A small but significant trial balloon went up
late last year when Charles Winters received a presidential pardon. Winters
delivered three converted World War II B-17 bombers to the nascent Israeli
armed forces in the late 1940s. Co-conspirators Herman Greenspun and Al Schwimmer
were fellow operatives within a vast network of nonprofit front organizations
stealing, reconditioning, and smuggling surplus WWII arms [.pdf] scheduled
to be scrapped under President Truman's War Assets Administration. Greenspun
personally stole 58 crates (weighing 35 tons) of .30 and .50 caliber machine
guns from the U.S. military for shipment from Hawaii to the Middle East in
violation of the 1939 Neutrality Act. Mainstream media has generally portrayed
Winters' posthumous pardon as "setting the record straight." His
hometown newspaper trumpeted that Winters was "on
the wrong side of the law, but on the right side of history."
Those concerned about the portrayal of Israel's history, including Hollywood
film director
Steven Spielberg, are among the many prominent individuals and organizations
that lobbied for Winters' pardon last year. A similar coalition is
pushing for the last-minute pardon of not only two American Israel Public
Affairs Committee (AIPAC) lobbyists indicted under the 1917 Espionage Act,
but also Israel's most notorious spy. Former U.S. naval intelligence analyst
Jonathan Pollard was sentenced to life in prison a quarter century ago for
selling some of America's most closely held national defense secrets to Israel.
As the final deadline looms, President Bush should carefully consider whether
executive clemency for lawbreaking in the name of Israel achieves positive
benefits or merely encourages ever more audacious challenges to the rule of
law in America. Documentary evidence, some old, some newly emerging, provides
clear answers.
Winters was probably the last of the "gun-runners for Israel" generation
likely to receive a pardon. President John F. Kennedy pardoned Herman Greenspun
in 1961 as a concession in wooing and winning over key donors of the Israel
lobby during his presidential bid. Greenspun was convicted of violating the
Neutrality Act in 1951. But if JFK thought he had mended rifts about illegal
arms and the Israel lobby's all-but-sovereign foreign policy, then he was mistaken.
The "nuclear-fund-runners" were ascendant. Key figures of the lobby
were
not only financing the fledgling Dimona nuclear reactor, but also running
foreign-funded cover propaganda in the U.S. AIPAC founder Isaiah Kenen
labored mightily to deflect U.S. State Department speculation that Israel's
Dimona nuclear reactor was a secret weapons facility by citing "expert
testimony" in his lobbying newsletter, The
Near East Report. Among Kennedy's last bilateral diplomatic acts was
a firm
July 5, 1963, demand for regular U.S. inspections of Dimona delivered to
the Israeli prime minister. But the push to include Israel in the fledgling
nuclear nonproliferation regime died with Kennedy's November assassination
in Dallas. A simultaneous and largely secret
Department of Justice drive to regulate the Israel lobby as agents of the
Israeli government also subsequently perished.
The exact costs of having Israel outside the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
and its U.S. lobby outside the Foreign
Agents Registration Act regime are hard to quantify. If AIPAC and other
organizations lobbying in coordination with the Israeli government had been
properly regulated as foreign agents since the 1960s, it is remotely possible
that peace would now reign in the Middle East. But presidents have instead
tried more conciliatory avenues. President George W. Bush may even grant the
requested pardons for Jonathan Pollard as well as
AIPAC's Steve Rosen and Keith Weissman as soft gestures toward peace
in the Middle East. But how successful are such concessions?
It is no secret that AIPAC has been working feverishly behind
the scenes to portray Iran as a grave threat to the United States and influence
policy toward a tougher U.S. military stance. Steve Rosen and Keith Weissman's
covert operation allegedly obtained classified presidential directives about
Iran, channeled classified information to
friends in the media, and guided Col. Lawrence Franklin's intelligence-gathering
activities at the Department of Defense. While the long-delayed case against
them has not yet gone to trial and major details have yet to emerge, AIPAC's
known efforts clearly could have led to a U.S.-Iranian military conflict, or
at least American acquiescence to an Israeli attack on Iran. This would have
done incalculable damage to U.S. interests if the FBI hadn't intervened.
The myth that pardons and leniency produce diplomatic results was clearly
operative in the Clinton White House. Even after failing to sign a comprehensive
peace deal between Israel and Palestinians, Bill Clinton pardoned gun-runner
Al Schwimmer and fugitive financier Marc Rich upon leaving office. Clinton's
deputy attorney general, Eric Holder (now president elect Barack Obama's nominee
for attorney general), advised the Clinton White House counsel that he was
"neutral, leaning toward favorable" on pardoning Rich,
after being told former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak supported Rich's
petition. As illegal settlements
spread and Gaza burns yet again, there is still precious little evidence
that such pardons improve the prospects for peace or increase American leverage
over Israel. Firmer actions such as
denials of airspace or
abstentions at UN Security Council votes are obviously more effective.
If President Bush is wavering or Barack Obama is considering pardons upon
entering office, historical precedent indicates that pardons for crimes perpetrated
in the name of Israel are costly but yield no benefits. Kennedy's unintended
leniency provided a green light for financing the Israeli nuclear weapons program.
The Marc Rich pardon produced nothing but embarrassment for Clinton and is
now a possible nomination
hurdle for Eric Holder. A pardon of Jonathan Pollard would probably result
in intensified unauthorized transfers of sensitive national defense information
to Israel in the future. A Rosen and Weissman pardon would signal that the
Israel lobby may freely pursue covert action to use the U.S. military against
Israel's enemies. Tough diplomacy, unfettered law enforcement, and reasonable
penalties for criminal violations are historically the only proven techniques
for keeping the Israel lobby in check.
Those lobbying for exceptions should understand better than most that the
rule of law itself is essentially binary: either it applies to us all, or the
entire American system of governance begins to decay. This is why it is so
ironic that Steven Spielberg and others who quietly pressed President George
W. Bush to pardon Charles Winters subsequently discovered the rule of law had
massively failed them many
were victimized by Bernard Madoff's alleged $50 billion Ponzi scheme, enabled
by nonexistent will to enforce the law despite of
years of legitimate complaints to the Securities Exchange Commission. No
American should be similarly trampled by individuals or rogue organizations
acting outside the law. Rewarding crimes committed in the name of Israel with
presidential pardons and leniency are practices that are simply far too costly
to continue.