Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

Action

ceramic bowl

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

Action

Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

Action

David Grossman

Ben Heine

Action

Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

Action

Dove

Ben Heine

Action

Two birds

Hoda Jamal

Action

Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

Action

Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

Action

Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

Action

Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

Action

Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

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

Action

Great Day on Eldrige Street

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

Action

Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘the-israel-project’

Republican Pollster Crafts Secret Handbook for Israel Lobby (Part 2)

Saturday, July 11th, 2009

This is part II in my discussion of the 2009 Global Language Dictionary (pdf), the secret hasbara handbook crafted by veteran Republican image-shaper Frank Luntz on behalf of The Israel Project.  The Dictionary is a propaganda treasure for the pro-Israel right, suggesting ways of spinning issues that might otherwise embarrass Israel in the U.S. media.

One of Luntz’s main themes is to ram home to a U.S. audience that Israel wants peace.  Of course, neither he nor Israel ever offer any concrete proof of what they will do for peace or how to achieve peace.  The empty slogan seems good enough for Luntz:

For Americans to have hope regarding the Middle East conflict, they need to be reminded that:

Israel has a long-term commitment to peace. When courageous Arab leaders, such as Egypt’s President Sadat and Jordan’s King Hussein, reached out their hands to Israel, peace was achieved.

This passage neglects to mention that these leaders negotiated peace deals with Israel decades ago and that Israel has not achieved any similar agreements with any Arab leaders since.  In fact, Pres. Assad of Syria has been “reaching out his hands to Israel” begging for negotiations for almost a year to no avail.  Why no mention of this inconvenient fact?

Then there’s the tired old Gaza fallacy:

“Israel made painful sacrifices and took a risk to give peace a chance. They voluntarily removed over 9,000 settlers from Gaza and parts of the West Bank, abandoning homes, schools, businesses, and places of worship in the hopes of renewing the peace process.”

“Despite making an overture for peace by withdrawing from Gaza, Israel continues to face terrorist attacks…”

Ariel Sharon took no risk whatsoever in his unilateral withdrawal from Gaza. Nor did he withdraw “in hopes of renewing the peace process.”  In fact, he hoped that the withdrawal would act as a pressure valve and diminish his need for a future peace process.

Those settlements were an albatross around Israel’s neck and no one except a tiny minority in the extreme settler movement saw them as having any value.  Further, since Sharon withdrew without consulting or negotiating with the Palestinians, he gained nothing as he might have.  So to say that Israel has the right to expect anything in return for withdrawal is foolish.  If it wanted anything in return, the time to negotiate for it would’ve been BEFORE withdrawing.

Yes, hasbara can be fun and unintentionally humorous:

Americans want a team to cheer for. Let the public know GOOD things about Israel.

Once you have established that you care about both Israelis and Palestinians and that Israel wants peace, you can begin the process of establishing a strong connection between Americans and Israel based on shared values and interests, including:

– Israel’s cooperative efforts with Jewish and Muslim citizens working together to create jobs, cutting edge technology, science and research;
– Israel’s remarkable advances in alternative energy;
– The work Israel has done in Arab neighborhoods and communities to raise health and living standards, including access, as full Israeli citizens, to Israel’s world-class national health care system.

Information about the cooperation of Israeli doctors and scientists – Jews, Muslims, Christians and others alike – in solving important health and technological challenges can be helpful. So can demonstrating that Israel and America share a commitment to freedom of religion, press, speech as well as human rights, women’s issues, and the environment.

Notice Luntz provides absolutely no proof of such “cooperative efforts” between Jews and Muslims.  The idea that Israel is doing anything to “create jobs” for its Muslim citizens is laughable.  And the number of Israeli Arabs working in the sectors of “technology, science and research” is infinitesimal.

Also, the notion that Israel is “raising health and living standards” for its Arab population is also grotesque when the latter has the highest poverty rate, lowest life expectancy, highest rate of children living in poverty, lowest level of education, etc. of any ethnic group in the nation.

As for freedom of religion in Israel–not so fast.  Religious leaders of the Muslim community are approved by the State, which can and does reject the choice of the community itself for whatever reason it chooses.  Jewish rabbinic leaders are never rejected in the same way.

As for freedom of the press–except for the times when military censorship is invoked on the flimsiest of excuses.  And the Israeli media NEVER challenges such censorship.

Freedom of speech?  Perhaps, except for Arab Knesset members who are regularly excoriated, threatened with death, and investigated by the Israeli police again on the flimsiest of pretexts.

Human Rights?  Except for those Israeli citizens who protested the Gaza war and were imprisoned for their non-violent protest.  And except for those who are investigated by the police and charged with crimes for doing nothing more than exposing torture and abuse committed by the IDF.

Draw direct parallels between Israel and America—including the need to defend against terrorism.

…The more you focus on the similarities between Israel and America, the more likely you are to win…support…Indeed, Israel is an important American ally in the war against terrorism, and faces many of the same challenges as America in protecting their citizens…Imagine what we would do if more than 250 times terrorists had crossed into our land and killed our children while they were riding buses or eating pizza? What would America do? What would America do if America’s neighbors in Canada or Mexico were firing rockets into America?

Now, that’s a slightly embarrassing line of argument since the U.S. actually did wage two wars of aggression against our Canadian and Mexican neighbors.  In the first (the War of 1812), our asses were whipped and we slunk home in defeat.  Relations have been pretty good with Canada ever since.

