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Posts Tagged ‘michael-lerner’

My Quarrel With Michael Lerner

Friday, March 25th, 2011

There is a wonderful story called My Quarrel With Hersh Rasseyner by Chaim Grade (he’s the Yiddish writer who should’ve won the Nobel Prize for Literature).  Whenever I have a principled dispute with a fellow Jew, I like to think of the title of that story.  This post concerns my quarrel with Michael Lerner. Though we don’t know each other very well, my history goes back several decades with him.

At the beginning of the 1982 Lebanon war, a Bay Area community coalition asked me to speak as a representative of the progressive peace group, New Jewish Agenda, to a region-wide protest rally.  I was in the middle of writing end of quarter graduate papers and pleaded exhaustion.  I thought of Michael Lerner and told them to invite him.  I went to that rally and heard Michael give what I thought was an extremely disappointing, mealy-mouthed defense of Zionism and Israel, when I thought Israel deserved severe criticism for the invasion.

I resolved from that moment never to pass on such a speaking opportunity to another person, especially not someone of whose views I wasn’t confident.

A year ago or so, the editor of the wonderful poetry collection, With an Iron Pen, a collection of Hebrew anti-Occupation poetry asked if I would review her book.  I told her I’d be delighted to do so but had no publishing connections to get such a review published.  She contacted Tikkun and they agreed to publish a review.  That’s the first time I ever published anything there.  Afterward, I received a letter from the magazine inviting me to join the advisory board, which I was glad to do.

At the beginning of the Dirar Abusisi case, I felt almost immediately that this was a major story, one that demanded attention be paid by anyone concerned about Israel.  I approached Michael with a draft essay and after reading it he graciously agreed to publish it.  In the same e mail, he asked me if I would write a post about Tikkun’s 25th anniversary celebration happening in Berkeley.

I was in the middle of preparing for a libel lawsuit to begin and writing intensively about the Abusisi case and I missed the date of the Tikkun party.  I apologized to Michael when he brought this to my attention, and immediately published a post crediting Tikkun for the wonderful work that it had done on behalf of Jewish progressivism over the years.

But Tikkun never published the Abusisi essay Michael had accepted.  Finally, I got an e mail from him saying that because Haaretz had published its first substantive piece on the story, mine was no longer newsworthy.  Though he didn’t say it explicitly, he essentially killed my essay.

I don’t know why this bothers me more than other editors who’ve behaved in similar ways.  I had an article killed by London Review of Books (at least they paid a kill fee).  I also ended my sustained relationship with Comment is Free because of high-handed editorial judgements.  But this seemed to me more of a personal affront.

Michael is a rabbi, a fellow progressive.  Doesn’t he have just a wee bit more of an obligation to act professionally and ethically?  I think so.  Perhaps I’m being naive.  He IS an editor after all.  But still…

I wrote Michael what I thought was a civil email asking him to reconsider, telling him that I thought he’d made a commitment to my piece and that he was not respecting me or my work by abandoning it.  I waited for a reply.  None came.

So my quarrel with Michael Lerner has come to an end.  Now it will be at a distance.  Unfortunately, Michael Lerner is not a person of his word.  And that is sad.  He disrespected not only me and my work, but the plight of Dirar Abusisi.  He deserves better as do I.

A few months ago, Lerner had written an e mail to me saying that my blog posed an infringement on the name of his magazine and caused confusion for his readers.  I’m not sure of what he was proposing.  I supposed he wanted me to change the name of my 8 year-old blog.  I replied that my blog had existed since 2003, had an identity distinct from his magazine, and that our titles were sufficiently different that most people would understand we were separate.  I naturally refused to change the name.  I never heard back from Michael on the subject.

When I conceived of the idea of submitting my essay to him I thought this might be a way to test our relationship and see whether it was back on track.  I’d welcomed his acceptance of my piece as a sign that it was.

He seems to care very deeply about his own projects, but less so about others.  Undoubtedly, Lerner is a creative genius in terms of conceptualizing projects and movements that have really moved the political debate among Jews and the nation at large.  But at what price?  Michael, it’s not all about you.  Sometimes it’s about other people.  Like Dirar Abusisi…and his six children in Gaza without a mother or father…and the fact that three nations have cooperated in his kidnapping and imprisonment.  Tikkun could’ve had the story.  It could’ve struck a blow for justice in a Jewish context, which is one of the things Tikkun was meant to do, I should think.  Now another publication will.

