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Posts Tagged ‘ehud-olmert’

Bibi, Chutzpah Award-Winner, Warns Abbas: ‘Stop Wasting Time’

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Friday called on the Palestinian Authority to “stop wasting time talking about how to enter the peace process,” following a failed meeting between the U.S. Mideast envoy and the Palestinian Authority president regarding a restart of peace talks.

Haaretz

Wasting time?  Who’s been wasting time since 1967?  Who’s had numerous opportunties to negotiate an end to this conflict but has stalled at every juncture?  Who to this day ignores viable peace initiatives like the Saudi Plan or the Geneva Initiative?

Have the Palestinians made their share of missteps?  Certainly.  But for this guy to get up there and act as if he’s bent out of shape because the Palestinians are wasting precious time instead of entering negotiations is the height of audacity–and it ain’t the audacity of hope either.

The audacity continues in this self-serving statement:

“The Palestinian Authority are the ones that are preventing the re-launch of the peace process with their preconditions that they have never asked before from any previous Israeli government,” the statement said. “The Prime Minister calls on the Palestinian Authority to sit at the negotiating table and discuss ways to promote security, peace, and prosperity for the two people.”

Abbas’ “condition” is a real settlement freeze.  Is Bibi saying this was never a demand of the PA?  No, because it has always been one.  Is he saying it has never been a precondition of previous negotiations?  Perhaps.  But look at the wasted year Abbas spent negotiating with Olmert when he offered no preconditions.  What did he get out of it?  A warmed over Clinton parameters offer with no provision for resolving Jerusalem or the Right of Return.  Maybe Abbas got wise and realized when you demand nothing from the Israelis you get nothing.

Anyway, Bibi, stop grandstanding.  It only makes you look like the emperor with no clothes, and the sight ain’t pretty.

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Israeli Bait and Switch on Shalit Deal

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

News coming out of the Middle East had a long-term ceasefire between Israel and Hamas a matter of hours away as recently as two days ago. Hamas would agree to halt rocket attacks on Israel. Israel would agree to halt military operations on Gaza. Israel would agree to lift the siege. The issue of Gilad Shalit and freeing Palestinian prisoners would be left to the next stage of negotiations.

That was what we heard till today. And as is Israel’s wont, when it suits, it changes its terms almost on a whim. Amos Gilad, Ehud Olmert’s military advisor and chief negotiator with Hamas and Egypt, thought he had a deal. But now he doesn’t. And he’s pissed:

Amos Gilad, the Israeli Defense Ministry’s liaison in talks with the Egyptians, was quoted in the newspaper Maariv on Wednesday as having told an associate that Israel was risking its relations with Egypt.

“I don’t understand what it is that they’re trying to do,” Mr. Gilad was quoted as saying about the Israeli government. “To insult the Egyptians? We’ve already insulted them. It’s madness. It’s simply madness. Egypt has remained almost our last ally here.”

Undoubtedly, the recent election is causing Olmert to cave in to pressure from the Israeli right which wants to do nothing that could be seen as capitulating to Hamas. Bibi Netanyahu has a strong hand as a result of the resurgence of the right in the elections. He’s whispering in Olmert’s ear of his unhappiness and the prime minister is losing heart.

To me, this is unconscionable. Only a country with unstable or two-faced political leaders takes a year or more to negotiate a deal with an enemy and then tries to alter the terms in its favor at the last minute. What does Israel think? That Hamas is so eager to do a deal that it will cave to this ploy? Could Israel really believe this? Or do the Israeli pols care so little about Gilad Shalit’s return that they’d risk blowing up the deal to score nationalist political points and look tough before the electorate?

The ball is in Israel’s court. It got this far towards releasing Shalit. If it wants a deal it knows what the terms are. If it doesn’t it can play games as it has and risk losing everything. Hamas has very little to lose and certainly doesn’t need this deal as much as Israel

Olmert Calls for Israeli Withdrawal from Golan, Territories

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

Ehud, where were you when we needed you to say these things? Why now, when you no longer have the power to implement them? At any rate, here are words that are painful to read if only because the man uttering them could’ve changed history if he had done so while he still had the power to make them come true:

Israel should withdraw from nearly all territory captured in the 1967 Middle East war in return for peace with the Palestinians and Syria, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was quoted on Monday as telling a newspaper.

