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Prominent Obama endorser critcizes "Israel Lobby"
American Thinker ^ | August 24, 2008 | Ed Laskey

Posted on 08/24/2008 11:22:49 AM PDT by SJackson

Prominent Obama endorser critcizes "Israel Lobby"

http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2008/08/prominent_obama_endorser_critc.html
 
Ed Lasky
 Andrew Bacevich's writes a somewhat disturbing op-ed in today's Los Angeles Times . He asserts that the next President-whoever he may be-will be probably disappoint his followers because his power to bring change is constricted by various interest groups. Bacevich, in particular, writes that the "the Israel lobby will oppose attempts to chart a new course in the Middle East".
Aside from the fact that American supporters of Israel-which include millions of Christians-have long sought peace in the region, his comments regarding the "Israel lobby" might cause some qualms-since he was one of the first prominent conservative endorsers of Barack Obama.

His views of a malignant, all-powerful "Israel lobby" conjures up fevered images that increasingly seem to have emerged from the swampland of conspiracy theorists to find a place among well-known academicians (Stephen Walt, John Mearsheimer), foreign policy experts (Zbigniew Brzezinski-also a supporter of Barack Obama) and powerful donors to politicians (George Soros-an early supporter of Barack Obama, who is wielding his empire of 527 and 501 c4 groups to aid him during his run for the Presidency).
Andrew Bacevich's endorsement of Barack Obama , which he neglects to mention in his op-ed, can be found here (published in Pat Buchanan's fiercely anti-Israel, anti-"Israel Lobby" magazine The American Conservative, no less). Bachevich positions Madeleine Albright and Warren Christopher as leaders of the foreign policy team (the "national security group") which is a stretch. The national security group was formed as an ad hoc group to burnish Barack Obama's credibility on the campaign trail.
Susan Rice, Tony Lake (who Bacevich does mention), Richard Holbrooke, Richard Danzig and others are much more likely to guide foreign policy. Samantha Power, previously his top foreign adviser until she "resigned" for insulting Hillary Clinton, has also stated at different times recently that she will most likely serve in an Obama Adminsitration  The Economist Magazine recently predicted Power will serve in a powerful position in an Obama administration 
Samanatha Power has been a harsh critic of America's support for Israel and has made disparaging remarks about Israelis and complained about criticism from American Jews, as well. She has also criticized special interest groups in America who "dictate" the way in which the "natonal interest is defined and pursued" and recommended the next President may need to take steps to eliminate aid to Israel and direct it to "Palestine" even if this means "alienating a domestic constituency of tremendous political and financial import"


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2008; bacevich; endorsement; foreignpolicy; islam; israellobby; jewishcabal; jewishvote; mohammedanism; obama
LA Times editorial

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/opinion/la-oe-bacevich24-2008aug24,0,1685703.storyThe next president will disappoint you

Needless to say the author takes a President Obama as a given, and posits the blame for his foreign policy failures, those are given too, on the Israel lobby and the military industrial complex. Also, the endorsement.

The Right Choice?      PDF

The conservative case for Barack Obama

By Andrew J. Bacevich

Barack Obama is no conservative. Yet if he wins the Democratic nomination, come November principled conservatives may well find themselves voting for the senator from Illinois. Given the alternatives—and the state of the conservative movement—they could do worse.

Granted, when it comes to defining exactly what authentic conservatism entails, considerable disagreement exists even (or especially) among conservatives themselves. My own definition emphasizes the following:

Accept that definition and it quickly becomes apparent that the Republican Party does not represent conservative principles. The conservative ascendancy that began with the election of Ronald Reagan has been largely an illusion. During the period since 1980, certain faux conservatives—especially those in the service of Big Business and Big Empire—have prospered. But conservatism as such has not.

The presidency of George W. Bush illustrates the point. In 2001, President Bush took command of a massive, inefficient federal bureaucracy. Since then, he has substantially increased the size of that apparatus, which during his tenure has displayed breathtaking ineptitude both at home and abroad. Over the course of Bush’s two terms in office, federal spending has increased 50 percent to $3 trillion per year. Disregarding any obligation to balance the budget, Bush has allowed the national debt to balloon from $5.7 to $9.4 trillion. Worse, under the guise of keeping Americans “safe,” he has arrogated to the executive branch unprecedented powers, thereby subverting the Constitution. Whatever else may be said about this record of achievement, it does not accord with conservative principles.

