Washington Post: Paranoia = Analysis

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What a strange tone in this Washington Post article on Arab media reaction to the withdrawal of Charles Freeman and his statement lashing out at the “Israel lobby.” The Post calls this stuff “analysis.” A better term might be “paranoid conspiracy theories.” Mideast Publications Question Obama Over Top Intelligence Pick’s Withdrawal.

A commentary in Abu Dhabi’s the National, a newspaper owned by an investment fund controlled by the government, said Freeman’s decision Tuesday to withdraw as chairman of the National Intelligence Council “threw the Obama administration into the heart of a long-running controversy over the alleged supremacy of pro-Israel hawks in determining U.S. foreign policy after having taken a cautious approach to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict so far consistent with previous administrations.”

The Daily Star in Beirut went further, saying Freeman’s action “is likely to be viewed as a significant victory for hardliners within the so-called ‘Israeli lobby,’ who led the movement to scuttle his appointment, and a blow to hopes for a new approach to Israel-Palestine issues under the Obama administration.”

An analyst in the National pointed out that the Israel lobby may have had a Pyrrhic victory. Noting that vocal Freeman opponent Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) had publicly said, “I repeatedly urged the White House to reject him, and I am glad they did the right thing,” the analyst wrote, “A lobby that has thrived through its covert operations can claim another victory in reversing Freeman’s appointment, but this time its workings may have been too transparent for its own good.”

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66 comments
1 VegasRick  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:40:21am

I blame the juice.
/

2 Occasional Reader  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:40:47am

Time for WaPo to invite another Hamas shill to write an op-ed. For, you know, "balance".

3 godfrey  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:41:11am

Pay no attention to the Saudi lobby, naturally.

4 Racer X  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:41:55am

Da Juice!

5 pingjockey  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:42:05am

Once again.....It's da Jooooos. Goddamn the pc apologistists for islamic terror.

6 gman  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:42:07am

That pic of Charles Freeman Jr. should have a caption "I see Dead People".
Creeepy

7 Cathypop  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:42:20am

Can the Israel Lobby do anything about Obama?

8 pingjockey  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:42:37am

apologists=wankers

9 Dianna  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:42:53am

I thought Schumer's objections had to do with Freeman's comments on China?

10 MandyManners  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:44:25am

The first said "alleged supremacy" and the second said "so-called". Does that mean that the writers themselves don't believe those POV's?

11 notutopia  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:44:27am

Hmmmm. Sen. Charles E. Schumer opposed him.
Wonders never cease.
/

12 Steve  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:45:40am

re: #1 VegasRick

I blame the juice.
/

I blame 3 2 1 Penguins

13 [deleted]  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:46:04am
14 nyc redneck  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:47:29am

the bottom line is freeman is O U T.
and they are fit to be tied.

15 pingjockey  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:47:49am

re: #13 buzzsawmonkey
Too late. I think the atmosphere at state and in the WH are already filled with toxic fumes to sell Israel down the river. The first chance these fools get.

16 Occasional Reader  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:47:53am

re: #13 buzzsawmonkey

he withdraws with Parthian shots

He's certainly got one part of that down; he looks like a horse's ass.

17 dentate  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:48:00am

All that work agitating against poor old Freeman, and I'm STILL waiting for my Zionist conspiracy paycheck. Haven't our minyans minions arranged the bailout yet?
/

18 DEZes  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:48:17am

A Syrian paper, al-Thawrah, said Freeman pulled out when he realized "no one is safe from the evils" of the Israel lobby.

Jerks that make statements like this are a waste of skin.
*SPITS*

19 Emerald  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:48:20am

Isn't the WaPo the same paper that has an anti-Semitic religion writer? It's no surprise that 1) they published this or 2) they're sales are in the toilet.

20 VegasRick  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:48:41am

re: #12 Steve

I blame 3 2 1 Penguins

[Link: video.aol.com...]

It's the penguin all right!

21 jcm  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:48:54am

The Juice, did it The Juice!
Kill the Juice!

22 Lincolntf  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:48:58am

Obama should really be taken to task for appointing a man who would attract such support.
What did Obama know about Freeman's anti-semitism and when did he know it?

