Some people were born Republican, others are "made." I was born a Democrat, like most Jews in this country, my family had been voting for Democrats ever since they passed Miss Liberty in NY harbor on their way to Ellis Island from Odessa. The first political campaign I ever worked on was for the reelection of Allard K. Lowenstein (who lost to Norman Lent in 1970). After that Election I hated the Republicans more than ever, yet almost 40 years later I find myself spending most of my free time as a tireless advocate for most Republican positions, WHAT THE HELL HAPPENED TO ME ! The Answer is General Al Haig, in 1973. General Haig didn't turn me into a Republican but he certainly started me on the road to becoming one.
But As John Loftus retells in his book "The Secret War Against the Jews" Al Haig took control on the third night of the Yom Kippur War while Kissinger, and Schlesinger were dickering about how much, or how little support Israel should get, and rammed out an order to U.S. Army bases throughout this country. "Gather up all the TOW anti-Tank missiles you can find and deliver them immediately to a military airport outside of Washington. In the middle of the night, unmarked transports arrived, the missiles were loaded, and sent to Israel just in time to stop the Egyptian advance. My friend Avi, a tank commander in the Sinai at the time credits that one single act of leadership with saving Israel.
You see, unlike the Democratic Party there are Republicans who do the right thing no matter if it is popular or not. Al Haig was like that, Ronald Reagan was like that also (Bush Sr wasn't) and for most his eight years Bush Jr. was like that. Barack Obama is not like that.
More than anything, more than the Reverend Wright thing, his Palestinian friends etc. Barack Obama CANNOT be trusted to do the "right thing" when push comes to shove. With Israel surrounded by terrorists on all three sides, and an Iranian leader with a Messiah complex trying to build a bomb, all supporters of Israel desperately need a US president who is more of a leader than a politician. Barack Obama is NOT a leader. If a Democrat gets less than 70% of the Jewish vote it is considered a loss. Barack Obama will get less than 70%...
Why more Jews won't be voting Democrat this year
Jul. 1, 2008
JENNIFER RUBIN , THE JERUSALEM POSTDefenders of Barack Obama, and sometimes Obama himself, seem frustrated that some American Jews refuse to assume their traditional role of support for the Democratic presidential nominee. The Obama defenders are irked that not all Jews accept at face value Obama's expressions of devotion to Israel and commitment to her security.
Why can't these contrarians just take Obama at his word (he is a Zionist, he really is, they insist)? The answer is "1973."
But the explanation starts in 2008. Many Jewish Obama doubters are convinced that Israel faces a true existential threat unlike any in 35 years. From nation states like Iran, which threaten to destroy Israel, to Hizbullah and Hamas terrorists, Israel may in the next decade be pushed to the brink of its existence. Israel's failure to defeat Hizbullah in 2006 demonstrated the limits of Israel's historic military advantage.
With the spread of nuclear weapons and other deadly technologies a second Holocaust - that is, the annihilation of a substantial portion of world Jewry - is not out of the realm of imagination.
THESE OBAMA skeptics recall a similar time, 1973, when Israel also faced extermination. Prime minister Golda Meir had miscalculated Anwar Sadat's willingness to go to war and decided against a first strike against Egypt. The Arab nations attacked in October 1973, and within days Israel was facing defeat.
The Israelis went to president Richard Nixon with a request for a massive infusion of arms. The Defense and State Departments squabbled. Our European allies, who feared an oil embargo (and would refuse us bases to refuel our planes), inveighed against it, and the Soviets blustered. Many on Nixon's staff wanted to deny the request, or offer only token assistance. Don't antagonize the Arab states, they counseled.
Nixon persisted and, according to some accounts, doubled the amount of aid Israel had requested. Riding herd on the bureaucrats, Nixon repeatedly intervened to push the transports along. Informed about a dispute regarding the type of air transportation, Nixon at one point exclaimed in frustration: "Tell them to send everything that can fly." Over the course of a month US airplanes conducted 815 sorties with over 27,900 tons of material.
Israel was saved due to this massive infusion of military aid. Meir referred to Nixon with enormous affection for the rest of her life. Nixon, despised by many in the US, was hailed as a hero in Israel. And Nixon (who had garnered a minority of the Jewish vote in 1972) received little or no political benefit at home for his trouble, leaving office the following year.
SO WHAT does this have to do with Obama? The Obama skeptics do not for a moment believe that Obama, in the face of domestic and international pressure similar to what Nixon faced, would rise to the occasion at a critical moment in Israel's history and "tell them to send everything that can fly."
In every significant interaction in Obama's adult life with those who distain and vilify Israel - from Rashid Khalidi to Reverend Jeremiah Wright to Louis Farrakhan - Obama has demonstrated passive resignation and indifference.
