Hysteria at Herzliya
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
DIGG THIS
When Congress
finally decides on just the right language for its "non-binding
resolution" deploring Bush's leadership in this war, it might consider
a resolution to keep us out of the next one.
For America
is on a collision course with an Iran of 70 million, and the folks
who stampeded us into Iraq are firing pistols in the air again.
At the
annual Herzliya Conference, U.S. presidential aspirants, neoconservatives
and Israeli hawks were all invoking the Holocaust and warning of
the annihilation of the Jews.
Israel's
"Bibi" Netanyahu, who compares Iran's Ahmadinejad to Hitler, said:
"The world that didn't stop the Holocaust last time can stop it
this time. ... Who will lead the effort against genocide if not
us? The world will not stand up on behalf of the Jews if the Jews
do not stand up on behalf of the world."
Said former
Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz: "Iran is the heart of the problem
in the Middle East. It is the most urgent threat facing the world,
and needs to be dealt with before it's too late." After meeting
with the Department of State's Nicholas Burns, Mofaz called 2007
"a year of decision."
Richard
Perle assured the conference that Bush will attack Iran rather than
see it acquire nuclear weapons capabilities. Newt Gingrich also
brought his soothing touch to the proceedings: "(C)itizens who do
not wake up every morning and think about possible catastrophic
civilian casualties are deluding themselves.
"Three
nuclear weapons are a second holocaust. ... I'll repeat it. Three
nuclear weapons are a second holocaust. ... Our enemies are fully
as determined as Nazi Germany and more determined than the Soviets.
Our enemies will kill us the first chance they get.
"If we
knew that tomorrow morning we would lose Haifa, Tel Aviv and Jerusalem,
what would we do to stop it? If we knew that we would tomorrow lose
Boston, San Francisco or Atlanta, what would we do?"
Mitt Romney
agreed. Ahmadinejad's Iran is more dangerous than Khrushchev's Soviet
Union, which put missiles in Cuba. For the Soviets "were never suicidal.
Soviet commitment to national survival was never in question. That
assumption cannot be made to an irrational regime (Iran) that celebrates
martyrdom."
Ehud Olmert,
mired in scandal, his popularity in the tank after the Lebanon fiasco,
was as hawkish as Bibi: "The Jewish people, with the scars of the
Holocaust fresh on its body, cannot afford to let itself face the
threat of annihilation once again. ... We will stand up against
nuclear threats and even prevent them."
Came then
U.S. peace candidate John Edwards. Keeping Iran from nuclear weapons
"is the greatest challenge of our generation. ... To ensure that
Iran never gets nuclear weapons, we need to keep all options on
the table. ... Let me reiterate all options."
Wrote the
Financial Times' Philip Stephens of Herzliya, "I gave up
counting the times I heard the words 'existential threat' to describe
Iran's nuclear program capability."
A few weeks
back, according to UPI's Arnaud De Borchgrave, Netanyahu declared
that Israel "must immediately launch an intense, international public
relations front first and foremost on the United States the goal
being to encourage President Bush to live up to specific pledges
he would not allow Iran to arm itself with nuclear weapons. We must
make clear to the (U.S.) government, the Congress and the American
public that a nuclear Iran is a threat to the U.S. and the entire
world, not only Israel."
Israel's
war is to be sold as America's war.
The project
is underway. According to Peter Beaumont, foreign affairs editor
of the Guardian, Israeli media are reporting that the assignment
to convince the world of the need for tough action on Iran has been
given to Meir Dagan, head of Mossad.
Listening
to the war talk, Gen. Wesley Clark exploded to Arianna Huffington:
"You just have to read what's in the Israeli press. The Jewish community
is divided, but there is so much pressure being channeled from the
New York money people to the office-seekers."
The former
Supreme Allied Commander in Europe was ordered out of ranks and
dressed down by Abe Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League. But Matt
Yglesias of American Prospect, himself Jewish, says Clark spoke
truth: "(I)t's true that major Jewish organizations are pushing
this country into war with Iran."
Yet is
the hysteria at Herzliya justified? Consider:
Not
once since its 1979 revolution has Iran started a war. In any war
with America, or Israel with its hundreds of nuclear weapons, Iran
would not be annihilating anyone. Iran would be risking annihilation.
Not only
has Iran no nukes, the Guardian reported yesterday, "Iran's
efforts to produce highly enriched uranium ... are in chaos." That
centrifuge facility at Natanz is "archaic, prone to breakdown and
lacks the materials for industrial-scale production."
There
is no need for war. Yet, Israelis, neocons and their agents of influence
are trying to whip us into one. Senators who are seeking absolution
for having voted to take us into Iraq ought to be confronted and
asked just what they are doing to keep us out of a war in Iran.
January
31, 2007
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire.
Copyright
© 2007 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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