Paul Wolfowitz, the chief architect of the Iraq War, now
wants the United States to help refugees. No, not the estimated 4.8 million
Iraqis forced to flee their homes in a war he and other pro-Israeli
neoconservatives planned as far back as 1992. Instead, the unlikely
humanitarian, having brought “democracy” to the Iraqi people in 2003, has
turned his attention this year to “the plight of North Korean refugees in
China.”
In a June 16 Wall Street Journal op-ed titled
“How to Help North Korea’s Refugees,” the visiting scholar at the
neoconservative American Enterprise Institute expresses his hope that President
Obama and South Korean President Lee, who were meeting that day, would find the
time to address “this purely humanitarian issue.”
While it’s hard to imagine any U.S. administration taking
anything Wolfowitz says seriously after the Iraq debacle, Americans should
still take note. Whenever a Zionist poses as a humanitarian, it can be taken as
axiomatic that Israel stands to benefit somehow -- often, if not always, at the
expense of U.S. interests.
But how, it may be reasonably asked, could Israel possibly
gain from Wolfowitz’s championing of North Korean refugees?
One obvious benefit is that it diverts the spotlight from
Israeli crimes in Palestine. The best known example of this strategy is the
Save Darfur coalition, which, as the Jerusalem Post once bragged, “was
actually begun exclusively as an initiative of the American Jewish community.”
Eliot Engel’s attempt to deflect international criticism of Israel’s apartheid
wall exemplifies this ploy. “Now millions of African people face genocide,” the
Democrat Congressman from New York protested, “and the UN’s top priority is
condemning the Israeli security fence that saves lives on both sides of the
security barrier.”
Not surprisingly, we also find that those in the forefront
of advocacy for North Korean refugees are pro-Israelis. In his op-ed,
Wolfowitz specifically commends Senators Sam Brownback and Dianne Feinstein and
Representatives Ed Royce and Gary Ackerman for “pressing the issue.” While it
would be difficult to find more than a handful of members of Congress who do
not at least publicly support Israel, those singled out for praise are among
its staunchest apologists on Capitol Hill. So, unless Zionists actually care
more about the world’s refugees (provided they are not Palestinian), something
is amiss here.
Weaponizing human rights
In explaining the reasons for “inaction” on the North Korean
refugee issue, Wolfowitz provides a hint as to a less transparent benefit for
Israel. “Unfortunately,” he writes, “many U.S. government officials seem . . . reluctant
to do anything that might jeopardize negotiations with North Korea.”
This oblique criticism refers to the intense struggle
between the State Department and the neocons for control of Korean policy,
which was particularly pronounced during the Bush administration. While the
career diplomats at Foggy Bottom had, in the words of chief U.S. negotiator
Christopher Hill, “no interest in weaponizing human rights,” this was precisely
the approach taken by the neocons.
The controversial North Korea Human Rights Act of 2004,
sponsored by Christian Zionist Sam Brownback, created the post of special envoy
for human rights. Jay Lefkowitz, the Orthodox Jewish appointee, couldn’t have
been more provocative in his dealings with Pyongyang. As Suzy Kim and John
Feffer wrote in Foreign Policy in Focus, “Lefkowitz deliberately overstepped his bounds to undermine the
nuclear talks by linking them to human rights.”
Predictably, the end result of this and other neocon
provocations was a nuclear-armed North Korea.
A diplomatic disaster for Washington, a nuclear Pyongyang is
a geostrategic boon to Tel Aviv, however. In their relentless campaign to
induce the United States to attack Iran, pro-Israelis invariably hype the North
Korean nuclear threat. It serves as an associative warning of the danger of not
preventing the “mad mullahs” in Tehran from also acquiring nuclear weapons.
But what about Wolfowitz’s professed concern for the
“probably between 100,000 to 400,000” North Korean refugees?
In addition to the nearly 5 million Iraqis displaced by
Wolfowitz’s War for Israel, some 3.9 million Palestinian refugees have
been generated by that state’s expansionist ideology.
If Paul Wolfowitz really gave a damn about refugees, he
would renounce Zionism.
Maidhc
Ó Cathail is a freelance writer. He has written for Antiwar.com, Dissident
Voice, Online Journal, OpEd News, Media Monitors Network, The
Palestine Chronicle and many other publications.