In the second (the Mexican War of 1848), we whupped Mexico’s ass and stole a huge chunk of their territory to make America safe for California freeways and Texas BBQ.  Relations have been a little touchy ever since.

Further, whenever dealing with the argument that asks Americans to put themselves in Israel’s shoes and imagine how they would act if New York was under attack–you have to turn the tables.  Imagine today that the U.S. conquers Baja California in a war and occupies it for 42 years and shows no willingness to return it anytime soon.  Would we Americans have any right to complain if Mexicans didn’t take too kindly to such unfriendly behavior?

If you don’t laugh at this passage you’ll cry it’s so ludicrous:

The language of Israel is the language of America: “democracy,” “freedom,” “security,”
and “peace.”

These four words are at the core of the American political, economic, social, and cultural systems, and they should be repeated as often as possible because they resonate with virtually every American. This is not rhetoric. It is fact. Despite the non-stop coverage of Israel in the press, the positive news about Israel remains untold.

No, it’s not rhetoric.  Just because Frank tells us so.  But wait.  Here are the “facts” he marshals to prove his argument:

It’s our job to “wear white hats in public”—to remind Americans that Israel is a team for whom they can feel good about cheering. After all:

Israel, America’s ally, is a democracy in the Middle East. In Israel, Christians, Muslims, and Jews all have freedom of speech, religion, and a right to vote. Indeed, more than a million Arabs are citizens of Israel, representing almost 20% of the population.

Furthermore, 12 Arabs and 21 women serve in Israel’s 120-member Parliament, and an Arab judge sits on the Israeli Supreme Court. On a cultural level, a recent Miss Israel was an Israeli Arab and Israel is sending an Arab-Israeli and a Jewish-Israel to sing together in the upcoming Eurovision contest. As the following chart shows, female membership in the Knesset is even on the rise.

Again, not so fast.  Israel is not a full-fledged democracy.  It is an ethnocracy with unequal rights for majority and minority ethnic groups.

12 Arabs may sit in the Knesset but none are ministers and no Jewish party has the guts to include any Arab party in a governing coalition.  In essence, this renders Arabs MKs powerless.

And as for the supposedly increasing female membership in the Knesset, what that chart indicates is that the numbers of female Knesset members has risen from 12 in the first Knesset (60 years ago) to 21 today.  A 90% increase over 60 years is nothing to brag about (you do the math).  And the fact that 15% of the Knesset’s members are women in a society in which at least half the citizens are female is also nothing special, I’m sorry to say.

to be continued

The Israel Project’s Secret Hasbara Handbook Exposed

Friday, July 10th, 2009

tip hasbara project screenshotImagine for a moment you’re a general about to embark on a decisive military campaign and your intelligence service secures a copy of your opponent’s entire campaign strategy. You open it and you see his battle plans laid out before you, key forces, weaponry, lines of attack, points of weaknesses, etc. You suddenly understand just how weak his forces are and precisely how to mercilessly attack and eviscerate him. The plan makes you understand that his forces are largely based on artifice and sham.  It gives you confidence that you are entirely on the right course and tells you how to stay on that course.  Victory is assured, your enemy’s defeat certain.

Douglas Bloomfield and Newsweek have done pretty close to that against the Israel lobby. Specifically, they’ve exposed a secret hasbara handbook written for The Israel Project by star Republican marketer, Frank Luntz. The oddly-named Global Language Dictionary (pdf) is a veritable goldmine of arguments, strategy, tactics. At 116 pages, it’s not for the faint of heart.  But anyone who wants to get inside the head of the Israel lobby must read this document.

I want to devote at least two or three posts to it so I hope you, dear reader, will bear with me.  I know my enthusiasm will mark me as a real wonk, but this is the real deal and worth spending some time parsing and deconstructing.

The first thing to say is that the entire document is a pathetic piece of propaganda.  While it ostensibly is addressed to TIP’s leaders and advises them how to shape a pro-Israel message when they lobby Congress, the media and other critical power brokers, the entire thing reeks of desperation and a lost cause.  It goes without saying that the arguments offered are not only devoid of truth, they’re devoid of rigor or credibility.  There is literally no substance to the claims offered on Israel’s behalf.  It’s an empty exercise in every sense of the word.  Reading this makes you realize that the entire Israel lobby edifice is a house of cards.

Perhaps I’m letting my shock at the shabbiness of the Dictionary get the better of me and overstating the case it reveals against the Lobby.  After all, any political network that exists for six decades and achieves as much as this one has doesn’t topple overnight.  But I’ll just have to let you be the judge.

One aspect of this I find extraordinary and entirely dubious is the choice of the Republican campaign pollster Frank Luntz to write this report.  This indicates, as I’ve always maintained, that the Lobby is totally tone deaf to the political environment.  We have a democratic president and two Houses of Congress under Democratic control for the first time in a few decades.  Pragmatic liberalism is ascendant.  Neo-conservatism and Bushian Republicanism are in retreat.  And who does TIP chose to make the case for Israel?  A right-wing Republican spinmeister.  Remarkable.  But one thing I must say is that this is a good sign for our side.  If our opponents are as wooden as they appear, then they will topple themselves without needing much help from us.