23 Last Mohican  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:49:52am

re: #13 buzzsawmonkey

That's an interesting theory. And even if that wasn't exactly BHO's intention in proposing Freeman's nomination, that may be its effect.

24 dentate  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:49:55am

re: #22 Lincolntf

Obama should really be taken to task for appointing a man who would attract such support.
What did Obama know about Freeman's anti-semitism and when did he know it?

And what the hell's wrong with Rahm Emanuel? He has no input on this?

25 gmsc  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:50:14am

re: #12 Steve

I blame 3 2 1 Penguins

I blame 3 2 1 Contact.

26 [deleted]  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:50:25am
27 VegasRick  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:50:29am

re: #21 jcm

The Juice, did it The Juice!
Kill the Juice!

[Link: www.foxnews.com...]
Da juice really did do it!

28 pingjockey  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:50:40am

BBIAB

29 brookly red  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:51:28am

A lobby that has thrived through its covert operations can claim another victory in reversing Freeman’s appointment, but this time its workings may have been too transparent for its own good.

Well now maybe it is time to openly support our allies...

"spits, twice"

30 gman  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:52:08am

Uh oh, it's the ubiquitous "Israel Lobby".
...and look "Israel Lobby" has its own heavily edited wikipedia page.

Here's how the "Israel Lobby" is defined on wikipedia:

According to former American Israel Public Affairs Committee official, Mitchell Bard, the "Israeli (or pro-Israel) lobby" is composed of formal and informal components. These components "tend to intersect at several points so the distinction is not always clear-cut."

Bard defines the "informal lobby" as the indirect means through which "Jewish voting behavior and American public opinion" influence "U.S. Middle East policy."

So, it's not clear cut but it's everywhere.
The typical viewpoint of a paranoiac.

31 solomonpanting  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:52:35am

re: #22 Lincolntf

Obama should really be taken to task for appointing a man who would attract such support.
What did Obama know about Freeman's anti-semitism and when did he know it?

How surprising is this story given Obama's 20-year "I never inhaled" relationship with Rev. Wright's toxic smoke?

32 yochanan  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:53:01am

re: #16 Occasional Reader

He's certainly got one part of that down; he looks like a horse's ass.

HE LOOKS A HELL OF A LOT MORE LIKE WHAT COMES OUT OF A HORSE'S PATOOT. THAN SAID PATOOT.

33 MJ  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:55:54am

On the positive side, the editorial in the Washington Post on Freeman was far better than anything else which appeared in one of the mainstream newspapers.
The NYT all but endorsed Freeman's conspiracy theories.

34 Steve  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:56:51am

re: #13 buzzsawmonkey

I still think that Freeman's nomination was a rope-a-dope.

Freeman gets nominated; he withdraws with Parthian shots at the "Israel lobby"; a new nominee is brought forward who has all of Freeman's noxious views but a lesser paper trail, and is confirmed, gladly, as an "improvement"; meanwhile, all of Freeman's noxious utterances about the eeeeeeeeeeeeevil "Israel lobby" are floating around, undenounced and uncondemned, to poison the atmosphere in general.

In the back of my mind I have wondered if the 'O' is capable of this type of thoughts.

35 [deleted]  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 11:58:47am
36 bhabcy  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:00:30pm

The Wash Post commenting on the Arab Press' take on Freeman is like Izvestia commenting on the goings on in the Soviet Communist Party.
There is no free press in the Arab world and its opinion is just govt opinion. The Post is just looking to confirm its opinion with some supposedly independent support from the foreign press.
The Post only manages to discredit its own reporting about Freeman whose withdrawal it either chose not to cover (bias) or did not see coming (incompetence). I'll you decide which is worse...
Cheers!

37 MJ  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:04:14pm

By the way, The New York Times continues it's cheer leading for Freeman bu reprinting a column the conspiracy theorist wrote back in 2000.
The Times continues it's Jihad against Israel which began back in the 1920's:

A U.S. Role Is Crucial For Peace
By Chas. W. Freeman Jr.
Published: Wednesday, October 18, 2000

No American politician ever lost an election by speaking too fondly of Israel or too poorly of the Palestinians. But this is a time for sober calculation about events in the Holy Land and their implications for American interests, not for emotionally or electorally satisfying rhetoric....