Dershowitz’ Lies: There He Goes Again

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

I bet you didn’t know I accused Alan Dershowitz of trying to kill Michael Lerner.  Neither did I.  But hell, that’s what the Dersh would have you believe in his latest ripping lie-filled yarn at HuffPo.  He’s back there for the second time in six days, this time claiming Michael Lerner is trying to silence him.

Editors would do the man a favor by restraining his written output.  Every time he writes he lies.  And often when he writes he repeats the same lie he’s already published, which only compounds the problem.  It’s come to the point where I wonder whether he knows he’s lying and doesn’t give a crap; or whether some mental impediment or grandiosity complex actually persuades him that anything issuing from his mouth must be true.

Somehow Lerner and I, by noting these lies and their ability to inspire the acts of other unbalanced individuals who share Dersh’ s views, constitute an attempt to “silence” him. Which is ludicrous if you consider that it is Dersh has published two pieces on this in four different publications in a space of six days. If this is silencing, then what would giving him free reign look like? Besides, God forbid anyone should think they could silence the biggest and fastest mouth this side of Brooklyn.

Imagine the hypocrisy of a tenured Harvard professor who almost single-handedly destroyed the academic career of Norman Finkelstein complaining about someone trying to silence him?  In fact, I half expect Dershowitz may be researching employment information about our 38 rabbis and dispatching a damning dossier to their synagogue boards as he did at DePaul with Finkelstein.  I wouldn’t put it past him.

Imagine the hypocrisy of someone who called Richard Goldstone a moser, a Jewish crime punishable by death, dismissing a claim that Dersh might be guilty of inciting violence against Michael Lerner.

First, our brash advocate believes he can’t be guilty of inciting the acts of vandalism against Lerner because he doesn’t know the perpetrators and didn’t put them up to it.  Like a good defense attorney, Dershowitz knows how to frame an issue narrowly to absolve himself of responsibility.  But you don’t have to know someone or tell them to do a bad act to be guilty of incitement.  All you have to do is make odious statements whose contents are widely known in the uber-Israelist crowd in which Dersh and these scumbags run.  Comments like Dershowitz’, in which he called Lerner and others who signed a statement supporting Richard Goldstone, “Hamas rabbis” and “virulently anti-Israel” among other choice epithets, could easily drive bad people to commit bad deeds.

The pro-Israel propagandist scoffs at the notion that Lerner was in any jeopardy despite the fact that his life has repeatedly been threatened over the 24 years he has published Tikkun:

On a scale of one to ten, having a few posters glued to your house ranks at about a one for seriousness.

Dersh, on the other hand, has faced down the tiger in his den.  Who sent the tiger?  Why, Michael Lerner of course:

I have been threatened with real violence, not a couple of posters on my house. I have needed armed bodyguards, policemen with bulletproof vests and other forms of protection from those incited by Lerner and his crew.

If any of this is true (it would be nice if Dershowitz would provide evidence for any of it, which he doesn’t), where is the least smidgen of evidence that anything Michael Lerner did or said about him had any impact on those who allegedly threatened his life?  Dershowitz also ignores the fact that Lerner’s life too has really been threatened by people like Victor Vancier who have demonstrated the capacity for real acts of violence.

And where is the evidence that anything Michael Lerner has done or said was intended to “silence” someone afflicted with loggorhea?  There is none of course.  But don’t let that stop a serial liar when he’s just getting started.

The demagogue’s dismissal of any jeopardy Lerner faced through the attack on his home contrasts to this trenchant and eloquent comment in the HuffPo thread by Paul Surovell:

As a defender of democracy and free expression it behooves you to issue a more serious response to the action against Lerner, perhaps along the lines of the statement by the ADL, Jewish Community Relations Council, Northern California Board of Rabbis, and Jewish Federation of the East Bay, which says:

“We unequivocally condemn criminal acts perpetrated against Rabbi Lerner’s home. Political disagreements must be resolved in a civil manner, and not by resorting to violence. Our communities are especially disturbed that this crime targeted Rabbi Lerner at his home, thereby conveying to him the message that he may not be safe there. We are encouraged by the responsiveness of the Berkeley Police Department to this incident, and we urge its officers to investigate this crime as thoroughly as possible. The entire community must send a message to the perpetrators that we reject violence and criminality as a means to express our political opinions.”

