-Caveat Lector-

World Socialist Web Site www.wsws.org

http://wsws.org/articles/2003/mar2003/morn-m21.shtml


WSWS : News & Analysis : North America

The controversy over US Congressman Moran: anti-Semitism, Zionism and
the Iraq war

By Bill Vann
21 March 2003

Back to screen version| Send this link by email | Email the author

A remark made earlier this month to an antiwar meeting by US
Congressman James Moran of northern Virginia has provoked a firestorm of
criticism. Major US Zionist organizations have demanded that he resign his
seat for associating the “Jewish community” with the Bush administration’s
drive to war in Iraq.

The Anti-Defamation League took out an ad in the Washington Post
denouncing Moran and accusing him of resurrecting “the dangerous anti-
Semitic canard about Jewish influence and control of US foreign policy.”
Democratic leaders vied with Republicans in censuring Moran, who was
immediately stripped of his post as a Democratic regional whip in the
House of Representatives. Six Jewish Congressmen issued a statement
advising Moran not to run again, while the Washington Post published an
editorial entitled “Blaming the Jews,” which declared Moran “unfit to
serve in Congress” and voiced hope that the Democrats would “make an
effort to find a better candidate” when Moran is up for reelection next
year.

Within days, two potential challengers for his congressional seat had
announced themselves, hoping, no doubt, to garner substantial resources
from the pro-Israel lobby for a bid to oust the incumbent.

Moran is the former mayor of Alexandria, Virginia and his district,
considered to be a safe district for the Democrats, is one of the
wealthiest in the state. He is considered a middle- of-the-road Democrat,
with strong ties to both the military and the high-tech industry, the two
largest employers in the area.

He is a typical political operator, embroiled in two recent corruption
scandals involving substantial loans from businesses that could benefit from
his vote. He cannot be described in any way as a principled opponent of
US foreign policy or the financial interests that drive it.

The current furor arose from a remark Moran made while speaking before
an audience of about 120 people gathered in a local church to oppose a
war on Iraq. Moran responded to a woman who rose to identify herself as
Jewish and wonder aloud why more Jews were not participating in the
forum. Referring to the seeming inevitability of war, the Congressman
commented: “If it were not for the strong support of the Jewish
community for this war with Iraq, we would not be doing this. The leaders
of the Jewish community are influential enough that they could change
the direction of where this is going, and I think they should.”

Moran’s remark was politically crude and inaccurate—reflecting the
thinking of a Democratic hack who sees the world in terms of “voting
blocs,” campaign contributors and lobbyists. What was meant by the
“Jewish community” and “Jewish leaders” was not spelled out. There is
certainly not enough there, however, to brand him an anti-Semite.

The motive of the Republicans in doing so was transparent: they cynically
hoped to use the incident to curry favor with Jewish organizations that
play a significant role in both campaign financing and political lobbying.
Democrats jumped on the bandwagon in an effort to conciliate this same
constituency.

Seizing upon an unguarded comment made before a small audience to
create a scandal of national proportions has a certain history on Capitol
Hill. It is a time-tested means of settling scores, regulating political
discussion and, in this case, intimidating those who might consider
opposing the policies of Israel and its American Zionist supporters.

But there is an added political dimension to the Moran story. As one
Democratic Party official told the Washington Post, the Congressman
“touched a raw nerve at a moment of very high danger to the world. It’s
bad timing in the extreme.”

What is this “raw nerve”? There is a growing popular realization that Israeli
interests play an inordinate role in the foreign policy of the US in general,
and the plans for another war in the Persian Gulf in particular. Under
conditions in which there is suspicion and unease among broad sections of
the American population over the ever-changing pretexts given by the
Bush administration for its war against Iraq, this perception has grown.

Moran was wrong to lump together the “Jewish community,” by which one
could infer all Jews in America, with the “leaders of the Jewish
community,” by which Moran no doubt meant the established pro-Israeli
lobby. At the same time, there is more than a kernel of truth to what he
said. Major American Jewish organizations that are staunchly pro-Israel do
exert significant influence in Washington, particularly on US actions in the
Middle East. Were such organizations to actively oppose a war on Iraq, it
would complicate the Bush administration’s drive to war.

Whether Moran is an anti-Semite cannot be ascertained from this one
remark. Moreover, the false identification between Jews as a whole and
pro-Zionist groups is unfortunately not unique to Moran. Indeed, this very
conception has been assiduously promoted by the Zionists themselves,
who react to any criticism of their own politics or the actions of the
Israeli state as prima facie proof of anti-Semitism.

Much ink has been spilled across the editorial pages of the major national
dailies in recent weeks dismissing charges that American Zionists and Israeli
interests are playing a substantial role in the current drive to war. In most
cases, these opinion pieces set up anti-Semitic straw men in order to
knock them down.

The Washington Post’s Richard Cohen, for example, wrote that the Clinton
administration “had many more Jews in important positions than does the
pro-war Bush administration.” He continued: “...it’s preposterous to
suggest that George Bush would heed the Jewish community, which largely
votes Democratic, over his conservative Christian base, whose support of
the war approaches 102 percent...”

Bill Keller of the New York Times, a supporter of the war, penned a similar
piece entitled “Is it good for the Jews?” He wrote: “Making the world
safer for us—defusing terrorism and beginning to reform a region that is a
source of toxic hostility to what we stand for—happens to make the world
safer for Israel as well. But the idea that Israel’s interests are driving one
of the most momentous shifts in American foreign policy is simple-minded
and offensive.”

It is true that the war against Iraq is not being fought at the behest of
Israel. It is a war to assert US imperialist hegemony in the Middle East and
internationally. Those who argue otherwise—most of them from certain
precincts of the Republican right wing—do indeed dabble in anti-Semitism.

That there exist neo-Nazi groups and anti-Semitic conspiracy theorists
counting up Jews in Washington (probably adding Rumsfeld to the list) and
ranting about a “Zionist occupation government” is indisputable. But the
real issue is not the ethnicity or religion of those in the administration
who promote war in Iraq, but their politics.

With the installation of the Bush administration, a tight-knit political
grouping that coalesced under the Reagan administration came back into
office. Known as “neo-conservatives,” this group is closely tied to an
interlocking chain of Washington think tanks that are characterized by
their promotion of US militarism and the expansionist policy of the Israeli
right. Several of these individuals have made substantial fortunes in the
private sector brokering US, Israeli and Turkish arms contracts.

This group includes among its most prominent members: Deputy Defense
Secretary Paul Wolfowitz; Richard Perle, the chairman of the Pentagon’s
Defense Policy Board; Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Douglas Feith;
and Elliott Abrams, convicted for lying to Congress during the Iran-contra
crisis and recently placed in charge of Near East Affairs on Bush’s National
Security Council.

These individuals constitute a right-wing ideological faction, whose views
no more represent those of most American Jews than Richard Cheney’s
reflect the thinking of most Methodists. Indeed, repeated polls have
indicated that Jews nationally oppose war against Iraq in a larger
proportion than the general population.

Even within the spectrum of Israeli politics, these officials represent a
decidedly reactionary layer. Feith and Perle served as advisors in 1996 to
the incoming Israeli Likud government of Benyamin Netanyahu, authoring at
the time a document entitled “A clean break: a new strategy for securing
the realm.”

This document repudiated any “land for peace” proposal calling for Israeli
withdrawal from the occupied territories. Instead, it urged an aggressive
Israeli policy to reshape the regional “strategic environment” through the
toppling of the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein. It advised the incoming
Israeli government to win US support for such a goal by posing the Middle
East conflict in terms reminiscent of the Cold War struggle against the
Soviet bloc.

Four years earlier, Perle—who came under a cloud in the 1980s for having
accepted payments from an Israeli arms firm that later sold weapons to the
Pentagon—joined Abrams in the creation of the Committee on US Interests
in the Middle East. This outfit was formed with the aim of scuttling the
Oslo negotiations between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization
and pressuring Washington into unconditional support for Israel’s control
of the occupied territories.

Does not the presence of these individuals in key decision-making positions
on US military strategy and the Arab-Israeli conflict provide Israel with
enormous influence on US policy? Even raising this question is answered by
the Israeli lobby in the US with cries of “anti- Semitism..”

This merely echoes the position of the Israeli government itself, which
dismisses criticism of its increasingly reactionary and brutal policies against
the Palestinian population as anti- Semitic. Thus, the Sharon government,
responsible for killing over 2,200 Palestinians in the last 30 months, calls
charges that Israeli troops massacred civilians in Jenin a “blood libel.”

Anti-Semitism, a foul and reactionary outlook with a long and deservedly
infamous pedigree, is in fact strengthened by this duplicitous attempt to
silence any opposition to Zionism and the colonialist policies of the Israeli
state by labeling it an attack on the Jewish people.

The Israeli daily Ha’aretz published a recent column making precisely this
point: “It is hard not to think that Israel contributed to this blurring of
distinctions. Cabinet ministers and spokesmen in Israel were too quick in
accusing Israel’s critics of anti-Semitic motives—even when the criticism
was specific and directed at government policy, with no derogatory
intentions toward Jews in general....On the other hand, when Israel notes
that the overwhelming majority of Jewish people stands behind it, it is
creating the equation between itself and the Jews.”

This “blurring of distinctions” has been the hallmark of the Israeli state
since its creation. It was the centerpiece of Zionist ideology that the Jews
could exist as a people only through the carving out of their own national
state. Long a distinct minority in terms of Jewish politics, it took the
greatest crimes of the twentieth century—Stalinism’s liquidation of its
socialist and internationalist opponents followed by the Nazi Holocaust and
the murder of 6 million European Jews—to create the conditions in which
Zionism could realize its reactionary project.

These terrible events also had their impact on the political thinking of a
layer of Jewish intellectuals who previously oriented towards the socialist
movement, but then turned sharply to the right. The political godfather of
the so-called neo-conservative movement that spawned the likes of Abrams
and Perle was Irving Kristol, who in his youth was a socialist and briefly a
member of the Trotskyist movement. In his recent speech before the
American Enterprise Institute outlining his “vision” for remaking the Middle
East, Bush began his remarks with a verbal nod to Kristol.

There is no question that the predominant pro-Israeli Jewish organizations
in the US have swung violently to the right in recent years. Through their
rabid defense of the indefensible actions of the Israeli government against
the Palestinians and their unconditional backing for US militarism, they
have dishonored a long-standing association of Jewish intellectuals,
professionals and workers with opposition to oppression in all its forms.

Increasingly, these Zionist “leaders” and organizations have allied
themselves with reactionary elements within and around the Bush
administration, including Christian fundamentalist anti-Semites who
fervently support Israeli aggression, seeing it as a short cut to Armageddon
(and the destruction of “heathen” Jewry).

The Israeli lobby will seek retribution against Moran, not only for a remark
in a Virginia church, but also for earlier statements criticizing Israeli
actions in the West Bank and Gaza and questioning the level of US aid to
the Zionist state. The threat is significant, as Rep. Cynthia McKinney
(Democrat of Georgia) found out. Her critical remarks about Israeli policy
resulted in a flood of money raised by the Zionist right into her
opponent’s coffers, helping deny her another term.

Such a political hit will be aimed not at anti-Semitism, but at defending a
corrupt set of relations between officials, arms manufacturers and
influence peddlers in Washington and Tel Aviv. It will be designed to send a
message to other politicians that any criticism of the US- Israeli military-
industrial complex is political suicide.

Like Israel itself, these Zionist organizations provide no answer to anti-
Semitism or the dangers of war and fascism that today arise with greater
force than at any time since the end of the Second World War. Indeed,
they only fuel these dangers.







Copyright 1998-2003
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved
Forwarded for your information.  The text and intent of the article
have to stand on their own merits.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material
is distributed without charge or profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this type of information
for non-profit research and educational purposes only.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Do not believe in anything simply because you have heard it. Do
not believe simply because it has been handed down for many genera-
tions.  Do not believe in anything simply because it is spoken and
rumoured by many.  Do not believe in anything simply because it is
written in Holy Scriptures.  Do not believe in anything merely on
the authority of teachers, elders or wise men.  Believe only after
careful observation and analysis, when you find that it agrees with
reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of one and all.
Then accept it and live up to it." The Buddha on Belief,
from the Kalama Sutra

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http://archive.jab.org/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http://archive.jab.org/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to