Jerusalem Post
 
Think Tanks: Hotbeds for anti-Semitism?  
By _DEBORAH  DANAN_ (http://www.jpost.com/Authors/AuthorPage.aspx?id=153) 
02/07/2013

 
The irresponsible smear campaigns of think tanks impact the media,  
policymakers and the public. It's time they were more closely  monitored.
 
In a seminal report in 2010, the Reut Institute delineated the “new  
battlefield” in which the Jewish state is subject to a "global systemic and  
systematic assault" of its policies, and indeed, of the very legitimacy of its  
existence. Sadly, despite Reut’s ongoing dedication in fighting  
delegitimization, the phenomenon of defamatory blitzkriegs on Israel only seems 
 to be 
growing. 

The “new battlefield” is the arena in which “new  anti-Semitism”—as 
defined by Natan Sharansky’s “3D” formula of demonization,  delegitimization 
and 
double standards—is waged. In recent years, however, new  soldiers have 
entered the battlefield and are wielding their own weapon—the  dreaded pen—
with as much gusto and as little care for the repercussions as a  Hamas 
militant with a rocket launcher. However, these are remote soldiers who  sit 
snugly 
behind the comfort and security of their desks. They are strategists  and 
security analysts, many of whom are (unsurprisingly) Jews, and are part of  
the latest monster called think tank terror. 

Just over a year ago, a  media firestorm was unleashed by employees at the 
Center for American Progress  (CAP), a Washington-based policy organization, 
who scribbled rabidly  anti-Semitic comments that included calling US 
supporters of Israel as “Israel  Firsters;” comparing Israel to Apartheid South 
Africa; and postulating that “the  entire Israeli occupation” of the Gaza 
Strip is “a moral abomination” comparable  to the former Jim Crow South in 
the US. 

The subsequent firings at CAP  didn’t do much to curb Judeophobia in other 
think tanks. Only last month in  London—the city that the aforementioned 
Reut report identified as the “Mecca of  delegitimization”—the prestigious 
Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) _published an article_ 
(http://linicom.co.il/external/?u=53&a=http://www.rusi.org/analysis/commentary/ref:C50FE8C438B
BC3/)  which was as unfounded as it was  defamatory. Authored by the think 
tank’s director of security Jonathan Eyal, the  article, entitled “
Netanyahu's Israel: Strategic Fatalism and Disaster,” is a  rambling diatribe 
akin 
to soapbox advocacy and is packed full of non-sequiturs  and factual errors. 

Eyal’s heavy-handed critique of Prime Minister  Binyamin Netanyahu’s 
policies leads him to conclude that should Israel cease to  exist, the blame 
will 
fall squarely on Netanyahu’s shoulders and not Israel’s  enemies. Eyal “
supports” his outlandish claim by quoting an “off-the-record”  comment 
allegedly made by US President Barack Obama: “Iran poses a short-term  threat 
to 
Israel’s survival; Israel’s own behavior poses a long-term one.” The  quote 
was taken from a column written by Jeffrey Goldberg, the man Eyal  
attributes as being the White House’s “unofficial spokesman.” But apparently  
Eyal 
didn’t read Goldberg’s column too carefully or he would have noticed that  
the “quote” was Goldberg’s own and not attributed to Mr. Obama. 

Eyal’s  sweeping generalizations continue with the assertion that “
Netanyahu will  re-launch his charm offensive in the US, claiming to be closely 
aligned to the  Administration but at the same time sabotaging every step taken 
by Washington in  the Middle East.” You see, Israel is the sole reason for 
the impasse in the  peace process; PA President Mahmoud Abbas’s 
intransigence, the Arab Spring, the  elusive Fatah-Hamas merger, on the other 
hand, do 
not play any role at all. For  Eyal, it’s much of the same regarding Israel’
s peace treaties with its neighbor,  Egypt. The occupied territories, Israel’
s “tinderbox,” may provoke a third  Intifada which in turn will cause 
Egypt to sever its ties with Israel. Right. So  US threats to cut foreign aid, 
or for that matter, the phrase “apes and pigs,”  would play no role 
whatsoever should the peace treaty with Egypt disintegrate.  

Much of Eyal’s phrasing is unsettling, and not only because it’s either  
erroneous or unsupported by actual evidence, but also because of its  
devil-may-care undertones. Sentences like “[Netanyahu] takes pride… in the  
occasional targeted assassination of people Israel does not like” are  
outrageously editorialized and should have never been allowed to have been  
published 
as part of an analysis piece on a think tank website. How can an  institute 
which purports to be a world expert on security reduce internationally  
recognized terrorists as being nothing more than “people Israel does not like?” 
 
These sentences have no basis in fact and have absolutely no value other 
than  being more fuel for anti-Semites (as if they need it). Consider this 
gem, for  example: “Most Israelis remain supremely uninterested in what they 
neighbors  think or do: they are content to continue their 
'villa-in-the-jungle' existence,  enjoying life in a land of plenty surrounded 
by violence and 
squalor.”  

Eyal underscores Netanyahu’s “strategic fatalism” by introducing Bayit  
Yehudi leader Naftali Bennett as the Robin to Netanyahu’s Batman (never mind  
that Bibi’s erstwhile chief-of-staff isn’t exactly loved by the premier). 
In a  single paragraph, Eyal makes two glaring omissions. The first is with 
regards to  Bennett’s proposal “to annex 60 percent of the occupied 
Palestinian land without  granting citizenship to any of its residents.” Wrong. 
In 
the words of Bennett  himself, “The Arab residents will become full-fledged 
Israeli citizens.” The  second omission is at the end of the paragraph, in a 
sentence that neatly (and  mistakenly) summarizes Netanyahu’s political 
vision: “Indeed, the promise to  create a Palestinian state is not even 
mentioned in Mr Netanyahu's current  electoral manifesto.” How convenient of 
Mr. 
Eyal not to mention that neither did  any of the traditional left-leaning 
parties like Labor –and to a large extent,  even Meretz—make any such promises. 

But before drawing to its  conclusion, what would a demonizing, 
delegitimizing and defamatory article about  Israel be without making mention 
of the 
reliable old friend, the Apartheid  claim? Eyal writes that Netanyahu’s “
approach is almost identical to the  policies which South Africa pursued during 
the Apartheid regime: seize the lands  and huddle their inhabitants into 
'Bantustans', postage stamp-size enclaves  where they remain powerless. In 
South Africa's case that resulted in the end of  that country's democracy, and 
a 
vicious civil war; the same awaits Israel.”  Dismantling Eyal’s ridiculous 
analogy would be an article in and of itself, but  suffice it to say that 
South Africa’s policy had nothing to do with security  implications (as Israel
’s does) and everything to do with the unadulterated  racism of keeping the 
country’s blacks at bay. 

Eyal’s wanton “analysis”  highlights western academia’s scary trend of 
Israel-bashing under the guise of  strategy scrutiny. On some level, this is 
far more sinister than classical  anti-Semitism of the type that is prevalent 
across the Islamic world, since the  latter’s vulgarity often borders on 
the absurd. One has to ask, what is the  substance of policy and what 
constitutes security interests other than arbitrary  whims and outlandish 
statements? The article decries the mythical powerful  Jewish/ Israeli NGOs, 
yet where 
is the outcry of such groups? Have they too  cowered into submission at the 
prospect of confronting new anti-Semitism that is  prevalent in the British 
establishment? It’s possible that from a legal  perspective this article 
may well be considered defamatory, but more than that,  when an esteemed think 
tank with considerable influence over foreign policy  resorts to the type 
of yellow journalism that is more suited to tabloids, it’s  no wonder that 
the foreign office is deemed as having an anti-Israel bias.

-- 
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