Israel's
International Conspiracy
Nearly
every western country has an Israel lobby
FEBRUARY 9, 2016
The Unz RevIew: an alternative media selection
Swedish Foreign
Minister Margot Wallstrom recently suggested an inquiry into a surge in
Israel’s reported extra-judicial killing of Palestinian demonstrators after
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called for a harsh
response and told
his police and soldiers that those opposed to the continued occupation of the
West Bank were “terrorists.” Almost immediately, the Israeli government
denounced Wallstrom as engaging in “political stupidity,” banning her from
travel to Israel, while one newspaper close to the government suggested that she might be assassinated, as
fellow Swede Count Folke Bernadotte was by Jewish militants in 1948, because
anti-Semitism appears to be in the Swedish DNA.
All of that outrage and personal ridicule is pro forma for an
Israeli government that reflexively smears and denigrates any and all critics,
but the more interesting epilogue was the unanticipated discovery by
the Swedish and international media that Wallstrom has not been paying the full
rent on the subsidized government apartment that she occupies. The revelation
follows a familiar pattern, where critics of Israel suddenly find themselves
being discredited for something completely unrelated to the Middle East.
President George H. W. Bush (the good Bush) suffered a similar come to Jesus
moment in 1991 when he went on national television to denounce the pressure
tactics of the Israel lobby. The Israeli government was demanding U.S. Treasury
backed loans to construct illegal settlements. President Bush, who was running
for reelection and far ahead in the opinion polls, suddenly was confronted by a well-funded and organized
opposition raising doubts about him and his record. And President Bush was not
reelected, presumably learning along the way that one does not trifle with the
Israel Lobby, to be replaced by the enthusiastically Zionist Bill Clinton.
United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is also wondering about Israel’s alleged commitment to
peace. On Tuesday he said “it was human nature to react to occupation,”
following up with a comment on Wednesday regarding Israel’s “stifling”
occupation of Palestine. Netanyahu reacted with his usual over the top
rhetoric, stating that Ban “was encouraging terror.” One might also anticipate,
as in the case of Wallstrom, a well-orchestrated media blitz questioning Ban’s motives or explaining
how he has always been a closet anti-Semite. It is par for the course and fully
expected when one criticizes Israel.
Indeed, it is a global phenomenon. Wherever one goes – Western
Europe, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the United States – there is a
well-organized and funded lobby ready, willing and able to go to war to protect
Israel. Most of the organizations involved take at least some direction from
officials in Tel Aviv. Many of them even cooperate fully with the Israeli
government, its parastatal organizations and faux-NGOs like the lawfare center
Shurat HaDin. Their goal is to spread propaganda and influence the public in
their respective countries of residence to either hew to the line coming out of
Tel Aviv or to confuse the narrative and stifle debate when potential Israeli
crimes are being discussed.
Israel’s diaspora allies are backed up by a formidable
government organized machine that spews out disinformation and muddies the
waters whenever critics surface. The Israeli Foreign Ministry has a corps of
paid “volunteers” who monitor websites worldwide and
take remedial action and there is a similar group working out of the Prime
Minister’s office. That is why any negative story appearing in the U.S. about
Israel is immediately inundated with pro-Israel comments, many of which make
exactly the same coordinated points while exhibiting the same somewhat less
than perfect English. On sites like Yahoo they are actually able to suppress
unwelcome comments by flooding the site with “Dislike” responses. If a comment
receives a large number of dislikes, it is automatically blocked or removed.
The sayanim,
local Jews in their countries of residence, are essential to this process,
having been alerted by emails from the Israeli Foreign Ministry about what to
do and say. The reality is that Israel has lost the war of public opinion based
on its own actions, which are becoming more and more repressive and even
inhumane and so are difficult to explain. That means that the narrative has to
be shifted by Israel’s friends through subterfuge and the corruption of the
information process in each country. In some places the key media and political
players who are engaged in the process can simply be bought. In other places
they can be intimidated or pressured into taking positions that are neither in
their own countries’ interests nor morally acceptable. In large countries like
the United States, Britain and France a combination of friendly suasion and
coercive elements often come together.
In all cases, the objective is the same: to repress or
misrepresent any criticism of Israel and to block any initiatives that might be
taken that would do damage either to the Israeli economy or to the country’s
perceived standing in the world. In some countries Israel’s advocates work
right out in the open and are highly successful in implementing policies that
often remain largely hidden but that can be discerned as long as one knows what
to look for.
