How
Bill Kristol Purged the Arabists
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: The
Unraveling Myth of Watergate
After taping
John Stossel's show on May 15 in New York, the Mrs. and I took the
10 a.m. Acela back to Washington. Once we had boarded the train,
who should come waddling up the aisle but Bill Kristol.
The Weekly
Standard editor seemed cheerful, and we chatted about the surge
in Mitt Romney's popularity and prospects.
I did not
ask what he had been doing in New York, but thanks to the website
Mondoweiss, I found out. Kristol was there for a May 15 "debate"
with Jeremy Ben-Ami of J Street, the pro-Israel organization, at
B'nai Jeshurun synagogue on the Upper West Side.
After listening
to Kristol, writes Phil Weiss, "I am still reeling."
"Kristol was
treated like royalty and came off as ... a Republican Party warlord,"
bragging "about how all the hostile elements to Israel inside the
Republican Party were purged over the last 30 years – (and) no one
(now) dared to question the power of the Israeli lobby."
"The big story
in the Republican Party over the last 30 years, and I'm very happy
about this," said Kristol, is the "eclipsing" of the George H.W.
Bush-James Baker-Brent Scowcroft realists, "an Arabist old-fashioned
Republican Party ... very concerned about relations with Arab states
that were not friendly with Israel ... ."
That Bush
crowd is yesterday, said Kristol. And not only had the "Arabists"
like President Bush been shoved aside by the neocons, the "Pat Buchanan/Ron
Paul type" of Republican has been purged.
"At B'nai Jeshurun,"
writes Weiss, "Kristol admitted to playing a role in expelling members
of the Republican Party he does not agree with." These are Republicans
you had to "repudiate," said Kristol, people "of whom I disapprove
so much that I won't appear with them."
"I've encouraged
that they be expelled or not welcomed into the Republican Party.
I'd be happy if Ron Paul left. I was very happy when Pat Buchanan
was allowed – really encouraged ... by George Bush ... to go off
and run as a third-party candidate."
Kristol's
point: Refuse to toe the neo-con line on Israel, and you have no
future in the Republican Party.
Ben Ami seemed
equally exultant: "We've won the war; we won the war," he told the
audience. Ninety-nine percent of Congress now votes almost 100 percent
pro-Israel.
But Ben Ami
appeared nervous about how this unanimity in the Congress behind
Israel had been achieved:
"I very seriously
and absolutely do believe that a significant percentage of American
members of the House of Representatives and the Senate are intimidated
on this issue (of Israel). ... They worry about the ramifications
of speaking out. ... They are worried about the attacks that they
will receive."
Ben Ami said
the 50 members who have criticized Israel are courageous, but, "Another
200 are scared to do it." Haaretz.com reports Ben Ami as saying
congressmen "live in fear" of the Israeli lobby.
Kristol laughed
at this and dared Ben Ami to name them.
When Ben Ami
brought up the destruction of Palestinian rights on the West Bank
and said Hillary Clinton repeatedly raises this issue with Israel,
writes Weiss, "Kristol sniggered."
It's a "myth,"
said Kristol, that Arabs care about Palestinians. The Israeli occupation
on the West Bank can last for 45 or 60 years more. Bill Kristol
on Palestinian rights sounds like Bull Connor talking about Negro
rights in Birmingham in 1965.
Another source
says Kristol predicted that Sen. Joe Lieberman, whose voting record
is closer to Socialist Bernie Sanders' than to conservative Jim
DeMint's, will be secretary of state in the Romney administration.
A former head
of the Israel lobby AIPAC describes Lieberman as "the No. 1 pro-Israel
advocate and leader in the Congress."
Joe led the
cheers for our last three Middle East wars – and has pushed for
two more, against Syria and Iran.
About Kristol's
comments, a point of personal privilege.
George W.
Bush never "encouraged" me to go third party. At the Iowa straw
poll in 1999, he asked me to stay in the party, and party chair
Jim Nicholson came to my home to make the same request.
At the synagogue,
Kristol was never asked about his role in the Iraq War that he and
his collaborators pressured Bush to wage as "Israel's fight against
terrorism is our fight."
Some 4,500
Americans died in that war, 35,000 were wounded, and 100,000 Iraqis
perished, leaving half a million widows and orphans.
Result:
U.S. influence in the Middle East is at a nadir. Al-Qaida has spread
into Pakistan, Iraq, Yemen, Somalia, Syria and North Africa.
Now the neocons
are worming their way into the Romney camp, dropping us hints on
whether John Bolton or Joe Lieberman will be the next secretary
of state.
Has Gov. Romney
imbibed the Kristol Kool-Aid that caused the war and cost the party
Congress in 2006 and the presidency in 2008?
Hard to believe,
but we should find out before November.
May
29, 2012
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 Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate
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