Tag Archives: Iran

AIPAC Salutes Itself For Senate Passage of Its Iran War Bill 90-1

24 Sep

On Friday night, the Senate passed by a 90-1 vote an AIPAC drafted resolution telling the president that containment of a nuclear Iran is not an option. If  Iran passes Binyamin Netanyahu’s “red line,” the United States must go to war.

As a US President, Barack Obama oppose automatic wars. He wants to keep all his options open. But the Senate gets its orders from AIPAC and AIPAC gets its orders from Netanyahu….

Here is AIPAC’s press release celebrating its belief that war is closer.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Marshall Wittmann, mwittmann@aipac.org
September 23, 2012

Senate Sends Bipartisan Message on Preventing Iranian Nuclear Weapons Capability

Resolution spearheaded by Sens. Graham, Lieberman and Casey rejects policy of containment

WASHINGTON — AIPAC applauds the Senate for rejecting a policy of containment of an Iranian nuclear weapons capability and calling for an increase in sanctions against the world’s leading state sponsor of terror.

The resolution (S. J. Res. 41) passed with overwhelming bipartisan support (90-1) and affirms that “it is a vital national interest of the United States to prevent the Government of Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapons capability.” It notes that, as President Obama has said, the window for diplomacy is closing and urges increased economic and diplomatic pressure on Iran to come into full and sustained compliance with UN Security Council resolutions.

With each passing day the Islamic Republic is inching closer to a nuclear weapons capability. Just last month the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) published a report detailing the tremendous progress Iran has made in its quest for nuclear weapons. Since May, the regime has doubled the centrifuges at its nearly impregnable Fordow facility from 1,064 to 2,140. It has produced 418 pounds of 20-percent enriched uranium—nearly doubling the quantity since January. And Iran has produced more than 15,000 pounds of low-enriched uranium, enough to fuel five bombs if further enriched.

AIPAC praises the efforts of Sens. Graham (R-SC), Lieberman (I-CT) and Casey (D-PA), as well as the 80 additional cosponsors, to get this resolution passed. The House in May passed H. Res 568, which similarly rejected containment as a policy for dealing with Iran. It was overwhelmingly passed in a bipartisan vote 405-11 with 330 cosponsors.

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Consistently ranked as the most influential foreign policy lobbying organization on Capitol Hill, AIPAC is a bipartisan American membership organization that seeks to strengthen the relationship between the United States and Israel. For more than 50 years, AIPAC has been working with Congress to build a strong, vibrant relationship between the U.S. and Israel. With more than 100,000 members across the United States, AIPAC works throughout the country to improve and strengthen that relationship by supporting U.S.-Israel military, economic, scientific and cultural cooperation.

AIPAC Salutes House For Passing Iran Sanctions Bill It Wrote

1 Aug

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Adam Harris, aharris@aipac.org
August 1, 2012

AIPAC Applauds House Passage of Iran Threat Reduction and SyriaHuman Rights Act


AIPAC applauds the House passage (421-6) of the Iran Threat Reduction and Syria Human Rights Act. This bill represents the strongest set of sanctions the United States has ever imposed on any country during peacetime.

Each passing day affords the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism the ability to advance its illicit nuclear program. America must lead the effort to exert the maximum economic pressure to get Iran to change course. 

The implementation of this bill would subject virtually all of Iran’s energy, financial, and transportation sectors to U.S. sanctions. Furthermore, it would prohibit the repatriation to Iran of any revenue it receives from the sale of its oil—which accounts for 80 percent of Tehran’s hard currency earnings and 50 percent of the funding for its national budget. Click here to read more about the bill.

AIPAC applauds bill authors Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Johnson (D-SD) and Ranking Member Richard Shelby (R-AL), and House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL) and Ranking Member Howard Berman (D-CA).

AIPAC calls on the Senate to expeditiously pass this bill and send it to President Obama for his signature.

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Iranian-Israel Singer Huge in Israel, Huge in Iran: Meanwhile AIPAC Law Helps Crash Iranian Planes

14 Jul

Today’s Guardian reports how love for this Iranian-Israeli, Israeli-Iranian singer unites fans in both countries.

Meanwhile, the New York Times reports on how AIPAC-written Iran sanctions laws are affecting Iranian air safety. And a despicable California Congressman cheers Iranian plane crashes. 