The Harvard bloviator calls me a “follower” of Michael Lerner.  Not only am I NOT a follower of Lerner, we often disagree on many issues.  My post, which Dersh attacks was written independent of any discussion or consultation with Lerner.  I don’t support Lerner because he is Lerner.  I support him because I originally devised the idea of writing the letter whose signatories Dershowitz maligned; and because the Tikkun founder’s reputation and property have been  assaulted by hyper-Zionist thugs, one of whom is Alan Dershowitz.

I wrote that his incitement against Lerner reminded me of King Henry’s statement about Thomas a Becket: “Will no one rid me of this meddlesome priest.”  Somehow this becomes a claim:

…Accusing me in effect, of trying to kill Lerner.

Note the well-placed “in effect.”  That phrase conceals a lot of mendacity since I not only never accused him of trying to kill Lerner, I never accused him of inciting anyone else to do so either.  But hey, why let a few facts get in the way?

You’d think with all that Harvard faculty support behind him he’d have a grad student proofread his copy before publishing.  Get a load of this sentence, responding to my criticism of the professor for “impugning the morals of his enemies.”  This is his barely coherent reply:

This is by one who supports the rabbi who has impugned the morals of his own enemies, namely the leaders of Israel by falsely accusing them of setting out to kill as many civilians as possible.

Of course, this claim too is a lie.  Neither Lerner, nor Goldstone nor the rabbinical signers have accused Israel’s leaders of “setting out to kill as many civilians as possible.”  Norman Finkelstein has already pointed out that Dershowitz either doesn’t know what a lie is or simply doesn’t give a crap.  He is to liars what O.J. Simpson was to sociopaths–a perfect specimen of the type.

What Lerner and I demand is truth and accuracy, qualities Dershowitz wouldn’t know if they bit him in the ass.

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American and Israeli Jews Refuse to Support or Serve in Gaza

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

Today brings words of two moving developments in the rising opposition to the war in Gaza among American and Israeli Jews.  Michael Lerner’s Network of Spiritual Progressives took out full page ads in the N.Y. Times and Washington Post saying:

Cease Fire Now in Gaza

President-elect Obama:

It’s Time to End the Violence in the Middle East–Once and for All

When you become president, please call for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and for an international peace conference to implement a fair and lasting solution to all aspects of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  The solution must also address the conflict between Israel and other states in the region.  The international community must stop the violence and terror against Israeli civilians and against Palestinian civilians in Gaza and the West Bank. The international community must also stop the hidden but persistent violence of the Occupation itself.

The strength of the statement was also its weakness.  It focused almost exclusively on the big picture of resolving the entire conflict and almost ignored the immediate events of the Gaza war.  As such it does little to stop the fighting and death occurring right now.  But it does compel us to keep our eyes on the prize of long term and comprehensive peace between Israel and its Arab neighbors.

The problem of course with a visionary statement like this is that it deliberately ignores the tremendous bitterness built up in Israel and especially in Gaza as a result of the Gaza massacre.  And this is precisely the bitterness which pushes such visions of peace farther into the distance.  It is hard to know whether peace has receded a month or a year or a decade as a result of Operation Solid Lead.  But certainly Lerner’s statement will do little to lessen that and that is the insurmountable obstacle that we now face.

The other strength of Lerner’s statement is that it focuses profoundly on the moral and spiritual underpinning of opposition to Israel-Arab enmity.  In Israel, unfortunately, there is almost no consideration given to such concepts.  This has become a war of survival for Israelis, who often feel there is no room for ethincal considerations when life is at stake.  Of course, it is precisely when life is at stake that morality becomes an even more critical component of our decision-making apparatus.  Who needs morality when life is good and all is well?

The Israeli peace group, Courage to Refuse, held a demonstration encouraging IDF soldiers to refuse to serve in Gaza.  This YouTube video is a series of interviews with several refusers (Seruvniks in Hebrew), who provide a moving counterpoint to the flag-waving and jingoism that characterizes much of Israeli society about this war.

This is an excerpt of Noam Livne comparing the courage it took him to serve in intense combat conditions versus the courage it took him to refuse to serve:

 I was a combat officer for four years.  I was in Gaza.  I was in Lebanon.  I commanded ambushes.  I commanded outposts.  I fought “terrorists.”  I was under mortar attack.  I was shot at and did all the scary things one does in the military.  And I say with all my heart that to refuse demanded more courage.