The N.Y. Times translates additional passages from the interview:

“What I am saying to you now has not been said by any Israeli leader before me,” Mr. Olmert told the newspaper Yediot Aharonot in the interview on the occasion of the Jewish new year, observed from Monday evening till Wednesday evening. “The time has come to say these things.”

He said that traditional Israeli defense strategists had learned nothing from past experiences and that they seemed stuck in the considerations of the 1948 war of independence.

“With them, it is all about tanks and land and controlling territories and controlled territories and this hilltop and that hilltop,” he said. “All these things are worthless.”

Here Olmert rejects the extremist settler strategy of groups like the Hilltop Youth who have been instrumental in establishing scores of new, illegal outposts:

He added, “Who thinks seriously that if we sit on another hilltop, on another hundred meters, that this is what will make the difference for the State of Israel’s basic security?”

Over the last year, Mr. Olmert has publicly castigated himself for his earlier right-wing views and he did so again in this interview. On Jerusalem, for example, he said: “I am the first who wanted to enforce Israeli sovereignty on the entire city. I admit it. I am not trying to justify retroactively what I did for 35 years. For a large portion of these years, I was unwilling to look at reality in all its depth.”

In spite of the fact that I have written many negative things about Olmert here, I have great respect and empathy for the sentiment behind these words:

…“A decision has to be made,” he said. “This decision is difficult, terrible, a decision that contradicts our natural instincts, our innermost desires, our collective memories, the prayers of the Jewish people for 2,000 years.”

Olmert concedes what Israeli public opinion has already come to accept–that East Jerusalem must eventually come under Palestinian sovereignty:

…Mr. Olmert made clear that the eastern, predominantly Arab, sector had to be yielded “with special solutions” for the holy sites.

Here, Olmert concedes that Israel will essentially have to return to 1967 borders:

…On peace with the Palestinians, Mr. Olmert said in the interview: “We face the need to decide but are not willing to tell ourselves, yes, this is what we have to do. We have to reach an agreement with the Palestinians, the meaning of which is that in practice we will withdraw from almost all the territories, if not all the territories. We will leave a percentage of these territories in our hands, but will have to give the Palestinians a similar percentage, because without that there will be no peace.”

Rather extraordinarily, regarding Iran, Olmert rejected what had appeared to be Israeli policy that an attack on Iran was not only feasible, but perhaps inevitable:

On Iran, Mr. Olmert said Israel would act within the international system, adding: “Part of our megalomania and our loss of proportions is the things that are said here about Iran. We are a country that has lost a sense of proportion about itself.”

I remember reading a blog post Bernard Avishai wrote about his own experience with Olmert.  The former said he found Olmert to be a charming and captivating individual.  Avishai even admired him and enjoyed his company a great deal, though he didn’t agree with him.  After reading this, I can completely understand how this might be possible.  In this interview, we see a man attempting to liberate himself from the political shackles that have enchained him for decades.  He knows what should be done and articulates it clearly.

And yet, Olmert’s political career is a real tragedy.  Instead of being the Israeli DeGaulle, he has fallen far short.  At least DeGaulle implemented his reformed vision of what was necessary when he extricated France from Algeria.  The best Olmert could do was tell us what needs to be done without being able to help us do it.  It is a frustrating political legacy.

My hope is that Tzipi Livni can build upon these insights and that unlike Olmert, who did not get to the Promised Land, she will.  She appears to be as intelligent and perceptive as Olmert about these issues.  Let us hope so.

Tonight starts the Jewish New Year.  Let us hope for a year of peace that all sides in this conflict have long deserved.  Amen.

Olmert Resigns…Let the Strangeness Begin

Sunday, September 21st, 2008

Ehud Olmert did the expected and resigned as Israeli prime minister yesterday.  This makes him an interim prime minister until Tzipi Livni, the new head of the Kadima Party, can form a ruling coalition.  So far so good.  But this is where the strangeness begins.

