| A Review of: The Politics of Anti-Semitism by Nicholas MaesThe essays in The Politics of Anti-Semitism are assembled from
Counterpunch, a newsletter/website that prides itself on "muckraking
with a radical attitude." Some of the contributors are well-known
figures of the radical left-Norman Finkelstein, Robert Fisk, Edward
Said, Michael Neumann-and, as one might expect of a muckraking'
enterprise, all without exception view Israel in the same condemnatory
light.
The first two essays in the volume set in place a central theme.
Michael Neumann and Scott Handleman write at length on the nature
of anti-Semitism, how the term has come to encompass (through the
machinations of neo-cons, various Jewish organizations and Christian
fundamentalists) any criticism of Israel's (alleged) brutalization
of the Palestinian people. Champions of Israel, Neumann and Handleman
argue, want to have their cake and eat it too: they wish to expand
the semantic reach of anti-Semitism in aid of a (repressive) Zionist
political agenda, AND they wish the term to retain its former moral
force when it refers exclusively to overtly hateful acts against
Jews. It is on account of such chicanery, therefore, that honest
commentators need merely question the excessive influence of the
US Jewish lobby, the legitimacy of West Bank settlements, or the
killing of stone-throwing children (cold-blooded in the contributors'
view), to be labelled anti-Semites and to endure the fury of the
pro-Israel establishment, in the form of slander, censorship and
threats. (Robert Fisk, Alexander Cockburn, M. Shahid Alam and others
describe their ill-treatment at the hands of pro-Zionists-never
mind that Fisk and Cockburn seem to relish a good scrap).
Even as anti-Semitism's range has been stretched in recent days,
Neumann and others go on to argue, anti-Semitism as a lethal menace
to Jewish existence has disappeared. Apart from the rare act of
vandalism, the odd insult, the occasional beating, Jews are nowhere
threatened with the systemic persecution they experienced in times
past. The days of restricted beaches and clubs, pogroms, forced
conversions and deportations are gone. Indeed, a point Belanger,
Brenner and Avnery each emphasize, if the Muslim world still adheres
to anti-Semitic antics of old, or if the anti-Semitic snake is to
rear its head in future, it is (or will be) only because Israel
provokes such resentment through its ongoing persecution of the
Palestinian population.
Once the logistics of anti-Semitism have been explained, the book's
contributors embark upon their criticisms of the Jewish state in
earnest. Israel is an ethnocracy and practices apartheid. Zionism
is racism. Indeed, the blatant racism of successive Israeli governments
has led to multiple war crimes and shapes the foundation of a
genocidal program. Jews control the US media and exercise this
authority monolithically, with the result that they control the US
Congress as well. Not only were Israelis complicit in the destruction
of the World Trade Centre (they were aware of the impending attacks
and kept this information to themselves), but a Jewish scientist
possibly disseminated anthrax spores (to besmirch the reputation
of US Muslims) and various Jewish lobby groups (whose members clearly
have dual loyalties) prompted the Bush administration to invade
Iraq and topple Saddam Hussein.
Given this deplorable record, one that tarnishes US relations with
the rest of the world, Americans should seriously reconsider their
close economic and political ties with the Jewish state (Blankfort
and the Christisons argue at length). It is not in America's interest
to compromise its partnership with one billion plus Muslims, as a
means of guaranteeing security for Israel, especially when such
security' is newspeak for regional dominance'. Universities should
divest their holdings from any company with ties to Israel, US
representatives whose support for Israel exceeds a consideration
of national interests should be outed', and the US should use its
disproportionate influence in the region to end the occupation and
bring about a single, secular bi-national state.
While The Politics of Anti-Semitism is a useful compendium of
contemporary leftist impressions of the Middle East conflict, and
here and there serves as a corrective to certain pieties pro-Israel
organizations have occasionally indulged in to excess, it does
present very glaring weaknesses. As the charges fall thick and fast,
the reader is often given the impression that systematic argumentation
has been left to one side, and that a vast number of facts have
been deliberately ignored to create the semblance of an open and
shut case.
