Saddam Hussein phoned President Bush. "I had a dream
about the United States," he said. "I could see the whole country, and
over every building and home was a banner."
"What was on the banner?" asked Bush.
"LONG LIVE SADDAM!" answered the dictator.
"I'm so glad that you called," said President Bush, "because I too had
a dream. In my dream, I saw Iraq and it was more beautiful than ever;
totally rebuilt with many tall, gleaming office buildings, large
residential subdivisions with swimming pools in every yard; and over
every building and home was a big, beautiful banner."
"What did the banner say?" asked Saddam.
I don't know," answered President Bush, "I can't read Hebrew."
The joke may offend some, but it underscores a growing debate over the
role of Israel — and American Jews supportive of Israel — as the United
States moves further toward war with Iraq.
In recent months, everyone from Slate's Michael Kinsley to former U.S. presidential candidate Gary Hart to Hardball
host Chris Matthews has commented about the problem of "dual loyalty"
in this conflict — the question of whether some Americans — especially
certain Jewish members of the Bush administration — are supporting war
with Iraq because they believe war is in Israel's interests.
The debate surfaced in public March 3 when Rep. James Moran, D-Va.,
told a church forum that, "If it were not for the strong support of the
Jewish community for this war with Iraq, we would not be doing this."
The White House condemned Moran's comments and the congressman has since apologized for his comments.
American Jewish groups have not endorsed the war, and many Jews have
been active in the anti-war movement. But, as evidenced by Moran's
recent comments, the debate continues over Israel's role, American
Jewish support of the Iraq war, and a perceived dual loyalty.
Kinsley wrote in October that there has been a "lack of public
discussion about the role of Israel in the thinking of President Bush."
The Moran flap was the first time the White House has gotten involved.
Before, the discussion has stayed in the realm of political magazines
and op-ed pages. Below we break down the debate:
The 'Elephant in the Room'
In his October column, Kinsley wrote that in discussion about Iraq,
Israel is "the proverbial elephant in the room" — the topic that
everyone agreed was an issue but that no one wanted to talk about, for
fear of sounding anti-Semitic. But writers recently have been more
willing to ponder how much Israel, or at least those concerned about
Israel's security, influences U.S. Iraq policy.
In a February opinion article in The Washington Post, New Republic senior editor Lawrence Kaplan explained that Israel's role in the impending conflict is a legitimate concern.
"How the Bush administration has arrived at the brink of war with
Saddam Hussein, and to what extent Israeli influence has brought it
there, is a legitimate question about which there is ample room for
disagreement," he wrote.
Kaplan explained that it's an important question, but one that is often
addressed in illegitimate ways (and anti-Semitic ways — though he
doesn't use the word "anti-Semitism"). He quoted Paul Schroeder,
writing in Pat Buchanan's revived American Conservative
magazine, that a plan for invasion of Iraq "is being promoted in the
interests of Israel." Kaplan wrote that this "socialism of fools"
(which, Slate columnist Mickey Kaus points out, is the same thing as anti-Semitism) has also invaded the anti-war left.
Buchanan himself added fuel to the fire in the March 24 issue of The American Conservative.
In his cover story attacking both Jews in the Bush administration and Jewish writers like Kaplan, David Brooks, and Washington Post
columnist Robert Kagan, Buchanan asserts: "We charge that a cabal of
polemicists and public officials seek to ensnare our country in a
series of wars that are not in America's interests. We charge them with
colluding with Israel to ignite those wars and destroy the Oslo
Accords. We charge them with deliberately damaging U.S. relations with
every state in the Arab world that defies Israel or supports the
Palestinian people's right to a homeland of their own. We charge that
they have alienated friends and allies all over the Islamic and Western
world through their arrogance, hubris, and bellicosity."
The Likudniks
Critics of U.S. Iraq policy, on the right and the left, have drawn
accusations of anti-Semitism for asserting that certain members of
Bush's administration (namely Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul
Wolfowitz; Richard Perle, chairman of the Pentagon's Defense Policy
Board; and Douglas Feith, undersecretary of defense for policy) have
dual loyalty — interests in both the United States and Israel.
Many of the pro-war members of Bush's administration, like these, were
in fact advisers to the administration of Benyamin Netanyahu, a member
of the Likud Party, when he was prime minister of Israel from 1996 to
1999.
As Mickey Kaus has mentioned in his column, the issue first gained
attention in early February when Robert Kaiser wrote a front-page Washington Post
article that noted, "For the first time, a U.S. administration and a
Likud government in Israel are pursuing nearly identical policies."
Conservative Americans under Buchanan's wing and writers for leftist
publications are not the only ones who have brought this issue to
light. Former presidential candidate Hart was chided recently for
comments he made about dual loyalty. He said, "We must not let our role
in the world be dictated by ideologues … who too often find it hard to
distinguish their loyalties to their original homelands from their
loyalties to America and its national interests."
However, he told The Forward, a weekly national Jewish newspaper, that his comments did not refer to any particular group.
Similarly, talk show host Matthews suggested on his show Hardball
that the United States is moving toward war because of "conservative
people out there, some of them Jewish, who are very tough on foreign
policy. They believe we should fight the Arabs and take them down. They
believe that if we don't fight Iraq, Israel will be in danger."
Is the Discussion Anti-Semitic?
In The Weekly Standard, Brooks wondered if this focus on the Jewish, pro-Israel hawks in the administration constitutes anti-Semitism. After
seeing an anti-war speaker mention Paul Wolfowitz, Brooks wondered:
"Why didn't he say Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, and Powell were organizing
the Bush administration policy? They're higher-ranking officials than
Wolfowitz and actually members of the administration, unlike Perle."
He continued, "Would the crowd have roared as wildly if he'd mentioned
Rice and Powell, I wondered, or did the words Wolfowitz and Perle
somehow get their juices flowing?"
Not Necessarily Good for Israel It's
important to note that not all American Jews, and not even all
pro-Israel American Jews, believe that a U.S.-led war with Iraq would
be in Israel's interest.
Israeli journalist Gershom Gorenberg, a frequent commentator in American media, wrote in October in The American Prospect,
"No one doubts that Israel will face serious risks the moment that
President George W. Bush orders an American offensive against Iraq."
"Nonetheless," Gorenberg continued, "conventional wisdom in the United
States, Israel and elsewhere is that Bush's plans for 'regime change'
in Iraq serve Israeli interests at least as much as U.S. ones."
A Saddam armed with a nuclear arsenal would be even more dangerous to
Israel's security than a Saddam armed with Scud missiles, which he used
against Israel during the 1991 Gulf War.
But as Gorenberg wrote, the focus on Iraq has forced the conflict
between Israel and the Palestinians to take a back seat, which does
nothing to further Israel's security. Gorenberg pointed out that a war
with Iraq will further destabilize the region, giving Arab nations more
venom for their anti-Israel sentiment and even possibly a quest for
revenge.
And it was in the liberal Jewish magazine Tikkun
that Steve Zunes, chairman of the Peace & Justice Studies Program
at the University of San Francisco, pointed out that the most powerful
pro-Israel lobby, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC),
has not said that a U.S. invasion of Iraq would be in Israel's
interests.
He wrote, "While AIPAC undeniably has influenced congressional votes
regarding Israeli-Palestinian concerns and other issues, it has not
played a major role in lobbying for support of the president's call for
a U.S. invasion."
No Unusual Influence
Zunes acknowledged the Jewish influence in the Bush administration, but says it is no different from Jewish influence elsewhere.
"While it is true that a disproportionate number of Jews can be found
among the strategic analysts pushing for this more aggressive U.S.
foreign policy, it is also true that a disproportionate number of Jews
can be found among liberal Democrats in Congress and Marxist
intellectuals in universities who oppose it," he wrote. "In short, it
is simply a reflection of the same cultural and historical phenomenon
that has seen Jews come to prominence in intellectual and other
influential sectors of societies throughout the diaspora."
Kaplan likewise recognized that not all American Jews are pro-war.
"For that matter," he wrote in the Washington Post
op-ed, "a cursory review of the literature opposing war in Iraq reveals
that the charge of 'Jewish-American hysteria' could just as easily
apply to opponents of an invasion."

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