Confronting our subversive institutions
LAST UPDATED: 06/13/2011 23:33
Just as Israelis are denied their right to an open, objective public discourse
due to the radical Left’s predominance in the media, so American Jews are denied their right to disown J Street due to the radical leftist American Jews’ takeover of key US Jewish umbrella groups.
Shimon Schiffer and Nahum Barnea are both senior political commentators for
Yediot Aharonot, Israel’s largest circulation newspaper. They are both also
leftist extremists. In their articles in last Friday’s weekend edition of Yediot
they demonstrated how their politics dictate their reporting – to the detriment
of their readers and to Israeli democracy. They also demonstrated the disastrous
consequences of the Left’s takeover of predominant institutions in democratic
societies.
Schiffer’s column centered on the subversive behavior of
President Shimon Peres and ran under the headline, “Subversive for
Peace.”
Schiffer published top secret documents chronicling Peres’s long
history of abusing his office to subvert Israel’s lawful governments and
obstruct their policies.
Schiffer’s article opened with an account of
Peres’s current moves to undermine Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s foreign
policy. According to Obama administration officials, during his recent meeting
with US President Barack Obama, which preceded Netanyahu’s stormy visit last
month, Peres and Obama agreed that a future deal between Israel and the
Palestinians must be based on the 1967 lines with mutually agreed swaps
involving Israeli withdrawals from areas that have been under its sovereignty
since 1949. While he acknowledged that Netanyahu completely opposes these
parameters and would openly oppose them if Obama adopted them publically, Peres
embraced them.
His message to the US leader was clear: Work with me and
we’ll get Israeli withdrawals.
Work with the elected leader of Israel and
you’ll get nowhere.
Schiffer then showed that Peres’s behavior is nothing
new. Using classified documents from 1987 and 1988 when Peres served as foreign
minister under then prime minister Yitzhak Shamir, Schiffer reported that during
that time, Peres conspired with then Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak to defeat
Likud in the 1988 elections. Peres also tried to convince the Reagan
administration to disassociate with Shamir and deal only with him. His efforts
were honorably rebuffed by then secretary of state George Schultz who reportedly
told Peres that he could not ignore the elected leader of
Israel.
Schiffer reported that Peres successfully collaborated with
Mubarak to undermine Shamir’s policy goal of retaining Israel’s control over
Taba in the post-Camp David implementation talks.
Finally, Schiffer
reported that in the summer of 1987, unbeknownst to Shamir, Peres dispatched
Avraham Tamir, then Foreign Ministry director general, to Mozambique to meet
secretly with PLO leader Yasser Arafat. At the time Israelis were prohibited by
law from maintaining any contact whatsoever with PLO members. So not only was
Tamir’s meeting an act of gross insubordination and subversion. It was a
crime.
Peres’s arguably treasonous behavior was not the only scandal
Schiffer exposed in his article. From the perspective of Israeli democracy –
equally scandalous was Schiffer’s admitted collusion with Peres’s subversive
operations.
Specifically, in his discussion of Tamir’s illegal meeting
with Arafat, Schiffer admitted that Tamir “told me at the time,” about the
meeting.
What this means is that one of Israel’s most powerful reporters
knew 24 years ago that the director general of the Foreign Ministry was sent by
the foreign minister to conduct an illegal meeting with Israel’s sworn enemy
behind the back of the prime minister. And he opted not to report the story. He
decided that Peres’s moves to empower Israel’s sworn enemies against the
expressed wishes of the prime minister and of the general public were more
important than the public’s right to know what he was doing. And so he hid the
information from the public. For 24 years.
Imagine how different
subsequent events might have turned out if Schiffer had fulfilled his
professional duty and informed the public in 1987 that Peres was engaged in
illegal activities whose expressed aim was the overthrow of the elected leader
of the country and the empowerment of Israel’s worst enemy.
IN COMPARISON
to Schiffer’s double whammy, Barnea’s article on Friday was nothing special. But
it was a representative sample of Israel’s most esteemed political commentator’s
consistent moves to distort current events in a manner that adheres to his
radical politics.
Barnea opened his essay with a sympathetic depiction of
a delegation of five anti-Israel US Congressmen organized by the anti-Israel
lobby J Street. Barnea then attacked Netanyahu and his ministers for refusing to
meet with the delegation.
From reading his column, you’d never guess that
the members of the delegation were among Israel’s most outspoken opponents on
Capitol Hill. And from reading Barnea, you wouldn’t know that J Street is an
anti-Israel lobby, which among other things, has urged Obama not to veto a UN
Security Council resolution condemning Israel for allowing Jews to build on
their property in Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria; lobbied Congress not to pass a
resolution condemning Palestinian anti-Jewish incitement following the massacre
of the Fogel family; and lobbied Congress not to pass sanctions against
Iran.
What you would learn from reading Barnea’s article is that Israelis
shouldn’t take heart from the overwhelming support we receive from Congress
because the thirty-odd standing ovations Netanyahu received were nothing more
than political theater.
The underlying message of Barnea’s piece was
clear. Israel’s supporters in Congress are not really supporters, they’re just
afraid of angering the all-powerful AIPAC. And obviously, if we have no real
friends, then anyone telling us to stand strong is a liar and an enemy and what
we really need to do is learn to love J Street and its anti-Israel Congressmen
who share Barnea’s agenda.