 

Reform Jews Support Divestment!

11 Jul

This is interesting. The Union of Reform Judaism put out a statement in 2007 favoring divestment from Iran because of its nuclear program. Last week it opposed divestment from companies that sustain the occupation of the West Bank and the blockade of Gaza.

The difference. Even in 2007, when Iran was at the rudimentary stages of civilian nuclear development, the progressive-on-everything-but-anything -related-to Israel rabbis thought the Iranian situation was significant enough to merit comprehensive divestment.

On the other hand, the occupation of the West Bank/Gaza which inflicts suffering on millions of Palestinians and threatens the survival of Israel itself does not merit divestment from Caterpillar, Hewlett Packard and Motorola.

Here is what the URJ said in 2007:

THEREFORE, the Union for Reform Judaism resolves to:
1. Divest, to the extent feasible, its investment funds from businesses that have at
least $20 million currently invested in the energy sector of the Iranian economy
until such time as a credible international body confirms that Iran has ceased its
ambitions to manufacture nuclear weapons;
2. Call on its affiliates and partners, including the Reform Pension Board and URJ
member congregations with investment funds, to divest such funds from these
same companies and under the same conditions;
3. Encourage Union regions, congregations, individuals, and affiliates at the
grassroots level to support and work toward targeted divestment by states,
municipalities, pension funds, universities, foundations, and other such entities;
4. Advocate for mutual fund companies to make available investment opportunities
that are consistent with standards for targeted divestment from Iran;
5. Call upon the governments of the United States and Canada to implement
economic sanctions targeting Iran, especially its energy sector, and to lead the
international community (particularly the United Nations, European Union,
Russia, Japan, and China) in applying similar divestment and economic sanctions
policies, taking steps to minimize the harm of these actions on vulnerable
populations within Iran or other countries; and
6. Encourage education of, and in, congregations on the threat of the Iranian nuclear
program, including educational efforts that reach out to other Jewish and non-Jewish entities to highlight

the current danger.

Here is the full statement. 

Iran Makes A Serious Offer: Will The Lobby Let Us Consider It?

5 Jul

This should be huge news. But it probably won’t be.

According to Barbara Slavin, the veteran Middle East reporter, the Iranian government has issued a 10-page paper suggesting the resolution of its conflict over its nuclear program through comprehensive negotiations with the west.

A ten page document given Tuesday (July 3) to Iran experts by Iran’s mission to the United Nations also calls for lifting all sanctions against Iran and a framework for “comprehensive and targeted dialogue for long term cooperation” that goes beyond the nuclear issue. It includes elements of a bigger bargain normalizing Iran’s status in the international community.

The Iranians first goal is the lifting of sanctions. There is nothing new in that, nor in Iran’s demand for “recognition of its right to enrich uranium….”  (Full text of Iran paper here).

What is new is how the Iranian government proposes to get to that point — through “cooperation and reciprocal steps.”  In other words: step by step negotiations, with the goal being satisfaction of both sides.

These negotiations would not be limited to nuclear issues. Slavin writes:

A final goal, according to the document, is “a comprehensive agreement on collective commitments in the areas of economic, political, security and international cooperation” that includes Iranian inclusion in talks aimed at ending the conflict in Syria – something the US has opposed.

The last time Iran offered the West comprehensive negotiations, with all differences on the table, was in 2003 when, in the wake of the invasion of Iraq, the shaken Iranian government decided that it should seek a deal with the Bush administration to ensure that it was not the next Middle East country to face attack. At that time, an over-confident Bush administration simply ignored the offer. An opportunity was lost.

It may be back. Fearing an attack by Israel backed by the United States, the Iranians seem to be in a bargaining mood.

The United States should say “yes” and include in the list of issues to be discussed Iran’s role in supporting the Syrian government’s war on its own people, its threats against Israel and support for Hizbullah and other issues that have divided us from Iran since the Iranian revolution.

In other words, Iran wants recognition of its right to enrich uranium; here is what we want.

One thing we cannot do is to continue to refuse to discuss the lifting of sanctions as we have thus far. Why in God’s name would Iran seriously negotiate when we say that the one thing they seek is off the table? It wouldn’t, especially when it knows that the insistence that sanction not be lifted comes from Binyamin Netanyahu by way of AIPAC and its Congressional acolytes.