As with every Republican leader since Reagan, President Bush has routinely expressed his support for traditional values. He portrays himself as pro-life and pro-family. He offers testimonials to old-fashioned civic virtues. Yet apart from sporting an American flag lapel-pin, he has done little to promote these values. If anything, the reverse is true. In the defining moment of his presidency, rather than summoning Americans to rally to their country, he validated conspicuous consumption as the core function of 21st-century citizenship.

Should conservatives hold President Bush accountable for the nation’s cultural crisis? Of course not. The pursuit of instant gratification, the compulsion to accumulate, and the exaltation of celebrity that have become central to the American way of life predate this administration and derive from forces that lie far beyond the control of any president. Yet conservatives should fault the president and his party for pretending that they are seriously committed to curbing or reversing such tendencies. They might also blame themselves for failing to see the GOP’s cultural agenda as contrived and cynical.

Finally, there is President Bush’s misguided approach to foreign policy, based on expectations of deploying American military might to eliminate tyranny, transform the Greater Middle East, and expunge evil from the face of the earth. The result has been the very inverse of conservatism. For Bush, in the wake of 9/11, ideology supplanted statecraft. As a result, his administration has squandered American lives and treasure in the pursuit of objectives that make little strategic sense.

For conservatives to hope the election of yet another Republican will set things right is surely in vain. To believe that President John McCain will reduce the scope and intrusiveness of federal authority, cut the imperial presidency down to size, and put the government on a pay-as-you-go basis is to succumb to a great delusion. The Republican establishment may maintain the pretense of opposing Big Government, but pretense it is.

Social conservatives counting on McCain to return the nation to the path of righteousness are kidding themselves. Within this camp, abortion has long been the flagship issue. Yet only a naïf would believe that today’s Republican Party has any real interest in overturning Roe v. Wade or that doing so now would contribute in any meaningful way to the restoration of “family values.” GOP support for such values is akin to the Democratic Party’s professed devotion to the “working poor”: each is a ploy to get votes, trotted out seasonally, quickly forgotten once the polls close.

Above all, conservatives who think that a McCain presidency would restore a sense of realism and prudence to U.S. foreign policy are setting themselves up for disappointment. On this score, we should take the senator at his word: his commitment to continuing the most disastrous of President Bush’s misadventures is irrevocable. McCain is determined to remain in Iraq as long as it takes. He is the candidate of the War Party. The election of John McCain would provide a new lease on life to American militarism, while perpetuating the U.S. penchant for global interventionism marketed under the guise of liberation.

The essential point is this: conservatives intent on voting in November for a candidate who shares their views might as well plan on spending Election Day at home. The Republican Party of Bush, Cheney, and McCain no longer accommodates such a candidate.

So why consider Obama? For one reason only: because this liberal Democrat has promised to end the U.S. combat role in Iraq. Contained within that promise, if fulfilled, lies some modest prospect of a conservative revival.

To appreciate that possibility requires seeing the Iraq War in perspective. As an episode in modern military history, Iraq qualifies at best as a very small war. Yet the ripples from this small war will extend far into the future, with remembrance of the event likely to have greater significance than the event itself. How Americans choose to incorporate Iraq into the nation’s historical narrative will either affirm our post-Cold War trajectory toward empire or create opportunities to set a saner course.

The neoconservatives understand this. If history renders a negative verdict on Iraq, that judgment will discredit the doctrine of preventive war. The “freedom agenda” will command as much authority as the domino theory. Advocates of “World War IV” will be treated with the derision they deserve. The claim that open-ended “global war” offers the proper antidote to Islamic radicalism will become subject to long overdue reconsideration.

Give the neocons this much: they appreciate the stakes. This explains the intensity with which they proclaim that, even with the fighting in Iraq entering its sixth year, we are now “winning”—as if war were an athletic contest in which nothing matters except the final score. The neoconservatives brazenly ignore or minimize all that we have flung away in lives, dollars, political influence, moral standing, and lost opportunities. They have to: once acknowledged, those costs make the folly of the entire neoconservative project apparent. All those confident manifestos calling for the United States to liberate the world’s oppressed, exercise benign global hegemony, and extend forever the “unipolar moment” end up getting filed under dumb ideas.

Yet history’s judgment of the Iraq War will affect matters well beyond the realm of foreign policy. As was true over 40 years ago when the issue was Vietnam, how we remember Iraq will have large political and even cultural implications.

