By Jeff Gates
On September 24th, U.S. President Barack Obama
will preside over a U.N. Security Council session on nuclear nonproliferation
and disarmament. In March 2010, Moscow will host a Global Nuclear Summit that
the U.S. has agreed to attend.
The next six months could prove hopeful or
harmful-depending on the impact on Israel's nuclear arsenal. With U.S. backing,
Tel Aviv has thus far avoided compliance with the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty-joining North Korea, India and Pakistan.
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Israel's Dimona reactor facility |
President John F. Kennedy tried to stop Israel
from starting a nuclear arms race in the Middle East. In a June 1963 letter to
Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion, he insisted on proof "beyond a reasonable
doubt" that Israel was not developing nuclear weapons at its Dimona reactor
facility. Though his letter was cabled to the U.S. embassy, Ben-Gurion resigned
(citing undisclosed personal reasons) before the message could be physically
delivered.
With Israel's nuclear ambitions under attack by
its key ally, that strategically well-timed resignation duped an inexperienced
young president and denied him a diplomatic victory that might well have
precluded the wars now being waged in the Middle East.
With Ben-Gurion's resignation, JFK was left
without an Israeli government with which he could negotiate. By the time a new
government was formed, the Kennedy threat had been eliminated and Tel Aviv could
start haggling from scratch with successor Lyndon Johnson who was far more
sympathetic to the goals of the Zionist state.
That strategy resurfaced in the recent
resignation of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert just as the Road Map gained traction
and the threat of peace loomed on the horizon. Olmert's successor, Benjamin
Netanyahu, then used the terms of the Road Map as a bargaining chip to start
haggling-with an inexperienced young president-over sanctions against Iran.
Democrat Lyndon Johnson proved himself a reliably
pliant pro-Israeli president as did his successor, Republican Richard Nixon.
Described by Prime Minister Golda Meir as "the best friend Israel ever had,"
Nixon agreed in 1969 to endorse "constructive ambiguity" as a means for Tel Aviv
to obscure its nuclear arsenal. Meanwhile Colonial Zionists brandished the
threat of that arsenal to seize land they sought for Greater Israel.
Israeli incursions provoked the reactions one
would expect, enabling Tel Aviv to portray itself as a hapless victim in need of
U.S. support in a hostile and anti-Semitic neighborhood. Four years after
Kennedy wrote to Ben-Gurion, Israel mounted a massive six-day assault on
neighboring nations, occupying lands that remain at the heart of the hostilities
against which Tel Aviv insists it needs nuclear weapons to defend itself.
With the war in Iraq poised to expand to Iran,
the next six months offer a rare opportunity to revisit not only Israel's
nuclear arsenal but also-in light of the consistency of its behavior over six
decades-the legitimacy of the Zionist enterprise.
Managing the Threat to Zionism: JFK, RFK and
Fulbright
In 1962, Senator William Fulbright of Arkansas,
chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, convened hearings to ensure that
the American Zionist Council-funded by the Jewish Agency-register as the agent
of a foreign government. JFK was then president and brother Robert his attorney
general. Edward ("Ted") Kennedy was elected to the Senate that year to fill his
brother Jack's seat. In October 1963, the Department of Justice-led by Robert
Kennedy-demanded that the Council register as a foreign agent.
Following the Kennedy assassination in November
1963, Nicholas Katzenbach succeeded RFK as Attorney General for Lyndon Johnson.
To avoid registration, the Zionist Council morphed into the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). That umbrella organization-still disguised as
a domestic lobby-continues to coordinate the efforts of dozens of organizations
that sustain a U.S. policy environment favorable to a foreign nation.
The Kennedy brothers shared a little-known
insight into the confidence with which Israel wields political influence across
party lines. In the closing weeks of his 1960 presidential campaign, candidate
Kennedy traveled to New York to seek financial support from Jewish business
leaders. On his return to Washington, he called his old friend Charlie Bartlett
who had introduced Jack to Jackie.
