Published on Tuesday, July 9, 2002 in The Independent / England
A Strange Kind of Freedom
- The biggest threat to liberty in the US may come from other
kinds of fundamentalism: Jewish and Christian
- By Robert Fisk
Inside the First Congregational Church of Berkeley, the Californian
audience had been struck silent. Dennis Bernstein, the Jewish
host of KPFA Radio's Flashpoint current affairs program, was reading
some recent e-mails that he had received from Israel's supporters
in America. Each one left the people in the church - Muslims,
Jews, Christians - in a state of shock. "You mother-fucking-asshole-self-hating
Jewish piece of shit. Hitler killed the wrong Jews. He should
have killed your parents, so a piece of Jewish shit like you would
not have been born. God willing, Arab terrorists will cut you
to pieces Daniel Pearl-style, AMEN!!!"
Bernstein's sin was to have covered the story of Israel's invasion
of Jenin in April and to have interviewed journalists who investigated
the killings that took place there - including Phil Reeves and
Justin Huggler of The Independent - for his Flashpoint program
Bernstein's grandfather was a revered Orthodox Rabbi of international
prominence but neither his family history nor his origins spared
him. "Read this and weep, you mother-fucker self-hating Jew boy!!!"
another e-mail told Bernstein. "God willing a Palestinian will
murder you, rape your wife and slash your kids' throats." Yet
another: "I hope that you, Barbara Lubin and all other Jewish
Marxist Communist traitors anti-American cop haters will die a
violent and cruel death just like the victims of suicide bombers
in Israel." Lubin is also Jewish, the executive director of the
Middle East Children's Alliance, a one-time committed Zionist
but now one of Israel's fiercest critics. Her e-mails are even
worse.
Indeed, you have to come to America to realize just how brave
this small but vocal Jewish community is. Bernstein is the first
to acknowledge that a combination of Israeli lobbyists and conservative
Christian fundamentalists have in effect censored all free discussion
of Israel and the Middle East out of the public domain in the
US. "Everyone else is terrified," Bernstein says. "The only ones
who begin to open their mouths are the Jews in this country. You
know, as a kid, I sent money to plant trees in Israel. But now
we are horrified by a government representing a country that we
grew up loving and cherishing. Israel's defenders have a special
vengeance for Jews who don't fall in line behind Sharon's scorched-earth
policy because they give the lie to the charge that Israel's critics
are simply anti-Semite."
Adam Shapiro is among those who have paid a price for their
beliefs. He is a Jew engaged to an American-born Palestinian,
a volunteer with the International Solidarity Movement who was
trapped in Yasser Arafat's headquarters in the spring while administering
medical aid. After telling CNN that the Sharon government was
acting like "terrorists" while receiving $3bn a year in US military
aid, Shapiro and his family were savaged in the New York Post.
The paper slandered Shapiro as the "Jewish Taliban" and demeaned
his family as "traitors". Israeli supporters publicized his family's
address and his parents were forced to flee their Brooklyn home
and seek police protection. Shapiro's father, a New York public
high-school teacher and a part-time Yeshiva (Jewish day school)
teacher, was fired from his job. His brother receives regular
death threats.
Israel's supporters have no qualms about their alliance with
the Christian right. Indeed, the fundamentalists can campaign
on their own in Israel's favor, as I discovered for myself at
Stanford recently when I was about to give a lecture on the media
and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, part of a series of talks
arranged largely by Jewish Americans. A right-wing Christian "Free
Republic" outfit posted my name on its website, and described
me as a "PLO butt-kisser" and asked its supporters to "freep"
my lecture. A few demonstrators turned up outside the First United
Methodist Church in Sacramento where I was to speak, waving American
and Israeli flags. "Jew haters!" they screamed at the organizers,
a dark irony since these were non-Jews shrieking their abuse at
Jews.
They were also handing out crudely printed flyers. "Nothing
to worry about, Bob," one of my Jewish hosts remarked. "They can't
even spell your name right." True. But also false. "Stop the Lies!"
the leaflet read. "There was no massacre in Jenin. Fiske [sic]
is paid big bucks to spin [lie] for the Arabs..." But the real
lie was in that last sentence. I never take any payment for lectures
- so that no one can ever claim that I'm paid to give the views
of others. But the truth didn't matter to these people. Nor did
the content of my talk - which began, by chance, with the words
"There was no massacre" - in which I described Arafat as a "corrupt,
vain little despot" and suicide bombings as "a fearful, evil weapon".
None of this was relevant. The aim was to shut me up.