We need real diplomacy, not diplomacy with limits set by a lobby and the pursuit of donors associated with it. The alternative is likely to be a war which will kill thousands of people, endanger U.S. vital interests in the region including our military and civilian personnel throughout the Muslim world, threaten the long-term survival of the State of Israel and irreparably damage American interests throughout the Middle East starting with the crashing of the world economy.

There is absolutely no reason not to accept the Iranian offer much like one would accept an offer to buy your house. Is the would-be buyer offering too little? Then cross out the figure he has penned in and put down yours. It’s called a counteroffer.

Remember how President Kennedy resolved the Cuban Missile Crisis. The Soviets first made a seemingly generous offer. But then, within hours, they reconsidered and sent an offer that met none of our demands. While his Cabinet fumed, Kennedy came up with a solution: accept the first offer and ignore the second. His gambit ultimately led to a resolution of the crisis and saved the planet.

President Obama can do the same with this latest Iranian offer. He should respond by indicating eagerness to discuss all the issues dividing the U.S. and Iran, starting with the nuclear issue and sanctions, and then moving on to the rest.

Why not? The worst that can happen is not reaching a deal. But the best: Obama can earn that Nobel Peace Prize and the horrific prospect of war with Iran would finally be off the table, along with the possibility that it will develop nuclear weapons. Isn’t it worth a try?

Obama’s Iran Policy Dictated by AIPAC

27 Jun

Yesterday I published a piece in Huffington Post on why I am voting for Obama in November. My bottom line is that he is a pretty lousy president but the GOP is infinitely worse. I stand by that.

However, I will say that if my vote was based exclusively on Middle East issues, rather on domestic concerns, I would not vote for Obama because he is a wholly owned subsidiary of AIPAC and Bibi Netanyahu. Obama’s Middle East policies are about fundraising not about US security.

I know that is a terrible charge to make about any president but this shoe fits comfortably on Obama and I have no doubt he knows it.

Take this latest news about the Iran negotiations by the terrific reporters Barbara Slaven and Laura Rozen in Al Monitor. 

Briefings by diplomats whose countries took part in the talks portrayed the meetings as a “dialogue of the deaf,” with the two sides trading widely divergent proposals. However, Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator did express willingness to discuss one key step requested by the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany (P5+1): stopping enrichment of uranium to 20% U-235, the isotope that gives uranium its explosive power.

The western members of the P5+1 insisted, however, that Iran had to meet all three conditions contained in their proposal: stop 20% enrichment, ship out a stockpile of more than 100 kilograms of 20%-enriched uranium and close Fordo, a fortified enrichment facility built into a mountain near Qom. 

That stance has led some P5+1 members to conclude that the United States hardened its position in Moscow compared to two earlier sessions in Baghdad and Istanbul, according to diplomatic briefings shared with Al-Monitor.

The new American position is precisely the same as Netanyahu’s. And it is classic Israeli “negotiating.” Rather than sit down and talk without conditions, Israel invariably sets the results it wants to achieve as preconditions for negotiations.

Take its position on negotiating with Hamas. First Hamas must swear off violence including in the occupied areas, accept all previous agreements negotiated by its adversary Fatah and recognize Israel. Then maybe Israel will talk or, more likely, add new conditions like recognizing Israel  ”as a Jewish state.”

Hamas has to agree to Israel’s demands in advance of negotiations, begging the question of why negotiate at all. Israel doesn’t negotiate. It offers a diktat.

And now, under Netanyahu’s tutelage, that is what we are doing with the Iranians. We issue ultimata.

The only reason Obama is doing this is because he believes that the key to keeping the money flowing from the “pro-Israel” community is by simply doing what AIPAC tells him to do.

Someone needs to explain to Obama that it is one thing for Members of Congress to develop their stands on the Middle East to please a few dozen donors. Congressmen are not entrusted with the security of the United States. Yes, they are hacks. Yes, they are bought by the lobby. But they cannot get us into a war.

Obama’s endless sucking up to Israel and AIPAC can get us into a war. At this rate, it will.

Has there ever before been an American president who has made foreign policy a subset of political fundraising the way this one has?  Bush did not go to war in Iraq to please AIPAC or Israel. Bush is a guy who believes that war is the answer to any international differences. It is who he is.