It doesn’t matter to Schiffer and Barnea that
the majority of the public opposes their views. It doesn’t matter that the
government’s policies more or less loyally represent the positions of the public
that democratically elected it. As Schiffer demonstrated by failing for 24 years
to report Peres’s behavior and as Barnea showed by failing to inform the public
about the nature of J Street and its anti-Israel Congressional delegation,
radical leftist writers exploit their power to dictate the contours of the
public discourse to advance their political agenda. And it doesn’t bother them
at all that advancing their personal politics involves actively undermining the
very mission of a free press – to enable the free flow of information to the
public.
THE BEHAVIOR of the likes of Peres, Schiffer and Barnea is not
unique to the Israeli Left. It characterizes the behavior of much of the
American Jewish Left as well. There, as here, radical activists and ideologues
have taken over mainstream institutions and transformed them into mouthpieces
for their extremist policies.
Take the local Jewish Community Relations
Councils in the US for example.
The JCRC’s are supposed to be local
umbrella organizations that conduct community events and other activities aimed
at advancing the interests, concerns and values of the members of their local
Jewish communities. But like the Israeli media, many of the local chapters of
the JCRC have been taken over by radical leftists who do not share and indeed
seek to undermine the interests, concerns and values of their local Jewish
communities.
Last week, Andrea Levin, the executive director and
president of the Committee for Accuracy in Middle Eastern Reporting in America
(CAMERA), published an article in Boston’s Jewish Advocate exposing how Boston’s
JCRC’s leadership unlawfully and secretly brought J Street into the umbrella
organization and then, when it was caught, used unethical means to gain approval
after the fact for their actions. As a comprehensive survey of American Jewish
views on Israel carried out last month by CAMERA demonstrated conclusively, the
vast majority of American Jews oppose all of J Street’s positions on Israel and
the Middle East.
But just as Israelis are denied their right to an open
and objective public discourse due to the radical Left’s predominance in the
media, so American Jews are denied their right to disown J Street due to the
radical leftist American Jews’ takeover of key US Jewish umbrella groups and
institutions.
Another depressing instance of this pattern just occurred at
the Union of Reform Judaism with the nomination and election of Rabbi Richard Jacobs to serve
as its president. Whereas outgoing president Eric Yoffie referred to J Street’s
anti- Israel positions on Operation Cast Lead as “morally deficient, profoundly
out of touch with Jewish sentiment and also appallingly naïve,” Jacobs serves on
J Street’s Rabbinic Cabinet. He also serves on the New Israel Fund’s
board.
When a group of Reform activists called Jews Against Divisive
Leadership (JADL) published ads in Jewish papers signed by a hundred Reform rabbis,
their actions met with condemnation by URJ’s leadership and even with calls to
blacklist the signatories.
The younger generation of radical American
Jewish activists on college campuses is following the same
course.
Following Yale’s decision last week to close its institute for
the study of anti- Semitism, recent Yale alumni Matthew Knee wrote a post at the
Legal Insurrection blog claiming that Yale’s Students for Israel group is
dominated by anti- Israel activists.
So too, at Berkeley, Hillel has been
penetrated by anti-Israel organizations, which like J Street pretend to be pro-
Israel when in fact they promote anti- Israel activities including economic
warfare against Israel. The situation at Berkeley is so bad that members of the
Hillel-affiliated Kesher Enoshi were key activists in the campaign to divest
Berkeley’s holdings from Israeli companies.
As the URJ’s threat to
blacklist JADL members indicates, there is only one effective response to the
radicalization of mainstream institutions: the creation of new, actually
representative institutions that will compete with and eventually replace those
that have been subverted.
In Israel this means creating alternative media
organs through the Internet and other outlets to end the radical Left’s monopoly
on information dissemination and engage in a discourse that reflects reality,
engages the majority and upholds the rule of law.
In the US it means
establishing new umbrella groups that represent the majority and deny membership
to marginal groups that represent next to no one.
In Israel, independent
Internet journalist Yoav Yitzhak just announced an initiative to form a new
journalists union that will represent reporters and writers who have no voice in
the leftist dominated Press Council. Initiatives like Latma, the satirical media
criticism website I founded two years ago, have rapidly become major voices in
the national discourse. Like people everywhere, when given the opportunity,
Israelis seek out information sources that inform rather than indoctrinate and
empower rather than demoralize them.
In the US, last October frustrated
activists in the Indianapolis Jewish community disenfranchised by the farleft
agenda of the local JCRC founded JAACI, the Jewish American Affairs Committee of
Indiana to serve as a new umbrella organization for the
community.
Dedicated mainly to giving voice to the Jewish community’s
deep concern and support for Israel, JAACI’s formation fomented an exodus of
local Jewish groups and synagogues from the JCRC. When given an option to
participate in a more representative organization, the local Jews grabbed
it.
The ability of institutional leaders – whether Jewish professionals
or journalists – to ignore their responsibility to serve those they claim to
represent is not due primarily to their formidable resources. It is due to our
willingness to put up with their behavior. If we want to have institutions that
represent and serve us, we have to take the initiative and build them
ourselves.
caroline@carolineglick.com