Kissinger and Shultz have a thoughtful op-ed in the WSJ on the Iran nuclear deal. However, they criticize it without offering an alternative. Could the deal be better? Of course, Iran could have renounced all nuclear ambitions and completely shut down its nuclear activities. But I doubt that even Kissinger and Shultz could have negotiated an agreement on those terms. So what is the alternative? Implicit in their op-ed is the conclusion that only a military attack taking out all of Iran's nuclear facilities would prevent the proliferation of nuclear technology throughout the Middle East. But would "shock and awe" work better in Tehran than it did in Baghdad? It would probably bring on a wider war that would make the Iraq war look like a small skirmish.
Furthermore, they do not mention Pakistan (or India), the elephants in the room when it comes to the proliferation of nuclear technology in the region. India does not appear to be a problem under its present government and the present international situation, but Pakistan is a big problem. Pakistan has many nuclear weapons, most aimed at India, but available for other purposes, if the government so decides, or if terrorists get their hands on them, and Pakistan's Waziristan region is full of Taliban terrorists. Even if Pakistan does not sell a nuclear weapon and if the terrorists don't get their hands on one, it is a source of nuclear technology. It has probably already provided some assistance to Iran and North Korea.
Pakistan is a more clear and present danger to the world than Iran is, mainly because Pakistan has nuclear weapons, and Iran does not. In theory Pakistan is a friend of the US, but in fact it is a fickle friend, often providing sanctuary for Taliban terrorists from Afghanistan who have been fighting American troops. In addition, it is probably a closer friend of China than it is of the US, with whatever geopolitical consequences that may produce. China is much less concerned about world peace than it is about the welfare of the Chinese state.
So, Secretaries Kissinger and Shultz, why should we be more worried about Iran than Pakistan? Shouldn't we be happy to turn down the heat with Iran, even a little bit, while new fires seem to be springing up daily in the rest of the Middle East?
Wednesday, April 08, 2015
Monday, April 06, 2015
Jews Bought Sen. Cotton's Letter to Iran
I was distressed by this article
in the NYT, “GOP’s Israel Support Deepens as Political Contributions Shift.” It says that Republican support for Israel in
partly ideological, but also “a product of a surge in donations and campaign
spending on their behalf by a small group of wealthy donors.” One of the main beneficiaries of this Jewish
largess was Senator Tom Cotton, the author of the Senate letter to Iran,
advising it not to negotiate with Obama and Kerry. It sounds like Sen. Cotton got well over $1
million from these Jewish contributors. The
article quotes a source downplaying speculation that the draft letter and plans
for its circulation were developed by Sen. Tom Cotton, Weekly Standard editor
Bill Kristol, and Las Vegas billionaire Sheldon Adelson in a room of Mr.
Adelson’s Venetian Hotel.
The growing Jewish support for Republicans is odd because
Jews have traditionally supported the Democratic Party, and tend to support
more liberal causes. According to J
Street, a majority of Jews still support liberal Democrats, but the fewer extremely
wealthy Jews supporting the Republicans throw the money balance in favor of the
GOP. For this group, the main issue is
support for Israel. This one reason
Republican House Speak Boehner invited Israeli PM Netanyahu to make a speech to
Congress attacking President Obama.
I don’t believe that American and Israeli interests always
converge. Thus I question Sen. Cotton’s
patriotism in supporting Israel over the United States. Clearly the choice of Netanyahu and his
Republican supports was (and is) to have the United States carry out a bombing
attack to destroy Iran’s nuclear facilities.
There is certainly a significant risk that American planes could be shot
down, or that Iran would respond to the attack.
Among other potential targets, there are thousands of American service
men and women next door to Iran in Afghanistan, and a few still left in
Iraq. Sen. Cotton apparently is happy to
have them die for Israel.
Revisionist Holocaust History
For Jews, World War II was all about the Holocaust. How many people died in the Soviet Union or
Western Europe, or certainly in the Pacific doesn’t matter. All that matters in how many Jews died in the
Holocaust. Even there, what’s important
is only the Jews who died. They don’t
care about the Poles, the Gypsies, the blacks, the gays, or any other groups
who died in the German prison camps.