It is not who Obama is. His Iran policies are entirely dictated by his desire to please a foreign country, its lobby, and most of all some very wealthy people who give his campaign money based exclusively on their view of that foreign country’s interests.

Obama should be ashamed. I bet he is.

But he’ll keep doing it. He has since he became president. It’s sickening. And it is so damn insulting to American Jews including Jewish donors who support Obama not because he is in Bibi’s pocket but because he is the more liberal candidate. Obama acts as if we are Israeli hardliners, not Americans.

New AIPAC Letter To Sink Iran Negotiations

11 Jun

AIPAC is still worried that there might be a breakthrough in the P5+1 negotiations with Iran. Accordingly, its staff drafted a letter to President Obama that will be circulated by Senators Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and Roy Blunt (R-MO). Its goal is to have the entire Senate endorse the hardest possible line to kill the next round of negotiations which is slated to convene in Moscow next week.

The letter demands the following as “the absolute minimum steps” which Iran “must take immediately.”

1. Shutting down the Fordow facility

2. Freezing enrichment above 5%

3.Shipping all uranium enriched above 5% out of the country.

In return the AIPAC/Senate letter tells the President to offer NOTHING except the continuation of negotiations. In other words, AIPAC proposes a negotiating framework under which Iran makes tangible concessions in return for our agreeing to… more negotiations. Any easing of sanctions is specifically ruled out.

The final paragraph of the letter indicates its real purpose: to shut down negotiations in favor of getting ready for military action. It reads:

If the sessions in Moscow produce no substantive agreement, we urge you to reevaluate the utility of further talks at this time and instead focus on significantly increasing the pressure on the Iranian government through sanctions and making clear that a credible military option exists. As you have rightly noted, ‘the window for diplomacy is closing. Iran’s leaders must realize that you mean precisely that.

The letter is pure AIPAC/Netanyahu. One, it offers the other party nothing except (2) negotiations themselves which are viewed as a concession to the other side.  The offer is designed to be rejected. Why would Iran give up something for nothing?

The letter is also an AIPAC device for scoring senators in an election year. Those who sign will be rewarded or left alone. Those who don’t will hear from AIPAC and its friends. Not a pretty possibility.

This is foreign policy making at its worst, not policy at all but pure special interest politics designed by a lobby to advance Binyamin Netanyahu’s interests and agenda. Ugly stuff. But not surprising.

Just appalling.

Obama Can Win Election By Reaching Agreement With Iran

5 Jun

 

The Obama administration has the politics of Iran wrong. It is right in understanding that another Mideast war before the presidential election would have dire electoral consequences. That is obvious.

An Israeli attack on Iran or, less likely, a U.S. attack would not only threaten vital U.S. interests in the Middle East, starting with American military and civilian personnel, it would also crash the still weak economy, starting with a huge spike in oil (and hence gasoline) prices.

Every week an attack can be delayed is a good one; allowing time for negotiations to end the crisis over Iran’s nuclear development is important. But it is not good enough. The administration needs to reach a deal that will end the crisis once and for all. That would be good policy and politics.

The horror that an attack on Iran would produce is made clear by a new report published by the Washington Institute For Near East Policy, the think tank that is closely associated with AIPAC (the lobby created it in the 1980′s but it has spun off with Dennis Ross, the former Obama administration official, who was its first director, back in a central role).

Owing to Ross’s presence, anything that comes out of the Washington Institute matters, especially because Ross has maintained his close ties with President Obama.

The report published this week, “Beyond Worst-Case Analysis Iran’s Likely Responses to an Israeli Preventive Strike” by Michael Eisenstadt and Michael Knights is a very significant addition to the debate over bombing Iran’s nuclear sites, with its importance only elevated by the institute’s own hawkishness on Iran.

Reading it one might think that an antiwar organization issued it to encourage policymakers to put away the bombing option permanently, but that is not the purpose of this report.

In fact, the authors make clear from the start that their intention is to demonstrate that worst-case predictions about the results of bombing Iran are overstated. And, if not, that they can be dealt with.