Dennis Bernstein sums it up quite simply: "Any US journalist,
columnist, editor, college professor, student-activist, public
official or clergy member who dares to speak critically of Israel
or accurately report the brutalities of its illegal occupation
will be vilified as an anti-Semite." In fact, no sooner had Bernstein
made these remarks than pro-Israeli groups initiated an extraordinary
campaign against some of the most pro-Israeli newspapers in America,
all claiming that The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and
the San Francisco Chronicle were biased in their coverage of the
Middle-East conflict. Just how The New York Times - which boasts
William Safire and Charles Krauthammer, those giants of pro-Israeli
bias, among its writers - could be anti-Israeli is difficult to
see, although it is just possible that, amid its reports on Israel's
destruction in the West Bank and Gaza, some mildly critical comments
found their way into print. The New York Times, for example, did
report that Israeli soldiers used civilians as human shields -
though only in the very last paragraph of a dispatch from Jenin.
None the less, the campaign of boycotts and e-mails got under
way. More than 1,000 readers suspended their subscriptions to
the Los Angeles Times, while a blizzard of e-mails told pro-Israeli
readers to cancel their subscription to The New York Times for
a day. On the East Coast, at least one local radio station has
lost $1m from a Jewish philanthropist while other stations attempting
to cover the Middle East with some degree of fairness are said
to have lost even more. When the San Francisco Chronicle published
a four-page guide to the conflict, its editors had to meet a 14-member
delegation of local Jewish groups to discuss their grievances.
According to Michael Futterman, who chairs the Middle East strategy
committee of 80 Bay Area synagogues, Jewish anger hit "boiling
point" when the Chronicle failed to cover a pro-Israeli rally
in San Francisco. Needless to say, the Chronicle's "Readers' Representative",
Dick Rogers, published a groveling, self-flagellating apology.
"The paper didn't have a word on the pro-Israel rally," he wrote.
"This wasn't fair and balanced coverage." Another objection came
from a Jewish reader who objected to the word "terror" being placed
within inverted commas in a Chronicle headline that read "Sharon
says 'terror' justifies assault". The reader's point? The Chronicle's
reporting "harmonizes well with Palestinian propaganda, which
tries to divert attention from the terrorist campaign against
Israel (which enjoys almost unanimous support among Palestinians,
all the way from Yasser Arafat to the 10-year-old who dreams of
blowing himself up one day) and instead describes Israel's military
moves as groundless, evil bullying tactics."
And so it goes on. On a radio show with me in Berkeley, the
Chronicle's foreign editor, Andrew Ross, tried to laugh off the
influence of the pro-Israeli lobby - "the famous lobby", he called
it with that deference that is half way between acknowledgement
and fear - but the Israeli Consul General Yossi Amrani had no
hesitation in campaigning against the Chronicle, describing a
paper largely docile in its reporting of the Middle East as "a
professionally and politically biased, pro-Palestinian newspaper".
The Chronicle's four-page pull-out on the Middle East was, in
fact, a soft sell. Its headline - "The Current Strife Between
The Israelis And The Palestinians Is A Battle For Control Of Land"
- missed the obvious point: that one of the two groups that were
"battling for control of the land" - the Palestinians - had been
occupied by Israel for 35 years.
The most astonishing - and least covered - story is in fact
the alliance of Israeli lobbyists and Christian Zionist fundamentalists,
a coalition that began in 1978 with the publication of a Likud
plan to encourage fundamentalist churches to give their support
to Israel. By 1980, there was an "International Christian Embassy"
in Jerusalem; and in 1985, a Christian Zionist lobby emerged at
a "National Prayer Breakfast for Israel" whose principal speaker
was Benjamin Netanyahu, who was to become Israeli prime minister.
"A sense of history, poetry and morality imbued the Christian
Zionists who, more than a century ago, began to write, plan and
organize for Israel's restoration," Netanyahu told his audience.
The so-called National Unity Coalition for Israel became a lobbying
arm of Christian Zionism with contacts in Congress and neo-conservative
think-tanks in Washington.
In May this year, the Israeli embassy in Washington, no less,
arranged a prayer breakfast for Christian Zionists. Present were
Alonzo Short, a member of the board of "Promise Keepers", and
Michael Little who is president of the "Christian Broadcasting
Network". Event hosts were listed as including those dour old
Christian conservatives Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson, who once
financed a rogue television station in southern Lebanon which
threatened Muslim villagers and broadcast tirades by Major Saad
Haddad, Israel's stooge militia leader in Lebanon. In Tennessee,
Jewish officials invited hundreds of Christians to join Jewish
crowds at a pro-Israel solidarity rally in Memphis.
On the face of it, this coalition seems natural. The Jewish
Anti-Defamation League felt able to run an ad that included an
article by a former Christian coalition executive director Ralph
Reed, headlined "We People of Faith Stand Firmly With Israel".
Christians, Reed claimed, supported Israel because of "their humanitarian
impulse to help and protect Jews, a shared strategic interest
in democracy in the Middle East and a spiritual connection to
Israel".
