The
Israelis are riding high, these days but not, perhaps, for
long. Ever since 9/11, the Israeli government and its American
amen corner have been making the point that Israel's fight
is now America's fight, and this argument has met with some
success. A
recent article in Ha'aretz notes that Israel is
winning the struggle for American hearts and minds:
"The
conventional wisdom among policy-makers in Israel and the
United States is that if there is one front on which Israel
enjoys a clear advantage in the international arena, it is
hasbara information and public relations in the United States."
Congress
is practically Israeli-occupied territory, and the Bushies
are in their back pocket: however, there are still some elements
of the American public who have not been brought to heel,
and this, we are told, shows that "Israel has cause for
concern."
It
seems that only half of the "influentials" professionals
in the media, politics, and academia, and others who regularly
follow the news take the Israel-can-do-no-wrong line. The
Israelis and their American supporters find this worrisome,
as well they should. In spite of a constant drumbeat of pro-Israel
propaganda, a well-organized cadre of American boosters, and
the slavish support of our government, still a great many
Americans are able to think clearly and critically about our
troublesome "ally." As Ha'aretz puts it:
"
"For
every individual that supports Israel, there is another who
opposes it. This is happening at time when the Palestinians
are at a disadvantage in public relations, when the president
has openly declared his support for Israel and Israel's political
lobby is at its height."
Those
numbers are bound to get worse as news
of the latest
Israeli caper hits
the headlines.
It really wasn't such a hot idea for the Mossad to
recruit Palestinians into a phony Al Qaeda cell in Gaza. It
was too easy to trace
the cell-phone calls and emails back to Israel, as well
as Germany and Lebanon. Aside from that, however, there was
something a little fishy about their recruitment methods,
such as this message cited by ABC
News (via Reuters):
"After
receiving reports from your brothers in the area about your
good morals and Islamic beliefs...we appeal to you to work
within the ranks of the mujahideen (Muslim fighters) and we
will support you with money and weapons. Call us at this number...and
identify yourself as Abu Anas. The telephone call should be
made between three and five in the afternoon... After you
read the letter and understand its content, burn it.
"(Signed),
Your brother and humble slave of God, Osama bin Laden."
Recruits
to this faux-Al Qaeda were given weapons (most of them didn't
work) and money provided by "Palestinian collaborators
with Israel," three of whom are in a Palestinian jail.
According to PLO "preventive security" chief Rashid
Abu Shbak, some of the money "was
transferred from bank accounts in Jerusalem or Israel."
These
revelations come in the wake of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon's claim
that Al Qaeda is behind recent attacks on Israel, and is present
in the occupied territories and Lebanon. A phony
"Al Qaeda" website has been set up, which we
are supposed to believe is the voice of the Evil One in
cyberspace: its recent pronouncement that a Palestinian "branch"
of Al Qaeda has been formed was duly
reported by the Washington Post, which also transcribed
the lamentation of one Rachel
Bronson, director of Middle East Studies at the Council
on Foreign Relations:
"'The
idea that al Qaeda is establishing a special cell to focus
on Israelis is horrifying news
' ... Al Qaeda's role could
be extremely destabilizing, she added, because 'it will be
weighing in on the side of Hamas,' the Palestinian Islamic
group that launches suicide bombings against Israeli civilians
and has been deemed a terrorist organization by the U.S. government."
What
is horrifying is that anyone takes such thinly-disguised disinformation
seriously. Repeating such nonsense with a straight face is,
one imagines, what makes Ms. Bronson so well-qualified for
her job.
Israel's
great achievement in the political and diplomatic realm has
been to draw the unleashed anger of the American giant away
from the perpetrators of 9/11 and toward its own enemies:
Saddam Hussein, Hamas, and the fictitious "Islamic Al-Qaeda
of Palestine," which exists only "by way of deception,"
to borrow a phrase from the official motto of the Mossad.
"By
way of deception, thou shalt do war" a principle
the Israelis have always lived up to. Juxtaposed against the
mounting evidence a recent series of reports in the
German
and British
media depict Mossad agents in the U.S. living "next
door to Mohammed Atta" the exposure of this "false
flag" operation draws the curtain on the terrorist
enigma. This demonstrates that an Israeli connection to the
worst terrorist atrocity in our history is not an "urban
myth," as one Justice Department spokesperson put
it, but a sinister and increasingly likely possibility.
In
all the columns I've written on this subject, my thesis has
been limited in scope. I've said only that the Israelis had
a certain amount of foreknowledge to what degree is not
known and failed to warn us. Not that they were behind
9/11. Nor am I saying that now. But I have a question: If
the Israelis are running phony "Al Qaeda" cells
in Palestine and Lebanon, why not in South Florida, or New
York?
This
question, you can be sure, won't be asked by the Kissinger
Commission, as the "National
Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States"
will inevitably be called, and yet surely given the way
in which 9/11 changed our lives it is one worth raising.
Which brings us to the reason I'm taking most of this week
off
.
Well,
not really "off" I'll be working harder than
ever, unfortunately, trying to get the first draft my new
book in shape. The Terror Enigma: Israel and the 9/11 Connection
will be published next year by Verso
Books. The book lays out the evidence that Israeli intelligence
not only shadowed the hijackers, but also succeeded in diverting
the American authorities away from the plotters' trail. They
launched a massive covert action aimed at government facilities
in the U.S. the infamous "art
students."
"By
way of deception, thou shalt do war" a war for survival,
as the Israelis see it, that must be waged against the West
as well as the Muslim world. As long as Americans see the
"war on terrorism" as the two-sided Manichean struggle
described by George W. Bush "you're either with us,
or with the terrorists" their anger and frustration
can be mobilized in support of an all-out war on the Arab
nations. But if Israel had some foreknowledge or even a
connection with Al Qaeda in America, and not just the Palestinian
"branch," then American rage will be directed at
another target.
Andrew
Sullivan is outraged that opponents of the Iraq war are putting
the "war on terrorism" in ironic quotes, and has
initiated one
of his tiresome campaigns to have it stamped out:
"QUOTATION
MARK WATCH: Have you begun to notice how some commentators
(mainly on the left but also on the paleo-right) have begun
to put the term 'war on terrorism' in quote marks? I wonder
what part of the phrase they don't buy. That we are fighting
terrorism?"
You
got that right, Andy. Surely there is a dangerous sort of
irony in the act of declaring a war, and then failing to see
one of your opponents. It is a danger that patriots cannot
fail to point out.
Until Americans, particularly those in government, stop seeing
the world with blinders on, the ironic quotes stay.
At
any rate, as much as I dislike abandoning my readers for even
a day, I'll be gone for the rest of the week, and back on
my regular schedule starting next Monday: unless, of course,
the shooting starts before then
.
Justin Raimondo
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