Prudence dictates modesty when attempting to predict the behavior of states embroiled in armed conflict, where uncertainty and the law of unintended consequences rule. Yet more than thirty years’ experience observing the current regime in Tehran, combined with insights derived from the Islamic Republic’s history and strategic culture, provide reason to support a more measured and less apocalyptic–if still sobering–assessment of the likely aftermath of a preventive strike.

 
The authors offer the following as likely, or at least possible, Iranian responses to a strike on its nuclear sites. Here they are in the authors’ order and exact words:
 
  1. Missile strikes against Dimona and Israeli population centers.
  2. Terrorism overseas.
  3. Proxy attacks on U.S. personnel in Iraq and Afghanistan.
  4. Kidnapping U.S. personnel.
  5. Clashes with the U.S. Navy.
  6. Missile or terrorist attacks on neighboring states.
  7. Closing the Straits of Hormuz.
  8. Rally round the flag (this refers to the Iranian people closing ranks behind a regime they detest in response to an outside attack)
  9. The Arab street rises up.
  10. A clandestine crash nuclear program.
Each one of these possibilities is described in hair-raising fashion, so much so that it will lead any sane reader to conclude that the bombing Iran option should be swept off the table in favor of unconditional negotiations. That is not, however, what the authors conclude. After seven pages describing the horrors that could follow an attack on Iran, they offer three recommendations of how the United States could prevent or mitigate them:
 
  1. Deterring Iranian retaliation against U.S. interests.
  2. Limiting the scope and duration of the conflict by keeping Hizballah out of the fight and mobilizing international pressure on Iran.
  3. Ensuring that Iran is unable to rebuild nuclear program in the conflict’s aftermath, and that Hizballah is unable to rearm.

In short, the authors are very convincing about the horrific consequences of bombing and equally unconvincing about our ability to prevent those consequences, at least one of which is particularly terrifying — an outbreak of terrorism here:

Iran would likely respond to a strike with terrorist attacks on Israeli, Jewish, and possibly U.S. targets on several continents, perhaps in conjunction with Hizballah. Both Tehran and Hizballah have undertaken such operations in the past, though several attempts have been thwarted in recent years, whether due to enhanced post-9/11 U.S. and Israeli surveillance of terrorist groups or the ineptitude of the operatives in question. It would be prudent to assume, however, that at least some of these attacks would succeed.(Emphasis mine).

Needless to say, the Washington Institute is not alone in making these dire predictions, which have frequently been issued by former U.S. and Israeli military and intelligence officials. But their provenance this time is striking.

Given all this, doesn’t it behoove President Obama to stop trying to appease those who are pushing him toward inflexibility in negotiating with Iran in favor of the opposite approach? Rather than trumpet his determination to maintain old sanctions and add new ones — thereby ensuring Iran makes no major concessions — why not declare that he is going the extra mile to avoid war?

Up to now Obama has acted as if the only constituency intensely interested in the question of bombing Iran or not bombing Iran are the hawks. And that may be true because no one in the administration emphasizes what bombing Iran might mean to all Israelis, Iranians and others but especially to Americans. Accordingly, the pro-war voices are, by far, the loudest.

Nonetheless, even without Obama addressing this issue, the American people seem to get it. Although they support strong measures to ensure that Iran does not develop nuclear weapons, they oppose military action by the United States or Israel as this poll demonstrates.  Obviously it did not take the Washington Institute’s frightening scenario to convince Americans that the last thing we need is another war, especially one that poses the threat of terrorism at home along with crashing the economy.

That is why Obama should stop dragging his feet and go into the next round of negotiations determined to come out with a deal that resolves the conflict.

Yes, a few donors might not be happy. But the vast majority of Americans would be pleased to see their president announce that he has achieved a deal that would both eliminate any Iranian nuclear threat to Israel in favor of us agreeing to accept limited Iranian enrichment for civilian purposes and, as we lift sanctions in return, lead to more oil and lower gas prices at home. 

Successful peacemaking may not win elections in and of themselves but any significant achievement by a president raises his stature by making him look like an accomplished leader. Obama needs that kind of accomplishment right now. Simply kicking the Iran can down the road until after the election accomplishes nothing.

Besides, averting the catastrophes that war with Iran would accomplish is simply the right thing to do. In fact, it is Obama’s obligation to the American people. Resolving the Iran crisis is a win-win. And Obama can do it, if he wants to.

