No, Dual Loyalty Isn't Okay
Many in congress and the media won’t discuss loyalty to Israel
Philip Giraldi • March 12, 2019
The
Solons on Capitol Hill are terrified of the expression “dual loyalty.”
They are afraid because dual loyalty means that one is not completely a
loyal citizen of the country where one was born, raised and, presumably,
prospered. It also suggests something more perverse, and that is dual
citizenship,
which in its present historic and social context
particularly refers to the Jewish congressmen and women who just might
be citizens of both the United States and Israel. There is particular
concern over the issue at the moment because a freshman congresswoman
Ilhan Omar has let the proverbial cat out of the bag by alluding to
American-Jewish money buying uncritical support for a foreign country
which is Israel without any regard to broader U.S. interests, something
that everyone in Washington knows is true and has been the case for
decades but is afraid to discuss due to inevitable punishment by the
Israel Lobby.
Certainly,
the voting record in Congress would suggest that there are a lot of
congress critters who embrace dual loyalty, with evidence that the
loyalty is not so much dual as skewed in favor of Israel. Any bill
relating to Israel or to Jewish collective interests, like the currently
fashionable topic of anti-Semitism, is guaranteed a 90% plus approval
rating no matter what it says or how much it damages actual U.S.
interests. Thursday’s 407 to 23 vote in the House of Representatives on a
meaningless and almost unreadable “anti-hate” resolution
was primarily intended to punish Ilhan Omar and to demonstrate that the
Democratic Party is indeed fully committed to sustaining the exclusive
prerogatives of the domestic Jewish community and the Jewish state.
The
voting on the resolution was far from unusual and would have been
unanimous but for the fact that twenty-three Republicans voted “no”
because they wanted a document that was only focused on anti-Semitism,
without any references to Muslims or other groups that might be
encountering hatred in America. That the congress should be wasting its
time with such nonsense is little more than a manifestation of Jewish
power in the United States, part of a long-sought goal of making any
criticism of Israel a “hate” crime punishable by fining and
imprisonment. And congress is always willing to play its part. Famously,
American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) official Steven Rosen once boasted that
he could take a napkin and within 24 hours have the signatures of 70
Senators on it, reflective of the ability of the leading pro-Israel
organization to impel the U.S. legislature to respond uncritically to
its concerns.
Ilhan
Omar has certainly been forced to apologize and explain her position as
she is under sustained attack from the left, right and center as well
as from the White House. One congressman told her that “Questioning support for the US-Israel relationship is unacceptable.” Another said
“there are many reasons to support Israel, but there is no reason to
oppose Israel” while yet another one declared that all in Congress are
committed to insuring that the “United States and Israel stand as one.”
But Omar has defended herself without abandoning her core arguments and she has further established her bona fides
as a credible critic of what passes for U.S. foreign policy by virtue
of an astonishing attack on former President Barack Obama, whom she
criticized obliquely in an interview Friday,
saying “We can’t be only upset with Trump. His policies are bad, but
many of the people who came before him also had really bad policies.
They just were more polished than he was. That’s not what we should be
looking for anymore. We don’t want anybody to get away with murder
because they are polished. We want to recognize the actual policies that
are behind the pretty face and the smile.” Presumably Omar was
referring to Obama’s death by drone program and his destruction of
Libya, among his other crimes. Everything she said about the smooth
talking but feckless Obama is true and could be cast in even worse
terms, but to hear the truth from out of the mouth of a liberal Democrat
is something like a revelation that all progressives are not
ideologically fossilized and fundamentally brain dead. One wonders what
she thinks of the Clintons?
The
Democrats are in a tricky situation that will only wind up hurting
relationships with some of their core constituencies. If they come down
too hard on Omar – a Muslim woman of color who wears a head covering –
it will not look good to some key minority voters they have long
courted. If they do not, the considerable Jewish political donations to
the Democratic Party will certainly be diminished if not slowed to a
trickle and much of the media will turn hostile. So they are trying to
bluff their way through by uttering the usual bromides. Senator Kristin
Gillibrand of New York characteristically tried to cover both ends by saying
“Those with critical views of Israel, such as Congresswoman Omar,
should be able to express their views without employing anti-Semitic
tropes about money or influence.” Well, of course, it is all about Jews,
money buying access and obtaining political power, with the additional
element of supporting a foreign government that has few actual interests
in common with the United States, isn’t it?
