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Top White House posts go to Jews

 
 
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 11:52 am
Quote:
http://static.jpost.com/images/2004/site/jplogo.230.gif

Top White House posts go to Jews

By NATHAN GUTTMAN
Washington


After appointing Joshua Bolten to be the White House chief of staff, US President George W. Bush nominated another Jewish staffer, Joel Kaplan, to serve as Bolten's deputy, putting him in charge of the daily policy planning.

The fact that White House policy is now in the hands of two Jews is not seen as significant by activists in the American Jewish community.

"He is simply appointing the best people for the job," said Nathan Diament, who heads the Washington office of the Orthodox Union. Another Jewish activist added that he "wouldn't read too much into it."

Bolten, who first served as head of the Office of Management and Budget, was the first Jewish member of Bush's cabinet. Ever since Bush took office, there has been a custom of opening cabinet meetings with a brief prayer and so, before his first cabinet meeting, Bolten's assistant contacted Diament and asked for help in finding a Jewish prayer for the security and well-being of the cabinet members. The Orthodox Union provided him with the text in English and in Hebrew and Bolten read it aloud at the next cabinet meeting.

Bolten and Kaplan will probably be the most prominent Jewish members of the Bush administration, but not the only ones. Apart from Bolten, there is another Jewish cabinet member, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, and there are other Jewish senior staff members, including Deputy National Security Adviser Elliott Abrams and White House staffer Jay Lefkowitz.

In the past year, several Jews who were holding senior posts in the administration have left, among them deputy secretary of defense Paul Wolfowitz, undersecretary of defense Doug Feith, Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff Lewis "Scooter" Libby and political adviser Ken Mehlman, who now heads the Republican National Committee.

Yet the policy of the administration has little to do with the religious beliefs of the staffers. "The president sets the policy goals and it is now the job of Josh [Bolten] and Joel [Kaplan] to help achieve these goals," said Noam Neusner, who served as the liaison to the Jewish community in Bush's White House from 2002-2005.

Other Jewish activists, both Republican and Democrat, agree that the nomination of Bolten and Kaplan have no affect on policy.

For Republicans, there is still a feeling that Bush does not receive the credit he deserves from the Jewish community. "We have Israel's best friend and it still hasn't changed the way the Jewish community sees him," said Fred Zeidman, a close friend of Bush and chairman of the National Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington. "I keep hoping that one day our community will see the light and support President Bush."

Neusner recalled that in the Bush White House there was always great respect for religious practices of the staffers and predicted that this policy would remain now that Bolten is running its daily operations.

One tradition likely to go on is the reading of the Purim megilla led by Chabad Rabbi Levi Shemtov, which attracts many of the Jewish staffers.

The relatively small number of Jews in Bush's cabinet became an issue largely due to the comparison with his predecessor, Bill Clinton. The former administration had such Jewish cabinet members as Robert Reich, Robert Rubin, Sandy Berger, Lawrence Summers and Madeline Albright and State Department officials Dennis Ross, Martin Indyk and Aaron Miller.

"I don't support this idea of bean counting," said Jay Footlik, who was Clinton's liaison to the Jewish community. He sees the fact that the former administration had many Jewish members as significant to the policy the president had in regard to the Jewish community. According to him, the reason Jews were so visible in Clinton's administration was merely a result of the community being "drawn to public involvement and political activity."

jpost


Watch for the AIPAC case to disappear, and for Johanthan Pollard to be set free.
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Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 01:45 pm
Ah, the fragrant spring-time stench of antisemitic conspiracy obsession . . .
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freedom4free
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 01:48 pm
This country is largely controlled by a single dominant group, whose interests do not really coincide with America's.

We've already had a good taste of that with Wolfowitz and Perle etc. They got us into the Iraq mess largely to benefit (what else)Israel.
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 01:49 pm
Dig, dig, dig . . . graves usually go down six feet, so you've got a little way to go . . .
0 Replies
 
freedom4free
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 01:52 pm
Quote:
Dig, dig, dig . . . graves usually go down six feet..


Yeah, graves...

http://www.gamla.org.il/images/1999/nov/regan1.jpg

http://pnews.org/images/cof.jpg

Wonder who they died for ?
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 02:01 pm
Given your typical lunacy, righteous indignation ill becomes you.
0 Replies
 
freedom4free
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 02:05 pm
http://www.thejewishweek.com/img/logomain.gif

Iran-Israel Linkage By Bush Seen As Threat

Iran-Israel Linkage By Bush Seen As Threat
Jewish leaders warn of backlash as president cites Jewish state as rationale for possible strikes.
James D. Besser And Larry Cohler-Esses

President Bush is risking a backlash that could injure the Jewish community — and his own cause — by repeatedly citing Israel as his top rationale for possible U.S. military conflict with Iran, Jewish leaders and Middle East analysts warned this week.

Bush’s repeated, sometimes exclusive, focus on Israel could spark public fury against the Jewish state and Jews if U.S. military action is accompanied by skyrocketing gas prices, terrorism at home or fallen G.I.’s who might be seen as dying for Israel, some said. Others feared it could fracture the shaky international coalition Bush is striving to assemble to oppose Iran’s nuclear program by framing the threat as primarily to Israel rather than international stability.

Ambassador Edward Walker, a former U.S. envoy to Israel who now heads the Middle East Institute in Washington, termed Bush’s Israel focus “a terrible idea.”

“Just think about if gas prices go up to $7 a gallon as a result, and everybody is saying it’s because of Israel,” he said.

“I don’t believe it is in Israel’s best interests to have the American people going into a major military action, which is what we’re talking about in Iran, with significant implications on the home front in terms of terrorism and energy prices, and then having people blame Israel,” said Walker.

Malcolm Hoenlein, executive vice president of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, said “The linkage to Israel is not a good idea, because then the Iranians say, you see, it’s the Zionists driving this.

“As much as we appreciate it, the question is whether it’s beneficial to tie this to Israel,” said Hoenlein, whose organization functions as the Jewish community’s official umbrella group for speaking out on foreign policy issues.

Hoenlein pointed out that Iran is tied to terrorist groups such as Hezbollah, which operates in Lebanon and other countries. It also exercises influence over militias accused of atrocities in Iraq and aims to spread its influence throughout the Muslim world.

The danger of a nuclear-armed Iran “is a much greater one than just Israel,” said Hoenlein.

In recent days, there have been reports of extensive U.S. military planning, possibly for a bombing campaign against a variety of Iranian targets. The aim, say the reports, would be to halt or, at least set back, what Iran insists is a peaceful program to produce nuclear energy. The United States, Europe and other countries fear this merely masks a covert Iranian drive to develop nuclear weapons.

Faced with increasing public clamor about a possible military conflict, Bush has repeatedly taken note of the threat a nuclear Iran would pose to Israel. Indeed, Iran’s president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has repeatedly called for Israel’s destruction, most recently this week. On some occasions, President Bush has offered this as his sole rationale for confronting Iran.

In a March 20 speech in Cleveland, for example, Bush replied to a question about the influence of apocalyptic Christian theology on his policies with a long, rambling answer in which he raised the threat he saw from Iran and said, “Now that I’m on Iran … the threat from Iran is, of course, their stated objective to destroy our strong ally Israel. It’s a threat to world peace; it’s a threat, in essence, to a strong alliance. I made it clear, I’ll make it clear again, that we will use military might to protect our ally, Israel.”

Other administration leaders have brought Israel into center stage on Iran in a different way — suggesting strong U.S. action could be necessary to keep Israel from acting on its own.

“One of the concerns people have is that Israel might [attack Iran] without being asked,” said Vice President Dick Cheney in a February 2005 radio interview, “that if, in fact, the Israelis became convinced the Iranians had significant nuclear capability, given the fact that Iran has a stated policy that their objective is the destruction of Israel, the Israelis might well decide to act first and let the rest of the world worry about cleaning up the diplomatic mess afterwards.”

Asked why Bush has made Israel a focus, Walker said, “because he is not very attuned to the history of the situation and he has some really strange advisers who do not understand the broader implications of this, in terms of the vast majority of the American public.”

Rep. Gary Ackerman (D-L.I./Queens), a frequent administration critic, said Bush’s focus increases the likelihood of a backlash against Jews and Israel if a U.S.-led war on Iran turns sour.

“It’s a horrible thing to do, it’s dangerous,” he said. “If something goes wrong, it’s a setup to say we did it for Israel and not for America, and to blame the Jews.”

Asked if he thought that was President Bush’s intent, Ackerman said “I don’t believe in accidents and coincidences in this business. They choose their words very carefully. This is not the first time the president has said this, but now it looks like it’s their whole program.”

Ironically, Middle East analysts say Israel’s own public stand has, by and large, played down the threat that Bush is playing up.

“For past few years, the position of the Israeli government has been that Iran’s nuclear program was not an Israeli issue,” said Shai Feldman, director of Brandeis University’s Crown Center for Middle East studies. Under the leadership of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon from 2000, said Feldman, Israel stressed the problem was “an international issue, a challenge to international stability.”

Israel may have felt comfortable stepping back because the European countries and even Russia and China have cooperated with the United States on the issue in ways they did not in the lead-up to the War in Iraq, Feldman conceded. This may have allowed Israel to de-emphasize itself, he said.

“In terms of maintaining this kind of international support, to say Israel is a primary concern is extremely counterproductive,” Feldman said.

Furthermore, he explained, many—though not all—Israeli analysts do not see a nuclear Iran as the kind of “existential threat” that Bush depicts. For all its president’s rhetoric, many Israeli analysts view Iran’s record as “on the whole, quite risk averse” and see a rational actor that would remain very aware of Israel’s second-strike capability, he said.

“It’s not that the day after Iran gets the nuclear bomb they drop it on Tel-Aviv,” said Feldman. It is rather, the many “general geopolitical implications” of a nuclear Iran that concern Israel, he said.

“One is that it would lead other countries [in the region] to follow suit” with their own nuclear arms programs, he said. “Two is that an Iran equipped with nuclear weapons would throw its weight around the region to a much greater extent than is currently the case.”

Shoshana Bryen, special projects director for the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs (JINSA), agreed that the administration’s strong focus on Israel could undermine its already shaky efforts to build a broad international coalition to pressure and possibly fight Iran.

“It’s a perfectly reasonable response to the fact that Iran has threatened only two countries — the United States and Israel,” said Bryen, whose group promotes strong ties between the U.S. and Israeli military. “The problem is that doing that gives countries that would like an excuse for not acting on Iran an out.”

Ahmadinejad believes the more Washington focuses on Israel as a factor in the Iran debate, the more trouble it will have recruiting allies, she said.

David Harris, executive director of the American Jewish Committee, said he has already seen signs of a backlash against Jewish groups because of his group’s support for a tough stand against Iran’s nuclear program.

Harris’ group recently published an ad in The New York Times and the Financial Times headlined “A Nuclear Iran Threatens Us All,” showing a map with concentric rings delineating the current and projected ranges of Iranian missiles now deployed and under development.

“Our point is and remains that Iran is a global problem,” he said. “Israel is one target, but not the only one.”

But letters to the editor blasted the group and said the ad was proof of the destructive impact of the Jewish lobby, Harris said.

“So there is always the possibility of a backlash,” said Harris.

Harris said his group “welcomes and appreciates the administration’s expressed support for Israel. ... But we maintain this is a problem that goes far beyond Israel.”

Some Jewish leaders seem conflicted — pleased that the president is actively concerned about Israel’s security but uncertain about his motives.

“The fact that the president is saying, time and time again, that Israel is under our [defense] umbrella should be welcomed and encouraged,” said Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League. But Foxman said the president’s exact motives in linking Israel so closely to U.S. Iran aims are unclear.

“Is this a security umbrella on behalf of Israel? Is it meant as a message to Israel? Or to Iran? At this point nobody really knows its significance.”

Jewish leaders say that while many have pushed for a forceful U.S. stand against Iran, no one is actively promoting the military option. Even some hawkish groups caution that attacking Iran could have unintended and devastating consequences.

JINSA’s Bryen, for example, that a military strike with civilian casualties will probably “strengthen the regime.”

There are no simple options, she continued, “which may be why the president keeps raising the specter of Israel. Everybody is hoping for a magic bullet, whether it be an Israeli or a U.S. magic bullet.” n

http://www.thejewishweek.com/news/newscontent.php3?artid=12350

--------

"Jewish leaders warn of backlash as president cites Jewish state as rationale for possible strikes."
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 02:16 pm
Dig, dig, dig, F4F--no one on the right has any respect for you, and in no time at all, NO ONE here will have any respect for you. Which is no more than you deserve.
0 Replies
 
freedom4free
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 02:21 pm
Laughing I didn't come here for respect. Only to spread the bitter truth.

This is not a game, young people are dying for Israel.
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blueflame1
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 02:21 pm
Posting an article from the Jerusalem Post is hardly anti-Semitic. The people named in the article helped lie us into war and many wrote up the blueprint for that war years ago. In their blueprint they said a catastrophe on the order of a new Pearl Harbor would help sell their plans to America. They've acieved their objectives so far. Next in their blueprint is an attack on Iran. Funny these war criminals get to hide behind cries of anti-Semitism. And those who accuse Condi and Powell of helping lie us into war are racists? Bushie critics are anti-American? People like Max Clealand are with Saddam and bin Laden?
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 02:23 pm
It doesn't surprise me, BF, to see you defending your girlfriend here. You probably missed this:

Quote:
This country is largely controlled by a single dominant group, whose interests do not really coincide with America's.

We've already had a good taste of that with Wolfowitz and Perle etc. They got us into the Iraq mess largely to benefit (what else)Israel.


Now go look-up antisemitism.
0 Replies
 
freedom4free
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 02:28 pm
Can we criticize Israel without being labeled anti-Semitic?

The shape of what's to come
By Banks Albach
Date: 4/26/06

A few weeks ago, the Financial Times ran an editorial titled, "Why can't we talk about Israel?" It's a fair question, though anyone that tries runs the risk of being labeled anti-Semitic.

The Times was commenting on a wave of claims of anti-Semitism that clobbered two professors and foreign policy scholars who wrote a paper criticizing America's unconditional support for Israel. In it John Mearshiemer of the University of Chicago and Stephen Walt of Harvard University claim that the Israeli lobby's influence on Congress is harmful to our foreign policy and this is major reason for Middle Eastern antagonism toward America.

It's no mystery that the American Israeli Public Affairs Committee, the largest Israeli lobby, wields enormous influence in Washington. According to it's Web site, "Through more than 2,000 meetings with members of - at home and in Washington - AIPAC activists help pass more than 100 pro-Israel legislative initiatives a year."

So what's wrong with a critical analysis of yet another interest group buying access to Congress?

Predictably, author and Harvard professor Alan Dershowitz, who is an unconditional supporter of Israeli policy, led the charge against Mearsheimer and Walt. Dershowitz compared them to conspiracy theorists and bigots and called on American Jews to demand they be treated equally with other Americans.

Earlier this semester, I wrote a column criticizing Israel's hard-line response to the newly-elected Hamas Palestinian government. The day it ran, someone asked me why I thought I was qualified to comment on that miserable and bloody conflict.

Any interest group that lobbies my government to the tune of nearly $3 billion per year is well within my range of criticism. And any government that engages in questionable foreign policy with my country's name attached to the sales receipt is well within the sphere of my written word.

Mearsheimer and Walt also forecasted that there would be a backlash to their thesis. In fact, it addressed the very question of why anyone who criticizes Israel is immediately labeled anti-Semitic.

An article by Michelle Goldberg on Salon.com highlighted the lashing Howard Dean got during his 2004 presidential campaign after he charged that the United States should take a more even-handed stance in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Sen. Joseph Lieberman said he was selling out Israel.

Likewise, Goldberg also pointed to the trail of criticism that followed Steven Spielberg's latest film "Munich," a critical cinematic account of Israel's response to the 1972 Palestinian massacre of Jewish Athletes that displeased many Jews and Israelis. Mearsheimer and Walt have simply analyzed one of the world's most powerful lobbies. They looked at AIPAC's media influence and strategy, its donor base, and its connections in Congress, among members and their staff. Admittedly, their findings are slightly monolithic and probably give the Israeli lobby more credit than it is due. Nevertheless, Dershowitz borders on hysteria in his rebuttal to their piece, even laying guilt on them for the fact that some neo-Nazis are using the report as ammo.

Continued...
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 02:32 pm
You're a fool if you think dredging up more cut-and-paste jobs will hide the essential antisemitic character of your remarks.
0 Replies
 
freedom4free
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 02:56 pm
You'd have to be blind not to see...

THE Great Seal

http://www.biblebelievers.org.au/images/oseal.jpg
0 Replies
 
jpinMilwaukee
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 02:57 pm
freedom4free wrote:

Bush's repeated, sometimes exclusive, focus on Israel could spark public fury against the Jewish state and Jews...


Well... I guess they were right to be concerned.
0 Replies
 
ebrown p
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 03:04 pm
These are ugly beliefs.

There is nothing I hate worse than anti-semitism cloaked in "liberal" ideas.

One can be anti-Bush without being anti-Semite.
0 Replies
 
blueflame1
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 03:08 pm
Setanta, I see no anti-semitism in the quote you posted. The fact is the PNAC is very much responsible for the war in Iraq and the lies that led to the war and the PNAC has several Jewish founders. Imo and the opinion of very many human beings these people are war criminals. No surprise to have ruthless Jewish war criminals in power and no surprise they would be in league with non-Jewish war criminals. Strange how the PNACers were also in league with Saddam and bin Laden. No surprise that Hamas was funded in it's beginnings by Likud. No surprise that Jews are as susceptable to betrayal as everyone else. No surprise Rabin was killed by a Jew or that many Rabbis called for his death and quoted scripture that to them proved G-D demanded it. Many Rabbis rejoiced when Rabin was killed. And this article is no surprise either. It points to a group that has declared war on the State of Israel. Imo this group is currently the biggest obstacle to a dignified solution. "Brushfire civil war: Israel, the new enemy of the True Jew"

By Bradley Burston

The time has come to choose your side. The civil war has begun.

On one side of this War Between the States are the Children of Light. The pure, the young and untainted, the real Jews, who care nothing for themselves, only for the Land of Israel. Passionate, tireless, leaderless.

They are the New Genuine Jews. And they have a new enemy: The state of Israel.

Increasingly, the language of hardline settlers has taken on a note of estrangement, even divorce from institutions of the state, the police, the Supreme Court, the army, the prime minister. "This is an army of Israelis who hate the Jews," a Hebron resident said last week.

By no means are they representative of settlers as a whole, or of pro-settler Israelis, nor youth as a whole, nor even settler youth. Their mindset and methods often harm the settlers' cause, and the settlers know it. They are small in number. Theirs is a brushfire civil war. But brushfires can take directions and forms which no one can control.

You know the children's crusade in its many forms, the Vegan Hippie Carlebachites, the hardcore Confederacy of Kahane, the separatist State of Judea loyalists, the settlement-born Orange Diaper Babies of the Hilltop Youth.

You know them by the way they relate to the rest of us. The quiet, knowing disdain that says that they know more than we, they care more than we, they suffer more, contribute more, matter more.

They are saintly where we are profane, godly where we are lost. And, to the extent that we serve in this army or support this government, we are something else as well. The enemy.

"This is a war," said Asaf Baruchi of Beit El settlement, standing bandaged and in a sling in from of Hadassah hospital in Jerusalem, the left half of his face striped in the blood of his own scalp. "It's a war between cultures. The left is trying to lliquidate religious Zionism, the only alternative."

Baruchi was beaten in the violent collisions between pro-settler demonstrators and the troops and police that came to oust them from Amona, a West Bank outpost not far from Baruchi's home. As many as 100 were injured on each side. A 15-year-old was critically injured by a police nightstick, and a policeman was critically injured by a thrown rock.

"The army's not yours, it's ours," Baruchi told Channel 10 talk show host Rafi Reshef, in response to a question about the actions of IDF troops in Amona. "You stole it, but we're going to take it back."

more http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=677531&contrassID=2
0 Replies
 
blacksmithn
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 03:19 pm
Please. You can be anti-Bush without being anti-Semitic. There's enough real corruption and conspiracy to go around without making up a completely repugnant one out of whole cloth.
0 Replies
 
ebrown p
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 03:28 pm
What is scary is that most of this stuff is just recycled from "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion" from 1921 which uses the same sort of illogical images and false arguments to "show" a vast Jewish conspiracy to control Europe.

It was of course used as a foundation of Nazi propaganda.

It is simply frightening that people still swallow (or is it gobble) this stuff.
0 Replies
 
blacksmithn
 
  1  
Reply Wed 26 Apr, 2006 03:45 pm
Well, if you tell a Big Lie long enough and loud enough, the gullible will believe it.
0 Replies
 
 

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