Obama Is More Likely To Approve Bombing Iran Than Romney

29 May

At the rate we are going, the pro-Iran war lobby could get the war it wants in the next few months, right during the U.S. election campaign. AIPAC and its leadership cadre in Congress (led by Rep. Howard Berman) are now insisting the United States permit ZERO enrichment by Iran, i.e, denying it its rights under the NPT.  Berman is a Democrat, speaking for Democrats, and his defection to the full Netanyahu approach makes it likely Obama will fold and give up on negotiations. Given that no Iranian government would ever accept such terms, a war is much more likely.

Many consider that impossible. After all, if President George W. Bush flat-out refused to give Israel permission to attack Iran , why would President Obama say “yes.”

The big difference is politics. When the Israelis (via their neocon proxies Vice President Cheney, Elliot Abrams, and others) demanded that Israel be allowed to attack before the ostensibly dovish Obama became president, the hawks had no cards to play.

Bush was leaving office and had no need to please the war crowd. Besides he knew that they had destroyed his presidency by duping him into invading Iraq. Why would he give them Iran when, as he told them, no one could predict the implications of attacking. In short, he responded to the idea of war in Iran as he should have reacted to the idea of invading Iraq: with skepticism. His “no” ended the discussion, leaving the war crowd despondent,  believing that that their chances of success with Obama were nil.

Bush would have been unlikely to agree (following the Iraq failure) even if he had political considerations to worry about.  Bush did not rely on AIPAC oriented donors to bankroll his campaigns. Republican presidential candidates (and that includes the likely 2012 nominee, Mitt Romney) are almost entirely funded by business interests.

Name a special interest (the old fashioned kind that donates to campaigns to ultimately put money in their own pockets like the Chamber of Commerce or Koch Brothers) and you will find it well-represented among GOP donors. But not the Israel lobby crowd which, no matter what you may think about it, is not about personal greed.

Check out the list of Romney’s top donors. These are not people who care about the West Bank,  Iran nuclear enrichment or foreign policy issues in general. Their special interest is themselves.

This is not the case with Democratic donors.  With corporate money flowing so heavily to the Republicans, Democrats need other sources.

One of the Democrats’ largest sources of funding comes from the “pro-Israel” crowd which, like Hollywood executives,  have stuck with Democrats through thick and thin. Although the single-issue Israel types, would like to see Jews move toward the Republicans, they don’t. To their credit, even Jewish multi-millionaire business people tend to be liberals who reject the Republican party as being alien and, to be frank, hostile to all minorities – including Jews.

Most of these wealthy Jewish donors do not give to Democrats out of hawkishness on Israel although AIPAC and other “pro-Israel” organizations have successfully conveyed the falsehood that they do. In fact, as the polls demonstrate, Jews support Democrats because of their  preference for a liberal, tolerant, economically just America not as a form of insurance that the U.S. will not push Israel toward peace. Nonetheless, the lobby has been very successful in conveying that  if a donor’s name is Goldberg, the money is about Israel, and now Iran,  even though it’s more likely to be about opposing racism or environmental destruction.

That is why Obama  treads so lightly on all issues that touch the Middle East.  His aides tell him that even the slightest deviation from the Netanyahu line will cause “pro-Israel” money to start flowing to the Republicans.

That is also why Vice President Biden met with pro-Israel groups right before the just-concluded Iran negotiations to assure them that the United States will not deviate an inch from Netanyahu’s. That commitment produced our refusal to even discuss the easing of sanctions in exchange for Iranian commitments to limit nuclear enrichment. And it was that refusal (and particularly the refusal to defer new onerous sanctions) that killed this round of negotiations and maybe negotiations altogether. After all, why would Iran give up anything unless we are prepared to lift sanctions? What country gives up anything in exchange for nothing or, at best, very little?

All this leads me to conclude that Netanyahu may decide to attack during the Obama presidency rather than wait for Romney. One, Romney is unlikely to  win. And, two, if he does win, why would he be more willing to approve an attack than George Bush was?

Sure, his campaign rhetoric is stridently hawkish and he has indicated that neocons will dominate his foreign policy team. But that could be just campaign talk, just another Romney attempt to look crazy right to solidify support among the crazy right.

