Poor Obama. No matter how much he tries to placate
the Israel lobby, they just won't take yes for an answer. The Lobby has been
after him for months,
trying to dig up "evidence" that someone with the middle name of "Hussein"
is necessarily an enemy of Israel. The best they could come up with so far were
the Rev. Jeremiah Wright's jeremiads,
which didn't have much of an effect at the polls, as the North Carolina and
Indiana primary results
and subsequent national polls attest.
Yet Obama still keeps trying to appease the Lobby. He's purged staff members
who so much as looked cross-eyed at the Israelis, such as one
poor adviser who meekly suggested that talking to Hamas might not be such a
bad idea. He was out faster than you can say Mearsheimer
and Walt.
Speaking of which: the Obama-oids have gone out of their way to distance
themselves i.e., "reject and denounce" those two hate-criminals,
even though, as Philip Weiss trenchantly avers,
a book by Obama's point man on the Middle East says pretty much the same thing.
In response to all this, Scott
McConnell, editor of The American Conservative, dryly remarked:
"At this point one wonders whether the people who deny the dramatic influence
of the Israel lobby on American politics feel a little bit silly."
Obama's latest ritualized act of kowtowing takes place in the pages of the
online edition of The Atlantic. In an interview
with Jeffrey Goldberg a male
Judy Miller who retailed Ahmed Chalabi's tall tales of Iraqi "weapons
of mass destruction" and other fables
while still managing to keep his job and his reputation Obama jumps through
all kinds of hoops with admirable dexterity, while ultimately avoiding abject
humiliation and even showing signs of resistance.
Goldberg is relentless from the get-go, demanding to know: Does Zionism "have
justice on its side?" Obama goes into a soliloquy about his "Jewish-American
camp counselor" whose tales of life in Israel he found "powerful
and compelling." Obama, the wanderer, has instinctive sympathy for a people
who want only to "return home." All very affecting and authentic,
but it's not enough for David
Frum, who kvetches:
"Now, how long do you think it takes Obama to deliver a 'yes' or 'no'
to that question? I count five long paragraphs interrupted by two follow-up
questions before we get to 'yes.' That's a long time. And when the answer
is delivered, it is immediately followed by a disclaimer."
No explanations, no dilly-dallying, no loitering in the middle ground Commissar
Frum wants answers, "straight" answers, and he wants them now!
So what is this supposed "disclaimer"? It's when Obama says:
"That does not mean that I would agree with every action of the state
of Israel, because it's a government and it has politicians, and as a politician
myself I am deeply mindful that we are imperfect creatures and don't always
act with justice uppermost on our minds."
How dare he refuse to give a moral blank check to whomever is elected prime
minister of Israel?! Frum takes the Ann
Lewis line, which is, as she put it at a forum on Israel: "The role
of the president of the United States is to support the decisions that are
made by the people of Israel."
According to the strictures set down by the Frum-Lewis Doctrine, we are obligated
to carry out whatever edicts the Israeli government issues and if Obama doesn't
buy that, well, then, he's obviously a Farrakhan-loving secret
Muslim.
Goldberg isn't satisfied, either. He presses the issue:
"Go to the kishke question, the gut question: the idea that
if Jews know that you love them, then you can say whatever you want about Israel,
but if we don't know you Jim Baker, Zbigniew Brzezinski then everything
is suspect. There seems to be in some quarters, in Florida and other places,
a sense that you don't feel Jewish worry the way a senator from New York would
feel it."
Unconditional support isn't enough: the Lobby demands love. At the
end of his interrogation, Obama is expected, like
Winston Smith, to love Big
Brother.
Obama's smooth "I find that really interesting" is devastating,
in its way: what equanimity!
He segues into a personal account, talks about his trip to Israel, lists all
the admirable qualities of the pioneers who have built a modern democracy in
a "hardscrabble land," among them a strong sense of morality and
a long tradition of open discussion and disputation: "What I also love
about Israel is the fact that people argue about these issues, and that they're
asking themselves moral questions."
Here Obama hits back, if ever so subtly. The poor guy was no doubt annoyed
at being hectored by this tiresome fanatic, so who can blame him for making
reference to the well-known
fact that discussion in the U.S., when it comes to Israel, is far less open
than it is in Israel itself? (Although that is changing.)
He pulls back, though, and resorts to the some-of-my-best-friends argument,
another way of groveling. Yet Goldberg is clearly pissed off, because he pops
him with the Ahmed
Yousef question. Poor Obama: another Rev. Wright-like tar baby, albeit
this time an Arabic version, one that the Lobby hopes will stick. Obama, however,
isn't having it:
"My position on Hamas is indistinguishable from the position of Hillary
Clinton or John McCain. I said they are a terrorist organization and I've repeatedly
condemned them. I've repeatedly said, and I mean what I say: since they are
a terrorist organization, we should not be dealing with them until they recognize
Israel, renounce terrorism, and abide by previous agreements."
Goldberg has got him. The man who would talk to Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, Hugo
Chavez, and Raúl
Castro won't deal with the elected
government of Palestine. Why single them out for special disfavor? After all,
the Cuban commies, for one example, have imprisoned and killed their internal
critics, as have the Iranians. Chavez is no angel, either. Why a different standard
for the Palestinians? He's acknowledged their suffering;
why won't he recognize their legitimacy?