The first chapter, 25 Rules for Effective Communication opens with:

The first step to winning trust and friends for Israel is showing that you care about peace for BOTH Israelis and Palestinians and, in particular, a better future for every child.  Indeed, the sequence of your conversation is critical and you must start with empathy for BOTH sides first. Open your conversation with strong proven messages such as:

“Israel is committed to a better future for everyone – Israelis and Palestinians alike. Israel wants the pain and suffering to end, and is committed to working with the Palestinians toward a peaceful, diplomatic solution where both sides can have a better future. Let this be a time of hope and opportunity for both the
Israeli and the Palestinian people.”

The first thing we learn is that this passage, as with everything else printed in the handbook, is empty meaningless drivel.  It’s a perfect example of political three-card monty in which there appears to be a card which isn’t there at all.  It’s all a sham.  There is no substance.  The rhetoric here is even worse than that offered by spokespeople like Mark Regev on behalf of the Israeli government.

In the following passage, we can see that Luntz has lifted shamelessly lifted arguments from MEMRI and former Mossad officer, Itamar Marcus’ Palestine Media Watch.  Others before me have demolished these tawdry arguments, but it’s instructive to read the lies and distortions that TIP instructs its representatives to parrot.

Throughout, the document drips noblesse oblige and fake concern for Palestinian children:

“As a matter of principle, we believe that it is a basic right of children to be raised without hate. We ask the Palestinian leadership to end the culture of hate in Palestinian schools, 300 of which are named for suicide bombers.  Palestinian leaders should take textbooks out of classrooms that show maps of the Middle East without Israel and that glorify terrorism.”

As a matter of principle, children should not be raised to want to kill others or themselves. Yet, day after day, Palestinian leadership pushes a culture of hate that encourages even small children to become suicide bombers. Iran-backed Hamas’s public television in Gaza uses Sesame Street–type programming to
glorify suicide bombers.

As a matter of principle, no child should be abused in such a way. Palestinian children deserve better.”

As a matter of principle I believe that no child (Israeli or Palestinian) should be raised in fear that their mother, father, sister, brother, grandmother or grandfather could be killed for no other reason than they happen to be in the wrong place at the wrong time and a frightened, trigger hungry 18 year army recruit decides to make an example of them.

As for maps, before Frank Luntz or Itamar Marcus make their specious claims about Palestinian textbooks, I’d like them to show me a single Israeli textbook that features a map of Palestine.  You will certainly find Judea and Samaria.  But will you find any acknowledgement of the millions of Palestinians who live in the Territories?

Further, the arguments are entirely dated.  Suicide bombings were a serious phenomenon in years past.  But Palestinian militants have largely abandoned this tactic, at least in part due to its unpopularity among average Palestinians.  You certainly wouldn’t know this from Frank Luntz’s agitprop.  It’s like he’s living in a time warp and its still the first Intifada (circa 2000).

Clearly differentiate between the Palestinian people and Hamas. There is an immediate and clear distinction between the empathy Americans feel for the Palestinians and the scorn they direct at Palestinian leadership. Hamas is a terrorist organization – Americans get that already. But if it sounds like you are attacking the Palestinian people (even though they elected Hamas) rather than their leadership, you will lose public support.

Another characteristic of the Dictionary is the dubious distinctions it draws, as in this example.  There is no way to distinguish between the Palestinian people and their leadership.  In effect, the passage concedes the illogic of its argument with this phrase: “even though they elected Hamas.”  Of course they elected Hamas.  That’s precisely the point.  They had an election and chose who they wanted to represent them.  So for the lobby to say they sympathize with Palestinians, but not with the leaders they chose is an empty statement.

Yet another example of noblesse oblige (and it’s entirely dubious to claim that these words “work”):

WORDS THAT WORK

We know that the Palestinians deserve leaders who will care about the well being of their people, and who do not simply take hundreds of millions of dollars in assistance from America and Europe, put them in Swiss bank accounts, and use them to support terror instead of peace. The Palestinians need books, not bombs. They want roads, not rockets.”

Clearly passages like this are designed to score debate points but are entirely devoid of accuracy.  The claims of embezzlement, of course, go back to the days when Yasir Arafat ran things and tolerated rampant Fatah corruption.  But Arafat has been dead for lo these many years.  Someone ought to roll over and tell Tchaichovsky and Frank Luntz the news.

As for Palestinians wanting roads, they do.  They’d like some of those wonderful Israeli bypass roads that run directly through former Palestinian farmland and whisk settlers from their settlement homes to their jobs inside Israel proper.  The same apartheid roads which are off-limits to Palestinians.

One thing you’ve got to give Luntz, he’s not above stealing ideas from anyone, even Israeli peace activists (see italics):

MORE WORDS THAT WORK

“The obstacles on the road to a peaceful and prosperous Middle East are many.  Israel recognizes that peace is made with one’s adversaries, not with one’s friends. But peace can only be made with adversaries who want to make peace with you.  Terrorist organizations like Iran-backed Hezbollah, Hamas, and Islamic Jihad are, by definition, opposed to peaceful co-existence, and determined to prevent reconciliation. I ask you, how do you negotiate with those who want you dead?”

There is an amazing insularity in the arguments presented here, with absolutely no conception that Palestinians feel precisely the same emotions as Israelis.  In other words, they too ask how and why they should negotiate with a state of Israel that would just as soon kill them as live with them in peace.

