights for Israeli Palestinians in Israel.  He opposes the Occupation, the Wall, the Gaza siege.  But still there’s that remaining thorny issue of Nakba.  The Original Sin of Israel.  You can’t hope to be a truly consistent progressive when you’re AWOL on Nakba and ROR.

What’s deeply ironic about all of this is that if Sieradski in his pro-Israel paranoia hadn’t stuck his nose into this, there would’ve been a single tweet supporting Freedom Waves and that would’ve been the end of it.  No pro-Palestinian activist would’ve attempted to hijack the movement, as Sieradski fears.  Everyone would’ve gone on their way supporting their various political causes whether they be OWS or Palestinian rights.  But as a result of his foolishness HE has made this issue the sine qua non of OWS.  HE has made it a defining moment by which Jews must choose to defend a deracinated OWS or reject it because it has rendered the Palestinians as superfluous to their really important goals.

In truth, what Dan Sieradski is doing is intensifying friction and tension among the various political constituencies within OWS.  It’s his kind of litmus-test politics that strains such coalitions to the breaking point.  I know because I’ve participated in Jewish political groups (among them New Jewish Agenda) riven by such factionalism around the issue of Israel and Zionism.  Though he may not have intended it, Sieradski has made OWS less pliable, less flexible, less open, and less tolerant.  And that bodes ill for it in the long-term.

Another irony characterising Sieradski’s Jewish activism is that he applied for and received a grant from the Schusterman Foundation, which wholly funds Aipac’s campus Israel advocacy program.  The Foundation also funds former Aipac stooge, Mitchell Bard’s American-Israel Cooperative Enterprise (AICE) .  It brings Israeli scholars to U.S. campuses to teach Israel Studies courses often from a decidedly pro-Israel vantage.  One of the faculty it funded was deemed so partisan in her George Washington University classroom presentations that her own students criticized her and she turned tail and left the school.

To be clear, I’m happy for Sieradski to receive funding from the Jewish community for his projects.  But Schusterman?  Why?  Sorry, but this is hypocrisy.  It allows the Foundation to point at the Jewish media guru as its token liberal Jewish grantee, a form of Zio-washing.  Not to mention that taking money from a foundation providing huge levels of funding to Aipac should be a red-flag for any prospective grant recipient who professes progressive values.

Contrary to what Dan Sieradski may believe, his work and his views are not so significant that they need to be held up to a mirror and parsed for meanings and contradictions.  The reason I’ve written this post is because the contradictions inherent in his Israel-Zionist world-view afflict so many American Jews and Israelis and cripple them in addressing these issues as forthrightly as they should.

A final word: I’m not criticizing Sieradski because he’s a Zionist or because he supports Israel, because I do as well.  I’m criticizing him because his views are so contradictory that he does a deep disservice to truly progressive values on these issues.

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