I call on all soldiers, pilots, officers and all who participate in this war to seek that courage within.

Stirring words from the frontline of the battle for the hearts and minds of the Israeli public.

CNN Covers American Jewish Debate Over Israel, Dershowitz Claims No Israel Critics Called ‘Anti-Semitic’

Monday, March 5th, 2007

Thanks to Muzzlewatch for pointing out this excellent piece of journalism from CNN (video) covering the raging debate within our community about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Frank Sesno does a terrific job of laying out the general contours of the debate including Jimmy Carter’s book and the AJC smear of liberal Jewish critics of Israeli policy. One word of warning though: Paul Zahn follows the piece with a long debate between two of our greatest blowhards, Alan Dershowitz and Michael Lerner. I should quickly add that while there are things I don’t like about Michael Lerner, I find his politics often agreeable to my own, including during this debate. He set out the progressive Jewish agenda pretty well.

But Dershowitz, what can you say about him? He comes up with the entirely fatuous claim that no critic of Israel has ever been called “anti-Semitic.” What he means to say is that no “legitimate” critic of Israel has ever been called anti-Semitic. Because, of course, many, many have been called anti-Semitic who criticized Israel. But even if we add the word “legitimate,” Dershowitz’s claim would be entirely fallacious. The Big D. even claims that he’s offered a reward to anyone who can provide that any American Jewish leader has called any critic of Israel anti-Semitic. What planet is the guy living on? The AJC report by Alvin Rosenfeld notes critics like Tony Kushner, Tony Judt and Adrienne Rich as anti-Semitic, when their only crime is not to share Rosenfeld’s belief in Zionism as the only legitimate expression of Jewish identity. I want to make clear that I don’t share their view and consider myself a progressive Zionist. But by God, I won’t let these distinguished artists be tarred and feathered as anti-Semites merely because they don’t conform to some narrow definition of Jewish identity.

Kristol’s Neocon Fantasy: Lebanon as Prelude to Iran-Syria War

Tuesday, July 18th, 2006

A few years ago John Bolton made an infamous and absurd speech accusing Syria of hankering after WMD. He practically announced that our next target after Iraq should be Syria. Now that Bolton is rapping out U.S. policy in the halls of the UN, one has to stop and wonder whether much has changed. He must relish current developments in Lebanon as they allow him to say to his fellow neocons: “I told you so.” And one can imagine the glee he must feel in telling the world that, no, Lebanon is not yet ripe for a ceasefire. In effect, he’s saying: “We still have to kill a few more Iranian stooges there before we let the guns fall silent.” And is there any doubt given Bolton’s fire breathing speeches to this year’s Aipac national conference that Bolton and his neocon buddies like Micheal Ledeen are dying for a war with Iran?

All of which brings me to an essay Michael Lerner wrote for Alternet, Middle East Violence: Neocons’ Fantasy. I’m not usually a fan of Lerner’s for reasons too complicated to go into here. But in this essay he gets close to some important underlying issues in the Lebanon conflict related to U.S. Mideast policy as seen through the eyes of the neocons. His arguments struck me particularly because I just published my own meditation on this issue yesterday in which I suggested that the U.S. is only too happy to see Israel as its proxy for a war against Iran’s proxy, Hezbollah. Lerner writes:

The champions of American global empire are using the latest upsurge of violence in the Middle East to give new life to their discredited plan to extend the war in Iraq to Syria and Iran. The neo-con Weekly Standard has taken the lead in its July 24th cover issue, proclaiming that the current violence is “Iran’s Proxy War” against the West.

As Standard editor William Kristol puts it, “It’s our war.” America’s, that is.

“What’s under attack,” Kristol argues “is liberal democratic civilization, whose leading representative right now happens to be the United States.” The logical conclusion of this “war of civilizations” analysis is Kristol’s advice to the Bush Administration: “our focus should be less on Hamas and Hezbollah, and more on their paymasters and real commanders — Syria and Iran. And our focus should be not only on the regional war in the Middle East, but also on the global struggle against radical in the short run we should be asking the international community to step in, impose a settlement on all sides that includes a return of Israel to its pre-67 borders with minor border changes (as defined in the Geneva Accord of 2003), reparations for Palestinian refugees and for Jews who fled Arab lands from 1948-1967, iron-clad security arrangements enforced by an armed international force on the restored borders, and a Truth and Reconciliation commission that is empowered to expose all acts of human rights violations on both sides — and to impose punishment accordingly.