As part of the larger global war on terrorism, Iraq has provided a pretext for expanding further the already bloated prerogatives of the presidency. To see the Iraq War as anything but misguided, unnecessary, and an abject failure is to play into the hands of the fear-mongers who insist that when it comes to national security all Americans (members of Congress included) should defer to the judgment of the executive branch. Only the president, we are told, can “keep us safe.” Seeing the war as the debacle it has become refutes that notion and provides a first step toward restoring a semblance of balance among the three branches of government.

Above all, there is this: the Iraq War represents the ultimate manifestation of the American expectation that the exercise of power abroad offers a corrective to whatever ailments afflict us at home. Rather than setting our own house in order, we insist on the world accommodating itself to our requirements. The problem is not that we are profligate or self-absorbed; it is that others are obstinate and bigoted. Therefore, they must change so that our own habits will remain beyond scrutiny.

Of all the obstacles to a revival of genuine conservatism, this absence of self-awareness constitutes the greatest. As long as we refuse to see ourselves as we really are, the status quo will persist, and conservative values will continue to be marginalized. Here, too, recognition that the Iraq War has been a fool’s errand—that cheap oil, the essential lubricant of the American way of life, is gone for good—may have a salutary effect. Acknowledging failure just might open the door to self-reflection.

None of these concerns number among those that inspired Barack Obama’s run for the White House. When it comes to foreign policy, Obama’s habit of spouting internationalist bromides suggests little affinity for serious realism. His views are those of a conventional liberal. Nor has Obama expressed any interest in shrinking the presidency to its pre-imperial proportions. He does not cite Calvin Coolidge among his role models. And however inspiring, Obama’s speeches are unlikely to make much of a dent in the culture. The next generation will continue to take its cues from Hollywood rather than from the Oval Office.

Yet if Obama does become the nation’s 44th president, his election will constitute something approaching a definitive judgment of the Iraq War. As such, his ascent to the presidency will implicitly call into question the habits and expectations that propelled the United States into that war in the first place. Matters hitherto consigned to the political margin will become subject to close examination. Here, rather than in Obama’s age or race, lies the possibility of his being a truly transformative presidency.

Whether conservatives will be able to seize the opportunities created by his ascent remains to be seen. Theirs will not be the only ideas on offer. A repudiation of the Iraq War and all that it signifies will rejuvenate the far Left as well. In the ensuing clash of visions, there is no guaranteeing that the conservative critique will prevail.

But this much we can say for certain: electing John McCain guarantees the perpetuation of war. The nation’s heedless march toward empire will continue. So, too, inevitably, will its embrace of Leviathan. Whether snoozing in front of their TVs or cheering on the troops, the American people will remain oblivious to the fate that awaits them.

For conservatives, Obama represents a sliver of hope. McCain represents none at all. The choice turns out to be an easy one.  

1 posted on 08/24/2008 11:22:51 AM PDT by SJackson
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To: dennisw; Cachelot; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; Lent; GregB; ..
If you'd like to be on this middle east/political ping list, please FR mail me.

High Volume. Articles on Israel can also be found by clicking on the Topic or Keyword Israel. or WOT [War on Terror]

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2 posted on 08/24/2008 11:28:12 AM PDT by SJackson (as a black man, you know, Barack can get shot going to the gas station, Michelle O)
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To: SJackson

The first step to charting a new course in the Middle East is to tell the Israel haters to shut up.


3 posted on 08/24/2008 11:45:47 AM PDT by popdonnelly (Boycott Washington D.C. until they allow gun ownership)
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To: SJackson
Biden hearts Iran:
http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/4610

... for the sake of sanctions and the unequivocal denial of any form of support to terrorists and terrorist supporters – the amendment said, “the United States should designate the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps as a foreign terrorist organization … and place the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps on the list of Specially Designated Global Terrorists.”

... Nevertheless, when it came time to vote on the measure, Biden said, “no.” Instead, he went on – in forthcoming speeches and blustering – to threaten Pres. George Bush with impeachment if the president unilaterally attacked Iran.

Why, Joe, why?

The Obama knows.

4 posted on 08/24/2008 11:51:29 AM PDT by bvw
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To: popdonnelly

The day we turn against Israel by electing a Pro-palestinian candidate, then you had better look up for JESUS IS COMING to fight for ISRAEL. Jesus was NOT a black man, for he was a JEW, neither black nor white...and he is coming back soon for the battle of ARMEGEDDON, and that is when all nations draw up against Israel...Anyone on the other side is in real trouble! WE can’t change God, for the only person we can change is ourselves. Just because people want God to be their idea of him, it isn’t going to move the creator one iota! God is peace, but he is also war, and many times in Bible he told his people to destroy EVERYTHING that belonged to the enemy. In the New Testament, there is place a where even JESUS told the disciples to sell their cloaks and buy a SWORD. LUKE 22:36-38...God said “I am the same yesterday, today and forever.”
Vote for Obama, not NO but Hell NO,.