Israeli politicians are not content merely to conduct some of the weirdest political horsetrading of any western democracy I know.  Pols like Labor’s Ehud Barak really wants to get strange.  He’s the junior coalition partner in the current government.  He’s a thoroughly unpopular leader both in Israel at large and in Labor as well.  Yet that doesn’t stop him from trying to work the angles:

Kadima has expected her to become prime minister by forming a new government from the existing components, the largest of which, after Kadima, is Labor. But Ehud Barak, the defense minister and head of Labor, has numerous reservations about the plan.

…Mr. Barak’s hesitation — made clear over the weekend when he declined an early meeting request from Ms. Livni and met first with the Likud leader, Benjamin Netanyahu — may be as much tactical as substantive. And while he did meet her on Sunday night, it may also be personal.

Mr. Barak, the most decorated soldier in Israel, is believed to chafe at taking orders from Ms. Livni, a lawyer who entered politics nine years ago with no national security experience other than the required military service and two years in a low-level Mossad espionage job in Paris.

Mr. Barak’s associates and key Labor Party activists say, however, that his concerns are as much about the future of the country and his party as about himself.

“This is not a game,” a close associate of his said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. “We are at a point in Israel’s history where major decisions have to be made. Barak thinks Livni is not ripe. She could be a good foreign minister or justice minister, but to be prime minister takes more.”

Barak leads a thoroughly unpopular party (among numerous ones in the Knesset).  Livni leads the largest party.  Yet somehow Barak’s sense of entitlement tells him that he should decide whether or not Tzipi Livni deserves to be p.m.  The sheer gall of it!

And what a chutzpan for his “close associate” to claim “it’s not a game.”  It’s not a game to Barak because it’s all about him, his future, his standing, his ego.  There is nothing about the country or its needs in his considerations.  If anyone tells you different don’t believe a word of it.

And if you detected a strong odor of sexism in these comments, boy (no irony intended) you should.  Imagine a guy who dressed as a woman to gun down an unarmed PLO leader doesn’t want to take orders from a woman.  Too bad!  I feel so bad for the guy.

The most shocking and twisted idea coming out of this article attributed to Barak is this:

But some officials say that Mr. Barak and Mr. Netanyahu met over the weekend to agree on an early date for elections.

Barak couldn’t get elected dog catcher.  And he wants early elections??  Is the guy a total imbecile?  The only other thing I can think of is that they’re hatching some sort of plan that would create a unity government of Likud and Labor with Netanyahu and Barak divvying up the spoils.  A more cynical, disgusting thought about an Israeli politician hasn’t crossed my mind in some time.

The ONLY thing for Barak to do if he is sensible is to hitch his wagon to Livni and hope her government lasts as long as it can.  There is no possible way Barak can win an election.  Not now. Not ever.  For him to think otherwise indicates he’s living in an alternate political universe.

Olmert Resigns

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008
Olmert's resignation bowed to the inevitable

Olmert's resignation bowed to the inevitable

Ehud Olmert bowed to the inevitable yesterday and resigned as Israeli prime minister effective September 17th, the date of the next Kadima party leadership primary.  Beset on all sides by up to six separate corruption investigations, the most serious of which involved accepting several hundred thousand dollars in cash and gifts from U.S. businessman Moshe Talansky, Olmert realized that his continued leadership was untenable.  In addition, he had little political credibility or traction with the nation because of both his ethical lapses and his failed prosecution of the 2006 war in Lebanon.

There were several options that Olmert could have chosen in resigning and the one he picked will send the Kadima party into a flurry of political jockeying before the primary elections.  The leading candidate is centrist foreign minister Tzipi Livni, who has made a name for herself as a political pragmatist, though she comes from a prominent rightist political family.  She pointedly departed from Olmert during the Lebanon war and refused to participate in promoting or defending it, a surprisingly independent move for a sitting foreign minister.  Her chief challenger is transportation minister, former IDF commander in chief and hawk Shaul Mofaz.  It was Mofaz who single-handedly caused a multi-billion dollar rise in the international price of oil a few weeks ago, with his statement that Israel faced no choice but to attack Iranian nuclear installations.  The latest polls (which are inherently unstable in Israeli politics) show Livni with a significant but falling lead over Mofaz.

