More on
American Zionism (2)
By Edward Said
A small,
potentially embarrassing episode has occurred since I wrote my last article on
this subject two weeks ago. Martin
Indyk, US
ambassador (for the second time during the Clinton administration) to Israel,
has abruptly been stripped of his
diplomatic security
clearance by the State Department. The story put about is that he used his
laptop computer without using
proper security
measures, and therefore may have disclosed information or released it to
unauthorized persons. As a result, he
now cannot enter or
leave the State Department without an escort, cannot remain in Israel, and must
now submit to a full
investigation.
We may never find
out what really happened. But what is public knowledge and has nevertheless not
been discussed in the
media is the scandal of Indyk's appointment
in the first place. On the very eve of Clinton's inauguration in January 1993,
it was
announced that
Martin Indyk, born in London, and an Australian citizen, had been sworn in as
an American citizen at the
president-elect's
express wishes. Proper procedures were not followed: it was an act of
peremptory executive privilege, so that,
after having gained
US citizenship, Indyk could immediately thereafter become a member of the
National Security Council staff
responsible for the
Middle East. All this, I believe, was the real scandal, not Indyk's subsequent
carelessness or indiscretion or
even his complicity in ignoring official
codes of conduct. For before he came to the very heart of the US government in
a top
and largely
secretly run position, Indyk was the head of the Washington Institute for Near
East Policy, a quasi-intellectual
thinktank that
engaged in active advocacy on the part of Israel, and coordinated its work with
that of AIPAC (the American
Israel Public
Affairs Committee), the most powerful and feared lobby in Washington. It is
worth noting that before he came to
the Bush
administration Dennis Ross, the State Department consultant who has been
leading the American peace process, was
also the head of the Washington Institute, so the
traffic between Israeli lobbying and US Middle East policy is extremely
regular, and yes,
regulated.
AIPAC has for years
been so powerful not only because it draws on a well-organized, well-connected,
highly visible,
successful, and
wealthy Jewish population but because for the most part there has been very
little resistance to it. There is a
healthy fear and respect for AIPAC all over the country,
but especially in Washington, where in a matter of hours almost the
entire Senate can
be marshaled into signing a letter to the president on Israel's behalf. Who is
going to oppose AIPAC and
continue to have a
career in Congress, or to stand up to it on behalf of, say, the Palestinian
cause when nothing concrete can be
offered by that
cause to anyone who stands up to AIPAC? In the past one or two members of
Congress have resisted AIPAC
openly but soon
after their re-election was blocked by the many political action committees
controlled by AIPAC, and that was
that. The only
senator who had anything remotely like an oppositional stand to AIPAC was James
AbuRezk, but he did not
want to be
re-elected and, for his own reasons, resigned after his single six-year term
ended.
There is now no political commentator who is
absolutely clear and open in his/her resistance to Israel in the US. A few
liberal
columnists like
Anthony Lewis of the New York Times do occasionally write in criticism of
Israeli occupation practices, but
nothing is ever
said about 1948 and the whole issue of the original Palestinian dispossession
that is at the root of Israel's
existence and
subsequent behavior. In a recent article, the former State Department official
Henry Pracht has noted the
staggering
unanimity of opinion in all sectors of the American media, from film, to
television, radio, newspapers, weeklies,
monthlies, quarterlies and dailies:
everyone more or less toes the official Israeli line, which has also become the
official American
line. This is the
coincidence American Zionism has achieved in the years since 1967, and which it
has exploited in most public
discourse about the
Middle East. Thus US policy equals Israeli policy, except on the very rare
occasions (ie, the Pollard case)
where Israel
oversteps the limit and assumes that it has a right to help itself to what it
wishes.
Criticism of
Israel's practices is therefore strictly limited to occasional sorties that are
so infrequent as to be almost literally
invisible. The
overall consensus is virtually impregnable and is so powerful as to be
enforceable everywhere within the accepted
mainstream. This
consensus is made up of unassailable truths concerning Israel as a democracy,
its basic virtue, the modernity
and reasonableness
of its people and its decisions. Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg, a respected American
liberal cleric, once said that
Zionism was the
secular religion of the American Jewish community. This is supported visibly by
various American organizations
whose role it is to
police the public realm for infractions, even as many other Jewish
organizations run hospitals, museums,
research institutes
for the good of the whole country. This duality is like an unresolved paradox
in which noble public enterprises
coexist with the
meanest and most inhumane ones. Thus, to take a recent example, the Zionist
Organization of America (ZOA),
a small but very
vociferous group of zealots, paid for an advertisement in the New York Times on
10 September that
addressed Ehud
Barak as if he was an employee of American Jews, reminding him that six million
of them outnumber the five
million Israelis
who had decided to negotiate on Jerusalem. The language of the advertisement
was not only admonitory, it was
almost threatening,
saying that Israel's prime minister had undemocratically decided to undertake
what was anathema to
American Jews, who
were displeased with his behavior. It's not at all clear who mandated this
small and pugnacious group of
zealots to lecture the Israeli prime
minister in these tones, but ZOA feels it has the right to intervene in
everybody's business.
