Distant bells are tolling as AIPAC
and Netanyahu’s Israel face a descent from the strange prestige won by
killing Palestinians (1767 of them last summer) and blocking their right to
statehood. Israel’s worst fears are not
threats from Iran—a hugely ballyhooed bogeyman—but the end of easy living
through a Congress well-bribed by pro-Israel dollars pumped into local congressional districts. Now, a few weeks after Netanjahu’s triumphal address to Congress, the
reality is an Israel twisting in the wind of a chaotic, internally feuding Middle
East with dueling narratives between the Saudis and Iraqis and the U. S. in alliance
with Netanyahu’s devil, Iran, against ISIS.
New days dawning ahead suggest that
the U. S./Iran nuclear deal must go through because it creates the
possibility of rational alliances with Iran against Arab extremists. Lies abound all around, but Israel’s familiar
devil—Iran—has been replaced by numberless others: Houthis, Al Quaeda in Yemen,
Boko Haran in Nigeria, Shabab in
Somalia, Muslim factional wars in Libya and Syria. It’s a long list.
The entrance of Henry Kissinger onto the stage last week is
a reminder that the exercise of power is often a dark art. Recall, please, that during the Yom Kippur War of 1973 (perhaps before you
were born, gentle reader) it was Kissinger who persuaded then President Nixon to
resupply Israel’s army as it reeled from the Egyptian surprise attack. The Arab
nations retaliated with their OPEC oil price rise that wrecked vast areas of both
the U. S. and world economy, forcing gasoline rationing and a huge price inflation
on U.S consumers. In Bangladesh the OPEC price rise meant mass starvation
because people had no fuel at the inflated OPEC price. No act of Congress or President Nixon—not even
an accounting of how the pros and cons of the Kissinger recommendations might
have been carefully weighed—was ever offered. The Kissinger twist was that it both saved
Israel and over the years preserved U. S. access to vast Arab oil reserves.
We can expect more dark room power
moves in coming months, but the stakes are no longer the U.S./Iran nuclear deal
as one could easily suppose, but about Republican ambitions for the 2016
elections. Oligarchic power, not oil, is
today’s new fuel of choice. The decline of Israel’s influence in the U . S. in
the face of these widespread and complex struggles in the Middle East is behind
the softening of Senator Corker’s Senate Foreign Relations Committee
bi-partisan agreement. It signaled an Israel by-passed by actually reducing the time frame for debating the pros and cons about lifting sanctions on Iran. Look for the return of President Obama’s veto
power by mid-summer.
This arrival of Henry Kissinger into
the fray with a Wall Street Journal OpEd (March 5, 2015, together with another
former secretary of state, George Schulz) opposes the Administration’s nuclear
deal but is actually about the art of converting a portion of the traditional Jewish
democrat vote into a Republican victory in 2016. Not Iran, not saving Israel, but the opportunity to cement rule
by oligarchy in the future U. S. seems to be the latest Kissinger dream. As this profoundly immoral evil rises over us,
we may once again note with regret the clear decline of faith community courage
to resist Voltaire’s Panglossian version of the world. Will faith communities resist their new
assignment: to paper-over the reality of our new masters and their regime of
permanent inequality and chronic poverty? Note Dean Baker's comment on your right about the looming destruction of the Affordable Care Act. Resistance will mean this kind of truth-telling. That’s the
Godly mission.
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