He did not stand up to his friend Khalidi, the Palestinian activist, professor and former Palestinian spokesman whom Obama honored at a farewell dinner, and object to Palestinian invectives that Israel was an apartheid state. He did not recoil, until Wright insulted him at the National Press Club, from Wright when he learned that Wright considered Israel a "dirty word" and postulated that Israel had invented an "ethnic bomb."
He did not heed (or was oblivious to) public pleas from Jewish organizations to avoid the Million Man March that Farrakhan organized; nor did he years later leave his church when it honored Farrakhan. It took a hateful rant from another wide-eyed preacher against Hillary Clinton, just when Obama needed to cool intra-party animosities, to do that.
AND IF any further proof were needed, Obama's actions with regard to the Kyl-Lieberman Amendment, the measure to classify the Iranian National Guard as a terrorist organization, should settle the question of Obama's intestinal fortitude when it comes to Israel. An issue presented itself: a choice between, on the one hand, taking a stance against Israel's most vile enemy, Iran, and, on the other, appeasing the far Left of his own party.
Obama chose to satisfy the MoveOn.org crowd and opposed the amendment. The amendment would have been "saber rattling" and unduly provocative, Obama argued at the time. Senators Dick Durbin, Harry Reid, Hillary Clinton and three quarters of the US Senate voted for the amendment.
Once his nomination was secured, Obama told those assembled at the AIPAC convention that he supported classification of the Iranian National Guard as a terrorist organization, a move he well understood was important to Israel's security and to AIPAC's members. Yet under just a smidgen of political pressure during the primary race, he had not been able to muster the will to support a modest measure which inured to Israel's benefit.
IS THERE anything in all this to suggest that in a potential crisis, when much of the world would be pressuring him to let Israel die, Obama would push all the naysayers aside and demand to "send them everything that can fly"? There is not a shred of evidence to suggest that he would be beyond persuasion when it came down to Israel's survival. In fact, all the available evidence indicates that the opposite is true.
That does not mean Obama will not carry the majority of the Jewish vote. Jews are overwhelmingly Democratic, and it is certainly the case that for many American Jews the secular liberal agenda takes precedence over everything else in presidential politics.
For these voters, then, "1973" is not uppermost in their minds. Their devotion to liberalism is controlling, and for their own peace of mind they are willing to accept Obama's generic expressions of warm feelings toward Israel.
Indeed the temptation to believe in Obama's bland promises of support for Israel is a tempting one for liberal Jews. If they can convince themselves that he will be "fine on Israel," no conflict arises between their liberal impulses and their concern for Israel. The urge to believe is a powerful thing, especially when the alternative is an intellectual or moral quandary.
It is also the case that some American Jews simply do not believe Israel is in peril, or that "1973" is remotely relevant. They imagine Iran is merely spouting nonsense, that Hizbullah and Hamas lack the organization or competence to threaten Israel's survival, and that Israel will muddle along indefinitely.
BUT SOME Jews are incapable of deluding themselves that Obama would be the most resolute candidate in defending Israel. In quiet moments of contemplation and in noisy debates with family members and friends, they worry about the tenuous nature of Israel's existence and the dangers which lurk from within and outside Israel's borders. These Jews cannot imagine a world without Israel and could not countenance election of a president who, in Israel's moment of peril, could well falter.
And that is why these obstinate Obama skeptics, some even after a lifetime of Democratic voting, will not pull the lever for him. For them some things rank higher than even the top items on the liberal political agenda. The risk is, in their minds, too great that when Israel needs help the most, Obama will buckle and Israel will be crushed.
Many, albeit not all and likely not even most, American Jews will therefore decline to vote for Obama. They know that if the majority of their co-religionists had their way and George McGovern, rather than Richard Nixon, had been in the White House in 1973, Israel might not have survived.
A few barbs from their fellow congregants, amazed they would not vote for a Democrat for president, are a small burden to bear as they cast their vote for the candidate who - they are certain - when the chips are down, will send everything that can fly.
1 comment:
I'm with YOU, but I think you are dead wrong in your conclusion.
AFAIK, our family is the ONLY family in our congregation to back McCain (or oppose Obama)- altho we live in a university and medical town.
Detailed fact driven discussion of the meaning of Obama's appointments (you know the names) merely results in
a) 'you people think there is some anti Israel conspiracy in the Obama campaign and that's crazy'
b) 'Israel can have peace if she just gives up the settlements'
And that is among people who should recognize without further discussion that given the history of this planet, the existence of Israel is compulsory for the continued existence of jews, SOONER OR LATER.
We should count it as a GIGANTIC victory if less than 2/3 of jews vote for Obama.
Obama's strength amongst the jews is Obama's strength among the populace.
People desperately want to believe someone can get them out of all this while they head over to the mall.
Our message sounds like crows over the body of a dead puppy in the road.
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