November 29, 2008

OBAMA Rehires Power Who Called for Invasion of Israel

Yid with Lid

Here is a fun little Item from the Jerusalem Post:

    State Departmentofficials said Friday that Samantha Power is among foreign policy experts the president-elect’s office selected to help the incoming administration prepare for Clinton’s anticipated nomination as secretary of state. The Obama transition team’s Web site includes Power’s name as one of 14 members of the “Agency Review Team” for the State Department. During the Democratic primary campaign, Power called Clinton “a monster” in an interview. She then resigned, calling her remarks inexcusable and contradictory to her admiration for Clinton.

For those 77% of American Jews who voted for Obama, Here is a little bit more about Ms. Power just in case your head is still in the sand:

    Over the Jewish Holiday a friend of mine vehemently tried to prove that Senator Obama was a friend of Israel. His statement was,”no matter who wins they can’t be worse for Israel than Ehud Olmert” While I agree that Olmert was not good for his homeland, Senator Barack Obama would be a Horror for our number one ally in the middle-east. Look,if you are the type that will vote for the liberal candidate no matter what–go ahead–but please don’t give me any more of that load of cow dung that Obama will be good for Israel. That belies the truth. How do I know for Sure? Take a look at his advisers.

Samantha Power, for example is thought to be a key foreign policy adviser in any Obama administration in the video above you can see her accuse Israel of human rights violations and suggest that the US SHOULD SEND IN TROOPS TO IMPOSE A SOLUTION ON ISRAEL. She also hints that the US’s foriegn policy is imposed on the country by “one large voting bloc” (the Joowze maybe?)

The Video is from 2002 when she sat for an interview with Harry Kreisler, the director of the Institute for International Studies at Berkeley. Kreisler asked her the following question:

    Let me give you a thought experiment here, and it is the following: without addressing the Palestine - Israel problem, let’s say you were an advisor to the President of the United States, how would you respond to current events there? Would you advise him to put a structure in place to monitor that situation, at least if one party or another [starts] looking like they might be moving toward genocide?

Power response is her advice to the President would be to 1) “Alienate” the American Jewish community, and indeed all Americans, such as evangelical Christians, who support the state of Israel, because 2) Israeli leaders are “destroying the lives of their own people.” 3) Pour billions of dollars of the taxpayers’ money into “the new state of Palestine”; 4) Stage an American ground invasion of Israel and the Palestinian territories — what else can she mean by a “mammoth protection force” and a “military presence” that will be “imposed” by “external intervention”? — in order to do the exact same thing that she considers the height of arrogance and foolishness in Iraq: an American campaign to remake an Arab society; 5) and Ariel Sharon and Yassir Arafat were on the same moral level:

    What we don’t need is some kind of early warning mechanism there, what we need is a willingness to put something on the line in helping the situation. Putting something on the line might mean alienating a domestic constituency of tremendous political and financial import; it may more crucially mean sacrificing — or investing, I think, more than sacrificing — billions of dollars, not in servicing Israel’s military, but actually investing in the new state of Palestine, in investing the billions of dollars it would probably take, also, to support what will have to be a mammoth protection force, not of the old Rwanda kind, but a meaningful military presence. Because it seems to me at this stage (and this is true of actual genocides as well, and not just major human rights abuses, which were seen there), you have to go in as if you’re serious, you have to put something on the line.

    Unfortunately, imposition of a solution on unwilling parties is dreadful. It’s a terrible thing to do, it’s fundamentally undemocratic. But, sadly, we don’t just have a democracy here either, we have a liberal democracy. There are certain sets of principles that guide our policy, or that are meant to, anyway. It’s essential that some set of principles becomes the benchmark, rather than a deference to [leaders] who are fundamentally politically destined to destroy the lives of their own people. And by that I mean what Tom Freidman has called “Sharafat.” [Sharon-Arafat; this is actually an Amos Oz construction — NP] I do think in that sense, both political leaders have been dreadfully irresponsible. And, unfortunately, it does require external intervention.

But it gets better Power is an advocate of the anti-Semitic view of forign policy made famous by professors Walt and Mearsheimer

    Power is an advocate of the Walt-Mearsheimer view of the American relationship with Israel. In a recent interview published on the Harvard Kennedy School’s website, Power was asked to explain “long-standing structural and conceptual problems in U.S. foreign policy.” She gave a two-part answer: the first problem, she said, is “the US historic predisposition to go it alone.” A standard reply, of course. The second problem, though, should give us pause:
    Another longstanding foreign policy flaw is the degree to which special interests dictate the way in which the “national interest” as a whole is defined and pursued . . . America’s important historic relationship with Israel has often led foreign policy decision-makers to defer reflexively to Israeli security assessments, and to replicate Israeli tactics, which, as the war in Lebanon last summer demonstrated, can turn out to be counter-productive.

    Power is not just assenting to the Israel Lobby view of American foreign policy, but is also arguing that Israel had something to do with the Bush administration’s decision to invade Iraq in 2003–an appalling slander, and a telling one.

    Also of note is a recent opinion piece Power wrote for TIME magazine, titled “Rethinking Iran,” the thrust of which rethinking involves the need to engage diplomatically the mullahs and pretend that the Iranian nuclear program is a figment of the paranoid imagination of the Bush administration. She writes:

    The war scare that wasn’t [the recent incident between Iranian speedboats and the U.S. Navy in the Straight of Hormuz] stands as a metaphor for the incoherence of our policy toward Iran: the Bush Administration attempts to gin up international outrage by making a claim of imminent danger, only to be met with international eye rolling when the claim is disproved. Sound familiar? The speedboat episode bore an uncanny resemblance to the Administration’s allegations about the advanced state of Iran’s weapons program–allegations refuted in December by the National Intelligence Estimate.

