[Mb-civic] No, It's Not Anti-Semitic - Richard Cohen - Washington Post Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Tue Apr 25 03:54:38 PDT 2006
No, It's Not Anti-Semitic
<>
By Richard Cohen
The Washington Post
Tuesday, April 25, 2006; A23
During the Jim Crow era, many American communists fiercely fought
racism. This is a fact. It is also a fact that segregationists and
others often smeared civil rights activists by calling them communists.
This technique is sometimes called guilt by association and sometimes
"McCarthyism." If you think it's dead, you have not been following the
controversy over a long essay about the so-called "Israel Lobby."
On April 5, for instance, The Post ran an op-ed, "Yes, It's
Anti-Semitic," by Eliot A. Cohen, a professor at the John Hopkins School
of Advanced International Studies and a respected defense intellectual.
Cohen does not much like a paper on the Israel lobby that was written by
John Mearsheimer of the University of Chicago and Stephen Walt of
Harvard University. He found it anti-Semitic. I did not.
But I did find Cohen's piece to be offensive. It starts by noting that
the paper, titled "The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy," had been
endorsed by David Duke, the former head of the Ku Klux Klan. It goes on
to quote Duke, who, I am sure, has nodded his head in agreement over the
years with an occasional piece of mine, as saying the paper is a "modern
Declaration of American Independence." If you follow Cohen's reasoning,
then you would have to conclude that David Duke and the Founding Fathers
have something in common. I am not, as they say, willing to go there.
Unfortunately, Cohen's piece is not unique. The New York Sun reported on
its front page of March 24 an allegation from Alan Dershowitz that some
of the quotes from the Israel lobby paper "appear on hate sites." Maybe
they do, but Mearsheimer and Walt took those quotes (about press
coverage of Israel) from a book written by Max Frankel, a former editor
of the New York Times. To associate Mearsheimer and Walt with hate
groups is rank guilt by association and does not in any way rebut the
argument made in their paper on the Israel lobby.
There is hardly a stronger, more odious, accusation than anti-Semitism.
It comes freighted with more than a thousand years of tragic history,
culminating in the Holocaust. The mere suggestion of it is enough for
any sane person to hold his tongue. Yet this did not stop the respected
German newspaper editor Josef Joffe from stating in the New Republic
that the lobby paper "puts 'The Protocols of the Elders of Zion' to
shame." He is referring to the most notorious anti-Semitic text of all
time. My friend Joffe is in dire need of a cold compress.
My own reading of the Mearsheimer-Walt paper found it unremarkable, a
bit sloppy and one-sided (nothing here about the Arab oil lobby), but
nothing that even a casual newspaper reader does not know. Its basic
point -- that Israel's American supporters have immense influence over
U.S. foreign policy -- is inarguable. After all, President Bush has just
recently given Israel NATO-like status without so much as a murmur from
Congress. "I made it clear, I'll make it clear again, that we will use
military might to protect our ally Israel," Bush said. This was the
second or third time he's made this pledge, crossing a line that
previous administrations would not -- in effect, promulgating a treaty
seemingly on the spot. No other country gets this sort of treatment.
Israel's special place in U.S. foreign policy is deserved, in my view,
and not entirely the product of lobbying. Israel has earned it, and
isn't there something bracing about a special relationship that is not
based on oil or markets or strategic location but on shared values? (A
bit now like Britain.) But I can understand how foreign policy
"realists" such as Mearsheimer and Walt might question its utility and
not only think that a bit too much power is located in a specific lobby
but that it is rarely even discussed. This may be wrong, but it is not
(necessarily) anti-Semitic. In fact, after reading the Mearsheimer-Walt
paper, the respected Israeli newspaper Haaretz not only failed to
discern anti-Semitism but commended the paper to its readers. "The
professors' article does not deserve condemnation," Haaretz stated in an
editorial.
An abridged version of the Mearsheimer-Walt paper was published by the
London Review of Books and is available online at http://www.lrb.co.uk/
. Read it and decide for yourself whether it is anti-Semitic. Whatever
the case, their argument is hardly rebutted by purple denunciations and
smear tactics. Rather than being persuasive, Mearsheimer and Walt's more
hysterical critics suggest by their extreme reactions that the duo is on
to something. These tactics by Israel's friends sully Israel's good name
more than Mearsheimer and Walt ever could.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/24/AR2006042401396.html?nav=hcmodule
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