But, of course, a fundamental problem - fundamental in every
sense of the word - lies behind this strange partnership. As Uri
Avnery, the leader of Gush Shalom, the most courageous Israeli
peace group, pointed out in a typically ferocious essay last month,
there is a darker side to the alliance. "According to its [Christian
Zionist] theological beliefs, the Jews must congregate in Palestine
and establish a Jewish state on all its territory" - an idea that
would obviously appeal to Ariel Sharon - "so as to make the Second
Coming of Jesus Christ possible." But here comes the bad bit.
As Avnery says, "the evangelists don't like to dwell openly on
what comes next: before the coming [of the Messiah], the Jews
must convert to Christianity. Those who don't will perish in a
gigantic holocaust in the battle of Armageddon. This is basically
an anti-Semitic teaching, but who cares, so long as they support
Israel?"
The power of the Israeli lobby in the United States is debated
far more freely in the Israeli press than in American newspapers
or on US television. There is, of course, a fine and dangerous
line between justified investigation - and condemnation - of the
lobby's power, and the racist Arab claim that a small cabal of
Zionists run the world. Those in America who share the latter
view include a deeply unpleasant organization just along the coast
from San Francisco at Newport Beach known as the "Institute for
Historical Research". These are the Holocaust deniers whose annual
conference last month included a lecture on "death sentences imposed
by German authorities against German soldiers... for killing or
even mistreating Jews". Too much of this and you'd have to join
the American Israel Public Affairs Committee - AIPAC - to restore
your sanity. But the Israeli lobby is powerful. In fact, its influence
over the US Congress and Senate calls into question the degree
to which the American legislature has been corrupted by lobby
groups. It is to an Israeli voice - Avnery again - that Americans
have to turn to hear just how mighty the lobby has become. "Its
electoral and financial power casts a long shadow over both houses
of the Congress," Avnery writes. "Hundreds of Senators and Congressmen
were elected with the help of Jewish contributions. Resistance
to the directives of the Jewish lobby is political suicide. If
the AIPAC were to table a resolution abolishing the Ten Commandments,
80 Senators and 300 Congressmen would sign it at once. This lobby
frightens the media, too, and assures their adherence to Israel."
Avnery could have looked no further than the Democratic primary
in Alabama last month for proof of his assertion. Earl Hilliard,
the five-term incumbent, had committed the one mortal sin of any
American politician: he had expressed sympathy for the cause of
the Palestinians. He had also visited Libya several years ago.
Hilliard's opponent, Arthur Davis, turned into an outspoken supporter
of Israel and raised large amounts of money from the Jewish community,
both in Alabama and nationwide. The Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz
noted that among the names of the first list of contributors to
Davis's campaign funds were "10 Cohens from New York and New Jersey,
but before one gets to the Cohens, there were Abrams, Ackerman,
Adler, Amir, Asher, Baruch, Basok, Berger, Berman, Bergman, Bernstein
and Blumenthal. All from the East Coast, Chicago and Los Angeles.
It's highly unlikely any of them have ever visited Alabama..."
The Jewish newspaper Forward - essential reading for any serious
understanding of the American Jewish community - quoted a Jewish
political activist following the race: "Hilliard has been a problem
in his votes and with guys like that, when there's any conceivable
primary challenge, you take your shot." Hilliard, of course, lost
to Davis, whose campaign funds reached $781,000.
The AIPAC concentrates on Congress while the Conference of Presidents
of Major American Jewish Organizations (CPMAJO), made up of the
heads of 51 Jewish Organizations, concentrates on the executive
branch of the US government. Every congressman knows the names
of those critics of Israel who have been undone by the lobby.
Take Senator J William Fulbright, whose 1963 testimony to the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee detailed how five million tax-deductable
dollars from philanthropic Americans had been sent to Israel and
then recycled back to the US for distribution to Organizations
seeking to influence public opinion in favor of Israel; this cost
him the chance of being Secretary of State. He was defeated in
the 1974 Democratic primary after pro-Israeli money poured into
the campaign funds of his rival, Governor Dale Bumpers, following
a statement by the AIPAC that Fulbright was "consistently unkind
to Israel and our supporters in this country". Paul Findley, who
spent 22 years as a Republican congressman from Illinois, found
his political career destroyed after he had campaigned against
the Israeli lobby - although, ironically, his book on the subject,
They Dare to Speak Out was nine weeks on The Washington Post bestseller
list, suggesting that quite a number of Americans want to know
why their congressmen are so pro-Israeli.