Recent Israel Lobby activity in the United States has included
legislation at state levels to make illegal divestment from Israel or to
promote boycott of Israeli products. A trade pact with Europe will reportedly
include language requiring the United States to take retaliatory action if any
European country tries to boycott Israel, to include the West Bank settlements,
which the empowering legislation regards as part of Israel proper.
Israel is also working to create a mechanism for global censorship of the internet to ban “incitement,”
which clearly is a euphemism for material that is critical of its policies.
Recently Facebook has begun to delete from its site any “hate speech” and
“terrorism” related material but what has not been widely noted is that the
apparent restrictions also have involved sites critical of Israel including Christians United for
Peace.
Many prominent critics of the American Israel Political Action
Committee (AIPAC) are unaware that AIPAC exists in various forms in a number of
other countries. BICOM , the Britain Israel Communications
and Research Centre, is located in London. The French equivalent is the Conseil
Representatif des Institutions Juives de France(CRIF). In Canada there is a Center for Israel and Jewish
Affairs (CIJA) , in
Australia a Zionist Federation of Australia and in New Zealand a Zionist Federation of New Zealand .
While AIPAC is specifically focused on the U.S.-Israel
relationship, its counterparts in Europe often deal with a whole range of issues
that they define as Jewish, but protecting Israel is always part of their
agenda, particularly for those groups that label themselves as Zionist. The
political power and financial muscle of the groups gives them access to
government far beyond the actual numbers of their supporters. In France this
has led to the legislation of hate crimes that de facto exist to protect Jews that have been also been interpreted
as limitations on one’s ability to criticize Israel. In its most recent test, a
French court declared that a peaceful protest promoting Boycott,
Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) directed against Israel was illegal.
Many believe that France now has less free speech than any other
European country. Recently, the alleged humor magazine Charlie Hebdo, ran a revolting cartoonshowing
the little Syrian boy Alan Kurdi who drowned in Turkey last summer as all grown
up and sexually assaulting a woman in Germany. There was considerable outrage
throughout the world but no sign that the French government will do anything to
prosecute the magazines since it was Muslims who were being ridiculed. Charlie
Hebdo frequently insults Muslims (and also Christians) but rarely lampoons Jews.
In Britain, Jewish organizations uniquely are allowed to patrol heavily Jewish neighborhoods in
police-like uniforms while driving police type vehicles and there have been
reports of their threatening Muslims who enter the areas. Prime Minister David
Cameron’s government, which is responsive to a Conservative Friends of Israel
lobbying group, has also done its part to create official barriers to any
spread of the BDS movement. It is proposing legislation that will enable it to
overrule decisions by local government councils that seek to cut business or
investment ties with Israel and, more particularly, Israeli settlements, under
the pretext that such action interferes with the conduct of foreign affairs.
The British government is also considering its
own brand of hate speech legislation, banning from social media any commentary that
is considered to be anti-Semitic, which will almost certainly extend to
criticism of Israel.
Canada’s government has also threatened to use hate speech laws to block
criticism of Israel and forbid BDS related activity. Australia meanwhile, has ceased referringto
east Jerusalem as “occupied” and is apparently leaning towards similar
“non-pejorative” language relating to the militarized occupation of the West
Bank, preferring the neocon favored dodge “disputed.” New Zealand has proposed Israeli-Palestinian peace talks that
specifically demands that participants “refrain from referring a situation…to
the International Criminal Court,” which would effectively decriminalize war
crimes committed by both sides during the two recent invasions of Gaza. As a
United Nations investigation determined that Israel wasdisproportionately
responsible for
what did occur, the proposal eliminates accountability and is effectively a get
out of jail free card for some Israeli government officials.
And so it goes. Criticize Israel and there will be a comeuppance
by virtue of a highly developed international system that relies on government
direction as well as volunteer supporters who are able to shape both the media
message and the political response. Accepting that as a given, I suppose one
should be proud of being called an anti-Semite every time the label is
misapplied to stifle dissent, but it all sadly reflects a lowering of the
discussion to a dirt level. This might just be because there is no justification for Israeli behavior. The fact is that
in terms of systematic human rights violations Israel is something beyond an
apartheid state, frequently engaging in open racism and, in the opinion of many
observers, crimes against humanity. It is furthermore a persistent source of
instability in the Middle East and even beyond.
Israel is a liability to the United States and to the European
nations that it has successfully manipulated into acquiescence regarding its
bad behavior. When AIPAC and its overseas clones act for Israel the host
nations in which these organizations exist should recognize exactly what is
taking place. If Israel is truly first in their hearts and minds that is
perfectly acceptable but its advocates should perhaps consider moving there and
letting the rest of us be. Would that be too much to ask?
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario