-Caveat Lector-

http://www.observer.com/pages/frontpage2.asp

When Good Things Happen to Very Bad Billionaires; Controversial
Pardon Opens Up Tribal Skirmishes
by Josh Benson
It was surely the most trying moment in Rabbi Irving (Yitz) Greenberg�s
tenure as chairman of the U.S.
 Holocaust Memorial Museum. Several days after the pardon of fugitive
billionaire Marc Rich made international news, the museum�s
spokesman received a call from a reporter asking about a letter written
on museum stationery in support of Mr. Rich�s pardon request. It was
one of more than 100 letters Bill Clinton received on Mr. Rich�s behalf.
Mr. Greenberg, one of the foremost Orthodox theologians among
American Jews, immediately realized that he had made an
error by using the official stationery, and at the next meeting of the
museum�s high-powered board, he apologized for his oversight. The
press attacked. The rabbi has laid low ever since.
By conceding his mistake, Mr. Greenberg has been more forthcoming
than many other erstwhile advocates for Mr. Rich. For example, the
normally ubiquitous Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-
Defamation League, went into hibernation, and publisher Michael
Steinhardt, who co-owns The Forward, didn�t even respond to inquiries
from reporters at his own paper. Denise Rich and Beth Dozoretz, two of
the most visible Jewish Friends of Bill, have invoked their Fifth
Amendment rights rather than testify before a Congressional committee,
and an unusually acrimonious debate has been raging in the pages of
the Jewish press about the competence of American Jewish leadership.
While mainstream commentators are nearly unanimous in their
straightforward condemnation of the pardons, the uproar in the Jewish
community has been more complex and confused. While there is anger
over the former President�s actions, there is also defensiveness, fear
and disillusionment about the conspicuous involvement of so many
American Jewish and Israeli leaders in the controversy. However
inadvertently, Mr. Clinton�one of the most popular public figures ever
among American Jews�has exposed bitter internecine rifts rarely aired
in public. In recent days, the controversy�stoked by Mr. Clinton�s self-
exonerating op-ed piece in The New York Times and by Mr. Rich�s
professions of innocence�has embroiled the Jewish community in
simultaneous debates over its role in American politics, its relationship
with Israel and its opinion of the former President. And, of course, at a
time when image-conscious secular Jews are wincing over headlines
about the four Hasidic embezzlers in upstate New Square who received
Presidential commutations, the omnipresence of an almost cartoonishly
shady figure like Marc Rich has been particularly bothersome.
"The whole Rich thing is complicated because he evokes the stereotype
of the rich Jew, a financial criminal who spreads his money around,"
said writer Samuel Freedman, the author most recently of Jew vs. Jew.
"He used his ill-gotten gains to buy himself legitimacy by supporting
Jewish activities, and that�s odious." Mr. Rich has given more than $80
million to Jewish and Israeli causes, and reportedly played an
instrumental role in helping the Mossad carry out a number of
undisclosed operations.
Aside from Mr. Rich himself, there has been the nettlesome matter of
the role that an array of Israeli and American Jewish leaders played in
securing his pardon. Mr. Greenberg�s letter on Holocaust Museum
stationery may have been an innocent mistake. But it has been far
harder to explain as aberrations the personal testimonials of former
Prime Minister Ehud Barak, former Mossad director Shabtai Shavit and
Mr. Foxman. The Forward published a list of the most prominent letter
writers under the heading, "Friends in High Places: Marc Rich�s Jewish
Fans."
The role of Mr. Rich�s Israeli backers in particular has fueled arguments
over the complicated relationship between American Jews and Israel.
"Israeli officials have absolutely no business in this kind of enterprise,"
said Martin Begun, the former head of the New York Jewish Community
Relations Council. "It wasn�t in Israeli interests, and it certainly wasn�t in
American Jewish interests. By any definition, it was harmful meddling."
While the involvement of Mr. Barak, Shimon Peres and more than 50
other prominent Israelis in the pardon process has disturbed some
American Jews, there has been no corresponding outcry in Israel.
Several American Jewish leaders who have been in Israel recently told
The Observer that the Rich pardon was a virtual non-issue there. To
some, the Israelis� underwhelming reaction is an illustration of the
serious cultural differences between Israel and the Jewish community in
America.
William Rapfogel, executive director of the Metropolitan Council on
Jewish Poverty, said, "From their point of view, Marc Rich looms very
small. The Israelis would say the controversy is bullshit."
"It�s all about having the moral high ground for a lot of the American
Jews," added one New York business leader who has worked in Israel.
"That�s why they�re so upset about the Israeli connection to Marc Rich.
But the fact that the Israelis have to worry about their survival makes
them a little more pragmatic about this stuff, whether it�s sources of
philanthropy or anything else. Their primary concern is that things never
go back to how they were 50 years ago, when the Arabs had all the
guns."
In justifying the Rich pardon, Mr. Clinton cited concerns about Israeli
security, but the explanation apparently didn�t help him much. The
