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Israel/Zionism
See other Israel/Zionism Articles

Title: de Borchgrave on the Zio-Yentas. Quite ballsy (my title).
Source: Wash Times
URL Source: http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20060428-083819-7632r_page2.htm
Published: May 1, 2006
Author: Arnaud de Borchgrave
Post Date: 2006-05-01 20:35:36 by Jethro Tull
Keywords: None
Views: 229
Comments: 50

Touching the third rail

By Arnaud de Borchgrave

April 29, 2006

A quarter of a million people marched in Manhattan. 100,000 squeezed into Madison Square Garden, many of them in uniform. More than 100,000 telegrams deluged the White House. All demanded immediate recognition of the about-to-be-born new state of Israel. Most of President Truman's Cabinet was against it. The most formidable naysayer was then-Secretary of State Gen. George Marshall.

Following World War II, foreign policy professionals wrote scores of position papers that warned an independent Jewish state would trigger a "reject phenomenon" throughout the Middle East. David K. Niles, in charge of Jewish affairs at the White House, was a persuasive advocate of, and organizer for, Israel. The Holocaust of 6 million Jews, the telegrams and the marchers in New York clinched it for Truman, Israel was born at midnight (local time) May 14, 1948. U.S. recognition followed 11 minutes later. A geopolitical honeymoon lasted until 1956 when Israel, France and Britain secretly joined forces, without informing President Eisenhower, to invade Egypt to wrest back control of the Suez Canal nationalized by president Abdel Gamal Nasser, then a budding Soviet protege. The Soviet Union's Nikita Khrushchev seized the moment to invade Hungary to suppress an anti-communist revolution, and then rattled his rockets at Eisenhower over Suez. Eisenhower, angry and indignant at allied perfidy, and anxious to avoid a wider conflict, told the three conspiring powers to clear out of Egypt pronto.

The special U.S.-Israel relationship encountered another major hiccup during the 1967 Six-Day War when friend and foe alike whistled with admiration when Israel decimated three Arab armies in less than a week. Israeli warplanes repeatedly attacked the USS Liberty, a ship intercepting tactical and strategic communications from both sides, flying the U.S. flag on a clear day, 15 miles off the Sinai coast, killing 34 sailors, wounding 171. . Since then Israeli and U.S. interests have gradually merged, a perception carefully nurtured by AIPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, arguably Washington's most powerful lobby, or at least co-equal in influence with the NRA (National Rifle Association) and AARP (American Association of Retired Persons).With some 200 employees and 100,000 wealthy benefactors, AIPAC claims it doesn't have to register as a foreign agent because all its funding comes from U.S. sources. There are also more than 500,000 Israelis with dual citizenship, a number of them AIPAC contributors.

Over the years, AIPAC has maneuvered to make Israel the third rail of American foreign policy. The handful of members of Congress who have been critical of Israel over the last 40 years have been publicly chastised with a figurative dunce cap, or, worse, lost their seats to AIPAC-backed opponents. Israel is an integral part of America's body politic.

Yet the recent publication of "The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy," an 83-page paper published on Harvard's Web site by two prominent academics, ran into a firestorm of vilification from government, academia and the media for documenting what is already well established.

The co-authors are neither neo-Nazi skinheads nor anti-Semites. John J. Mearsheimer is a political science professor and co-director of the Program on International Security Policy at the University of Chicago. Stephen M. Walt is academic dean and a chaired professor at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. Both are members of the Coalition for a Realistic Foreign Policy. Some of their conclusions about the Israel lobby's goals:

"No lobby has managed to divert foreign policy as far from what the American national interest would otherwise suggest, while simultaneously convincing Americans that U.S. and Israeli interests are essentially identical."

American supporters of Israel promoted the war against Iraq. The senior administration officials who spearheaded the campaign were also in the vanguard of the pro-Israel lobby, e.g. then Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz; Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Douglas Feith; Elliott Abrams, Mideast affairs at the White House; David Wurmser, Mideast affairs for Vice President Richard Cheney; Richard Perle, first among neocon equals, chairman of the Defense Policy Board, an influential advisory body of strategic experts.

• A similar effort is now under way to bomb Iran's nuclear facilities. • AIPAC is fighting registering as foreign agents because this would place severe limitations on its congressional activities, particularly in the legislative electoral arena.... American politicians remain acutely sensitive to campaign contributions and other forms of political pressure and major media outlets are likely to remain sympathetic to Israel no matter what it does.