They routinely
write or telephone the president of my university to ask him to dismiss or
censure me for something I said, as if
universities were
like kindergartens and professors to be treated as under-age delinquents. Last
year they mounted a campaign
to get me fired
from my elected post as president of the Modern Language Association, whose
30,000 members were lectured
by ZOA as so many
morons. This is the worst sort of Stalinist bullying, but is typical of
organized American Zionism at its worst
and most
zealous.
Similarly for the
past few months various right-wing Jewish writers and editors (for example,
Norman Podhoretz, Charles
Krauthammer and
William Kristol, to mention only a few of the more strident propagandists) have
been critical of Israel for
essentially
displeasing them, as if they had more title to it than anyone else. Their tone
in these and other articles is dreadful, an
unappetizing combination of brazen
arrogance, moral preachiness, and the ugliest form of hypocrisy, all of it done
with an air of
complete
confidence. They assume that because of the power of the Zionist organizations
that back and support their
reprehensible
rantings they can get away with their appalling verbal excesses, but it is
mostly because most Americans are either
ignorant of what
they are saying or cowed into silence that they can get away with this sort of
nonsense, very little of it having
much to do with the
real political actualities of the Middle East. Most sensible Israelis regard
them with distaste.
American Zionism has now reached the level of
almost pure fantasy in which what is good for American Zionists in their
fiefdom
and their mostly
fictional discourse is good for America and Israel, and certainly for the
Arabs, Muslims and Palestinians, who
seem to be little
more than a collection of negligible nuisances. Anyone who defies or dares to
challenge them (especially if
he/she is either an
Arab or a Jew critical of Zionism) is subject to the most awful abuse
anvituperation, all of it personal, racist
and ideological.
They are relentless, totally without generosity or genuine human understanding.
To say that their diatribes and
analyses are Old
Testament-like in manner is to insult the Old Testament.
In other words, an
alliance with them, such as the Arab states and the PLO have tried to forge
since the Gulf War, is the
stupidest kind of ignorance. They are
unalterably opposed to everything the Arabs, Muslims and, most especially,
Palestinians
stand for and would
sooner blow things up than make peace with us. Yet it is also true that most
ordinary citizens are often
puzzled by the
vehemence of their tone, but unaware really of what is behind it. Whenever you
speak to Americans who are not
Jewish or Arab, and
who have no expertise on the Middle East, there is routinely a sense of wonder
and exasperation at the
relentlessly
hectoring attitude, as if the whole Middle East was theirs for the taking.
Zionism in America, I have concluded, is not
only a fantasy built on very shaky
foundations, it is impossible to make an alliance or to expect rational
exchange with it. But it
can be outflanked
and defeated.
Ever since the
mid-1980s I had proposed to the PLO leadership and to every Palestinian and
Arab I met that the PLO quest
for the president's
ear was a total illusion since all recent presidents have been devoted
Zionists, and that the only way to
change US policy
and achieve self-determination was through a mass campaign on behalf of
Palestinian human rights, which
would have the
effect of out-flanking Zionists and going straight to the American people.
Uninformed and yet open to appeals
for justice as they
are, Americans would have reacted as they did to the ANC campaign against
apartheid, which finally
changed the balance
inside South Africa. In fairness here, I should mention that James Zogby, then
an energetic human rights
activist (before he
threw in his lot with Arafat, the US government and the Democratic Party), was
one of the originators of the
idea. That he abandoned it totally is a sign of
how he changed, rather than a nullification of the idea itself.
But it also became
very clear to me that the PLO would never do it for several reasons. It would
require work and dedication.
Second, it would
mean espousing a political philosophy that was really based on democratic
grass-roots organization. Third, it
would have to be a
movement rather than a personal initiative on behalf of the present leaders.
And lastly, it required a real, as
opposed to a
superficial, knowledge of US society. Besides, I felt that the conventional
cast of mind that kept getting us in one
bad position after another was very difficult to
change, and time proved me right. The Oslo accords were the unimaginative
acceptance by the
Palestinians of Israeli-US supremacy rather than an attempt to change it.
In any case, any
alliance or compromise with Israel in the present circumstances, where US
policy is totally dominated by
American Zionism,
is doomed to roughly the same results for Arabs generally and Palestinians in
particular. Israel must
dominate, Israel's
concerns are primary, and Israeli systemic injustice will be prolonged. Unless
American Zionism is taken on
and made to change
-- not a very difficult task, as I shall try to show in my next article -- the
results will be the same: dismal and
discrediting for us
as Arabs.