5 posted on 08/24/2008 12:01:09 PM PDT by Kackikat ( Without National Security all other issues are mute points; chaos ensues.))
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To: SJackson

Robert Malley, former Hussein foreign policy advisor.

Robert Malley grew up in France, where his Egyptian-born father, Simon Malley, and New York raised mother, Barbara (Silverstein) Malley, were radical publishers of a controversial magazine about Africa and the so-called Third World. Malley’s parents were rabidly anti-Israel and counted Yasir Arafat as a personal friend. Indeed, Arafat was among those “leaders” (for want of a better word) who intervened with the French government to readmit the Malley family to France after they had been expelled for their radical activities.

That is, while in the Clinton administration Malley dealt directly with Palestinian matters, and with Yasir Arafat himself, despite having a huge and hidden conflict of interest: close ties between his family and Yasir Arafat.

Well, hidden from the public – when questioned about it in 2001, Dennis Ross, Clinton’s senior Middle East adviser, said that the Clinton administration knew all about Malley’s past.

While CAMERA did not publish all the facts at the time, we did mention the ties between Malley and Arafat in an article in 2005.

more.....

http://www.camera.org/index.asp?x_context=8&x_nameinnews=88&x_article=1437


6 posted on 08/24/2008 12:09:52 PM PDT by roses of sharon ((Who sent Barack Hussein Obama?))
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To: SJackson

This is so seriously disturbing for Jewish people.

What I don’t get though is this:

Obama knows he’s going to get the Muslim vote and the vote of people who support Palestine. They’re not going to vote for McCain anyway.

So why doesn’t he put a muzzle on this woman and the other people who keep spouting off? Is he trying to lose the election? That’s what’s so puzzling to me, guys. He could tell his advisors to shut the hell up until after he gets electedm but he’s NOT doing it. That’s what really puzzling and also very DISTURBING.

I will say though that I’m glad this is still surfacing now, so at least American Jews can know that if they help elect this guy, they should have at least seen it coming.


7 posted on 08/24/2008 12:34:58 PM PDT by LiberalsSpendYourMoney (Liberalism is a tax on humanity)
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To: Kackikat; popdonnelly

My comments were intended for S Jackson, and not popdonnelly...my apologies.


8 posted on 08/24/2008 4:46:08 PM PDT by Kackikat ( Without National Security all other issues are mute points; chaos ensues.))
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To: SJackson
Hmmm...wonder why they didn't mention Obama's New Foreign Policy Advisor Daniel Kurtzer, another Israel hater.

"Possibly more than any other U.S. State Department official, Kurtzer has been instrumental in promoting the goals of the Palestinians and in raising their afflictions to the center of the U.S. policymakers' agenda," the paper stated. Kurtzer first rose to prominence in 1988 when, as a State Department adviser, he counseled the Reagan administration to recognize the Palestine Liberation Organization led by Yasser Arafat. The PLO had carried out scores of anti-Western attacks, but in the late '80s Arafat claimed to have renounced violence. In 1988, Kurtzer was noted as the principal author of a major policy speech by then-Secretary of State George Shultz in which the U.S. government first recognized the "legitimate rights" of the Palestinians.

More at:

Obama adviser: Divide Jerusalem!

Obama adviser travels to Syria

9 posted on 08/25/2008 6:41:49 AM PDT by ravingnutter
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To: ravingnutter
Hmmm...wonder why they didn't mention Obama's New Foreign Policy Advisor Daniel Kurtzer, another Israel hater.

Giuliani was just attacking Kurtzer the other day for negotiating with Assad when he was in Syria four months ago.

10 posted on 08/25/2008 7:26:35 AM PDT by SJackson (as a black man, you know, Barack can get shot going to the gas station, Michelle O)
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To: SJackson

Bacevich is a conservative Cindy Sheehan. Since his son died, he has been focused on making sure that those who killed his son win.


11 posted on 08/25/2008 10:45:10 AM PDT by rmlew (NYARLATHOTEP / BIDEN'08 . If you don't believe me check out the first's wikipedia page.)
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