Head
Strong | 'Anti-Semitic' label curbs talk about Israel
By
Michael Smerconish
September
9, 2007
One year after 9/11, I
visited Israel as a guest of the Jerusalem Post. In the midst of the intifadah, the hard-line newspaper arranged for me to
broadcast my daily radio show from Jerusalem. At the time, I was also filing
one-minute commentaries for KYW-AM (1060). One of them caused some
consternation at home. Here is what I said:
"Yesterday, an Israeli
guide was anxious to show me the community called Gilo.
" 'Look,' he said, 'at
the sandbags that these people have to place in their windows to shield them
from sniper fire from a neighboring village called Beit Jala.'
"Sure enough, there
were sandbags in windows and bullet holes in walls. Thinking of my kids, I
said, 'That's no place to raise a family.'
"Today, I had a
different guide with a different perspective. He wanted me to tour an Arab
neighborhood in the West Bank.
" 'Look at where
Israeli tank fire has destroyed these homes,' he said to me. I looked. The
devastation was terrible. 'This is no place to live,' I said to myself.
" 'Where are we?' I
asked.
" 'This is the village
called Beit Jala,' he told me, 'and the tank fired from over there, in Gilo' -
where I had been the day before."
I ended the commentary by
saying: "And so it goes."
My intention was only to
present a form of geopolitical glass half empty/half full, not to assert any
moral equivalency. But that didn't spare me an onslaught of e-mail from Jewish
listeners disappointed in what I had said, or what they thought I was implying.
Some told me my "comparison" was anti-Semitic, which stunned me,
given that my entire trip had a palpable, pro-Israeli tone.
I was reminded of that
experience this week while considering the backlash against the release of The
Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy,
by John J. Mearsheimer and Stephen M. Walt. Mearsheimer is a political
scientist at the University of Chicago. Walt is a professor at Harvard
University's John F. Kennedy School of Government.
Their book is an outgrowth
of their lengthy online article on the same subject, and of a 40-page essay
published last spring in the London Review of Books. Their premise is that the
United States has set aside its own security to advance the interests of Israel,
owing to the existence of a "lobby," which they define as a loose
coalition of individuals and organizations who actively work to steer U.S.
foreign policy in a pro-Israel direction.
Among their observations is
that anyone who criticizes Israel's actions or argues that pro-Israel groups
have a significant influence over U.S. policy stands a good chance of being
labeled anti-Semitic.
Labeling has become all too
common in today's political debate, overlooking that few of us can neatly be
compartmentalized under words such as liberal or conservative. Speak against same-sex marriage? You must be a "homophobe."
Oppose affirmative action? That sounds "racist."
Similarly, to question U.S.
support for Israel runs the risk of being branded "anti-Semitic."
Perhaps it's only a small minority who assign the labels. Still, each debasing
generalization stifles conversation about issues of the day. The shame is that
some people, who already have a seat at the table, resort to such language as a
way to prevent those of different views from even getting to the table at all.
Here's hoping that, six
years removed from 9/11, Mearsheimer and Walt can initiate a reasonable
conversation about Israel. No subject with implications for U.S. security
should be off-limits. Among their words worthy of debate are these:
"[S]aying that Israel and the U.S. are united by a shared terrorist threat
has the causal relationship backwards: the United States has a terrorism
problem in good part because it is so closely allied with Israel, not the other
way around."
Of course, others conclude
that the origins of America's terror problem are much wider in scope than
Israel alone; they argue that disdain for America's relationship with Israel
long preceded the modern terrorist threat. I say let's air it out.
Mearsheimer and Walt's
arguments sound similar to words spoken to me by Michael Scheuer, author of the
book Imperial Hubris and a man
who spent 22 years with the CIA. From 1996 to 1999, he ran "Alec
Station," the Osama bin Laden tracking unit at the CIA's Counterterrorist
Center. He told me he agreed with Mearsheimer and Walt that the Israeli lobby
had "distorted and burdened" U.S. foreign policy.
"The most dangerous
aspect of the Israel lobby," Scheuer said, "is that it threatens free
speech in America. Very few Americans will exercise their right to free speech
if criticizing Israel earns them identification as an anti-Semite."
Which reminds me that after
I recently interviewed Scheuer, a blog posting said: "He won't out-and-out
claim he hates Jews, but everything he criticizes centers around Israel and the
'dual loyalty' of neo-cons. You would be smart to avoid using this man as a
reference. Soon he will reveal himself to be the true anti-Semite he is."
Scheuer argues that he was
hired by the CIA not to be guardian of the world, but to be a guardian of the
American people, and that our foreign policy should be designed to protect
Americans first. This is exactly what Mearsheimer and Walt say we have
abdicated.
Hardly an anti-Semitic view,
and these well-credentialed academics have gone to great lengths to defuse any
accusations of personal animus toward Israel.
"In its basic
operations, the Israel Lobby is no different from the farm lobby, steel or
textile workers' union, or other ethnic lobbies," they write in the London
Review of Books. "There is nothing improper about American Jews and their
Christian allies attempting to sway U.S. policy; the Lobby's activities are not
a conspiracy of the sort depicted in tracts like the Protocols of the Elders
of Zion."
Their words are falling on
deaf ears in certain quarters. A number of potential forums for discussion with
the authors have turned down or canceled events. According to the New York
Times, these include the Center for the Humanities at the Graduate Center at
the City University of New York, the Chicago Council on Global Affairs, a
Jewish cultural center in Washington, and three organizations in Chicago.
This would seem only to
strengthen their argument.
Michael Smerconish's column appears on Thursdays in the
Daily News and on Sundays in Currents. Michael can be heard from 5:30 to 9 a.m.
weekdays on "The Big Talker," WPHT-AM (1210). Contact him via the Web
at http://www.mastalk.com.