Candidly Speaking: Breakfast with Peter Beinart (JERUSALEM POST OP-ED) By ISI LEIBLER 05/17/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=270249
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During a recent visit to New York, I had an extended breakfast
meeting with controversial author Peter Beinart who in recent months
received enormous media exposure as the most prominent far-left
critic of Israel in the United States. Jeffrey Wiesenfeld, a feisty
New York conservative Jewish activist, also participated.
I must confess that I prefer confronting less charming adversaries.
Beinart, who is 41 years old, is an amiable, charismatic and highly
articulate personality. In contrast to many Jewish critics of Israel
who are often ignorant and indifferent of their Jewish heritage, he
considers himself a committed Jew, maintains a kosher home, attends
synagogue and sends his children to Jewish day schools. He also
regards himself as a passionate Zionist and claims that his prime
motivation is to contribute to the long-term future of Israel and the
Jewish people.
But despite his likeable personality and insistence
that “disagreements” with Israeli government policies do not detract
from his ardent love of Israel, Beinart has unquestionably now
assumed a prominent role as a leading Jew engaged in demonizing and
delegitimizing the Jewish state.
His portrait of Israel, which he accuses of obsessively
exploiting “victimhood,” is consistently distorted and imbalanced.
His analysis of the Israeli-Arab conflict is unfailingly biased, not
merely because he is unfairly critical of Israeli government policies
but more so because he has essentially adopted the narrative of our
enemies. He dismisses the reality that the vast majority of Israelis
have no desire to rule over Arabs and – if they had a genuine peace
partner – would welcome a Palestinian state.
While occasionally paying lip service and condemning some Arab
abominations, his book concentrates on Palestinian suffering and
lacks comprehension and compassion for the violence and terror
suffered by the Israelis since Oslo. To accuse him of establishing
moral equivalence between the parties would be an understatement.
He even condemns Israel for not having tried hard enough to find a
diplomatic solution with Hamas to avert the Gaza War. Beinart uses
clichés like occupation even in relation to Gaza, despite the fact
that aside from border security and an ineffective prohibition on
importing arms, the Hamas state is entirely independent and runs its
own affairs.
The core of his case rests on the distorted and widely discredited
chronicle of former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who Beinart insists
was close to achieving a settlement.
He thus praises the limited security cooperation achieved with the PA
as a diplomatic strategy to gain international support but fails to
relate to the stubborn intransigence of PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas,
his refusal to end incitement, educate his people for peaceful co-
existence or compromise on the right of return of Palestinian
refugees.
Beinart repeats the mantra that in the absence of settlements, peace
and goodwill would prevail and warns that unless they are dismantled,
a single state will emerge which will demographically destroy the
Zionist dream. The most radical aspect of his approach is his
despicable call for a “Zionist BDS” – a global boycott of goods from
the settlements, which he defines as “nondemocratic Israel.”
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu is depicted as a duplicitous
schemer who pays lip service to peace but in practice bitterly
opposes any genuine settlement. In contrast, he adulates President
Barack Obama, devoting to him an entire chapter of his book,
bizarrely titled “The Jewish President,” extolling his virtues as a
ardent friend of Israel.
I challenged Beinart on how, as a committed Jew and purported Zionist
resident in New York, he failed to experience pangs of conscience
when adopting a stand on life and death issues which ran counter to
the will of the majority of Israelis. He retorted that his views
mirrored those of many Israelis and that as an American Jew who loved
Israel, he felt an obligation to speak up.
When we parted, Beinart graciously presented me a copy of his book
with an inscription referring to me as “a fellow lover of the Jewish
people and the Jewish state,” but it was clear that our respective
positions remained unchanged. Yet, although he did not say so
explicitly, my impression was that were he to write his book today,
he would not include his radical call for a boycott of settlements,
which alienated him from farleft groups who otherwise share his views.
Beinart is not a self-hating Jew, but many allege that his views stem
from a calculated decision to advance his career or are
subconsciously motivated by a desire to become the darling of the far-
left liberals. If he has genuinely convinced himself that his motives
are exclusively altruistic, one is tempted to suggest that he is
displaying egomaniacal or narcissistic characteristics.
Despite the extensive media coverage, sales of his book have been
poor and most reviews, including many from the left, have panned him,
particularly in relation to his call for a Zionist BDS. Even J Street
distanced itself from this. Initial indicators suggest that as of
now, the vast majority of American Jews oppose his views and only a
small (albeit noisy) group support him.
But one should not underestimate the potential damage he can inflict.
One need only “Google” his name to appreciate the enormous media fest
associated with him. His demonic misrepresentation of current Israeli
government policies has the potential of influencing and confusing
Jews on the left fringe and providing succor to those seeking to
besmirch and delegitimize Israel at a time when it is confronting
grave existential dangers. It is thus crucial that his fraudulent
allegations and distortions be exposed and refuted.
It is highly disconcerting that only last week Beinart was one of a
group, which included other virulently hostile critics of Israel, who
met and consulted with President Obama on the Middle East. Beinart
would unquestionably be at the vanguard of those encouraging the
president (if reelected) to renew pressure against the Jewish state.
He would also unquestionably urge him to implement his call to
boycott Israeli settlement products.
It is thus important that we publicize the fact that Beinart’s
extremist views are an anathema to the vast majority of Israelis as
well as American Jews. In this context, while endorsing the principal
that the widest range of opinions should partake at the forthcoming
Peres Presidential Conference scheduled for June in Jerusalem, the
disturbing decision by the organizers to invite Beinart as a keynote
speaker, is perplexing and inexplicable.
It implies a failure to appreciate the damage that providing such a
prestigious platform and legitimizing the status of a Jew promoting
an odious campaign explicitly calling for a global boycott of Israeli
settlements, inflicts on both our self-respect and international
standing. Above all, it conveys an utterly confused message to the
Obama administration on where Israel itself draws red lines. (© 1995-
2011, The Jerusalem Post 05/17/12)
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