The co-authors recall it was Messrs. Perle, Feith and Wurmser who put their names to a 1996 policy blueprint for Benjamin Netanyahu's then incoming government in Israel. Titled "A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm [Israel]," the three neocons said the rebuilding of Zionism must abandon any thought of trading land for peace with the Palestinians (i.e., repeal the Oslo accords). Next Saddam Hussein must be overthrown and democracy established in Iraq, which would then prove contagious in Israel's other Arab neighbors.

When NBC's Tim Russert on "Meet the Press" asked Mr. Perle about his geopolitical laundry list for Israel's benefit, he replied, "What's wrong with that?"

For all this to succeed, the neocon strategic thinkers wrote, "Israel would have to win broad American support." And to ensure this support, they advised the Israeli prime minister to use "language familiar to Americans by tapping into themes of past U.S. administrations during the Cold War, which apply as well to Israel."

An Israeli columnist in Ha'aretz said Mr. Perle and Mr. Feith had been "walking a fine line" between "their loyalty to American governments" and "Israeli interests."

Clearly, the FBI did not understand the role and power of AIPAC when it launched an investigation into espionage on behalf of Israel. The accused was Larry Franklin, an Iranian expert in Mr. Feith's 1,600-strong Pentagon shop. Classified Pentagon documents on Iran had been shared with senior AIPAC officials Steven Rosen and Keith Weissman. An Israeli diplomat was the ultimate recipient. When Franklin was arrested, the Israeli was promptly recalled. AIPAC fired its two senior officials who then were also indicted on charges of receiving and transmitting classified defense information in violation, not of the Espionage Act, but an obscure World War I-era statute.

Franklin was sentenced to a prison term of almost 13 years -- but allowed to remain free with a promise of a much-reduced sentence if he helped the prosecution of Rosen-Weissman. But Mr. Rosen, as AIPAC's brilliant director of foreign policy issues, has a global Rolodex of 6,000 influential friends. For the last 23 years, he has been the architect of numberless congressional initiatives to meet Israel's strategic and funding needs.

U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis III and prosecutors were running in to an invisible buzzsaw of pressure for a dismissal motion. Judge Ellis authorized defense subpoenas for calling Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Undersecretary of State R. Nicholas Burns, two ranking officials Mr. Rosen claims also shared classified information.

Judge Ellis then postponed the trial from May 17 to early August when most chattering class cognoscente will be on vacation and a motion to dismiss will hardly be noticed.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 18.

#2. To: Starwind, your biblical perspective on this sandpit please (#0)

bump

Jethro Tull  posted on  2006-05-01   20:45:23 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#18. To: Jethro Tull (#2)

Starwind, your biblical perspective on this sandpit please

This is my biblical perspective based upon Israel Finkelstein's book, The Bible Unearthed. He is a leading Israeli archaeologist.

1) The original Jews were Canaanites who lived in the highlands and fought against the lowlanders so they are not genetically separate from the Palestinians and have less right to the land than their brothers in the camps.

2) The Israelis of ancient days were never slaves in Egypt.

3) There never was a unified kingdom of Israel and Judah.

4) Jerusalem at the time of King David had 1,600 residents. There never was a glorious Davidic kingdom.

5) Solomon never built a Temple at Jerusalem.

6) The Passover was never celebrated at Jerusalem until 600 years after the fictional events were said to have occured.

7) The Book of The Law was not found until 622 B.C. under the rule of King Josiah.

I am not an atheist. In fact I am much more "religious" than most. My religion does not permit me to condone the killing of unarmed civilans. My religion does not permit to use starvation as a political weapon. My religion does not support imperialism. My religion is opposed to all but defensive wars. We have not had a defensive war in this country since my great grandparents came here. So I guess I would have been opposed to all of them.

Horse  posted on  2006-05-01   22:54:09 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 18.

#24. To: Horse (#18)

My religion does not permit me to condone the killing of unarmed civilans. My religion does not permit to use starvation as a political weapon. My religion does not support imperialism. My religion is opposed to all but defensive wars. We have not had a defensive war in this country since my great grandparents came here. So I guess I would have been opposed to all of them.

I'm in full agreement with you.

christine  posted on  2006-05-02 00:32:05 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#26. To: Horse, *Bereans* (#18)

This is my biblical perspective

I don't have a problem with archeological claims, but please, let's not be so disingenuous as to label them a "biblical perspective" when it is (as was intended) entirely the opposite implying the Bible is false.

Sincerely, feel free to state your claims of falsehood but let's not pretend they're "biblical". Words do have meaning.

based upon Israel Finkelstein's book, The Bible Unearthed. He is a leading Israeli archaeologist.