More obliviousness, with no awareness of the dark irony of this statement:

“We may disagree about politics…But there is one fundamental principle that all peoples from all parts of the globe will agree on: civilized people do not target innocent women and children for death.”

Do I hear any concern here for the “innocent women and children” of Gaza who were slaughtered in their hundreds during the Gaza war?  No, of course not.

Of course, there is unintentionally comic discourse:

Don’t pretend that Israel is without mistakes or fault. It’s not true and no one believes it. Pretending Israel is free from errors does not pass the smell test. It will only make your listeners question the veracity of everything else you say.

Admit Israel make mistakes.  Don’t specify them.  Change the subject as quickly as possible and hope no one notices what you’ve just conceded.  And then point out how much more guilty the Palestinians are than the Israelis for the conflict.

Use humility. “I know that in trying to defend its children and citizens from terrorists that Israel has accidentally hurt innocent people. I know it, and I’m sorry for it. But what can Israel do to defend itself? If America had given up land for peace – and that land had been used for launching rockets at America, what would America do?

Use fake humility.  Pretend that Israel is the U.S. and that there has been no Occupation and no injustice perpetrated against Palestinians.  Pretend their lands have not been stolen.  Pretend they have not been turned into refugees in the hundreds of thousands.  Pretend that Israel has a right to expect Palestinians to behave like Canadians or Mexicans, who have not had a border dispute with the U.S. in 150 years.

Here is more fakery in the guise of concern.  And note the conflation of American Jews with Israelis as if we are them (a little identity confusion?):

WORDS THAT WORK

“Are Israelis perfect? No. Do we make mistakes? Yes. But we want a better future, and we are working towards it.

And we want Palestinians to have a better future as well. They deserve a government that will eliminate the terror not only because it will make my children safer—but also because it will make their children more prosperous. When the terror ends, Israel will no longer need to have challenging checkpoints to inspect goods and people. When the terror ends we will no longer need a security fence.”

There is virtually no terror on the West Bank, yet 500 checkpoints remain there.  Why?  Tell me why, Mr. Luntz.

If there is a money quote in this document that reveals that the lobby is now running scared it is this:

We’re at a time in history when Jews in general (and Israelis in particular) are no longer perceived as the persecuted people. In fact, among American and European audiences—sophisticated, educated, opinionated, non-Jewish audiences—Israelis are often seen as the occupiers and the aggressors. With that kind of baggage, it is critical that messages from the pro-Israel spokespeople not come across as supercilious or condescending.

More unintended irony:

WORDS THAT DON’T WORK

“We are prepared to allow them to build……”

If the Palestinians are to be seen as a trusted partner on the path to peace, they must not be subordinated, in perception or in practice, by the Israelis.

What is the Occupation if not “subordination” personified??

Here’s right back at ya, buddy:

WORDS THAT DO WORK

“Achieving peaceful relationships requires the leadership…of both sides. And so we ask the Palestinians … Stop using the language of incitement. Stop using the language of violence. Stop using the language of threats. You won’t achieve peace if your military leadership talks about war. You won’t achieve peace if people talk about pushing others to the sea or to the desert.”

Israel’s military and political leaders speak the language of violence, incitement and war virtually every day.  No acknowledgement of that, of course, by Luntz.  As for “pushing Jews into the sea,” I haven’t read a real live Palestinian resident of the Occupied Territories make such a statement in several decades.  So this argument is circa 1970 or so.  Nice try though, Frank.

“Israelis know what it is like to live their lives with the daily threat of terrorism.

As do Palestinians.

Remind people – again and again – that Israel wants peace. Reason One: If Americans see no hope for peace—if they only see a continuation of a 2,000-year-long episode of “Family Feud”—Americans will not want their government to spend tax dollars or their President’s clout on helping Israel.

Bingo.  Here Luntz inadvertently speaks the truth. Israel wants peace in the same vague way that a 13 year old girl may want to be whoever the teen idol of the moment happens to be. Israel has no plan. No means of getting to peace. So to say that Israel wants peace is, once again, meaningless.

And the fear lurking in the hearts of the lobby is that some day Israel will be exposed and Americans will abandon it because they will come to understand that whatever Israel may claim it wants, there will never be peace under terms acceptable to Israel.  That will be a day of reckoning that the lobby wants to avoid at all costs.

To be continued…

How Did Holocaust Shooter Get His Guns?

Friday, June 12th, 2009
Where does a convicted felon manage to find the guns to kill?

Where does a convicted felon manage to find the guns to kill?

In our gun happy culture, it’s no surprise that a convicted felon would gain access to guns and use them to kill someone.  That’s precisely what James Von Brunn, who attacked the U.S Holocaust Museum earlier this week and killed an African-American security guard, did.  As such, he had no legal right to own any weapon (as I understand the law).  So how did he do it?

Thanks to M.J. Rosenberg for pointing me to this CNN report that reveals he used a Winchester rifle (!) made sometime between 1908 and 1920.  How’s that for an antique?  We shouldn’t be surprised that a man who served in World War II and who espoused views that would make him at home in Nazi Germany circa 1933, owned a weapon about as dusty as his ideas.  Clearly von Brunn, at least in this particular, managed to circumvent the law.

But he also owned another weapon:

Mr. von Brunn brought a .22-caliber rifle and a .30-30 rifle when he moved into an apartment in Annapolis, Md., two years ago, according to the affidavit. The police recovered the .30-30 as well as ammunition for a .22 from his bedroom after the museum attack.

While it seems hopeless to topple the gun lobby in this country, at least we can demand that authorities trace these weapons and punish anyone stupid enough to sell one to a violent thug and felon like von Brunn.

I’m also distressed to find that embarrassed websites and web hosts are erasing many vestiges of von Brunn’s sojourn online.  His website, Holy Western Empire, has been taken down by its host.  von Brunn’s Wikipedia account and biography have been scrubbed clean.  In these instances all I can say is thank God for the Internet Archive and Wikileaks.  TPM Cafe has also uploaded many of his writings for the record.

It is interesting that before someone commits murder you can’t get a web host to do a thing about the hate they post to websites (we’ve had that problem with Masada2000 and its webhost, Dreamhost).  Nor can you get the police to investigate their threats and other activities (just ask the Seattle Police Department and FBI about defenestration and genital mutilation threats sent to me which they refuse to investigate).  But then after haters do strike and the damage is done, they rush to obliterate the killer’s identity and existence.  A bit hypocritical I think.

Some Comment is Free commenters noted that Abe Foxman did not, as I predicted, tie the shooting to Iran or the vast Islamist conspiracy.  No, that honor goes to Jennifer Lazlo Mizrahi, director of the Israel Project who actually had the self-promotional cahones to write a press release in which she claimed that the Maryland police would’ve stopped von Brunn had they only investigated him when he allegedly distributed hate flyers on her doorstep.  She goes on:

Today we are talking about Iran – and the possible re-election of a man who denies the Holocaust and has said he wants to see Israel wiped off the map.

We need to keep the lessons of history in our minds. Even if that memory is from just yesterday – when an innocent man was murdered in cold blood.

I am pleased that President Obama has spoken out forcefully about the culture of hate in the Arab world – and the senseless act from yesterday.

Thanks to Ali Gharib for catching this.  Abe, I owe you an apology on this one.  We’ll catch you another time.  The credit for such sky-is-falling exploitation of tragedy for political advantage goes to the Israel Project this time.

And if we want to go even farther afield in the universe, we can always catch Debbie Schlussel orbiting out there somewhere around planet [Pam] Geller.  Here’s what Deb writes:

…The shooter…at the U.S. Holocaust Museum is not a Muslim but a White guy, James W. Von Brunn, who is a neo-Nazi.

But that is a distinction without a difference. In fact, it is because of Muslims–who are the biggest contributor to the worldwide rise in anti-Semitism to Holocaust-eve levels–that neo-Nazis feel comfortable–far more comfortable!–manifesting their views about Jews. Until 9/11 and our resulting new tolerance for Islam, the neo-Nazi types were marginalized and howling at the wind. We know who has been targeting Jewish museums and centers affiliated with Jews in recent years. And it hasn’t been, in general, 89-year-old White guys…

Can you imagine there are actually people in the world who admire this woman?  In my opinion, she von Brunn and bin Laden were made for each other.  The views of one are more paranoiac and pathological than the other.

Jane Harman Hires Lanny Davis to Fight Political Fires

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Jane Harman is auf tsouris (“in trouble big time”).  So it’s only natural that she hire a big-time spinmeister who can negotiate the thicket of legal and political problems she faces.  What better person to choose than the guy who helped get Bill Clinton off: Lanny Davis.  The only problem with Davis is that he’s up to his eyeballs in the very web of pro-Israel intrigue that includes Harman. You’d think that Harman might want to avoid going to the very well which got her into trouble to begin with.  Clearly, Harman is playing hardball and unwilling to concede that she did anything wrong in cozying up to Israeli agents and using them to advance her own political power.

As I reported here, Davis signed on with IDF generals to become a media apologist at The Israel Project for the Gaza war.  TPM reports that he’s long been affiliated with Aipac (you’ll for sure see him yucking it up with Harman and the group’s fatcat donors at next month’s annual policy conference, at which the congresswoman is scheduled as a headline speaker).  He’s also a regular on Fox News.

Davis’ strategy will be to blame Porter Goss for Harman’s troubles, claiming that he’s had it in for Harman since she leaked a House intelligence committee report that angered the Republican majority.  It would be a deft stroke on Davis’ part, since it would turn a scandal that highlights Jane Harman as a national security risk under the sway of a foreign government; and turn it into a petty partisan political feud.  This would add enough confusion and complication to allow Harman to break a tackle and head for daylight.

In the interest of keeping the matter focused where I think it should be, I quote this incisive passage from Philip Giraldi:

The real Harman story is about Israel intelligence operations directed against the United States which have brought about the systematic corruption of the America’s political system by a foreign power aided and abetted by friends strategically placed throughout the government and the media. Just imagine if Harman had obtained either senior intelligence position that she sought. She would have had access to every sort of top secret intelligence possessed by the US government and would have been in a good position to influence policy. From the Israeli perspective, she would have been their spy, a highly placed agent of influence who could also provide every bit of sensitive intelligence in the CIA cupboard. The apparent fact that she agreed to help an agent of a foreign government and was to be rewarded with advancement makes her something like Kim Philby, the British spy of the 1960s who progressed through his own system while secretly working for another country, Russia. Philby was a whole lot smarter, but the essential betrayal was the same. Those who argue that Israel is no Cold War Russia miss the point, as the national interests of the U.S. and Israel are far from identical, particularly after a series of right-wing governments in Tel Aviv has culminated in the current monstrosity of Netanyahu-Lieberman.

Once you are on the hook in an intelligence relationship, there is no getting off it. Had Harman done a favor for the Israelis and been rewarded in return, it would have been a skeleton in her closet forever. The Israelis might also have taped the incriminating conversations, presumably unaware that the FBI was also on the line. The Israelis would surely remind her of her crime whenever they need a favor, and she would be forced to pay the piper whenever called upon. What could have been better for Israel than owning the director of central intelligence or the head of the House Intelligence Committee? What could have been worse for the United States?

Even if you label this overly alarmist–and it is because it posits Harman as a helpless puppet of Israel’s interests and I’d like to think she would be able to navigate the shoals of power without totally prostituting herself–what Harman did is terribly troubling.  And no amount of diversion into the realm of partisan vendettas should distract us from this bedrock original fact.  For you can argue what you will about Porter Goss’ motives, but his actions came AFTER Harman’s betrayal in exchange for a mess of political porridge.

Israel Project, Bought and Paid For by Israeli Government

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

At an earlier point in his career, Lanny Davis actually did something meaningful with his life by defending Bill Clinton from impeachment.  But he scraped the bottom of the barrel during the Gaza war by signing up as a “senior advisor” and “spokesperson” for the Israel Project, one of the rightist pro-Israel groups that never met an Israeli war it didn’t like.

There was one curious statement in the press release touting his joining the ranks of the hasbara brigade:

Mr. Davis, who will be available to appear on U.S. and international TV, radio, print and Internet outlets on short notice if necessary, will be speaking independently only for himself, as a private citizen, and, like The Israel Project, does not speak on behalf of the Israeli government nor is he (or they) under any instruction or influence by the Israeli government.

It seemed Davis was desperate to maintain the illusion of independence when in fact he, like the Israel Project, was essentially flogging for the war against Gaza. I read that phrase “nor is he (or they) under any instruction or influence by the Israeli government.” Why would they feel the need to say this? Methinks they do protest too much.

So just how independent is the Israel Project from the Israeli government? Well, from the looks of this web page, not very. Look down the list of other spokespeople signed up by the Israel Project for Gaza hasbara duty: IDF Col. Miri Eisin, IDF Maj. Avital Leibovitz, Mark Regev, UN ambassador Gabriela Shalev, etc. In fact, of the eleven spokespeople listed only three do NOT work for the Israeli government (and those three work for the Project). But two names stand out for a different reason: Jeremy Issacharoff is deputy chief of mission at the Israeli embassy in Washington. He happens to be married to another person on the list. But surprisingly, she isn’t listed under her married name, but under her maiden name: Laura Kam.

That's Laura Kam Issacharoff to you

That's Laura Kam Issacharoff to you


Why would she try to hide this connection? Perhaps because she works for the Israel Project and is desperate to avoid any appearance of collusion between the embassy and the group.  In other places online this information is revealed.  So why wouldn’t it be on the Project’s own site?

So is there collusion? Funny you should ask. During the Gaza war, the Israel Project, dutiful shills that they are, translated and promoted a letter written by an Israeli soldier which explained to Gazans why he was forced to live and sleep in their home during the war. The letter is quite a deft, though transparent bit of sophistry which defends the war while purporting to be sensitive to the feelings of the Gazans.

But what’s especially interesting is that the Israeli embassy (yes, the one at which Jeremy Issacharoff works) also touted the very same letter in its own press release. A coincidence? If it is, I’ve got a bridge and some swamp land in Florida to sell you.

Can I prove that the Israel Project is bought and paid for by the Israeli government? Not yet. But there’s so little room between them that one may as well be an adjunct of the other. So I urge anyone reading this, especially those in the media or U.S. government to be wary of any message you hear from this organization. It is NOT independent of the Israeli government. It is an extension of it.

You should also keep in mind that the Project’s agenda is the same as the Israeli government.  The former is among the Israel lobby groups ginning up a war against Iran (Americans Open To Force To Rein In Iran On Nukes is but one representative sample of the genre).  So when you read anything from the Project advocating a military solution to the Iran issue, know that this propaganda comes to you courtesy of the hasbara machine of the Israeli government, despite any disclaimers to the contrary (“TIP is not related to any government or government agency”–yeah right).

This is especially important in light of the Jane Harman eavesdropping episode.  When a U.S. representative or government official speaks to a representative of TIP, they should in future keep in mind that they are not speaking with an independent, dispassionate voice for truth as TIP would have them believe.  Jane Harman proves that the Israeli spy apparatus in this country has its hooks into everything and anything that can provide an advantage in the battle to advance Israel’s message with the American people.  Caveat emptor.

Avigdor Lieberman’s American Jewish Enablers

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

American Jewish leader like to give the impression of being vaguely centrist and pro-Israel.  Nisht ahin, nisht aher, (“not too much of this, nor too much of that”) as they say in Yiddish.  But every once in a while the hopelessly compromised rightward slant of their views is illuminated like a lightning flash.  That’s happened in James Besser’s latest Jewish Week story on the reception Yvet is getting among the American Jewish leadership.  Certainly no one expected a rapturous reception and he’s not getting one.  But what IS surprising is the “live and let live” attitude adopted by some of the more prominent Israel lobby organizations.

