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Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer, authors
of “The
Israeli Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy,” have been touted by some in
the press as “two of America's top scholars.” The academic dean of
Harvard's Kennedy School of Government and his co-author of the
University of Chicago may occupy prized perches, but that doesn’t make
them scholars.
However you slice it, the half-baked folderol that is “The Israeli
Lobby” isn’t “scholarship.” Scholarship appeals to evidence and reason.
Theirs is a randomly yoked together bit of pamphleteering in the
postmodern tradition—its authors don’t reason or argue. Instead, they
propagandize, promoting as axiomatic a belief in the superiority of
certain moral or political positions, one of which is the idea of
Israel’s foul founding.
A scholar, moreover, builds his case. These two declare their case open
and shut on page two of the screed. “Readers may reject our
conclusions,” they grandiosely state, “but the evidence on which they
rest is not controversial.”
The logically invalid argument from authority undergirds “The Israeli
Lobby”—and in particular, our authors’ assertion that the facts they
present “are not in serious dispute among scholars,” because these rely
“heavily on the work of Israeli scholars and journalists.”
Jews—Israelis included—are leaders of the new anti-Semitism, which
consists in the demonization of Israelis (often described as Nazis
vis-ŕ-vis the Palestinians) and the delegitimization of the Jewish
State. Blaming Israel or the Israeli lobby for America’s foreign policy
blunders, and alleging that Israel was founded through systematic ethnic
cleansing and land theft are the centerpieces of their campaign.
Because a Jew—Israeli or other—has espoused these positions against
Israel, Harvard’s Tweedledumb and UChicago’s Tweedledumber would like
their readers to believe that they must be true. The
Capos of the concentration camps were Jews; did their Jewishness
make their depredations against their own people correct or commendable?
While our “scholars” both demonize and delegitimize Israel, they are
mere dwarfs standing on the shoulders of
Jewish giants. Noam Chomsky, “The Godfather,” Steven and Hillary
Rose, Norman Finkelstein, Joel Kovel, Tanya Reinhart in Tel Aviv, and
Michael Cohen in Swansea—these are but a few of the new anti-Semitism’s
leading Jewish lights.
The real rock stars of the Israeli intelligentsia—Israel’s own
Ward Churchills—are the pretentiously self-styled “New Historians.”
This is a group of popular far-left fabricators (one of whom facetiously
boasted: “We perform at weddings and bar mitzvas”), who’ve cocked a
snook at the liberal country in which they’ve thrived, so as to gain
admittance into the fashionable Palestinian pantheon.
They claim "Zionist imperialists" cheated Palestinian peasants out of
their land (which was, in fact, bought fairly and legally), and that
these interlopers conducted a systematic and deliberate policy of ethnic
cleansing with respect to the “indigenous population.” (There
undoubtedly have been sporadic acts of aggression and even terror
against Palestinian Arabs by Jews during the War of Independence. But
there is simply no historical evidence that they have been the result of
a concerted or systematic campaign.)
The “New Historians’” rendition is fast becoming the received wisdom on
Israel’s history in the court of public opinion. This historical
revision of Israel’s birth, incidentally, resembles the way the Left has
distorted and reduced America’s history to a narrative of the oppressed
and the excluded. As Efraim Karsh, Professor of Mediterranean Studies at
the University of London, has noted, “Partisan rewriting of history has
apparently become the accepted norm in those fields of research dealing
with highly contentious political, social, and historical phenomena,
such as the Arab-Israeli conflict.”
The Harvard philippic defers to the “New Historians’” most flamboyant
and fishy associate, Benny Morris. In fact, it was Morris’s
bowdlerization of Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion’s words that first
prompted Karsh to investigate the fraud perpetrated by these hip
historians, and expose it in his masterful book, “Fabricating
Israeli History: The ‘New Historians.’”
While perusing the English-language version of Morris’ doctored-to-death
book, “The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem,” Karsh happened
upon a quote from a letter Ben-Gurion wrote to his son, allegedly
stating that, “we must expel the Arabs and take their places.” Karsh
“recalled the letter saying something quite different.” On examination,
it transpired that the Hebrew text read as follows: “We do not wish, we
do not need to expel Arabs and take their place … All our aspiration is
built on the assumption that there is enough room in the country for
ourselves and the Arabs.”
Initially Karsh, a gentleman and a scholar, read Morris charitably,
attributing the mangled citation to an innocent mistranslation or typo.
Still, to allay his worst fears, he proceeded to plumb all primary
source-material Morris used to shore-up his allegations.
Parroted by Walt and Mearsheimer, Morris has charged that the “Zionists”
systematically “drove Palestinians into exile,” and “that the Zionist
and Israeli establishments have systematically falsified archival source
material to conceal the Jewish state's less-than-immaculate conception.”
It turns out Morris was
projecting. For, as an incredulous Karsh discovered, “Morris not
only fails to show rewriting by [the Israeli founding fathers], but he
himself is the one who systematically falsifies evidence.”
Indeed, “there is scarcely a document that he does not twist.” As Karsh
demonstrates in detail, Morris and his cohorts have “violated every
tenet of bona fide research”: they misrepresent documents, resort to
partial quotes, withhold evidence, make false assertions, and rewrites
original documents. Such is the incompetence of these Arabists that they
even neglect Arab archival material, relying almost exclusively on
Western—often only secondary—sources.
“Through documentary manipulation,” observes Karsh, the Israeli
“scholars” (lauded by Walt and Mearsheimer) have turned “Israeli history
on its head.”
Although Karsh has been attacked personally and stigmatized, the
blistering, textual bitch-slap he dealt these charlatans remains
unassailable. A dejected Morris even wrote to the Times Literary
Supplement to admit that “Karsh has a point. My treatment of transfer
thinking before 1948 was, indeed, superficial.”
The Arab-Israeli debate, however, doesn’t hinge on the “professional and
intellectual integrity” of the interlocutors. Irrespective of whether
they are true or false, certain positions in contemporary Middle-Eastern
Studies and history departments are automatically deemed virtuous, and
veracity be damned. Their proponents are published in prestigious
journals and by distinguished publishing houses and become media
darlings.
Popularity, fashion, and the booming “bash-Israel business” account for
the “new historians’” tenure, not scholarship. Ditto the Harvard
hucksters who promote them.
© 2006 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
March 24
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