[Fyi to *Bereans*] Finkelstein's work is not widely accepted, and has been refuted by peers:

Three Debates about Bible and Archaeology (excerpted):

[Finkelstein] propounds a complex argument based on hand burnished red slip ware, i.e., a type dipped in a red clay wash and then buffed by hand with a piece of ceramic to give at least parts of it a shiny patina. At Jezreel, it was found only in the ninth century stratum and not in spotty, earlier tenth century material recovered at the site. Combining Jezreel data with those from his excavations at Megiddo, he concludes that this pottery is to be dated exclusively to the ninth century. Since, according to his dating, the pottery is associated with monumental architecture, he extrapolates that all such construction should be assigned to the ninth century, at the earliest. Consequently, attested construction projects assigned to David, Solomon, Rehoboam and Jeroboam in the tenth century on the basis of the established chronology and on the strength of Biblical accounts of their building activities, projects that infer the presence of significant economic resources, a labor pool supportable by an economy greater than subsistence level, and an organized, central administration, are dated incorrectly. The projects could only have been undertaken by kings living no less than 50 years after the death of Solomon.

At a theoretical level, at issue is whether or not Finkelstein has isolated a significant factual discrepancy in ceramic chronology of such moment that it requires the changes for which he calls.

The archaeological community as a whole rejects Finkelstein's ceramic chronology on well argued archaeological grounds35. The consensus maintains that published, and reported but still unpublished, archaeological evidence supports both a tenth and ninth century dates for the tell-tale pottery as well as for the construction of monumental projects at the above-mentioned sites36. In the few places where evidence for such projects is unaccountably missing, the absence may be attributed in part to erosion, ancient robbing, and, in the case of Jerusalem, to Roman engineers who preferred building on stable, hard, flat, surfaces. They shaved large areas almost to bedrock, removing the debris of earlier construction, in order to create uncluttered platforms for their own structures37. It has been suggested orally at a few archaeological meetings that since no clear tenth century BCE stratum was found at Jezreel, the absence of the burnished red slip ware in what was found sealed under the ninth century stratum may be due to Ahab who ordered a similar clearing of the site prior to constructing a palace and administrative center38. In any event, the absence of evidence may not be interpreted facilely as evidence of absence39.

The Stones of Jerusalem Speak (excerpted):

EILAT MAZAR: In general, we found what we were looking for in the City of David, where the most ancient part of Jerusalem is located dating as early as the 3rd millennium B.C.E. We were surprised by how well it was preserved. We were excavating in the very core of ancient Jerusalem, which is called "Ir David," or the City of David - the Jebusite (Canaanite) city that David conquered and renamed Jerusalem. We excavated in the spot from which Jerusalem eventually enlarged and spread. We chose to dig there based on biblical sources which describe King David's palace being built by Hiram, the Phoenician king of Tyre.

We also found ancient pottery of Jerusalem from the Jebusite period, the King David and King Solomon period, and the First Temple period of the Iron Age (12th-6th centuries B.C.E.). We concluded this after examining both the gigantic stones of the structure and the pottery, which we used to date the findings. These are the main artifacts utilized in building the case that the remains are of King David's palace.

YIJ: Could you explain how you came to the conclusion that it is King David's palace if the story of King David is extant only in the Bible, which some would argue is not a historical, but a religious text?

EM: Let's set the Bible aside for a moment and examine the technicalities of archaeology. It is important to consider the nature of the structure we found; it could not simply be a monument because the inner walls - two and a half meters thick - are far larger than in regular monumental construction. Furthermore, the pottery under the structure, dated to the 12th or 11th centuries B.C.E., indicates a construction date. Additionally, within the structure we found pottery dated to the 10th or 9th century B.C.E., which indicates that the building was erected some time between the end of the 11th century and the beginning of the 10th century B.C.E.

In terms of biblical references, this is the time period when King David ruled. The key question now is determining what the structure was. It was built in an elevated part of the City of David, from which one can exercise effective control over surrounding areas. We cannot assume that an ordinary building, no matter how monumental, was erected in such a location; it must therefore have been very important. If it is not a regular house, which is obvious, what else could it have been? The considerable time and skill invested in the construction suggest that it must have been extraordinarily impressive - so it would have been something like a temple, a fortress, or a palace.

The most extreme criticism comes from Professor Israel Finkelstein of Tel Aviv University, who believes that the Bible does not reflect history. It will be hard for him to accept new facts since he based his claims and theories on the absence of evidence that I discussed before. Now that actual evidence has been found, I think he will find it very difficult to accept, but he will eventually have to.

Starwind  posted on  2006-05-02 01:01:21 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 18.

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