As president, however, he is likely to understand, as Bush did, that, as a Republican,  he is free to do what he wants to do on the Middle East including refusing to authorize an Israeli attack. After all, unlike Obama, AIPAC-connected donors will not have played a significant role in his election and are unlikely to support him for re-election. Besides, pure business types like Romney (and his supporters) can be surprisingly dovish when it comes to disrupting the world economy not to mention their beloved oil market.

These calculations are all obvious enough that one can assume they have occurred to Netanyahu and his lobby too. Romney, for all his tough talk, is both a question mark and fairly immune to the intimidation of U.S. policymakers that is Netanyahu and his lobby’s stock-in-trade. Obama, on the other hand, has been led to believe he is utterly vulnerable to the lobby and its donors – which is why he has proven to be such a pushover for Netanyahu over the past three years.

In short, unless somehow there is a breakthrough in the next round of Iran negotiations (June 18 in Moscow), a breakthrough Netanyahu and his lobbyare working hard to prevent, war could be looming.

And not under President Romney. Under President Obama.

Yes, that could, in the end, cost him the election, but that is not what he is likely to hear from his top advisers these days: the people who raise the money. As always, they will tell Obama that he has no choice but to give Netanyahu what he wants. If past is prologue, he will.

Mainstream Media & Bloggers Are Too Scared To Mention AIPAC In Iran Coverage

24 May

Look, I don’t blame them. As I can testify from personal experience, telling the truth about the lobby is dangerous. And by the lobby I mean not only AIPAC but all its satellite organizations, journalists, flacks, bloggers, rabbis, etc, who  will come after anyone who talks about the lobby’s role in determining U.S. policy on Iran.

But come on.

Every piece of legislation dealing with Iran, including all the sanctions bills, were written in AIPAC’s offices and then handed over to favored senators and representatives for introduction. For the last decade, every AIPAC annual conference, attended by the President and half the Congress, has had as its centerpiece the need to confront Iran. Just this week, as negotiations began in Baghdad, the Vice President met with the ultra-right Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations, which is led by this guy. (Watch the youtube, you will fall off your chair laughing).  And the next day the Senate Majority Leader met with the same group.  The message to the Conference in both cases: trust us, we will not deviate from Prime Minister Netanyahu’s policy that sanctions not be lifted no matter what Iran offers. And we didn’t!

To put it simply, there would be no Iran hysteria was it not for the lobby. After all, was there hysteria over North Korean  nuclear weapons? The North Korean regime is insane which the Iranian regime is not. And we have over 100,000 troops in South Korea, not to mention that Seoul, the South Korean capital, is virtually on the border with the crazy north.

But Iran is different.  And that is because of the lobby. (If groups other than the lobby cared much about Iranian reprocessing, would not Biden and Harry Reid  have met with them. Of course, they would have. But they know Iran is strictly an Israel lobby issue. And that means it is enmeshed in the question of who will or will not receive campaign contributions from PACs and individuals who take their marching orders from the lobby.

Imagine if there was no lobby. (Such a lovely thought).

Then the United States government could work to either prevent the development of an Iranian nuclear weapon (or to contain it afterwards) without hectoring from its political opponents and without a super-powerful special interest lobby (and the donors it controls) breathing down its neck.  If the lobby did not exist and if Obama had not been forced to cater to Netanyahu’s every whim for three years (which utterly undermined his credibility), he would be able to resolve this issue through normal diplomacy. I have no doubt that he would have normalized relations with Iran by now, as he started to do in his first months in office until the lobby went ballistic. And the nuclear issue would have been resolved.

America needs an American policy on Iran. Once the Iranians know that we are speaking for ourselves and not for Netanyahu and AIPAC, they might understand that we are acting in good faith, which we are not doing now.

I don’t want to see Iran develop nuclear weapons and I understand why Israel worries about that possibility (although they aren’t exactly in a strong position to argue against nuclear proliferation).

And that is among the many reasons that I wish the timid MSM and bloggers would start telling the truth to the American people. This whole issue is not about us. It’s about Netanyahu and AIPAC. And, largely due to them, we may never be able to resolve it.

George Washington is spinning in his grave, waiting for Rachel Maddow to address this issue. Fat chance.

Neither Maddow or the other “progressives” want to risk offending people who might slow their advance to the heights. That is why this is the ONLY issue that the wise don’t touch with a ten foot pole.

Career comes first. And last.

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