When it first mentioned the controversy over the paper by Walt and Mearsheimer, the Washington Post titled it Of Israel, Harvard and David Duke. I thought it was an excellent title for it showed the appeal the paper had to people outside the mainstream.
With its second print article on the subject Report on Effect of Israel Lobby Distorts History, Critics Say , the Post has omitted Duke's opinion. It's a shame. In fact the article, reported by a Michael Powell has presented Mearsheimer/Walt in a rather favorable light.
For one thing after quoting some of the critics of "The Lobby" Powell tells us
And they are not without academic support. Juan Cole, a professor of Middle Eastern studies at the University of Michigan, suggests the authors make commonplace points -- that U.S. Middle East policy is driven disproportionately by those who favor Israel, and that this lobby resorts to all manner of vile accusations to discredit opponents.
How credible is the paper? Well it has academic support. From Juan Cole no less. How vile is the Israel lobby? It discredits its opponents! And it's successful at it too.
They unsuccessfully shopped their article -- which pointedly relies on much Israeli scholarship -- here before the London Review of Books published it in March. An academic, footnoted version was posted on the Kennedy School Web site -- but as the controversy raged, the Harvard logo was removed.
So in two (non-consecutive) paragraphs a news story in the Washington Post dismisses the critics of Walt and Mearsheimer and it offers up circumstantial proof that they're right!
(Over at the Corner, Tim Graham notes that the article shows a closeness that the Post has with Noam Chomsky - 2 appearances in 3 days.)
Actually the Washington Post tread here before, 3 years ago, in an article "Bush and Sharon Nearly Identical On Mideast Policy" "
The Likudniks are really in charge now," said a senior government official, using a Yiddish term for supporters of Sharon's political party. Neumann agreed that Abrams's appointment was symbolically important, not least because Abrams's views were shared by his boss, national security adviser Condoleezza Rice, by Vice President Cheney and by Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld. "It's a strong lineup," he said.
Mickey Kaus was quick to pick up on this and noted presciently
On the other hand, imagine the potential for conspiratorial anti-Semitic mischief if the war goes badly and sub-rosa Web-fed resentment focuses blame on the unpublicized Likudnik factor.
Jefferson Morley on the electronic side of the Washington Post has picked up on the controversy. In his first, Global divide on Israel Lobby Study, he takes the unfortunate tack of quoting extensively from the Islamic/Arabic press lauding "The Lobby" and finally hitching onto Christoper Hitchens anti-Israel stance. The second Israeli Lobby Controversy grows deserves credit for citing a Jerusalem Post report on the acquisition of an American company by an Israeli that the US has cancelled.
However it also gives the editor who published the piece to argue something to the effect of, "I can't be antisemitic because I'm Jewish."
Weak.Very weak.
Eliot Cohen on the Post's op-ed page has an excellent comeback "Yes. It's antisemitic"
First Cohen cites a number of mistakes in "The Lobby"
It is indeed a wretched piece of scholarship. Israeli citizenship rests "on the principle of blood kinship," it says, and yet the country has a million non-Jewish citizens who vote. Osama bin Laden's grievance with the United States begins with Israel, it says -- but in fact his 1998 fatwa declaring war against this country began by denouncing the U.S. presence in Saudi Arabia and the suffering of the people of Iraq. "Other ethnic lobbies can only dream of having the political muscle" The Lobby has -- news to anyone advocating lifting the embargo on Fidel Castro's Cuba. The Iraq war stemmed from The Lobby's conception of Israel's interest -- yet, oddly, the war attracted the support of anti-Israel intellectuals such as Christopher Hitchens and mainstream publications such as The Economist. America's anti-Iran policy reflects the dictates of The Lobby -- but how to explain Europe's equally strong opposition to Iranian nuclear ambitions?
So it's a sloppy piece of work, but does that make it antisemitic? Yes.
Why?
