Caroline Glick
The expressions of shock and indignation that accompanied Edward
Snowden’s revelations that the United States uses signal intelligence
assets to spy on its allies were more than a little disingenuous.
Everybody knows that everybody spies on everybody. If Germany’s spy
agencies can, they are most certainly listening to the cellphones of
friendly leaders from Washington to Paris. Allies routinely use signals
intelligence, and human intelligence and everything in between to
uncover information that their allies seek to keep from them.
In the case of the US and Israel, US government agencies have been
involved not merely in spying against Israel, but in bids to undermine
American public support for Israel almost since the establishment of the
Jewish state.
According to a new history of the CIA’s involvement in the Middle
East, America’s Great Game, reviewed this week in The Wall Street
Journal, in 1951 Kermit Roosevelt, the CIA’s operations chief in the
Middle East set up a fake anti-Israel lobby in Washington called
American Friends of the Middle East. Its job was to weaken popular
support for the Jewish state. The CIA’s anti-Israel front group operated
for 16 years, until the fact that it was a CIA front group was exposed
in 1967 by the far-left Ramparts magazine.
And this brings us to Jonathan Pollard, the American Jewish naval
intelligence analyst who is now serving the 28th year of his life
sentence for transferring classified materials to Israel.
Snowden’s revelations and the story of the CIA’s anti-Israel front group
in Washington make clear that US indignation over Israel’s fielding of
an agent in Washington was equal parts self-righteousness and
hypocrisy. There was nothing extraordinary in Israel’s efforts to gain
information that its American ally didn’t wish to share with it. Allies
spy on each other. And they use sympathetic locals to achieve their
ends. South Korean Americans have been caught spying for South Korea.
Taiwanese Americans have been caught spying for Taiwan, and so on.
US prosecutors prosecuted, and US judges convicted these agents of
friendly countries for their criminal activities. The average prison
term meted out to such agents of friendly governments runs from four to
seven years. Their average time served in prison is two to four years.
Pollard was different not because of what he did, nor even, necessarily
because he transferred classified information to Israel rather than to
Britain. Pollard was unique because he was an American Jew transferring
classified information to Israel. And the discriminatory treatment he
has received from the US government owes entirely to the same
institutional anti-Jewish bias that caused the CIA to form the first
anti-Israel lobby in Washington, just three years after Israel gained
independence.
As former CIA director R. James Woolsey explained to National Public
Radio in March, “I really take the view now that if someone says
[Pollard] should not be released after 28 years, just pretend that he’s a
Filipino American or a Greek American and pardon him. I see no reason
why people should treat a Jewish American who spied for Israel on those
grounds more harshly than they treat a Filipino American who spied for
the Philippines or a South Korean American who spied for South Korea.”
Pollard’s prolonged imprisonment, and the fact that the criminal justice
system has been used against him in such a profoundly discriminatory
manner have brought about a situation where his only chance of early
release is through a Presidential grant of clemency.
On Tuesday, former New Mexico governor Bill Richardson – a close
supporter of President Barack Obama – became the latest in a long line
of senior US officials from both parties who have called for Obama to
commute Pollard’s sentence.
In his letter to the president, Richardson wrote, “In my view, there is
no longer a need for a discussion today. Virtually everyone who was in a
high position of government – and dealt with the ramifications of what
Pollard did at the time – now support his release.”
Given the gross anti-Jewish prejudice at the heart of the US
government’s mistreatment of Pollard, every additional day he remains in
prison is an attack on the freedom and security of the American Jewish
community. As long as an American Jew is held in prison so unjustly –
and in failing health – simply because he committed his crime as an
American Jew, the American Jewish community is being discriminated
against as a community. Pollard received, and continues to receive
unequal treatment under the law because he is a member of the American
Jewish community.
The state of the American Jewish community is far weaker today than
it was when Pollard was railroaded into his life term in 1986. Amid the
mass assimilation rates reported by the recent Pew survey of American
Jews, characterized among other things by weaker levels of communal
identification, anti-Semitic attacks against Jews is on the rise. And
with an increasingly fragmented community, it is becoming more and more
difficult for American Jews to defend their communal rights as Jews to
equal protection under the law.
According to FBI data, Jews were the target of nearly two-thirds of
religiously motivated hate crimes carried out in the US in 2012.
According to the Anti-Defamation League, the FBI data actually
understated the problem because less than 75 percent of the law
enforcement agencies in the US provided the bureau with their hate crime
data. The ADL’s data show a 28 percent rise in anti-Jewish attacks in
New York during 2012.