As
Omar put it, “I want to talk about the political influence in this
country that says it is OK for people to push for allegiance to a
foreign country…” She also tweeted to a congressional critic that “I
should not be expected to have allegiance/pledge support to a foreign
country in order to serve my country in Congress or serve on committee.”
Gilad Atzmon, a well known Jewish critic of Israel, observed drily
that “How reassuring is it that the only American who upholds the core
values of liberty, patriotism and freedom is a black Muslim and an
immigrant…”
But
such explicatory language about the values that Americans used to
embrace before Israel-worship rendered irrelevant the Constitution
clearly made some lightweights from the GOP side nervous. Megan McCain,
daughter of thankfully deceased “Bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb Iran”
Senator John McCain appears on a mind numbing talk-television program
called The View where she cried as she described
her great love for fellow Israel-firster warmonger former U.S. Senator
Joe Lieberman as “like family,” before launching into her own
“informed” analysis: “I take the hate crimes rising in this country
incredibly seriously and I think what’s happening in Europe is really
scary. On both sides it should be called out. And just because I don’t
technically have Jewish family that are blood-related to me doesn’t mean
that I don’t take this seriously and it is very dangerous, very
dangerous… what Ilhan Omar is saying is very scary to me.”
The New York Times
also had a lot to say, covering the story on both its news and op-eds
pages daily. Columnist Michelle Goldberg, who is usually sensible, criticizes Omar
because of her “minimizing the legacy of the holocaust” and blames her
because “she’s committed what might be called, in another context, a
series of microaggressions — inadvertent slights that are painful
because they echo whole histories of trauma.” In other words, if some
Jews are indeed deliberately corrupting American politics on behalf of
Israel and against actual U.S. interests using money to do so it is not a
good idea to say anything about it because it might revive bad
historical – or not so historical – memories. It is perpetual victimhood
employed as an excuse for malfeasance on the part of Jewish groups and
the Jewish state.
Another Times columnist Bret Stephens also takes up the task
of defenestrating Omar with some relish, denying that “claims that
Israel…uses money to bend others to its will, or that its American
supporters ‘push for allegiance to a foreign country’” are nothing more
than the “repackage[ing] falsehoods commonly used against Jews for
centuries.” He attributes to her “insidious cunning” and “anti-Jewish
bigotry” observing how “she wraps herself in the flag, sounding almost
like Pat Buchanan when he called Congress “Israeli-occupied”
territory.” And it’s all “…how anti-Zionism has abruptly become an
acceptable point of view in reputable circles. It’s why anti-Semitism is
just outside the frame, bidding to get in.” He concludes by asking why
the Democratic Party “has so much trouble calling out a naked
anti-Semite in its own ranks.”
Stephens
clearly does not accept that what Omar claims just might actually be
true. Perhaps he is so irritated by her because he himself is a perfect
example of someone who suffers from dual loyalty syndrome, or perhaps it
would be better described as single loyalty to his tribe and to Israel.
Review some of his recent columns in The Times if you do not
believe that to be true. He has an obsession with rooting out people
that he believes to be anti-Semites and believes all the nonsense about
Israel as the “only democracy in the Middle East.” In his op-ed he
claims that “Israel is the only country in its region that embraces the
sorts of values the Democratic Party claims to champion.” Yes, a
theocratic state’s summary execution of unarmed protesters and starving
civilians while simultaneously carrying out ethnic cleansing are
traditional Democratic Party programs, at least as Bret sees it.
People
like Stephens are unfortunately possessors of a bully pulpit and are
influential. As they are public figures, they should be called out
regarding where their actual loyalties lie, but no one in power is
prepared to do that. Stephens wears his Jewishness on his sleeve and is
pro-Israel far beyond anyone else writing at The Times. He and
other dual loyalists, to be generous in describing them, should be
exposed for what they are, which is the epitome of the promoters of the
too “passionate attachment” with a foreign state that President George
Washington once warned against. If the United States of America is not
their homeland by every measure, they should perhaps consider doing Aliyah and moving to Israel. We genuine Americans would be well rid of them.
Philip
M. Giraldi, Ph.D., is Executive Director of the Council for the
National Interest, a 501(c)3 tax deductible educational foundation that
seeks a more interests-based U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East.
Website is www.councilforthenationalinterest.org, address is P.O. Box 2157, Purcellville VA 20134 and its email is inform@cnionline.org.
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