Israel's daily newsmagazine
   Israel's daily newsmagazine
| home | security | politics | diplomacy | anti-semitism | culture | travel | views | Shmooze! | today's weblog  
 
AntiSemi > Anti-Israel Academics

   



 
Sign up for free!

E-mail
 
         
       
         












Dr. Charles Jacobs is President of the American Anti-Slavery Group (AASG) in Boston. His work has appeared in The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, The New Yorker, and on ABC, NPR and CBS. Last April, he witnessed the redemption of 2,953 slaves in Sudan and he received the Freedom Award by Coretta Scott King.
Previous views
March against Israel flops
Accepting the reality of Islamic anti-Semitism
Why Israel, and not Sudan, is singled out
Slavery is not history

Views: Murder-Minded Mythmakers of the Middle East
Views: Barnard's Shame, Columbia's Dirty Deal
Views: Anti-Zionism is Racism
Views: What if the Earth really is round?
British boycott backlash builds
Views: The Road to Anti-Semitism is Paved with Dubious Intentions
Pappe smear: Anti-Israel soon-to-be-ex-Israeli prof slams UK "Jewish Lobby"
Views: Beyond Self-Hatred
Views: Indoctrination Parading as History at Andover High

 
Confronting the Saudi lobby
By Dr. Charles Jacobs   September 23, 2007


 Bookmark to del.icio.us

The Walt and Mearsheimer book accusing Israel and its allies of dominating American foreign policy is out. Three developments so far:

First, the reviews aren't good. The New York Times, for example, derided the book as a "prosecutorial brief." On the other hand, academics that like the book will assign it for their courses, doing long-term damage to the minds of American students.

Second, thanks to a slip of banana peel proportions, which was caught by Camera's brilliant analyst, Alex Safian, it's clear the dynamic duo doesn't believe a major part of their own thesis. While the book says Israel pressured the U.S. into war with Iraq, Mearsheimer instead curiously told an interviewer the truth: When it learned the Bush administration was determined to attack Iraq, Israel argued that the Iranian situation was more dangerous and should be addressed first. So Mearsheimer knows his book is wrong. Israel did not push for, much less author, the Iraq war.

Third, and probably most important, Walt and Mearsheimer's obsessive focus on Israel is causing critics from the right and the left to look carefully at the 800 pound gorilla of American Middle East policy, Saudi Arabia. With billions to burn, Saudi's impact on the rest of the planet is well understood. Madrassas, Islamic "universities," preachers and imams by the score have, among other things, moved Islam profoundly toward xenophobic and violent Wahhabi ideology. Yet most of the U.S. government carefully averts its eyes. Why?

Because Saudi Arabia buys influence and former American officials peddle it. These include former ambassadors to Saudi and Gulf states like James Akins, Edward Walker and John West, former CIA station chiefs and analysts like Raymond Close, and former congressmen like Paul Findley. They're all on the Saudi payroll --either directly through business deals or indirectly through Saudi support for their think tanks and foundations.

In a masterful Wall Street Journal piece, Jeff Robbins, Mintz Levin lawyer and -- full disclosure --attorney for the David Project, recounts how after Sept. 11, 2001, as president of the Boston chapter of the World Affairs Council, he was persuaded by a defense contractor to arrange a forum for Boston influentials to hear the Saudis expound on their enlightened, tolerant country.

Multiply this by every major city and media market, factor in the PR firms and lobbyists, the defense contractors, the public officials and academics -- Saudi recently gave Georgetown and Harvard $20 million each -- and you begin to get the sense of the scale and dollars behind the Saudi lobby. We're looking at tens if not hundreds of millions in the U.S. alone. But, Robbins noted, to Israel's critics, there is "nothing wrong" in any of this.

Walt and Mearsheimer deny being anti-Semites. Yet, Robbins went on, since they are "content with foreign oil money being used to advance a pro-Arab position on the Middle East, but devote themselves to criticizing American Jews for lobbying their public officials in support of the Jewish state, one may legitimately wonder what phrase would apply."

Views expressed by the author do not necessarily reflect those of israelinsider.


 Talk Back! Respond to this view



Click on the blue headline to read a Talkback comment and respond to it. Click on the icon to send a private email to the talkback writer. The icon appears only if the writer has decided to be contacted. If no popup window appears, please make sure your popup blocker allows israelinsider.com.

 
  | about |   partners |   sponsor |   donate |   news |   subscribe |   contact |