The political instability Olmert caused with his resignation portends well for the possible political comeback of perennial prime minister candidate Bibi Netanyahu, leader of the rightist Likud opposition.  Should the Kadmina-led coalition falter, Netanyahu eagerly waits in the wings for his second opportunity to lead the nation.  His first prime ministership was marked by a hardline approach to the Israeli-Arab conflict and an unwillingness to negotiate over major issues dividing the parties.  He also has a reputation as a fiscal hawk willing to restrain spending on Israel’s safety net for its large population of poor, unemployed and ultra-Orthodox Jews.  When he served as finance minister his policies were known for fiscally punishing the most vulnerable of Israel’s citizens.  Current polls show that if a new election were held now Netanyahu would become prime minister.

Naturally, this is something Kadima and its junior coalition partner, Labor, seek to prevent at all costs.  But the current government is a fragile reed including multiple parties each with its own separate social and political agenda.  It remains to be seen whether the new party leader can hold together these disparate elements.

The biggest casualty in Olmert’s downfall may be his various peace initiatives initiated as his political career entered its most unstable phase.  He began third party peace talks with Syria brokered by Turkey several months ago.  With great willingness by both sides to compromise, it appeared that such talks might bear fruit in a relatively short period of time.  More complicated and less productive have been U.S.-mediated talks with Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas.

If there are national elections and Netanyahu wins, each of these negotiating tracks may fall victim to his assumption of the reins of power.  He is known as a deep skeptic regarding the possibility of peace with the Arabs and as a booster of military power as the key to national security.

Olmert’s downfall marks the end of the career of one of Israel’s veteran political operatives whose own career began in the early 1970s.  He helped end the career of beloved long-time Labor party Jerusalem mayor Teddy Kollek and used the mayoral perch to launch himself into national political leadership.  After joining the Knesset, he became Ariel Sharon’s chief political aide and enforcer.  When Sharon wanted to lower the boom on then Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, it was Olmert who told the Jerusalem Post that Israel was prepared to assassinate him.  A later report by a journalist-confidant of Sharon’s published in Haaretz, claimed that Sharon, and Israeli intelligence, had indeed been responsible for Arafat’s death.

Olmert was known throughout his career as a wily, but pragmatic political survivor willing to compromise his rightist principles for either his own advancement or achieving political goals.  His supporters and critics, for example, could never tell whether his recent peace initiatives toward Syria and the Palestinians were the product of principle or an attempt to save his prime ministership.  For this reason, he leaves a mixed legacy of a man who seemed to have some vision of compromise with Israel’s enemies, but who allowed his penchant for the good life to interfere with, and ultimately topple him.

Rare Double-Dipper Spotted in Prime Minister’s Office

Saturday, July 12th, 2008

An extremely rare native Israeli bird, the fork-tongued double-dipper has been spotted in the Israeli prime minister’s office.  It has a nasty habit of pecking at any outstretched hand it finds when it sees bright shiny coins in them.  And it’s known to feed voraciously and steal from anyone foolish to leave their bounty unguarded.  All this by way of saying that Ehud Olmert seems to have come up with an ingenious method of corruption that didn’t involve stealing from just anyone–he stole from charities.  That’s a particularly low blow in Jewish tradition since tzedakah and caring for those in need is held in such high regard.

Haaretz reports:

The police and the Justice Ministry released a joint statement on Friday saying that they had widened a corruption investigation against Olmert and that the prime minister was suspected of asking several charities and state institutions to pay for the same trips abroad. The statement added that Olmert was suspected of using the money to fund family vacations.

The latest suspicions pertain to Olmert’s stint as Jerusalem mayor and his time as minister of industry and trade, during which he allegedly asked for and received the money from organizations…

According to the suspicions, Olmert’s travel agency, Rishon Tours, allegedly sent invoices to each organization who gave money for the same flights, as though each had been the only contributor.