Jews are attempting to rewrite history to support their view, and because
of the single-mindedness of their effort, they are succeeding.
The latest shot in this Jewish war against honoring the
Allies’ victory in World War II is Nicholas Berg’s “The Holocaust and the West
German Historians.” According to the review
in the Wall Street Journal, this book is something of an academic attack on
West German historians for playing down the role of the Holocaust in their
histories of World War II. Appropriately
the reviewer, Brendan Simms, is somewhat critical of the book. He says:
Mr. Berg presents his case in a
tone of polemical outrage, which occasionally jars in an academic narrative but
seems excusable in light of the story he is telling.
Mr. Berg fails to acknowledge that
German historians were engaged in not only a personal but also a national
survival strategy. They were desperately seeking an intellectual and ethical
basis upon which the German people could start again amid the wreckage of 1945.
My main complaint is that Jewish historians do not give
enough credit to the Allies, Soviet, British and American, for their victory. As bad as the Holocaust was, life for Jews
would have been worse if the Germans had won.
I believe that the reason we have a World War II memorial on the
Washington Mall is that history, led by Jewish historians, has been rewritten
to downplay the Allied victory. WW II
vets thought that their victory would be memorial enough, but as their victory
became less praiseworthy, they eventually needed something concrete to
memorialized their deeds.
Monday, March 30, 2015
Why Is the GOP More Jewish than the Jews?
Peter Baker had a great article in the NYT about how Republican support for Israel has become unquestioning and an essential element of any candidate's foreign policy platform. It was pegged to former Secretary of State Jim Baker's speech to J Street, the moderate Jewish lobby, in which Baker was just slightly critical of Israel. He was pilloried by virtually every Republican in Washington. Jeb Bush had to disavow Baker's remarks, despite the fact that Baker was one of George H.W. Bush's most loyal supporters and had already been designated as an advisor to Jeb. It sounds as if failure to support Israel 100% is treason against the US. The article attributes this attitude to several factors:
- A greater sens of solidarity in the fight against Islamic extremism sinc 9/11
- A resulting increase in evangelical Christan support for Israel,
-The influence of wealthy Jewish political donors like Sheldon Adelson, and
- The GOP tendency to oppose anything Obama does, including feuding with Netanyahu.
The article points out that the current Republican attitude is much different from that of previous GOP leaders, who were more questioning of Israel, including Presidents George H.W. Bush, Dwight Eisenhower and Richard Nixon, as well as Secretary Colin Powell, and NSC chair Brent Scowcroft. Even Ronald Reagan angered Israel by selling AWACs to Saudi Arabia, and by supporting a UN resolution condemning Israel for bombing Iraq's Osirak nuclear reacator.
The article points out that traditionally Jews have supported the Democratic Party, while Protestants have been Republicans.
The article quotes George W. Bush's White House press secretary, Ari Fleischer, on Bush's strong support for Israel. It says Fleischer is now a member of the Republican Jewish Coalition's board of directors. Fleischer said, "Being pro-Israel is a no-brainer, absolutely moral issue to take inside the Republican Party."
- A greater sens of solidarity in the fight against Islamic extremism sinc 9/11
- A resulting increase in evangelical Christan support for Israel,
-The influence of wealthy Jewish political donors like Sheldon Adelson, and
- The GOP tendency to oppose anything Obama does, including feuding with Netanyahu.
The article points out that the current Republican attitude is much different from that of previous GOP leaders, who were more questioning of Israel, including Presidents George H.W. Bush, Dwight Eisenhower and Richard Nixon, as well as Secretary Colin Powell, and NSC chair Brent Scowcroft. Even Ronald Reagan angered Israel by selling AWACs to Saudi Arabia, and by supporting a UN resolution condemning Israel for bombing Iraq's Osirak nuclear reacator.
The article points out that traditionally Jews have supported the Democratic Party, while Protestants have been Republicans.
The article quotes George W. Bush's White House press secretary, Ari Fleischer, on Bush's strong support for Israel. It says Fleischer is now a member of the Republican Jewish Coalition's board of directors. Fleischer said, "Being pro-Israel is a no-brainer, absolutely moral issue to take inside the Republican Party."
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