Just two months ago, the US House of Representatives voted 352
to 21 to express its unqualified support for Israel. The Senate
voted 94 to two for the same motion. Even as they voted, Ariel
Sharon's army was continuing its destructive invasion of the West
Bank. "I do not recall any member of Congress asking me if I was
in favor of patting Israel on the back..." James Abu Rizk, an
Arab-American of Lebanese origin, told the Arab-American Anti-Discrimination
Committee afterwards. "No one else, no average American, has been
asked either. But that is the state of American politics today...
The votes and bows have nothing to do with the legislators' love
for Israel. They have everything to do with the money that is
fed into their campaigns by members of the Israeli lobby. My estimate
is that $6bn flows from the American Treasury to Israel each year."
Within days, 42 US governors turned up in Sacramento to sign declarations
supporting Israel. California governor Gray Davis and New York
governor George Pataki - California has the largest Jewish population
of any state except New York - arranged the meeting.
Sometimes the support of Israel's loyalists in Congress turns
into farce. Tom Delay - reacting to CNN founder Ted Turner's criticism
of Israel - went so far out of his way to justify Israeli occupation
of the West Bank that he blurted out on MSNBC television that
the Palestinians "should become citizens" of Israel, an idea unlikely
to commend itself to his friend Ariel Sharon. Texas Republican
Richard Armey went the other way. "I'm content to have Israel
grab the entire West Bank. I happen to believe the Palestinians
should leave... to have those people who have been aggressors
against Israel retired to some other area." Do the people of Texas
know that their representative is supporting "ethnic cleansing"
in the Middle East? Or are they silent because they prefer not
to speak out?
Censorship takes many forms. When Ishai Sagi and Ram Rahat-Goodman,
two Israeli reserve soldiers who refused to serve in the West
Bank or Gaza, were scheduled to debate their decision at Sacramento's
Congregation B'nai Israel in May, their appearance was cancelled.
Steve Meinrath, who is chairman of the Israel Affairs Committee
at B'nai Israel, remarked bleakly that "intimidation on the part
of certain sectors of the community has deprived the entire community
of hearing a point of view that is being widely debated in Israel.
Some people feel it's too dangerous..."
Does President Bush? His long-awaited Middle-East speech was
Israeli policy from start to finish. A group of Jewish leaders,
including Elie Wiesel and Alan Dershowitz - who said recently
that the idea of executing the families of Palestinian suicide
bombers was a legitimate if flawed attempt at finding a balance
between preventing terrorism and preserving democracy - and the
AIPAC and CPMAJO heads all sent clear word to the President that
no pressure should be put on Israel. Wiesel - whose courage permeates
his books on the Holocaust but who lamentably failed to condemn
the massacre of Palestinian refugees in Beirut in 1982 at the
hands of Israel's Lebanese allies, said he felt "sadness", but
his sadness was "with Israel, not against Israel" because "after
all the Israeli soldiers did not kill" - took out a full page
in The New York Times. In this, he urged Bush to "please remember
that Ariel Sharon, a military man who knows the ugly face of war
better than anyone, is ready to make 'painful sacrifices' to end
the conflict." Sharon was held "personally responsible" for the
massacre by Israel's own commission of inquiry - but there was
no mention of that from Wiesel, who told reporters in May that
he would like to revoke Arafat's Nobel prize.
President Bush was not going to oppose these pressures. His
father may well have lost his re-election because he dared to
tell Israel that it must make peace with the Arabs. Bush is not
going to make the same mistake - nor does brother Jeb want to
lose his forthcoming governorship election. Thus Sharon's delight
at the Bush speech, and it was left to a lonely and brave voice
- Mitchell Plitnick of the Jewish Voice for Peace - to state that
"few speeches could be considered to be as destructive as that
of the American President... Few things are as blinding as unbridled
arrogance."
Or as vicious as the messages that still pour in to Dennis Bernstein
and Barbara Lubin, whose Middle East Children's Alliance, co-ordinating
with Israeli peace groups, is trying to raise money to rebuild
the Jenin refugee camp. "I got a call the other day at 5am," Bernstein
told me. "This guy says to me: 'You got a lot of nerve going and
eating at that Jewish deli.' What comes after that?" Before I
left San Francisco, Lubin showed me her latest e-mails. "Dear
Cunt," one of them begins, "When we want your opinion you fucking
Nazi cunt, we will have one of your Palestinian buddies fuck it
[sic] of you. I hope that in your next trip to the occupied territories
you are blown to bits by one of your Palestinian buddies [sic]
bombs." Another, equally obscene, adds that "you should be ashamed
of yourself, a so-called Jewish woman advocating the destruction
of Israel".
Less crude language, of course, greeted President Bush's speech.
Pat Robertson thought the Bush address "brilliant". Senator Charles
Schumer, a totally loyal pro-Israeli Democrat from New York, said
that "clearly, on the politics, this is going to please supporters
of Israel as well as the Christian coalition types". He could
say that again. For who could be more Christian than President
George W Bush?