Each body then had its own receipt that it had funded the trip, and the surplus money – apparently a substantial amount – was allegedly deposited in a private bank account in Olmert’s name, which was handled by the same travel agency. The suspicion is that these funds were then used to pay for private trips abroad for Olmert and his family. On some occasions, Olmert’s wife and children traveled on their own. Police say Olmert amassed close to $100,000 in the private bank account over the course of many years.

Among the agencies which allegedly funded Olmert’s trips are AKIM, a charity geared towards aiding mentally disabled children; ALEH, a group that cares for physically challenged children; Yad Vashem; the Simon Wiesenthal Center; and American Friends of the IDF.

As a Jewish communal fundraiser, I have an idea of how the mechanics of this might have worked.  If Olmert scheduled a trip during which he would address two or three charity events, he could bill each one for the full cost of the trip.  Each charity would accept it was paying for the trip since it was booking him for a major fundraising event.  Even if a fundraiser knew that Olmert was speaking for other groups during his trip, he would never think to ask whether the other groups were paying for his travel since he’d assume his own group was the only one doing so.

But I do have to say the guy has balls because Jewish fundraising can be an especially close-knit circle and it wouldn’t be hard for a fundraiser for one group engaging Olmert to speak to a fundraiser for another also engaging him, and for the two of them to compare notes and discover that each one was paying his full travel expenses.  That would let the cat out of the bag.  Though I’m sure Olmert would believe he could bluff his way out of such a situation as a respected Israeli leader.  As I said, very ballsy.

When you think about it, this guy had a chance to leave a lasting legacy.  He could’ve negotiated a final status agreement with the Palestinians.  He could have resolved the Israeli-Syrian conflict and the long-term conflict with Lebanon.  He could’ve neutered Iran as a perpetual Israel enemy.  What did he do instead?  He financed family vacations on the backs of Jewish charities.  What a waste.  A waste of hard-earned charity money and a waste of human potential.

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.

Bush Calls Iran ‘Existential Threat to Peace’

Saturday, June 7th, 2008

It’s come to me that Israel and the U.S. might as well have co-presidents, Bush and Olmert. Their policies and views are so similar that, like old married couples, they can almost finish each other’s sentences and ape the other country’s policies.

No sooner did Bush spend an hour behind closed doors with Olmert talking about Iran, than Bush came out warning that Iran was a threat to the world’s existence. I even detected a bit of a Hebrew accent when he spoke:

“[It's] very important for the world to take the Iranian threat seriously, which the United States does,” Bush said. “Iran is an existential threat to peace.”

Hardly anyone in the world outside of the neocons and Israeli hawks believe Iran is an “existential threat to peace.” In fact the very use of the term “existential” is Israeli right-wing code for Arab genocide. The same precise terms were used during the Lebanon war in painting Hezbollah as diabolically evil. To be clear, many nations believe that Iran is a hostile party and that any effort for it to obtain nuclear weapons is dangerous. But there is a qualitative difference between saying this and saying the ayatollahs want to blow us and Israel to kingdom come.

Such rhetoric must be seen for what it is: jingoistic propaganda. Keep in mind that Ehud Olmert’s is holding on by the skin of his teeth and George Bush faces the lowest approval ratings of his presidency. They’re both desperately seeking to remain relevant. But would they go to the extreme of actually starting a war to prove that relevance?

Similarly, Olmert and Barak are beating the war drums against Hamas these days. In their twisted view, the way they must enter into a truce with the Islamist movement is by first invading Gaza to “flush out” any “last remnants” of resistance. The policy is terribly callous and ineffective. The thinking goes like this: we need a ceasefire; but we know Hamas will build up their military capability during that ceasefire. So let’s go in and hit ‘em where it hurts for a few days so that we won’t have to do this again for, oh, at least another six months or so.

Israeli policy is like the movie Groundhog Day. It keeps repeating itself over and over in an endless cruel cycle. But with the difference being that Israel, unlike Bill Murray’s character, never understands the folly of its ways and breaks out of the cycle.

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