[No wonder Democrats (including all of the Senate’s Jews) are trying to
fast-track a vote on Hagel. The more we get to know about him, the more the
Secretary of Defense is shaping up as the wrong job for the man. df]
Contemporaneous account by Hagel supporter of 2007 speech
Chuck Hagel /
AP
BY: Alana
Goodman
February 14, 2013
February 14, 2013
Fox News Channel on Tuesday
reported that secretary of defense nominee Chuck Hagel failed to disclose to the
United States Senate speeches delivered to controversial groups such as the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination
Committee as well as James Zogby’s Arab American Institute.
Meanwhile, a
2007 speech then-Sen. Hagel delivered at Rutgers University in New Jersey as he
tested the waters for a presidential run is drawing fresh scrutiny.
Hagel said
the U.S. Department of State was an adjunct of the Israeli foreign minister’s
office, according to a contemporaneous report of the
event.
Republican
political consultant and Hagel supporter George Ajjan wrote about the March 2,
2007, speech on his website the following day, writing
a description “point by point through some of the more important elements of his
speech.”
“Point six“:
The
State Department has become adjunct to the Israeli Foreign Minister’s
office…
Wow. A very
bold statement by Hagel bound to further raise the ire of the “Jewish Lobby”
(yawn…), but it does express his strong belief in a comprehensive solution to
problems in the Middle East. Hagel mentioned this theme several times –
comprehensive, he said, in the sense that all tools should be used to achieve
American foreign policy objectives (diplomatic, political, economic, and
military), but also comprehensive in the James Baker sense of addressing the
Arab-Israeli conflict holistically as both Bill Clinton and George W. Bush have
proved too lazy and too incompetent to do.
Reached by
phone, Ajjan confirmed his 2007 account of the event, saying he was “taking
notes as [Hagel] was speaking.”
“If I wrote
it, then that’s what happened at the time,” Ajjan told the Free
Beacon.
He added that
the event, which was cosponsored by the Rutgers University Center for Middle
Eastern Studies and the American Iranian Council, was closed to the press.
“When [Hagel]
said the State Department was becoming an adjunct of the Israeli ministry, I
think that was during the Q&A,” said Ajjan. “Even in the blog, I was
surprised that he said that. It was a very bold statement.”
Ajjan said he
has “been a supporter of Hagel for a long time” and admired his opposition to
the Iraq war in particular.
“Back in ’07,
I was hoping that he was going to throw his hat in the ring for the Republican
presidential primaries,” he said.
Ajjan, who
ran for Congress in 2004, added he would still support a Hagel presidential bid
today.
“I’d be
delighted to see Hagel mount some sort of third party candidacy,” he said. “If
he makes it through these confirmation hearings you really couldn’t ask for a
better pedigree.”
On his
Twitter feed, Ajjan expresses criticism of neoconservatives, Israel,
and the war on terror that is commonplace among Hagel supporters.
Rutgers
University and a spokesperson for Hagel did not respond to requests for comment
by press time.
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