What is one to make, for example, of the authors' categorical
assertion that the mass media is in Jewish hands and therefore
seriously distorts the perspective of any story about Israel? It
is a simple matter of record that the New York Times, ABC, CBS and
other major media organs have reported in great detail stories that
have been highly embarrassing to Israel (Sabra and Shatila, the
Baruch Goldstein killings, the Massacre on the Mount', the Jenin
Massacre (later discredited), etc.). The allegation of genocide is
puzzling too when one considers that population figures for the
West Bank and Gaza Strip have exploded over the last thirty years.
If Zionism is racism (as Brenner, Belanger, Avnery and others assert)
why did the UN itself come to renounce its notorious resolution to
that effect? And how does the US Jewish lobby system work, when US
Jews generally support Democratic candidates and have produced from
its ranks numerous critics of Israeli policies (as Finkelstein,
Handleman, Neumann, Avneri and Brenner themselves demonstrate)?
More troubling, however, are not statements that basic common sense
calls into question; instead, it is the near total silence on
conflicts in other parts of the globe (ones much more violent than
the Israeli occupation) and, more to the point, on Palestinian
shortcomings and Muslim aggression. To read The Politics of
Anti-Semitism, one would conclude that Israel's harsh treatment of
the Palestinians is the only manifestation of violence in the Middle
East for the last fifty years (excluding the recent US invasion of
Iraq). The contributors make no effort to describe a greater context,
as if Assad of Syria, the ayatollahs of Iran, Saddam Hussein, past
Egyptian and Jordanian governments, and the Palestinian themselves
have been irrelevant or blameless agents in this drama. This is not
to suggest that a consideration of Palestinian terrorism in recent
years, or the rampant corruption of Arafat and his cronies, or
Hamas' ideological drive to destroy the Jewish state, whitewashes
Israel of all charges of wrongdoing; it must, however, provide a
rationale for SOME of Israel's actions, even its more questionable
ones, and allows, down the road, for a more cogent plan of
disengagement, one less recklessly aggressive than the divestment
campaign or a bi-national, secular state (a disastrous scenario)
that various contributors insist is the best way to proceed.
The volume's greatest weakness, however, is that it is just as
manipulative in its view of anti-Semitism as it accuses supporters
of Israel to be. Any commentator who defends Israel against charges
of genocide-a term whose semantic range has been preposterously
stretched-is someone who believes any critic of Israel is a vicious
anti-Semite, according to the paradigm Neumann and others have
established. By hinging their polemic against Israel on the question
of whether or not their observations are anti-Semitic (it being
understood that only unreasonable, paranoid types would conclude
such opinions to be indeed anti-Semitic), the book's contributors
invite their readers to forego a lengthy analysis of each accusation
and the careful weighing of evidence (which is conspicuously absent)
to fume over the rhetorical excesses of the Zionist lobby. In other
words, the question of anti-Semitism is a smoke screen. The real
issue, of course, is whether one's assertions are accurate,
well-documented and made in good faith. The contributors to The
Politics of Anti-Semitism too often fail on all three counts; their
tactic of choice consists of brazen sloganeering or the recitation
of hollow truths' (the Jenin massacre, Israel and 9/11, neo-con
control of the Bush administration), as though mere repetition will
obviate the need for more solid evidence or hard argumentation.
While there is good reason to suspect the intentions of critics-who
hold Israel to a higher standard than other nations, who launch
accusations that cannot be supported with facts, or who view the
Jewish reaction to the Holocaust as an exercise in rapacity and
self-exoneration-whether their motivation is anti-Semitic or not
is possibly irrelevant. In the end it is the soundness of their
arguments that matters. Do they construct a rational argument and
invite their readers to prove them wrong. The contributors to the
Politics of Anti-Semitism do not. One either shares their scathing
view of Israel, or one is beyond the boundaries of acceptable
discourse, in a domain crowded with imperialists and mass murderers.
If there is ever to be stability in the region, it will not be a
product of the heated, unhelpful antagonism of a Michael Neumann.
The author might lay claim to the boast that some of his best friends
are Jewish; the problem is a Michael Neumann considers the majority
of Jews to be his worst enemies as well.
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