Howard Dean's blunt message: Forget Palestine
By Joshua Frank
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Nov 30, 2005, 01:30
Democratic National
Committee Chairman Howard Dean has a fickle stance on virtually every foreign
policy issue thrown his way. None, however, are more telling of his party's
incompetence than his posture on the Israeli/Palestinian issue, which is
virtually identical to that of the neocons.
Recently Dean
returned from a week-long jaunt to Israel sponsored
by the National Jewish Democratic Council (NJDC). Shortly after his return Dean
spoke to an elite crowd of American Israel Public Affairs Committee
(AIPAC) friends and lobbyists in Philadelphia about
his trip to Israel. And the audience was pleased with what they heard.
"Literally,
from Israel's birth, as that great Democrat Harry Truman took the courageous
step to immediately extend America's hand to recognize the State of
Israel," Dean espoused, "Democrats have done all we can to foster the
special, enduring relationship between the two countries. Maintaining Israel's
security is a key U.S. national security interest . . ."
But Dean's vision
of Israel's security is not without consequences for Palestinians or Arab
Israelis.
The
October 2003 issue of The Jewish Week
quoted Gov. Howard Dean as saying that he had been very clear in his support
for "targeted assassinations" of alleged Palestinian terror suspects.
He believed these men were "enemy combatants in a war," adding,
"Israel has every right to shoot them before they can shoot
Israelis."
This position
bears a striking resemblance to that of both Presidents George W. Bush and Bill
Clinton. And why is Dean's
position, like that of Bush and Clinton, so dead wrong? From the 1948 war to
the proposal to settle the whole of the Occupied Territories, Israel has always
been associated with the policy of expelling Palestinians from the land -- an
act that is frighteningly similar to the Nazi objective during the Second World
War to round up and clear all the Jews from Europe to provide "Lebensraum"
for the citizens of Germany.
Dean's former
campaign fundraiser during his bid for the presidency, Steven Grossman, was the
ex-director of AIPAC. The most influential pro-Israel lobby in the United
States, AIPAC is committed to, amongst other things, defending Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon and his former Likud Party's every mishap.
What does the AIPAC
ideology entail? How about support for the current wall being erected by Israel
to keep Palestinians at bay, as well as Israeli settlements in the West Bank, support
for a nuclear program in the country, as well as billions in US aid? All this
despite the numerous UN resolutions Israel has broken with their dealings of
occupied territories of Palestine, including UN Resolution 1402, which demands
that Israel withdraw its military from all Palestinian cities at once.
Nevertheless,
Dean's defense of AIPAC and Ariel Sharon, whom Bush has called a "man of
peace," mirrored the sentiments of many of Washington's most influential
Zionist strategists.
A prime
example: Richard Perle, the ex-chairman of the Defense Policy Board, who was
influential in advising the Bush administration on invading Iraq, certainly
would have corroborated Dean's comments in the December 5, 2003, issue of The Jerusalem Post. An article in that
issue quoted Dean as saying, "Israel is a democracy, [and] the only
democracy aside from Turkey in the region. Israel has incurred severe economic
damage as a result of being forced to fight this war. I believe that by
providing Israel with the loan guarantees and thereby enabling Israel's economy
to grow, the US will be advancing its own interest."
He
continued, "As a fellow democracy that shares our values, that is fighting
a war against terrorism, Israel is a friend, a strategic asset, and an ally for
the US. A strong Israel is essential for advancing the US interest of building
a stable world." Given this impassioned rhetoric, it is nearly impossible
to imagine that Dean would have ceased to support the US's billion-dollar loan
guarantees to Israel if he had been elected.
"The human
rights situation in Israel and the Occupied Territories continues to
deteriorate. Some 2,500 Palestinians, most of them unarmed and including some
450 children, have been killed by the Israeli army and more than 900 Israelis,
most of them civilians and including more than 100 children, have been killed
by Palestinian armed groups since the start of the current uprising, or
intifada, in September 2000," contends Amnesty International. "Tens
of thousand of Palestinians and thousands of Israelis have been injured, many
maimed for life. Palestinians do not feel safe, in either the street or in
their homes, as Israeli army aircrafts, helicopter gunships and tanks
frequently shell Palestinian refugee camps and densely populated residential
areas. Israelis also do not feel safe when they leave their homes, as
Palestinian armed groups deliberately target Israeli civilians in suicide
bombings and other attacks on buses, restaurants and other public places."
When he
was interviewed in The Forward in the
fall of 2002, Dean admitted that his position on Israel was "closer to
AIPAC's" than that of Palestinian advocates, such as the Jewish-led Peace
Now, and declared his support for building the wall that will separate
Palestinians from the occupied territories.
Debunking
the ignorance of the Israeli wall, Bernard Avishai, author of The Tragedy of Zionism, wrote in Harper's January 2005 issue:
"This
is where the demographic argument gets you. You put West Bank Palestinians
behind a wall where economic life is virtually impossible, and you hive off
another hundred thousand Arab Israelis and put them behind the wall, too.
Meanwhile, you expand your border to include non-Jewish settlements and
maintain existing political economic barriers for Arab Israelis, a barrier of
institutional practice and law, a barrier of land and common ideology. You say
Jews and Arabs must be separated because even if Israel's Arab citizens will
make the most of what liberties Israel gives them, they could not possibly want
to be absorbed into Israel. And after all of this, you suppose yourself a
democracy because you represent the general will of the 'Jewish majority.' But
is the choice really Apartheid or binationalism?"
In the
aforementioned Forward issue Dean also
championed Israel for taking its battles across the border into Syria. "If
Israel has to defend itself by striking terrorists elsewhere, it's going to
have to do that," Dean told Judy Woodruff in a CNN interview. He followed
this statement by claiming: "[T]errorism has no place in bringing peace in
the Middle East . . . nations have the right to defend themselves just as we
defended ourselves by going into Afghanistan to get rid of al Qaeda."
Later,
when Joseph Lieberman and Kerry questioned Dean's half-baked call for
"peace" in Palestine, the former governor responded, "I was a little surprised because
people who know me know very well I am a strong defender of Israel . . . But
after I thought about it for a while, I wasn't surprised. I think that the
connection of the Jewish community to Israel is so strong, and the feeling in
Israel that someday they may be abandoned is enormous."
Howard Dean's own campaign website even went as far as to boast
that the United States should "maintain its historic special relationship
with the state of Israel, providing a guarantee of its long-term defense and
security."
So
here's Howard Dean's blunt message on behalf of the Democratic Party:
"Forget Palestine".
Joshua Frank is the author of the new book,
"Left Out!: How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush," which has just been published by Common Courage
Press. You can order a copy at a discounted rate at www.brickburner.org. Joshua can be
reached at Joshua@brickburner.org.
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