[Link: query.nytimes.com...]

38 [deleted]  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:05:07pm
39 do_not_spindle  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:07:28pm

The schizophrenia (or is it multiple personalities?) inside the WashPo continues. The editors show from time to time they still have a clue (see the Post's editorial this past week on how Freeman demonstrated himself how he was unqualified for the job), the choices for the op-ed page sometimes show they have a clue (Congressman Wolf's op-ed on why he opposed Freeman's nomination) and sometimes doesn't (mouthpiece for Hezbollah, Hamas, Fatah, Saudis, and their apologists). And the newsroom meanwhile runs off in their own direction - I guess the editors' control over their own paper doesn't extend past the last 2 pages of A section.

And Pincus' "he said she said" writing (I hesitate to call it journalism) doesn't help - it gives credence to Freeman & Co's accusations when they need to be dismissed out of hand. Maybe it's too much work (and maybe risks a libel suit) for Pincus or his colleagues to do some actual reporting, and write how Freeman *is* unqualified and here's why in his own words.

Today's other piece in the Opinion section (which has really gone downhill since the re-org) makes it even more confusing. The piece says Freeman was nominated (by the DNI by the way, not the President) to a really minor position of little consequence for policy, so the opposition doesn't make sense.

40 Challenger  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:07:45pm

Wow. That article is cuckoo-cuckoo. What a bunch of nuts. Maybe they don't think anyone actually reads their stuff since they're all going out of business.

41 MJ  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:08:22pm

More news on Chas Freeman.

The Nation published an interview with him written by Robert Dreyfuss.
Dreyfuss, for those who don't know, also works for Lyndon LaRoche so being an antisemitie comes naturally to him as well as to the Nation.

Here's some choice snippets:


Q. You say that you retain confidence in the president. You don't think that a quiet word from him to members of Congress might have stopped all this?

A. Oh, I think it might well have, particularly at the beginning when it was still a purely partisan matter. Before Nancy Pelosi jumped on the bandwagon. When you had the seven Republican members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence writing a letter that was particularly partisan, that's when, if the White House were going to weigh in, it might have done some good.
-------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------

Q. You were confident that you could withstand this assault until just before you dropped out.

A. Oh, I could have withstood it anyway. I don't mind criticism…
...The only thing I regret is that in my statement I embraced the term ‘Israel lobby.' This isn't really a lobby by, for or about Israel. It's really, well, I've decided I'm going to call it from now on the [Avigdor] Lieberman lobby. It's the very right-wing Likud in Israel and its fanatic supporters here. And Avigdor Lieberman is really the guy that they really agree with. And I think they're doing Israel in.

-------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------

Q. The Israel lobby wasn't too happy with other Obama appointments, such as James Jones, George Mitchell, Samantha Power. Why do you think they went after you and let them slide by?
A. Because I was seen as particularly vulnerable. I'm precisely not the things they accuse me of being. I'm not a lobbyist.
-------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------
Finally, he seems to be calling his supporters, including Obama, who, after all, was prepared to hire him, "monkeys":

Q. Do think that's working? Are the ‘monkeys' scared? Is the administration deterred?
A. By ‘monkeys' in this analogy I mean people who might accept an appointment in the administration who are independent, who have an open as opposed to a closed mind on these matters. I don't think it's working. But, I mean, I'm the last person to be able to judge that.

[Link: www.thenation.com...]

42 Jack Reacher  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:09:41pm
“A lobby that has thrived through its covert operations...


Well, then, how do you know it exists?
Because we can't see it; that proves its existence!
(Smacks forehead)

43 walahi  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:11:34pm
44 Lincolntf  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:13:11pm

Duke just won the ACC Championship. Nice job by a talented and gutsy team.

45 unclassifiable  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:14:25pm

Well I'm not lobbying for them anymore dammit!

It's been years since I got a Zionist Lackey, Inc. check!

/

46 opinionated  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:15:05pm

The Arabs and anti Semites have always accused the Jews of a nefarious hold on American foreign policy.

Are you telling me that they didn't believe their own crap until now?

