Posted on 03/02/2004 1:54:29 PM PST by NutCrackerBoy
It is being claimed, ever more widely, that neocon policies are determined by the advantages they bring, manifest or putative, to the State of Israel. Patrick Buchanan, in the current American Conservative, believes this ardently, while the most quoted advocates of neocon militancy, Richard Perle and David Frum, go further than merely to deny that neoconservatism is an Israel First world view. They insist that criticism of neocon policies is, at heart, anti-Semitic.
Richard Perle, co-author with Frum of The End of Evil, old acquaintances remember as being for many years on the public scene as an adamant opponent of Soviet wiles and analyst of the perils of complacent coexistence. Perle's specialty was national defense, and he was there year after year to point out, for instance, that the disarmament fetishists played into the hands of Soviet opportunists. If we unilaterally stopped testing nuclear weapons, we risked Soviet technical advantage. If we stopped deploying theater weapons in Europe, we were threatened by the Soviets' development of their SS-20 missiles and the corresponding advantages in leverage over Western Europe.
It is reasonable to say that Perle's focus on the Communist threat was central to his devising of corollary policies. It is charged now, by e.g. Buchanan, that that focus is now on Israel. That Perle and co-author David Frum rise in the morning with a map of Israel in front of them and decide what ideas, people, countries to encourage, which to discourage, based on their bearing on Israel.
Now these acts of analytical reductionism are in part owing to political realities. Pat Buchanan, who has an ear for the trenchant way of saying things, wrote ten years ago that Congress had become the "Amen corner" for pro-Israel policies. In this space, I once jocularly proposed that Israel be annexed as the 51st state, which would give us the advantage of participating in the formulation of Israeli policies which we would then automatically endorse.
Nobody who knows his way around questions the political leverage of the Jewish vote in critical states or denies the importance of Jewish patronage of favored candidates and office holders.
But the transposition of this into the position that U.S. policies are formulated because they bear directly on Israeli interests is invention. The proposal to go to war against Iraq was, concertedly, advocated in one form or another by Richard Perle. But that policy proceeded from the loins of Donald Rumsfeld and George Bush after the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington, and was animated by the reiterated U.S. interest in the stability of the Near East. The Bush administration arrived at the conviction that the sepsis of which the 9/11 attack was a single, lethal thrust was a variant of the Islamic fundamentalism that had taken over the country of Afghanistan and almost certainly was festering in Iraq. Which was governed by a totalist dictator who had already used weapons of mass destruction and was accumulating an inventory for strikes against his neighbors and nations of the west.
Israel, by geographical proximity, would have been an obvious target of Saddam Hussein's belligerence, but not necessarily the exclusive target of it. Saddam Hussein, in the past, had attacked not Israel but Kuwait, and before that, Iran.
The hostility to Israel on the part of the Muslim community is a fact of life, but to say that the war against Iraq bolstered Israel's security is not to say that we went to war in Iraq in order to bolster Israel's security.
There was no distinctive pressure, in 2003, to send U.S. Marines to Iraq in order to destroy a regime hostile to the State of Israel. And associates of the administration would probably confess, if out of earshot, that they would not have recommended the war on Iraq except for their conviction that it was becoming a storehouse of weaponry which Saddam was entirely capable of using, whether against Kurds, Kuwaitis, Iranians, or Israelis.
The neocon movement, it is being suggested, is motivated by concern for Israel but, more, by its affinity for the Likud Party of General Sharon, which represents militant and, many believe, shortsighted policies, contrasting with policies advocated by many Israelis, including past Israeli leaders, Ehud Barak prominent among them.
It's an unreasonable polarization of opinion: 1) everything a neocon advocates is animated by a concern for Israel, and, 2) every criticism of neocon policy is animated by anti-Semitism. That is straitened thought, and should be resisted.
That's pretty funny.
This is exactly what the Bush Administration brought upon itself by allowing a jack@ss like Richard Perle to have any input whatsoever in the Iraq issue -- particularly in that nebulous, mysterious role as an "unpaid advisor" to the Pentagon.
. . . the most quoted advocates of neocon militancy, Richard Perle and David Frum, go further than merely to deny that neoconservatism is an Israel First world view. They insist that criticism of neocon policies is, at heart, anti-Semitic.
Mr. Perle and Mr. Frum, meet Abe Foxman.
Yeah, the sheer chutzpah of actually listening to the advice of someone advocating a strong military and a vigorous, pro-active approach to national defense.
you wouldn't see any Canadian government doing such a silly thing, eh?
Why shouldn't Buchanan believe this ardently, many of the leading neocons including Perle, Wolfowitz, Feith, Ledeen, and Bryen have all been investigated in the past for leaking classified informatiom to Israel.
I don't believe you, and furthermore I don't believe you can substantiate this assertion through any credible source.
You wouldn't see any Canadian government doing such a silly thing, eh?
I wouldn't know about that -- I'm not a Canadian.
/sarcasm off/
Perle's past ic checkered only in the eyes of the lunatic fringe on the left and on the right.
I also believe He chose America to carry goodness into the world, as our history well illustrates.
I believe if we cease to do these things, God will turn against us, as He did at Sodom, where Lot vainly tried to convince Him there was some good left there too.
Counterpunch!?
I ask for a credible source and you cite COUNTERPUNCH!?
My advice to you is to get (a) a clue and (b) a life.
While he was serving in the Reagan administration in the 1980s, his most ardent critic was Republican Senator Jeremiah Denton of Alabama, a retired Navy admiral (the only former Navy admiral ever to be elected to the U.S. Senate, I believe) whose seven years in a North Vietnam POW camp are chronicled in his autobiography When Hell was in Session.
After doing some research on Richard Perle's career, I've speculated that he was functioning in a capacity as an "unpaid advisor" to the U.S. Defense Department because there was no way in hell he could obtain the security clearances required for an appointed position at the Pentagon. Think about the implications of that one for a minute or two.
You can call me whatever the hell you want, but I am certainly not a part of any "lunatic fringe."
Perle was caught by an FBI wiretap on the Israeli Embassy diclosing classified information supplied by someone on the NSC. Why he was given a slap on the wrist and never prosecuted for this crime is beyond me.
Unless you have a security clearence yourself there's no way you could have access to any information which would allow you to come to any reasonably informed conclusion.
And you certainly aren't going to get any reliable information from the Internet.
* Defense Department Distinguished Service Medal
* Navy Cross
* Navy Distinguished Service Medal
* Silver Star (awarded three times)
* Bronze Star (awarded five times)
* Distinguished Flying Cross
* Air Medal (awarded twice)
* Purple Hearts (two)
* Combat Action Ribbon
* Navy Unit Commendation
Now compare this to the combined military credentials for all those @ssholes Westerfield listed in Post #7.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.