Juan Cole writes:

Is AIPAC a Wikileaks Operation?

Posted: 06 Dec 2010 01:43 AM PST

One of the supreme pieces of hypocrisy in Washington right now is all
the politicians crying treason and death penalty on Wikileaks founder
Julian Assange, when many of them are up to their gills in money
arranged for them from the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

In 2003 Larry Franklin, the ‘go-to man on Iran’ at the Pentagon under
undersecretary of defense for planning Douglas Feith, carried a draft
confidential finding on Iran out of the building and gave it to Steven
J. Rosen and Keith Weissman of AIPAC’s Middle East Bureau. They not
only were happy to receive the classified document, but they ran with
it right over to the Israeli Embassy and delivered it to Naor Gilon,
the embassy official with the Iran portfolio.

Rosen and Weissman, and probably AIPAC in general, were under FBI
surveillance on suspicion of espionage, and that is how they were
caught. The FBI field officers were astonished when Franklin came into
the picture unexpectedly. Less astonished, I suspect, when Naor Gilon
did.

Franklin confessed to wrongdoing, and spent some years in jail. But
Rosen and Weissman maintained they had done nothing illegal, since
under US law for someone who is not a government employee to receive
classified documents from a third party is not illegal, nor is sharing
them with others once they have been received. AIPAC fired them, so
they had to fight their own legal battles. The prosecution was
ultimately dropped. The Neoconservatives say that the case should
never have been brought, since it just criminalized the routine
horse-trading in information typical of Washington.

Rosen has now launched a $20 million wrongful termination suit against
AIPAC. He maintains that his action of delivering the classified
document to the Israeli embassy was standard operating procedure in
AIPAC, and that he did nothing out of the ordinary, and that he should
not have been fired. He is also threatening to name details of this
routine spying.

Rosen, ironically, was hired by Daniel Pipes’ so-called ‘Middle East
Forum.’ Pipes runs Campus Watch, which is a neo-McCarthyite attempt to
intimate US college professors into toeing the Likud Party line
whenever they talk about Israel and Palestine. So it is only natural
that an indicted spy for Israel, Rosen, should be on staff and
energetically using dirty tricks to smear the reputations of patriotic
Americans.

What Steven Rosen is alleging is that AIPAC, which arranges for
millions to go to the campaigns of American politicians, is in essence
a Wikileaks operation, only instead of posting the ferreted-out
classified material to the Web, they channel it to the Israeli
government. (Of course, the Israeli government sometimes acts as a
Wikileaks as well; Seymour Hersh was told by US intelligence officials
that Israel shared with the Soviets some of the intel it got from spy
Jonathan Pollard.)

Whether the allegations about AIPAC routine spying are true or not,
Rosen and Weissman certainly did exactly the same thing Julian Assange
did, and yet they are free men.

Rep. Pete King (R-NY), who wants Eric Holder to prosecute Julian
Assange of Wikileaks, hasn’t objected to the cases against Rosen and
Weissman being dropped, and hasn’t asked for an investigation of
AIPAC. One of the problems congressmen like this will have in crafting
anti-Wikileaks legislation is that they may well be driving a nail
into AIPAC’s coffin, as well. King, who keeps accusing Americans of
being terrorists, is also known as a long-time supporter of the
[Provisional?] Irish Republican Army.

You have to love hypocrisy when it is taken to this Himalyan scale. It
has a kind of putrid beauty.
-- 
Jim Devine / "The conventional view serves to protect us from the
painful job of thinking."   - John Kenneth Galbraith
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