actual extent of Mr. Rich�s contributions to Israeli security has been a
matter of some debate, based on the possibility, as a Forward editorial
put it, that "his back-channel involvement in Israeli intelligence, through
his business dealings in Iran, Sudan and other trouble spots, ran deeper
than has been disclosed." But Mr. Clinton�s list of "legal and foreign
policy reasons" for the pardon triggered harsh criticism from right-wing
Jewish opinion makers, including those who have been among the most
hawkishly pro-Israel. "The Israelis made me do it only whips up anti-
Semitism," wrote New York Times columnist William Safire the day
after Mr. Clinton�s byline graced the paper�s Op-Ed page. William
Kristol, the Weekly Standard editor who served in the Reagan and Bush
administrations, was even more blunt: "He tried to blame it all on the
Jews," Mr. Kristol told The Observer. "As a Jew, I didn�t realize that
Marc Rich was vital to my security. I found his claims that this had
foreign-policy considerations deceitful and obnoxious. Playing the
Jewish card like this is a new low, even for Clinton."
Same Old Song?
Criticism from such quarters comes as little surprise to many
supporters of Mr. Clinton. "A lot of the people bashing Clinton now are
the same people who have been bashing him for eight years," said
Jeremy Burton, who was the New York coordinator for the Clinton-Gore
campaign in 1996. "They�ve been baffled as to why the 90 percent of the
Jewish community loved this guy for so long, and they finally see an
opportunity to prove that he�s bad for the Jews."
But the fierce reaction to the Rich pardon and Mr. Clinton�s justification
of it has not been limited to right-wing Jews. More surprising was the
tone of criticismfrom Senator Charles Schumer (Hillary Clinton�s
colleague) and the editorials in mainstream Jewish newspapers, which
carried headlines like "Shame on Clinton." "Clinton made a mistake
because he made people think that he was blaming the Jews, whether it
was true or not," said Hank Sheinkopf, a Democratic political consultant
who has done campaign work for Israel�s Labor Party. "Ultimately, that�s
the impression that a lot of people are left with."
Indeed, others feel that it is Mr. Clinton who appears to be the victim of
a certain amount of scapegoating. "For Jewish leaders to blame
President Clinton for their behavior is outrageous," said Mr. Begun. "If
Clinton used poor judgment, that�s one thing�but for them to apply
pressure on him and then blame him for inciting anti-Semitic behavior is
a baffling twist of logic. The poor man was pressured to death."
A director at one of New York�s most prominent Jewish philanthropic
organizations concurred: "The people who are criticizing Clinton now are
a bunch of hypocritical, unethical shits. There is this terrible power
dynamic in the Jewish community right now, with a total lack of ethics
about taking money from less-than-pure sources. The only question
they ever had is, is it good for the Jews? They never had a problem
dealing with Marc Rich when it benefited them."
Politics aside, the Rich affair has also stirred interdenominational
tensions, rarely visible to non-Jews but faintly reminiscent of the regular
frum-versus-secular skirmishes in Israel. In a scathing op-ed in the
Jewish Week, Rabbi Eric Yoffie, a leader of the American Reform
movement, took Jewish leadership to task for its involvement in the Rich
matter. Other reform leaders quickly followed suit. "The issue with
American Jewish leadership is that, under Clinton, they had greater
access to power than ever before, and some of them abused that
power," said Rabbi Daniel Polish, an active leader in the Reform
movement here in the U.S.
Reaction to the public scolding from Reform leaders was equally bilious,
with Mr. Yoffie and company being accused of everything from
disingenuousness to self-loathing. "They�re not even a real movement,"
said one prominent Orthodox leader. Mr. Sheinkopf, who is Orthodox,
was equally dismissive: "Any time the Reform movement can take a
shot at the Orthodox movement, they do," he said. "They�re using the
Rich pardon as a way to attack Orthodox Jews because they don�t
understand the Orthodox mindset. A lot of the criticism is coming from
people who think being Jewish is eating a bagel and going on vacation
to Nassau."
But whatever the tumult caused in the Jewish community, it is
interesting to note that the rest of the country hasn�t treated the Rich
pardon as a Jewish issue at all. "I don�t think that Jewish stereotypes
hold a lot of water in America anymore, except in the lunatic fringe,"
said Mr. Freedman. "I don�t think that there is any consideration in the
non-Jewish community that the Jews are to blame for Marc Rich so
much as that Clinton is a slime for doing this. There�s this
fear�especially in the older generation of Jews�of backlash, but it
doesn�t happen."
You may reach Josh Benson via email at:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
back to top
This column ran on page 1 in the 3/5/2001 edition of The New York
Observer.
--

Best Wishes


I don't think there is any doubt that some of the factors in his pardon
were attributable to his large gifts.  In my opinion, that was
disgraceful.  A number of them were quite questionable, including about
40 not recommended by the Justice Department.  I never pardoned anyone
whose pardon was not recommended to me after a complete investigation by
the Justice Department. -Jimmy Carter

<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:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[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