The White
House publicly humiliated US National Intelligence Director,
Adm. Dennis Blair last week by forcing him to cancel appointing
veteran diplomat Charles W. Freeman Jr. as the chairman of the
National Intelligence Council, one of the nation’s most important
national security posts.
The National
Intelligence Council chairman’s job is to assemble all reports
from America’s 16 intelligence agencies and produce a synthesis
upon which the president make national security policy.
A former
ambassador to Saudi Arabia and respected Mideast and China expert,
Freeman had the audacity to previously say, "left to its
own devices, the Israeli establishment will make decisions that
harm Israelis, threaten all associated with them, and enrage
those who are not."
Freeman
has criticized Israel’s actions on other occasions. He committed
the ultimate heresy of warning that close US collaboration with
Israel’s right-wing parties was jeopardizing American interests
and security, and generating anti-American terrorism.
A firestorm
ensued as the outspoken Freemen touched the "third rail
of American politics." A former high official of the Israel
Lobby, who has been charged with passing classified information
to Israel, had the chutzpah to kick off a vicious slander campaign
against Freeman. Sen. Joseph Lieberman and other pro-Israeli
politicians took up the cry. The Obama administration was forced
to ask Freeman to "resign" after lamely claiming it
had not been informed of his appointment.
The Israel
Lobby has been crowing, and rightly so. Freeman’s public lynching
sent a clear message to politicians, officials, and media: fail
to toe the party line on Israel and risk losing your career.
One also
suspects the public humiliation of Admiral Blair may have been
linked to his denials that Iran was making nuclear weapons.
Blair had recently reaffirmed the National Intelligence Estimate
(NIE) finding that Iran is not producing nuclear weapons. This
finding enraged the Washington war party.
Freeman’s
rejection confirms the decisive influence of pro-Israel groups
over the Obama administration’s Mideast policies. It is an evil
portent for Israelis and Arabs seeking peace.
Hillary
Clinton was named Secretary of State in part to placate American
supporters of Israel, many of whom doubted Barack Obama’s commitment
to continuing the Bush administrations unlimited support of
Israel’s right-wing parties.
She, in
turn, named Dennis Ross Special Advisor for Iran and the Gulf.
Ross has long been linked to Israel and associated with the
Israel Lobby. Imagine the uproar if an American Muslim noted
for pro-Palestinian positions was named Washington’s Special
Advisor to Israel.
Take candidate
Obama’s promises to the Israel lobby that he would never pressure
the Jewish state into a peace deal it opposed, and his assurances
that Jerusalem would remain undivided. Add Obama remaining almost
mute while Israel was pounding Gaza into ruins with US weapons.
Now comes
the humiliation of Freeman and Adm. Blair, and the State Department’s
tilt towards Israel. All this adds up to a "new" US
Mideast policy that may be not so different from that of President
Bush, except perhaps for less overt antagonism toward Iran –
at least for a while and occasional chirps about aiding "moderate"
(read: obedient) Palestinians.
No change
in the US-Israeli equation means no change in Israel’s policy
of stalling on creation of a viable Palestinian state. Israel
is speeding up building settlements on the West Bank and Golan.
The advent of rightist Bibi Netanyahu as Israel’s new prime
minister will intensify these expansionist trends. Unlike his
predecessors, Netanyahu at least has the honesty to openly say
he won’t stop settlements or accept a real Palestinian state.
Which,
of course, means no Arab-Israeli peace in the Mideast for the
foreseeable future. Israel and its American supporters will
retain their grip on US Mideast policy. The Freeman affair ends
any hope held by many Americans and Mideasterners that President
Obama would have the political courage to change course on the
Mideast and nudge Israel and the Palestinian factions into a
real land for peace deal – the only possible basis for peace
in the Arab-Israeli conflict.
President
Obama is moving sharply to the left in domestic affairs by starting
to implant European-style socialist polices in America, nationalizing
banks, supporting failed industries, raising taxes and running
up monster deficits.
But,
interestingly, Obama’s foreign policy has veered far to the
right from his original antiwar, reformist image. US military
spending still remains absurdly high, accounting for 50% of
the world’s total. The US armed forces are being rapidly reconfigured
for "expeditionary and counterinsurgency warfare"
in the Third World – what was once known as "colonial warfare."
Obama promised
30,000 US troops would reach Afghanistan. Most alarmingly, after
promising the US would get out of Iraq, President Obama now
plans to keep some 50,000 American "training" troops
there and large numbers of mercenaries.
Most of
the 90,000 US troops slated to be withdrawn from Iraq will be
sent to Afghanistan, provided Iraq does not boil up again. New
US bases are being built or expanded, and new supply routes
sought through Central Asia and even Iran. In other words, a
growing stay and long presence.
This sounds
more like the Imperial-talking Bush than the so-called "antiwar"
Barack Obama.