When confronted with the ugly face of Israeli racism and fascism, the AJC’s David Harris confronts the issue squarely and firmly and…attacks J Street!  That’s right.  The problem isn’t Yvet, it’s those no good anti-Semit’n who pass themselves off as Jews.


J Street, you see, really took the bull by the horns and posted a hard-hitting video which laid out Lieberman’s views for all the world to see and, has v’halila, distributed it on Youtube, thus washing Jewish dirty linen in one of the most popular web venues in the world.  Not nice, and just not done by groups that truly love Israel—like the AJC, of course.  So this is Harris’ response:

“It doesn’t help Israel,” said David Harris, executive director of the American Jewish Committee. “[Instead of J Street attacks on Lieberman] we need much more focus on the eight ball; what does demonizing the new foreign minister get you?”

…“I’m not sure what they accomplished…He was portrayed in the worst possible way; the images seemed chosen to portray him as a dark, almost demonic figure. He’s there, give him a chance, judge him not by what he says by what this government does.”

“A dark, almost demonic figure…”  Gee, maybe that’s because it’s what Lieberman IS.  Arabs certainly see him that way.  Even American Jews see him that way.  He had only a 27% approval rating in the recent J Street poll.  Israeli voters aren’t much more positive in the latest Haaretz poll.  The Israeli and American Jewish mainstream has a distinct distaste for Lieberman’s hatemongering.  The only ones pleading for patience on Yvet’s behalf are the leadership elites like Harris and a few others.

Another one of the pro-Israel elites stumping for the Yisrael Beitenu leader is Jennifer Mizrahi, chief ideologue for the Israel Project.  Her comments were even more telling than Harris’:

Jennifer Laszlo Mizrahi, founder and president of The Israel Project, conceded that Lieberman, dramatically different from the suave, Americanized Netanyahu, is a lightning rod for many American Jews.

Different can be scary,” said Laszlo Mizrahi, whose group works with media to present Israel favorably. “There were people who thought Barack Hussein Obama was scary because of his middle name.”

But ultimately, the issue is “Prime Minister Netanyahu, and what his new government stands for and what it will deliver in terms of peace and security for Israel and its neighbors.”

Now that IS rich. Lieberman is merely ‘different.’ Not aberrant mind you. Not pathological. Not racist. Not violent. Not corrupt. Just “different.” That must be the reason he scores so poorly in the polls I mentioned. People just don’t like his accent.

Also rich, is Mizrahi’s comparison of Lieberman and Obama, as if Lieberman’s Russian name Yevgeny, like Obama’s middle name Hussein, is what puts people off. Considering that Mizrahi was likely one of those neocon Jews who was circulating the Obama smears noting his middle name and accusing him of being anti-Israel and a Muslim, it’s quite humorous to see her try to anesthetize American Jewish hostility to Lieberman by telling us we don’t like him–not because of what he stands for–but because he’s a little different than what we’re used to.

Instead of worrying about Lieberman, she said, Jewish groups should be focusing on “the fact this prime minister wants to create a better economic future for the Palestinians, which is tough to do at a time when Israel itself is experiencing massive unemployment.”

Here again Mizrahi takes us for rubes by passing off Bibi’s avowed aim of bringing economic betterment to Palestinians in place of political freedom, as something substantive. It’s as if she’s saying our fear of Lieberman is merely the fear of the bogeyman, while what’s real and important is Netanyahu’s economic plan. The truth is precisely the opposite: what is real is Lieberman’s racism; what is fake is the new prime minister’s “plan” to improve Palestinians’ lives.

She echoed another theme of mainstream pro-Israel groups: Lieberman isn’t the radical firebrand portrayed in the press.

“I think one of his most significant quotes was that if there’s a sustainable peace, he would give up his own home. How many political leaders can say something like that?”

More importantly, how many political leaders would you BELIEVE when they say something like that? And if you’d believe Lieberman then you’re probably the proud owner of a certain New York City bridge and some beautiful swampland in Florida.

Mizrahi doesn’t understand that with Israeli pols, talk is cheap. It means nothing. Lies mean nothing. Actions speak louder. Inaction speaks louder still. And a frozen status quo practically screams.

If David Harris and Jennifer Mizrahi want to pimp for Lieberman that’s their perogative. But as a character says in Hester Street, “you can’t piss on my back and tell me it’s rain.” Everyone else in this country knows the true Lieberman and “won’t be fooled again.”

‘Munich’ and ‘Paradise Now’ Oscar Potential Damaged by Pro-Israel Campaign

Tuesday, March 7th, 2006

While no one is dismissing Oscar-winner, Tsotsi, in the Best Foreign Language Film category as anything less than stellar, it must also be said that Paradise Now‘s Oscar potential was severely damaged by an orchestrated smear campaign led by The Israel Project, a pro-Israel propaganda group. Newsday says this about the film and its opponents:

…A furor is starting to erupt around…”Paradise Now,” nominated as best foreign-language film. The film is obscure (director Hany Abu-Assad is not a name heard much around Hollywood), and it hasn’t made much money (barely more than $1 million), but the topic is red hot: suicide bombing in Israel.