    Does anyone think that if the time comes that Power has President Obama’s ear, she will advise him to do anything other than repudiate America’s greatest ally in the Middle East in favor of appeasing its greatest enemy? And here’s an even better question: Does Barack Obama have a single adviser who would tell him to do anything else?

One day later Pollak followed up with more information:

    Note that this wasn’t her response to a question about her personal views of the conflict, or about what she envisions might be a utopian solution to the conflict; it was a response to a question about what she would tell the President of the United States if she was his adviser. Yesterday Barak Obama took a large stride toward the presidency–helped in some small measure by the speeches on behalf of the Obama campaign that Power has delivered–and it is time that someone asked him, while he is still a candidate, what he thinks of the perverse things his many foreign policy advisers have said about Israel and the Middle East.

Martin Kramer points us to an interesting quote from the 2003 book Ethnic Violence and Justice, in which Samantha Power, one of Barack Obama’s foreign policy advisers, asks a question of David Rohde, a reporter who covered the intifada for the New York Times. The quote is as follows:

    Samantha Power: I have a question for David about working for the New York Times. I was struck by a headline that accompanied a news story on the publication of the Human Rights Watch report. The headline was, I believe: “Human Rights Report Finds Massacre Did Not Occur in Jenin.” The second paragraph said, “Oh, but lots of war crimes did.” Why wouldn’t they make the war crimes the headline and the non-massacre the second paragraph?

(The article to which Power refers is here, and its headline is: “MIDEAST TURMOIL: INQUIRY; Rights Group Doubts Mass Deaths in Jenin, but Sees Signs of War Crimes.” Obviously, Power has misremembered the headline.)

Here we have another window into the thinking of Power: Israel is accused in sensational press reports of a massacre in Jenin, and is subjected to severe international condemnation; HRW finally gets out a report and says there was no massacre; the NYT reports this as its headline; and Power thinks the headline still should have been: Israel guilty of war crimes!

sources for the above Commentary here and Here

Posted by Ted Belman @ 5:34 pm |

8 Comments


  1. You gotta love how Powers implies in her interview with Kreisler that absent US intervention, Israel might commit genocide against the Palestinian Arabs.

    As if Israel couldn’t have delivered that outcome 100 times over by now if genocide was the objective.

    But of course, Powers is the Anna Lindh Professor of Practice of Global Leadership and Public Policy at Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government.

    snip

    Lindh was a staunch defender of Arafat and advocated an economic boycott of Israel by the EU, a policy long desired by Eurabian politicians. Not surprisingly, the Anna Lindh Foundation draws inspiration from the spirit of Edward Said, the late dhimmi ideologue bent upon subverting Western culture, and values. The Anna Lindh Foundation endeavors to fight what it dubs “Fortress Europe” on Arab immigration issues, and to establish a totalitarian academic structure which alone will be entitled to teach and publish material on the Euro-Arab Mediterranean. It will also monitor the texbooks and university curricula for all of the EU. Moreover, the Foundation promotes the vision of a unified Euro-Mediterranean world where people are not even defined as being from the North or the South, (terms considered too provocative as they might evoke visions of a once-Christian North and a very Muslim South). The Euro-Arab continent will instead be populated by an amorphous mass called only “Us,” without acknowledged ethnic, national, or religious features.

    How easy it is to connect the dots.

    Comment by Charles Martel — November 29, 2008 @ 7:42 pm



  2. Why not appoint Samantha Power as Ambasador to Sudan, or Special Envoy to Zimbabwe or Myanmar? How about undersecretary for the school lunch program?

    Hard to believe these are the opinions of the woman who wrote ‘The Problem From Hell’. Must be the water supply at Harvard.

    Wasn’t it Paul Wolfowitz who said/wrote ‘the road to peace in Jerusalem runs through Baghdad’ - that neocon idea, which is why the entire anti-war left loves to believe Israel is responsible for Bush43’s war in Iraq.

    Comment by Birdalone — November 29, 2008 @ 10:58 pm



  3. It’s too bad Obama didn’t appoint Powers as Secretary of Domestic Jews. That’s what American Jews deserve for allowing these vermin into the executive office.

    Comment by Shy Guy — November 30, 2008 @ 12:43 am



  4. I find it interesting and not a surprise that Obama fired Powers from his campaign not because of her views on Israel and American Jews but because she called Hillary a Monster. Interesting to watch how the two interact when in POWER(attempt at pun).http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23519392/. Like the guy from A TEAM used to say “I love it when a good plan comes together”It seems that economically based on his appointments Obama will at least initially go to a centrist policy and foreign affairs will stick to his campaign positions. I can hardly wait to see America invading Israel and then creating a Pali state as an American protectorate. Well in our history we fought all the great powers in History with very mixed results and the question is will America be added to the list? This is why our next elections in Israel may be the most important one since the founding of the State of Israel.
    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23519392/

    Comment by yamit82 — November 30, 2008 @ 2:19 am



  5. Also Obama’s pick for National Security Advisor, Gen James Jones, agrees with Power (no “s”) on inserting Us or NATO troops into Judea and Samaria.

    Comment by Ted Belman — November 30, 2008 @ 7:15 am



  6. Samantha Power is a monster.

    Comment by Laura — November 30, 2008 @ 1:53 pm



  7. Make Samantha Power ambassador to Saudi Arabia, where she would soon learn a woman’s proper “place” in Islamic Supremacist society.

    Comment by Bill Levinson — November 30, 2008 @ 1:58 pm



  8. Obama, the PUPPET MASTER has spoken!

    Comment by Michael Sunstar — November 30, 2008 @ 8:13 pm


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