Rashid
Khalidi Heads Pro-PLO Panel in Bashing Israel
The
Jewish State Is, Apparently, a Greater Threat to America than Anything
Emanating from the Muslim World
by Andrew Harrod
FrontPage Magazine
October 30, 2015
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Israel is a greater threat to America than anything emanating from the
Muslim world, according to participants in an October 15 panel
titled "The Future of Bipartisanship on Israel." One of the
nation's largest Democratic
Party campaign contributors, the Service Employees International
Union (SEIU), provided an appropriately partisan setting in their
Washington, DC, headquarters for this biased panel. Columbia University
professor and former PLO spokesman Rashid
Khalidi moderated before an audience of around seventy, including
Jerusalem Fund director Zeina
Azzam.
Former CIA analyst and Georgetown University security studies
researcher Paul
Pillar ("one of the wisest people" on the Middle East,
according to Khalidi) began the panel by dredging up the well-worn
assertion that the U.S. suffers from its alliance with Israel.
Downplaying broader jihadist motives, he claimed that the Arab-Israeli
conflict is a "highly exploitable issue" that exacerbates
"extremism and specifically, terrorist threats to the U.S."
American support for Israel is a "major drain on U.S. political and
diplomatic capital," he added.
Pillar defined Israeli interests in the Palestinian territories as
"based on religious, nationalist, and economic reasons," with
no mention of self-defense. "When people have peaceful effective channels
for pursuing their interests, they tend to use them," he stated,
implying that Palestinian terrorism is merely the result of oppression.
The "denial of self-determination and democracy to a whole
population shows the United States to be a hypocrite," he
maintained, as if this alleged "denial" were a policy.
Despite acknowledging bilateral military cooperation, Pillar perceived
little commonality between Israel and the U.S. concerning terrorist
threats. Unlike "transnational jihadists," terrorism against
Israel "is not really threatening the American people," he
declared, denying any link between the two. His superficial
and callous assessment held that the "only Americans
Hamas has killed are the ones that happened to be on the wrong street
corner [in Israel] at the wrong time," although Palestinian
terrorists have killed more
Americans than the Islamic State. He also asserted that Hezbollah's
"highly lethal terrorism" against Americans ended with the 1996
Saudi Arabian Khobar Towers
bombing, despite the continuing global reach of Iran's
terrorist proxy.
Envisioning a greater nuclear threat from Israel, a "nuclear
outlaw state," than from Iran, Pillar criticized the "intense
recent effort by the Israeli government to kill one of the most
significant advances in nuclear nonproliferation," the Iran
nuclear agreement. Yousef
Munayyer, executive director of the U.S. Campaign to End the Israeli
Occupation, agreed with Pillar, calling the ineffective
deal the "most intrusive inspections regime known to man."
Munayyer chastised opponents of the agreement's sanctions
relief and labeled it an "effective moving of the
goalposts."
Nihad
Awad, executive director of the Hamas-linked Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), alleged a conspiratorial "connection . .
. between the Islamophobia network and the pro-Israel machinery"
that "has been hijacking U.S. foreign policy." He accused
Middle East Forum (MEF) president Daniel Pipes of being a "central
figure in the Islamophobia network" and a "failed
academician." In fact, Pipes—who has consistently emphasized
that "radical Islam is the problem, moderate Islam is the
solution"—has taught
at Harvard, the University of Chicago, Pepperdine, and the U.S. Naval War
College.
Arab American Institute executive director Maya Berry charged Campus Watch (CW), a project of
MEF that analyzes and critiques the field of Middle East studies, with
"targeting professors" and causing the "suppression of
free speech on college campuses," a false and disproven
allegation that further demonstrates professors' expectation to be free
of criticism. "This is a massive campaign funded by very, very,
very, very well endowed organizations," added Khalidi
melodramatically. It translates into "the protection of the status
quo," while pro-Palestinian "activism is grassroots."
Awad went on to blame this alleged network for the outcome of the 2008
Holy Land Foundation (HLF) trial, claiming that the "government
bought into the pro-Israel propaganda machinery against HLF." He
described HLF merely as the "largest relief organization for Muslims
in the country," which funded "low-credit projects" in the
Palestinian territories, when, in fact, the American government convicted
HLF in 2008 for supporting Hamas. As Awad put it, the list of unindicted
conspirators in the case, such as the aforementioned CAIR, is a
"Who's Who in the [American] Muslim community."
Munayyer and other panelists drew a predictable analogy
between African-Americans and Palestinians as two "oppressed
peoples." He claimed that "it is very easy for Palestinians to
identify with [the] Black Lives Matter" movement, while Khalidi
asserted that American police forces undergoing Israeli riot control
training are learning "how to subdue colonized populations"
from the "masters of that kind of repression."
The panelists presented these linkages as a broader shift in American
attitudes towards Israel. "The younger you are, the more progressive
you are, and the darker your complexion," stated Munayyer, "the
more likely you are to be sympathetic towards Palestinians and critical
of U.S. policy." Berry cited July
2015 data from pollster Frank
Luntz, in which "almost half of Democratic opinion elites found
Israel to be racist." As a 2012 Democratic convention delegate,
Berry witnessed the controversy
over what Khalidi called the "disgusting plank" in the party
platform reaffirming Jerusalem as Israel's historic capital.
Thus did the panel present a near-perfect blend of radical politics,
biased scholarship, and conspiracy mongering in the cause of ending
America's longstanding support for Israel, which Khalidi labeled a
"consensus of idiocy." In this alternative universe, Iran is
more trustworthy than the region's only democracy, concerns over Islamism
are a unfounded, and the violent, corrupt Palestinian Authority ruled
by sharia is a virtuous polity. This distortion of reality
demonstrates the malign influence of contemporary Middle East studies,
which provides intellectual cover for apologists of bigotry and violence,
something all persons of good will should oppose.
Andrew E. Harrod is a freelance researcher and writer who holds a
PhD from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and a JD from George
Washington University Law School. He is a fellow with the Lawfare
Project, an organization combating the misuse of human rights
law against Western societies. You may follow Harrod on twitter at
@AEHarrod.
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