Charles Freeman, Roger Cohen and the Changing Israel Debate
by Glenn Greenwald
by
Glenn Greenwald
Anyone
who doubts that there has been a substantial and very positive
change in the rules for discussing American policy towards Israel
should consider two recent episodes: (1) the last three New York
Times columns by Roger Cohen; and (2) the very strong pushback
from a diverse range of sources against the neoconservative lynch
mob trying, in typical fashion, to smear and destroy Charles Freeman
due to his critical (in all senses of the word) views of American
policy towards Israel. One positive aspect of the wreckage left
by the Bush presidency is that many of the most sacred Beltway pieties
stand exposed as intolerable failures, prominently including our
self-destructively blind enabling of virtually all Israeli actions.
First, the Cohen columns: Two weeks ago, Cohen writing from
Iran mocked
the war-seeking cartoon caricature of that nation as The New
Nazi Germany craving a Second Holocaust. To do so, Cohen reported
on the relatively free and content Iranian Jewish community (25,000
strong). When that column prompted all sorts of predictable attacks
on Cohen from the standard cast of Israel-centric thought enforcers
(Jeffrey Goldberg, National Review, right-wing blogs, etc.
etc.), Cohen wrote
a second column breezily dismissing those smears and then bolstering
his arguments further by pointing out that "significant margins
of liberty, even democracy, exist" in Iran; that "Iran
has not waged an expansionary war in more than two centuries";
and that "hateful, ultranationalist rhetoric is no Iranian
preserve" given the ascension of Avigdor Lieberman in Benjamin
Netanyahu's new Israeli government.
Today, Cohen returns with his most
audacious column yet: noting the trend in Britain and elsewhere
to begin treating Hezbollah and Hamas as what they are namely,
"organizations [that are] now entrenched political and social
movements without whose involvement regional peace is impossible,"
rather than pure "Terrorist organizations" that must be
shunned and Cohen urges the Obama administration to follow
this trend: the U.S. should "should initiate diplomatic contacts
with the political wing of Hezbollah" and even "look carefully
at how to reach moderate Hamas elements." As for the objection
that those two groups have used violence in the past, Cohen offers
the obvious response, though does so quite eloquently.
Read
the rest of the article
|