While partisans on all sides of this struggle must abandon their fantasy of ultimate justification of their claims, a clear first step is to dismiss the neo-con fantasy of a global war of civilizations, with its accompanying notion that this is the best way to reframe the globalization of capital and American corporate domination of the world as a path to expand democracy and human rights. That fantasy is dead — the Iraq invasion and subsequent tragedy has removed it from any level of plausibility. Let’s not let the neo-cons use the violence between Israel, Palestine and Lebanon as an excuse to try to revive that which ought to be put to eternal rest. Islamism.”

In my post, I predicted that the neocons would see in the Lebanon war an omen favoring future war (or at least military conflict) with both Iran and Syria (but especially Iran). Kristol’s thoughts seem like almost a mirror image of what my own were yesterday when I wrote that post. His essay reads much like the grandstanding, cheerleading intellectual pablum that neocons (including Kristol) were writing before we went to war with Iraq. They said in effect, don’t worry America, don’t be afraid. War with Iraq is the right thing to do on behalf of American democracy. We need to give Saddam a big fat bloody nose and teach those Al Qaeda fiends a lesson. And as I said, it was all nonsense. What Kristol’s writing now is not just nonsense, it’s deeply dangerous nonsense. We’ve failed in Iraq. He wants us to fail on even a grander scale by taking on, in Iran, a power as strong or stronger than Saddam’s Iraq was.

[Both Israeli and Palestinian] triumphalist narratives must be abandoned.

But they won’t be as long as Bush and his advisors in the neo-con camp see in the current violence yet another opportunity to reframe the Middle East struggle as one that will provide ex post facto justification for the war in Iraq and enticement for new militarist adventures to destabilize or overthrow oppressive regimes in Iran and Syria…

We should be asking the international community to step in, impose a settlement on all sides that includes a return of Israel to its pre-67 borders with minor border changes (as defined in the Geneva Accord of 2003), reparations for Palestinian refugees and for Jews who fled Arab lands from 1948-1967, iron-clad security arrangements enforced by an armed international force on the restored borders, and a Truth and Reconciliation commission that is empowered to expose all acts of human rights violations on both sides — and to impose punishment accordingly.

While partisans on all sides of this struggle must abandon their fantasy of ultimate justification of their claims, a clear first step is to dismiss the neo-con fantasy of a global war of civilizations, with its accompanying notion that this is the best way to…expand democracy and human rights. That fantasy is dead — the Iraq invasion and subsequent tragedy has removed it from any level of plausibility. Let’s not let the neo-cons use the violence between Israel, Palestine and Lebanon as an excuse to try to revive that which ought to be put to eternal rest.

While Lerner doesn’t dwell much on Kristol’s article in his own, I think it’d be instructive to quote more of the former’s argument:

WHY IS THIS ARAB-ISRAELI WAR different from all other Arab-Israeli wars? Because it’s not an Arab-Israeli war…The prime mover behind the terrorist groups who have started this war is a non-Arab state, Iran, which wasn’t involved in any of Israel’s previous wars.

What’s happening in the Middle East, then, isn’t just another chapter in the Arab-Israeli conflict. What’s happening is an Islamist-Israeli war. You might even say this is part of the Islamist war on the West…

What’s under attack is liberal democratic civilization, whose leading representative right now happens to be the United States.

Here is another lesson that Kristol learns regarding Iran and its influence over Mideast politics:

States matter. Regimes matter. Ideological movements become more dangerous when they become governing regimes of major nations…Islamism became really dangerous when it seized control of Iran…

No Islamic Republic of Iran, no Hezbollah. No Islamic Republic of Iran, no one to prop up the Assad regime in Syria. No Iranian support for Syria (a secular government that has its own reasons for needing Iranian help and for supporting Hezbollah and Hamas), little state sponsorship of Hamas and Hezbollah. And no Shiite Iranian revolution, far less of an impetus for the Saudis to finance the export of the Wahhabi version of Sunni Islam as a competitor to Khomeini’s claim for leadership of militant Islam–and thus no Taliban rule in Afghanistan, and perhaps no Hamas either.

