WASHINGTON POST GETS IT RIGHT: JEWS ACCUSED (FALSELY) OF DUAL LOYALTIES
August 30, 2006
In the August 29 edition of the Washington Post,
reporter Dana Milbank wrote a piece about what two noted political
scientists had to say on Monday about their criticisms of the Israeli
lobby. John Mearsheimer of the University of Chicago and Stephen Walt
of Harvard University spoke at the National Press Club in Washington
at the invitation of the Council on American-Islamic Relations. They
are widely known for their controversial article, “The Israel Lobby
and U.S. Foreign Policy.”
At the event, the two scholars accepted a button
proclaiming “Fight the Israel Lobby,” much to the applause of the
Muslim audience. Walt then criticized Paul Wolfowitz and Doug Feith,
two prominent Jews who have helped to shape Bush administration policy
in the Middle East, for having “attachments that shape how they think
about the Middle East.”
Catholic League president Bill Donohue commented as
follows:
“After reporting what Stephen Walt said on Monday, Dana
Milbank raised an interesting point. He picked up on the word
‘attachments,’ saying it sounds preferable to saying ‘dual loyalties.’
Milbank is correct. That is exactly what Walt was implying: he, and
Mearsheimer, are promoting the invidious notion that Jewish
neoconservatives are not to be trusted as their real loyalties lie
elsewhere.
“As American Catholics, we are all too familiar with
the old canard about ‘dual loyalties.’ Indeed, this smear tactic has
been hurled at us for over 200 years. Just as we deeply resent
accusations that American Catholics cannot think and act independent
of the Vatican, we find it abhorrent when it is said or implied that
American Jews cannot think and act independent of Israel.
“Bigotry dressed in scholarly veneer is still bigotry.
Walt and Mearsheimer have an agenda to sell and what they are hawking
is sick stuff.”
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