47 opinionated  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:16:17pm
covert operations

First rule of covert operations.

Don't have your convention on C-Span every year.

48 MarineMomSue  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:18:07pm

re: #22 Lincolntf

I wonder how much cash he & his buddies contributed to O's campaign?

49 swamprat  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:20:09pm

Adios, neo-bigot.

50 AuntAcid  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:30:39pm

FWIW
"I am for doing good to the poor, but I differ in opinion of the means. I think the best way of doing good to the poor, is not making them easy in poverty, but leading or driving them out of it. In my youth I travelled much, and I observed in different countries, that the more public provisions were made for the poor, the less they provided for themselves, and of course became poorer. And, on the contrary, the less was done for them, the more they did for themselves, and became richer." -- Ben Franklin

51 Opinionated  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:31:33pm

re: #1 VegasRick

I blame the juice.
/

He also may be on the sauce.

52 Gus  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 12:41:59pm

The end of the article contains the most crucial point:

Caroline Glick, a columnist in the Jerusalem Post specializing in national security issues, had a different take. She described what she called "disturbing things about the climate in Washington these days." The foremost was that Blair's choice of Freeman, despite what she said were the latter's known "extreme views on Israel and American Jews," may indicate something about the DNI. She said Blair's testimony last week to the Senate Armed Services Committee on Iran's nuclear program showed that "America's top intelligence officer is willing to take Iran's word on everything," and, "On the other hand, he isn't willing to take Israel's word on anything."

Caroline Glick has a recent take on the Freeman nomination in her blog entitled: Intelligence and the anti-Israel lobby. It also contains commentary on Pincus, the Washington Post, and others.

While you're at her site make sure and read her "about me" page.

53 lostlakehiker  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 1:16:41pm

An analyst" pointed out"...

An analyst in the National pointed out that the Israel lobby may have had a Pyrrhic victory. Noting that vocal Freeman opponent Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) had publicly said, "I repeatedly urged the White House to reject him, and I am glad they did the right thing," the analyst wrote, "A lobby that has thrived through its covert operations can claim another victory in reversing Freeman's appointment, but this time its workings may have been too transparent for its own good."

This turn of phrase confers a warranty on the opinion of the analyst, and a cachet on the writer, who might not merit the accolade "analyst".

Another way to have written the piece:

An advocate for the Palestinians saw in this the possibility that "the Israeli lobby" may have had a Pyrrhic victory. Noting that vocal Freeman opponent Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) had publicly said, "I repeatedly urged the White House to reject him, and I am glad they did the right thing," the observer wrote, "A lobby that has thrived through its covert operations can claim another victory in reversing Freeman's appointment, but this time its workings may have been too transparent for its own good."

It should be noted, however, that opposition to Freeman's appointment was widespread and not limited to disagreements with his views on Israel---which in any case are not the sole province of lobbyists for Israel.
His positions on freedom in China and on the events at Tienanmen square also came in for heavy criticism.

Pigs will fly before the Post presents this kind of context and counterweight to Arab opinion in its "news", rather than shilling for the anti-Semitic and anti-American line taken by the "analyst".

54 Julio Jurenito  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 1:20:29pm

Good analysis. To be taken at face value.

55 Zimriel  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 1:27:45pm

It is my unpleasant duty to report that one site I'd been visiting for some time now, Steve Sailer's, has gone down the rabbit hole too. I'm not going to link him this time, or ever again, but he can be found via Google (mind the spelling of his last name).

First he posted that pro-Israel commenters equal Saudi-funded sockpuppets on 12 March:

I'm sorry if I haven't been following this closely, but there appears to have been some sort of disagreement between those Washington insiders who are paid to serve Saudi interests and those Washington insiders who would pay to serve Israeli interests.

Apparently, American interests remain of little interest.

His last post on 13 March:


As I said before, I wasn't paying attention to the Charles Freeman imbroglio, but, even though it's been over for awhile, every time I look into the Washington Post, its editors are still talking about him as if he had set fire to the Declaration of Independence. Now, WaPo editorial board member Charles Lane (formerly, one of Marty Peretz's many bright young men who served as editor of The New Republic) is trying to force Obama into denouncing public mention of the power of the Israel Lobby.
...
This is just a ploy by the Israel Lobby to show off their power, to make Obama dance to their tune, to humiliate the President by forcing him to make a big speech claiming he's not dancing to their tune, that there's not even a tune playing, that only Bad People hear any music. They want him to say like Richard Pryor to his wife, "Who are you going to believe? Me or your lying ears?"