What of course is ludicrous in this analysis is the presumption that without Iran Hamas would be but a mere hiccup in terms of its impact on Palestinian society. And even more ludicrous is the notion that without Iran there would be no Taliban. What’s that, you say? “I thought Pakistan was the prime instigator and political author of the Taliban.” Nah, Kristol would have you believe otherwise. He’d like to turn received notions like that on their head (without any proof that his own notions are credible). He’d like to replace conventional wisdom with his own wish fulfillment fantasy, a convenient justification for war with Iran. Iran is fucking up Israel and Afghanistan in much the same way that Saddam fucked up his own country and his neighbors. Ergo, the only reasonable approach is to take out the Iranian mullahs just as we took out Saddam. The world will thank us for it.

Kristol closes with the most disturbing portion of his essay in which he advocates war against Iran now:

Syria and Iran are enemies of Israel [and] the United States. We have done a poor job of standing up to them and weakening them. They are now testing us more boldly than one would have thought possible a few years ago. Weakness is provocative. We have been too weak, and have allowed ourselves to be perceived as weak.

A word about the “weakness” syndrome. This meme precisely echoes one advanced by the Israeli military-intelligence establishment as a prime justification for war against Lebanon. We have been soft on the terrorists. What we need to do is ‘teach them a lesson’ they won’t soon forget, etc.

But war is not a political policy. War does not correct past political mistakes. As presented by neocons and the Israeli generals, war seems a pathetic admission that all political alternatives have been exhausted and there is no other option than a military solution. This turns von Clausewitz’s saying that “war is politics by other means” on its head. For the neocons, war replaces politics for there is no political solution worth entertaining. Politics become bankrupt. This is, of course, a fatal divergence from everything that most Americans hold dear. We believe (or at least we used to) in using diplomacy to resolve international conflicts. We believe in using our military as an absolute last resort. We believe that people of good will can work out their differences short of guns and bombs. In this way, I believe that neocons betray fundamental American values and I profoundly hope that loony notions like Kristol’s will be soundly rejected by American voters come November.

Kristol continues with his “strength uber alles” concept of international relations:

The right response [to Islamists] is renewed strength–in supporting the governments of Iraq and Afghanistan, in standing with Israel, and in pursuing regime change in Syria and Iran. For that matter, we might consider countering this act of Iranian aggression with a military strike against Iranian nuclear facilities. Why wait? Does anyone think a nuclear Iran can be contained? That the current regime will negotiate in good faith? It would be easier to act sooner rather than later. Yes, there would be repercussions–and they would be healthy ones, showing a strong America that has rejected further appeasement.

You bet there’ll be repercussions. Lots of them–most very bad. Just read Sy Hersh’s latest New Yorker exploration of U.S. military thinking regarding attacking Iran to read the disastrous scenarios that might ensue. But Bill’s not talking about those types of repercussions. He’s talking about “The Good News.” Good repercussions. Sure.

And a word about that neocon code word, “appeasement” that brings to mind Neville Chamberlain bragging to the assembled multitudes that he’s brought “peace in our time” by caving to Hitler at Munich. That’s right. Any of us who raise doubts about Kristol’s grand vision are just appeasers of Islamist tyranny. And what will we have to show if we hold Bill back from blasting the ayatollahs? Most likely some mullah will become Speaker of the House when they come for us and take over our way of life, not to mention our country. For like Winston Churchill, we must meet them on the beaches or they will conquer us.

What mumbo jumbo. What hocus pocus. To think that a man who clearly has some intelligence actually believes this shit:

…A military strike would take a while to organize. In the meantime, perhaps President Bush can fly from the silly G8 summit in St. Petersburg–a summit that will most likely convey a message of moral confusion and political indecision–to Jerusalem, the capital of a nation that stands with us, and is willing to fight with us, against our common enemies. This is our war, too.

Yes, let’s dress up Israel in the old Red, White and Blue (well, at least the white and blue). Their fight is our fight and all that. This starts to sound like FDR exhorting Americans to see Britain’s fight against the Nazis as our fight too. No doubt Kristol would like to create such a rhetorical resonanance. But it isn’t there. Israel is fighting it’s own fight for its own reasons. We must have a Mideast policy that does not mesh with, ape or echo Israel’s. If we do not see that our interests are separate from those of Israel we’re in for big, big trouble on the world stage. For this is a massive delusional enterprise that would allow everyone in the world, not just the Arabs, to say we’ve ‘gone native’ as far as Israel is concerned. They will be able to say with justification that not only are we Israel’s protectors, but we are essentially the same as Israel. What a disaster that would be. And it takes a foolhardy man not to recognize that.

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