The tagline of the movie declares, “From the most unexpected place comes a bold new call for peace,” and the film is nuanced and ambiguous. Still, it’s hard to refute the argument that it humanizes Palestinian suicide bombers. A private group called The Israel Project has led the charge against “Paradise Now”; yesterday the project held a news conference in Jerusalem in which the Israeli father of a teenager killed by a suicide bomber referred to the film as “Hell Now.” And the project is running an ad in Variety that asks, “Is it right to honor a film that puts a human face on deliberate murders of children?

Israel Project ad against 'Paradise Now'Israel Project ad in Variety (source: The Israel Project)

The Jerusalem Post, the Anglo-Israeli media mouthpiece for the campaign, added this description of the ad:

The group also placed a full-page ad Friday in the entertainment industry daily Variety featuring photos of an Israeli bus and teenager blown up by a suicide bomber.

This is the type of ad that represents what I call the pornography of terror. It is in the same class as the Iraqi Al Qaeda videos of terrorists beheading innocent westerners. Both forms of graphic abuse exploit images of terror to provoke manipulated emotions in their viewer. I have no doubt that this kind of terror exploitation affected Academy voters.

The Israel Project glommed onto Yossi Zur, a father who lost a teenage son to Palestinian terror, and used him for all he was worth to amass 33,000 signatures on a petition calling the film propaganda that justified suicide bombings against Israel. The group held a press conference the Friday before the Oscars and fronted the daughter of a fedayeen who’d fought Israel (and died) during the 1950s. She now denounced Palestinian terror and the film specifically though she’d never seen the inside of a Palestinian refugee camp and in fact is an American citizen. Full-page ads in Variety aren’t cheap and one wonders which deep pockets in the right-wing pro-Israel community fronted the bucks for this expensive project.

Here are some of the provocative comments made about the film at the group’s website:

…an extremely harmful piece of work, not only for Israel and the Middle East, but the whole world.

At a time when the world faces threats from a potentially nuclear Iran and is suffering from suicide bombers, is it right to give an award to a film that puts a human face on deliberate murders of children?

“Paradise Now” is a movie that attempts to explain away the actions behind mass-murderers. This mere act in-effect legitimizes this type of mass-murder & portrays the murderers themselves as victims!

Giving an Oscar to this movie will glorify these murderers & the groups that have sent them. It may even encourage more murders of this type.

This movie tries to say that suicide murder is legitimate…

Granting an award to this kind of movie gives the filmmakers a seal of approval to hide behind. Now they can say that the world sees suicide bombing as legitimate. By ignoring the film’s message and the implications of this message, those that chose to award this film a prize have become part of the evil chain of terror and accomplices to the next suicide murders – whether they kill 17 people or 17,000 people.

Of course, each of these statements about the film is patently false. If anyone behind this effort bothered to see the film at all, they clearly saw it only through their own ideologically distorted lens. But the problem is that this “distorted” view of the film prevailed via the media war waged against it.

Interviewed on To the Point today (audio stream), Christian Science Monitor film critic, Peter Rainer, said that the anti-Paradise Now created just enough noise that Academy voters decided to tune it out and go with nominees that brought less baggage with them like Tsotsi.

I was distressed that Warner Brothers, the film’s distributor did little to support the film during Oscar season. It was showing only in 10 U.S. cities and almost none outside of New York and Los Angeles regions. There seemed to be little or no publicity budget (I saw no ads for the film in the NY Times) and nothing was done to counteract the professional smear campaign the film faced.

I’m sorry to say that Hany Abu Assad, the director, was probably right when he told an interviewer that the Israel Project had probably guaranteed his film would not win:

Hany Abu-Assad, the director of Paradise Now, a film centering on two Palestinians preparing to carry out a suicide bombing, said he believed pro-Israel lobbying would in the end cost him the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film.

“I can write off an Oscar win right now,” Abu-Assad said.

“The Oscars are a complex matter, and I believe that in the end, if there is a close call, what will work against me will be two or three conservatives, even if the majority votes with its heart.”

I think this raises a troubling precedent for the Academy: the prospect that any film whose subject angers any particular group will face this type of expensive and debilitating vilification. I’d warn the studio and distributors to expect more of this in the future. If you’re distributing a controversial film you should expect the same type of crap the Israel Project dished out this year. And I think that Academy voters will have to educate themselves about such controversial films and become more sophisticated at recognizing propaganda campaigns for what they are and discounting them.

What is distressing is that if the campaign had been waged by a Pat Robertson or James Dobson Academy voters would know something about the political positions of these groups and discount them accordingly. The Israel Project and to a large extent the issues underlying Paradise Now are not as familiar to Hollywood. Why is why this campaign was able to succeed in sowing doubt in the minds of the film community. This in turn, has done a great disservice to the potential for serious debate of the issues surrounding this film. There must be a debate about terror and its role in resistance to oppression. There must be a debate about the role that terror plays and has played in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. How will the Palestinians ever be able to reject terror if we in the outside world cannot even discuss it intelligently and reasonably. Thanks to the Israel Project there will not be such a debate.

I included Munich in the title of this post even though there was no orchestrated campaign against it. Nevertheless, there was much disquiet among the pro-Israel community about the film as represented in a David Brooks column. The Jerusalem Post had this to say:

The film has been criticized, particularly in Israel, for allegedly drawing a “moral equivalence” between the terrorists and the pursuing Mossad agents, as well as for historical inaccuracy.

I hope that the time will come soon when the world will be more ready to address the issues raised by these two films and accord such works of art the Academy Award recognition they deserve.