Charles Lane and The New Republic, as you'll recall, "hated" Bush and so were redundant for Federal lobbying purposes of any sort (so if an Israeli wanted to be heard then, s/he went to the big churches and The Weekly Standard); and Lane and TNR are even less relevant today. So Sailer's argument is nonsense - unless we assume that when a Jew, any Jew, complains about Federal policies which affect Israel then he's part of a vast monolithic Zionist "Lobby". For more evidence of Sailer's intent, I refer you to the comment section to that article, which has attracted a predictable rabble of net.nazi's.

For a long time the Southern Poverty Law Center and others have been telling us that Sailer was a racist. For a long time I'd been defending him. Then he pops up with Protocols-level crap like this. He ought to be ashamed of himself.

56 svines  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 2:05:20pm

Mr. Freeman, and his son, are tightly tied to Arabic leaders and money. While this does not automatically meant they will always side with those who have made them wealthy, their comments and support for Middle East policies, especially those relating the elimination of Isreal, do.

Isreal is still the only duly elected democracy in the Middle East, and we depend on them to stabilize the region. Those who think that the region will be better off without Isreal should be ready for islamic radicalization to hit their countries next. Take note Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt. Once the Palistinians backed by the Syrian and Iranian theocracies have eliminated Isreal, you will be next, and they may not wait for Isreal to die before they move on you.

57 she said  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 2:13:49pm

I did not see that anyone caught this:
" Gibbs said, "I gave you as straight of one as I can get." "

I cannot be the only one chuckling over the inadvertent slip of the truth in that little comment.

58 [deleted]  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 2:26:49pm
59 Dr. Shalit  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 3:16:02pm

re: #58 ploome hineni

ploome -

And guess what the "closing out" question was today on Fareed Zakaria GPS?
You got it - CNN wants to know whether the public believes that "The Israeli Lobby" is "too influential."
Hey Fareed - Get a Clue - I feel the strength of the "Saudi Lobby" every time I gas up.

-S-

60 Kronocide  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 3:53:18pm

'Jewish Lobby' = 2008/9 version of 'jewish bankers'

Same story, different characters. Oogaboogah jewish conspiracy BS.

61 [deleted]  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 5:22:50pm
62 arcatan  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 6:31:12pm

We got to get smart about politics already. The WaPo is laying the ground for ongoing suspicion of pro-Israeli sentiment. By overstating the Freeman/Jewish-Lobby issue they get masses of Leftist goons to see Jewish conspiracy everywhere and set up a "populist" barrier against the support of Israel.

63 gman  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 6:44:36pm

re: #54 Julio Jurenito

Good analysis. To be taken at face value.

forgot your sarc tag, Julio.

64 kawabunga  Sun, Mar 15, 2009 9:45:18pm

Each time I see "analysis" in an "article" I take it to mean that the dork writing the piece can't figure out a way to hide his bias and has to "analyze" instead of "report".

Gawd, I feel like Agnes Moorhead in that Twilight Zone episode where she crushed all those invaders. I only wish that David Brooks and his lover Frank Rich were the space aliens being crushed.

65 Laroon  Mon, Mar 16, 2009 7:21:44am

Paranoia? An even better term might be government-sponsored propaganda.
Stuff like this always floors me. Supposedly respectable journalists report on what is being written in the Arab "media" with absolute silence about the fact that Arab "media" is no more than a communication tool of Arab governments. In the best case it is subject to strict state censorship.
And what the hell is "news" about Arabs blaming the "The Israel Lobby" (aka Goldstein from 1984) for anything the US does that they can no longer blame on George Bush?

66 Laroon  Mon, Mar 16, 2009 7:25:32am

re: #57 she said

I've actually gotten to the point with this Gibbs guy where I feel embarrassed every time I hear him talk. I should probably get counseling for that...


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