If by anti-Semitism one means obsessive and irrationally hostile beliefs about Jews; if one accuses them of disloyalty, subversion or treachery, of having occult powers and of participating in secret combinations that manipulate institutions and governments; if one systematically selects everything unfair, ugly or wrong about Jews as individuals or a group and equally systematically suppresses any exculpatory information -- why, yes, this paper is anti-Semitic.
Eliot Cohen has exposed the sloppiness of the Walt/Mearsheimer paper. Stripped of its pretensions, it is not a valid academic examination of a controversial topic but a series of unfounded assumptions assigning blame for policies that its authors do not approve of.
There are of course those who believe that the Lobby is non-controversial and that the criticism of it is a sign of the potency of the Lobby.
And excellent and thorough debunking is here.
UPDATE: other responses via Real Clear Politics Buzztracker
Ace of Spades HQ
Well-- Jews are crafty, and they're so diabolically conspiratorial it's hard to figure out what the hell they're up to.Look, if it's true that such a small number of people control the world in such great disproportion to their numbers, then I say-- let them run the world. For crying out loud, if they're that freaking cunning and gifted by genius, then I for one welcome our New Zionist Jewish Caballist Overlords.
Harvard's original motto was Veritas Pro Christo Et Ecclesia, "Truth for Christ and his Church."The motto has since been updated to the less religious (hence more politically correct) Veritas -- "Truth." I would say the time has come for the University to consider yet another update, so that their motto might more accurately reflect the intellectual climate of Harvard in the early 21st century.
Might I suggest, Veritas Non Grata?
In a powerful piece in today’s Washington Post, Professor Eliot Cohen of John Hopkins University slams Harvard Kennedy School Dean, Stephen Walt and Chicago University Professor John Mearsheimer, co-authors of the Israel Lobby. He does not merely lable the authors "anti-Semitic," but with clarity, reason and precision explains why they are anti-Semitic. Of course, in the authors strange minds this will be seen as proof of the Jewish conspiracy that their paper talks about
The appearance of such in the Post may be a sign that good sense is kicking in, and that the encroachment of the fever swamps on our top academic institutions will not go unchallenged by the rest of the intellectual and political establishment. Stephen Walt is stepping down as academic dean of Harvard’s Kennedy School, though no link to the paper has been convincingly established.Rejecting this pernicious shoddy work is important, and shaming the writers and the institutions which sponsored it important for the health of our polity.
What is interesting to the Moose is how the allegiances have switched on attitudes toward Israel between the right and the left. Since the 1967 war, the right has generally become reliable supporters of Israel while the left has been the state's most ardent critics. Much of that attitude swing is attributable to the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. Israel is no longer perceived as the "underdog" by the left while the right views her has the most ardent defender of Western values in the region.
Just one question: if “The Lobby” is so far-reaching and powerful, how is it that the political geography of Israel has been shrinking?Stay tuned for the forthcoming papers from Harvard, “How the Evil Jooooz and Neocons Were Behind the 9/11 Attacks: Islam is the Religion of Peace™” and “Bushitler and Those Damn Kikes.”
The Official Website of David Duke - No I won't link to it.
Eliot Cohen, a leading Jewish-extremist Neocon who was the first to promote what he calls “World War IV,” has launched an unbridled attack against me and against the authors of the important Harvard JFK School of Government paper, “The Israel Lobby and US Foreign Policy.” All he can do, as is usually the case among the Jewish extremists, is to scream, “Anti-Semitic” at the top of his lungs. The proponents of the ethnic supremacist, terrorist state of Israel are always the first to accuse others of ethnic supremacism or ethnic hatred such as their use of the term “anti-Semite” against those who simply tell the truth about their policies that hurt the American people.
Technorati tags: John Mearsheimer, Stephen Walt, the Lobby, Israel, AIPAC.
Related articles about Israel in Soccer Dad.
Related articles about AIPAC in Soccer Dad.
Crossposted on Israpundit and Soccer Dad.
Posted by SoccerDad at April 5, 2006 2:36 AM | TrackBackExcellent overview. Thanks, SD!! :-)
Posted by: Hube at April 5, 2006 5:21 PM