And it’s not simply that violence against Jews is rising. The rising
violence is being met by unprecedented silence or even support of the
violence by American leaders. In recent months, Jews of all ages have
been the victims of the so-called “knockout game” in which groups of
black Americans walk up to an unsuspecting Jew and sucker punch him or
her. The same Obama White House which has placed itself at the center of
several cases of perceived abuse of African Americans has remained
silent about clear cases of African American hate crimes against Jewish
Americans.
Even worse, at least one politician has made statements defending the
anti-Jewish violence. In a Facebook post on the rash of anti-Jewish
attacks by blacks in Crown Heights, Laurie Cumbo, a recently elected New
York City Council member from Crown Heights justified the attacks.
She wrote, “Many African American/Caribbean residents expressed a
genuine concern that as the Jewish community continues to grow, they
would be pushed out by their Jewish landlords or by Jewish families
looking to purchase homes.”
Cumbo’s remarks received wide coverage, and a week after writing
them, she apologized. But her dim view of Jews, and others who work hard
and succeed may well be shared by New York’s mayor elect Bill de
Blasio. During the 1980s, de Blasio worked on behalf of Nicaragua’s
Communist Sandinista regime. He supported them even as they led a
concerted campaign against Nicaragua’s Jewish community, expropriated
Jewish property, firebombed a synagogue and transformed it into a
Sandinista youth center as the Jews of Nicaragua fled to Florida.
The American Jewish community faces these increased levels of attacks at
a time when radical leftist Jews are using the fact of their Jewishness
to attack the very notion of Jewish rights. Consider a recent event at
Swarthmore College.
On Sunday, the board of Swarthmore College’s Hillel unanimously
agreed to defy guidelines set by the national Hillel organization
barring campus Hillel’s from hosting or otherwise giving assistance to
anti-Zionist organizations. Rejecting Hillel’s positions, the Swarthmore
Hillel board declared, “We do not believe it is the true face of young
American Jews.”
Congratulations for the board’s decision streamed in from Jewish leftist groups at Harvard and other institutions.
Hillel’s national organization did not take Swarthmore’s Hillel board’s
decision lying down. Tuesday, Hillel’s new president and CEO Eric
Fingerhut informed the Swarthmore branch that it cannot continue to
refer to itself as Hillel if it goes forward with its resolution
rejecting the organization’s guidelines.
Fingerhut’s swift rebuke and warning to the Swarthmore branch must be
applauded. Both in passing the guidelines and in standing up for them,
Hillel has made clear that being a Jewish group claiming to speak for
Jews has to mean something.
Zionism is the Jewish national liberation movement, and Israel is the
national home of the Jewish people. To be an anti-Zionist is to reject
the right of the Jewish people to freedom. To be anti-Israel is to be
anti-Jewish. And a Jewish group cannot support an anti-Jewish group
without losing its meaning, and betraying the Jewish people.
Likewise, the American Jewish community cannot remain a community in
any meaningful sense of the word if it does not defend Jewish rights.
And this brings us back to Jonathan Pollard, in failing health, in
his 28th year in prison. Committed American Jews, among them are many
Jewish leaders that have been grappling since Pew published its findings
in October, with the question of how to inspire the community to
revitalize itself and recommit itself to Jewish continuity and Jewish
rights.
The answer may very well be: By standing up for Pollard and demanding his immediate release from prison.
Pollard’s plight can and should serve as a lightning rod for communal
action because there is no clearer case of anti-Jewish discrimination
by the US government than his continued imprisonment.
Pollard’s case is meaningful because it is hard. It isn’t easy to
defend Pollard. He betrayed the US government. But the government’s
disproportionate and unjust treatment of him owes entirely to the fact
that he is an American Jew. Until he receives justice, no American Jew
can be certain that his or her constitutional right to equal protection
under the law will be respected. Defending Pollard means defending
Jewish rights. And defending Jewish rights also involves communal
identification in a deep and significant way.
Moreover, at a time when increasing numbers of assimilated American
Jews disassociate with Israel, standing up for Pollard will relink the
community with Israel in a profound and meaningful way.
Finally, Pollard’s case is a good case to take up as a communal cause
because there is every reason to believe that such communal action can
succeed. As Esther Pollard wrote in The Jerusalem Post this week, during
the White House Hanukka party, Obama said that clemency for Pollard is
“under consideration.”
Nothing breeds success like success. A successful American Jewish
campaign to secure Pollard’s release could serve as a building block to a
communal revitalization and renaissance. That is, the worst act of
governmental discrimination carried out against the American Jewish
community could serve as the basis for a renewal of the community at a
key moment in its history.
Originally published in The Jerusalem Post.
No comments:
Post a Comment