Much of Obama's appeal is personal, rather than ideological. He's just the
kind of president one can imagine pulling off a series of diplomatic triumphs
based on the sheer power of his personality alone. The Obama campaign knows
this, of course, and that's partly why the candidate continually emphasizes
the value of diplomacy, of talking to our alleged adversaries, and giving America
options other than war. It's pretty humiliating for him to have to drop this
tack because it so rankles the Lobby.
What's more, you can bet John
McCain will point to this contradiction during the coming debates. If I
were McCain, I'd ask: Well, Barack, if you're going to talk to Ahmadinejad,
then why not have a cup of coffee with Ahmed
Yousef?
Goldberg, clearly enjoying himself, digs the knife in deeper and inquires
if Obama was "flummoxed" upon receiving the Ahmed Yousef seal of
approval.
Obama flummoxed? Surely he jests.
It's time for Obama to play his trump card, and he does so by citing his support
for Israel's 2006 invasion of Lebanon, in which factories, hospitals, and Christian
churches were bombed and thousands of Lebanese civilians were killed, in retaliation
for the kidnapping
of two Israeli soldiers and the killing of three more. That, at least, was
the ostensible rationale for a sustained assault on Lebanon's physical and
socio-economic infrastructure, although military action to take out Hezbollah
was planned
long before that incident.
In any case, Goldberg keeps throwing him some pretty hard fastballs: what about
the settlements?
And you'll note how Goldberg phrases the question, asking whether President
Obama "will denounce the settlements publicly." "Denounce"
is a pretty strong word: I doubt that's what Obama would do. The point is that
what the Lobby fears most is public criticism by an American chief executive,
or, really, by any American official. The settlements, answers Obama, are not
helpful, and he doesn't deny that he'll say this in public. He won't take a
vow of silence.
Goldberg comes back with an echo of a persistent suspicion, oft voiced in
Likudnik circles: "Do you think that Israel is a drag on America's reputation
overseas?"
Clearly exasperated at this point, Obama cuts to the core of the issue by
inserting a heretical concept that an American president ought to be upholding
American interests:
"No, no, no. But what I think is that this constant wound,
that this constant sore, does infect all of our foreign policy. The lack of
a resolution to this problem provides an excuse for anti-American militant
jihadists to engage in inexcusable actions, and so we have a national-security
interest in solving this, and I also believe that Israel has a security interest
in solving this because I believe that the status quo is unsustainable. I am
absolutely convinced of that, and some of the tensions that might arise between
me and some of the more hawkish elements in the Jewish community in the United
States might stem from the fact that I'm not going to blindly adhere to whatever
the most hawkish position is just because that's the safest ground politically."
Obama is here engaging the Lobby, challenging its claim to set the terms of
the debate and refusing to grovel. Good for him. The very
idea that American and Israeli interests are in any way separable and
even, at times, in opposition to each other is the Lobby's worst nightmare.
For that would mean the end of our policy of unconditional public support
although, in private, recriminations abound.
Obama really goes on the offensive toward the end of the Goldberg interview,
especially when he avers:
"My job in being a friend to Israel is partly to hold up a mirror
and tell the truth and say if Israel is building settlements without any regard
to the effects that this has on the peace process, then we're going to be stuck
in the same status quo that we've been stuck in for decades now, and that won't
lift that existential dread that David Grossman described in your
article."
Of course Obama has read Goldberg's article, and the mirror metaphor
is really devastating, yet more evidence of the candidate's underrated ability
to lash out but with a rapier, not a broadsword.
Existential dread that's what Obama evokes in the Lobby. They've had it easy
during the Bush II era, with the
American Netanyahu ensconced in the White House. Settlements?
Go right ahead. The Wall
of Separation? Higher, please. Assassinations
timed to derail the "peace process"? Fire away! Those days will be
over if Obama makes it to the Oval Office, and the Lobby knows it.
The great problem for Obama is that no matter what he does or says, the Lobby
will fight him every inch of the way, and the smears will get more outrageous.
The "he's-a-secret-Muslim" meme is just the beginning. The guilt-by-association
strategy is by no means exhausted. How many penny-ante anti-Semites who spent
two minutes with him shaking his hand, and would enjoy the publicity of being
the focus of media attention, can be dug up between now and November?
We'll soon find out.
NOTES IN THE MARGIN
The official publication date of my book, Reclaiming
the American Right: The Lost Legacy of the Conservative Movement, is May
30. You can pre-order, though, via the publisher, the Intercollegiate Studies
Institute.
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I wrote Reclaiming in 1992. It was published the next year by the Center
for Libertarian Studies, went through two editions, and then went out of print.
It is an alternative, and admittedly polemical, history of conservatism in
America, seen through the prism of changing foreign policy perspectives, from
the "isolationism" of the Old Right to the openly imperialistic doctrines of
neoconservatism. ISI is bringing it back, with a new introduction by George
W. Carey and commentaries by Scott Richert and David Gordon, as well as the
original introduction by Pat
Buchanan, and I'm really jazzed about it. The book was really quite prescient
when it came to the central role played by the neoconservatives in formulating
a foreign policy that has brought us only disaster. My friend Pat kindly refers
to it as "the Iliad of the American Right," and I'm particularly
proud of what Ron Paul had to say
about it:
"When I was deciding whether or not to run for president as a Republican,
I re-read Justin Raimondo's Reclaiming the American Right and
it gave me hope that the anti-interventionist, pro-liberty Old Right, which
had once dominated the party, could and would rise again. Here is living history:
the story of an intellectual and political tradition that my campaign invoked
and reawakened. This prescient book, written in 1993, could not be more relevant
today."
You can pre-order here.
~ Justin Raimondo