By Robert M. Goldberg on 3.24.08 @ 12:07AM
Obama's military adviser and campaign co-chairman can't stand Israel and its supporters.
Last week, Barack Obama's military adviser and national campaign
co-chairman Merrill "Tony" McPeak accused former President Bill
Clinton of "using divisive tactics and unfairly trying to question
Barack Obama's patriotism." McPeak, a former chief of staff of the
Air Force, previously supported Howard Dean and then John Kerry. He
has campaigned for Obama and cut commercials claiming that Obama
has the "right stuff" to be Commander in Chief. His job is to
burnish Obama's image as a guy tough enough to be President. So who
better to go after Bill Clinton and get the Obama campaign back on
offense?
In off-the-cuff remarks to reporters Friday he even compared the
former president's comments with the actions of Joseph McCarthy,
the 1950s communist-hunting senator.
"I grew up, I was going to college when Joe McCarthy was
accusing good Americans of being traitors, so I've had enough of
it," McPeak said. And last month McPeak had to retract his
statement that as president, Obama would not be reduced to "crying
fits" like Mrs. Clinton
Well, it is likely that Obama will soon be having to retract
Merrill McPeak. McPeak, who was arrested last year for driving
under the influence, apparently has a problem controlling more than
his thirst for fermented beverages. He also has a penchant for
bashing Israel or, more particularly, Jews who oppose negotiating
with terrorists.
McPeak has a long history of criticizing Israel for not going
back to the 1967 borders as part of any peace agreement with Arab
states. In 1976 McPeak wrote an article for Foreign Affairs magazine
questioning Israel's insistence on holding on to the Golan Heights
and parts of the West Bank.
In recent years McPeak has echoed the Mearsheimer-Walt
view that American Middle East policy is being controlled by
Jews at the expense of America's interests in the region. In a 2003
interview with the Oregonian, McPeak complained of
that the "lack of playbook for getting Israelis and Palestinians
together at...something other than a peace process....We need to
get it fixed and only we have the authority with both sides to move
them towards that. Everybody knows that."
The interviewer asked McPeak: "So where's the problem? State?
White House?"
McPeak replied: "New York City. Miami. We have a large vote --
vote, here in favor of Israel. And no politician wants to run
against it."
Translation (as if it's needed): Jews -- who put Israel over
every American interest -- control America's policy on the Middle
East. And McPeak has the audacity to accuse Bill Clinton of
McCarthyism.
McPeak also claims that a combination of Jews and Christian
Zionists are manipulating U.S. policy in Iraq in dangerous and
radical ways: "Let's say that one of your abiding concerns is the
security of Israel as opposed to a purely American self-interest,
then it would make sense to build a dozen or so bases in Iraq.
Let's say you are a born-again Christian and you think that
Armageddon and the rapture are about to happen any minute and what
you want to do is retrace steps you think are laid out in
Revelations, then it makes sense. So there are a number of
scenarios here that could lead you in this direction. This is
radical...."
McPeak also noted: "The secret of the neoconservative movement
is that it's not conservative, it's radical. Guys like me, who are
conservatives, are upset about these neocons calling themselves
conservative when they're so radical."
Guys like McPeak are upset because they think Jews have too much
influence.
McPeak (in his Oregonian interview) also equated
terrorist organizations with neoconservative supporters for
Israel:
Interviewer: "Do you think...there's an element within Hamas,
Hezbollah, that doesn't want Israel to exist at all and always will
be there?"
McPeak: "Absolutely."
Interviewer: "So this is -- this is multilateral."
Instead of discussing Hamas and Hezbollah, McPeak returns to his
primary target: Christian and Jews who support Israel:
McPeak: "There's an element in Oregon [sic], you know, that's
always going to be radical in some pernicious way, and likely to
clothe it in religious garments, so it makes it harder to attack.
So there's craziness all over the place. I think there is enough
good will on the Israeli side -- I've spent a lot of time in
Israel, worked at one time very closely with the Israeli air force
as a junior officer, and so -- but that's maybe the more
cosmopolitan, liberal version of the Israeli population."
In other words, American policy is the product of "religious
Jews and neocons" who in McPeak's mind are just as much to blame
for a lack of peace in the Middle East as are Hamas and
Hezbollah.
It will be interesting to see how the Obama campaign formulates
what should be its latest disavowal and dismissal of yet another
anti-Israel and anti-Jewish "adviser."
McPeak's comments are worse than McCarthyism. They reflect the
views of Reverend Wright and other Obama advisers who believe that
Israel is just a problem to be solved, not an ally to support.
McPeak is not the only member of the Obama campaign who holds
such twisted views. Others such as Robert Malley or Zbigniew
Brzezinski have found themselves downgraded to "informal" advisers
as their anti-Israel views are made public. Samantha Powers was
dismissed for calling Hillary a monster, not for sharing McPeak's
belief in the malign omnipotence of the "Israel lobby."
Obama has a Jewish problem and McPeak's bigoted views are
emblematic of what they are. Obama can issue all the boilerplate
statements supporting Israel's right to defend itself he wants. But
until he accepts responsibility for allowing people like McPeak so
close to his quest for the presidency, Obama's sincerity and
judgment will remain open questions.
topics:
Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Military, Iraq, Israel, NATO, Oil