According to Bartlett, Kennedy was livid after
those he met in Manhattan assured him that the funds he sought were available
but only if he turned over to them the formulation of U.S. policy in the Middle
East. With brother "Bobby" his chief campaign strategist, that experience
doubtless came to mind when, in 1963, JFK confirmed that Israel-while portraying
itself a U.S. ally-repeatedly lied to him about its development of nuclear
weapons.
Israel vs. the Kennedys
At the height an unpopular war in Vietnam, Robert
Kennedy emerged to challenge the policies of the Texan who replaced his brother
as president in 1963. No one knows for sure that, as president, RFK would have
followed JFK's stance on the Zionist state's nuclear arsenal. Nor do we know for
certain that he would have renewed his insistence that the Israel lobby register
as the agent of a foreign government.
When a second Kennedy threat was eliminated with
an assassination in June 1968, Tel Aviv welcomed to the White House Richard
Nixon who supported Israel's strategically essential "ambiguous" policy on
nuclear arms. Nixon Attorney General John Mitchell was a partner in the same New
York law firm (Mudge, Rose, Guthrie & Alexander) that Nixon joined in 1963 after
his failed bids as president, losing to JFK in 1960, and as governor of
California two years later. In honor of Nixon's arrival, the dominantly Jewish
firm was renamed Nixon, Mudge, Rose, Guthrie & Alexander.
In 1973, five years after RFK's death, Senator
Fulbright could announce with confidence that "Israel controls the U.S. Senate."
By 1974, he was replaced in the Senate. Journalist Helen Thomas was then
covering Nixon, one of ten presidents in her lengthy career as White House
correspondent. In Obama's first press conference, she sought to clarify the
ambiguity about just who posed a nuclear threat in the region. Her question for
this latest Commander in Chief: which nation in the Middle East has nuclear
weapons?
In response, Chicagoan Barack Obama did the "Tel
Aviv Two-Step." Rather than answer the question, he spoke about the need for
nuclear nonproliferation and disarmament. Not since then has Thomas been allowed
to ask another question. Instead she was subjected to a withering barrage of
personal attacks by pro-Zionist broadcasters who sought to make it appear that
she-not the answer to her question-is the problem.
At every opportunity, Tel Aviv insists that
Tehran's nuclear energy program poses an "existential threat." That claim is
correct though not for the reason that the Israel lobby would have Americans
believe. If Israel cannot persuade the U.S. to join (or condone) an attack on
Iran, some faint semblance of stability may yet be attained in the Middle East.
With stability will come an opportunity to confirm the common source of the
fixed intelligence that induced the U.S. to invade Iraq in response to the mass
murder of 911.
Only one nation had the means, motive,
opportunity and, importantly, the stable nation state intelligence to mount such
a deception inside the U.S. As that fact becomes apparent, an informed American
public will insist that its leadership revisit the legitimacy of the Zionist
enterprise along with the costs that this "special relationship" has imposed on
the U.S. in blood, treasure and hard-earned credibility.
Israel is the Real Threat to Israel
The existential threat to Israel is real but its
source is not Iran. The real threat is the facts that Tel Aviv may again obscure
if it succeeds in provoking yet another crisis in the region. Those facts
confirm the illegitimacy of the Zionist enterprise as a nation state.
The threat to Barack Obama could become
existential should he act consistent with his oath of office. As yet he has
shown no inclination to address the perils that this entangled alliance with
Jewish extremists imposes on U.S. national security and on the prospects for
peace.
As the source of the duplicity that induced the
U.S. to war becomes known, Americans will insist on accountability. Zionist
fanatics may choose another course. A modern-day Masada is a nuclear
possibility. With their vast arsenal (estimates range from 200 to 400 warheads),
these religious extremists could preempt accountability by creating chaos
worldwide while affixing blame on "Islamo" fascists in an attempt to keep their
victim status plausibly intact.
To eliminate the existential threat posed by
nuclear-armed religious extremists requires that the U.S.-as Israel's key
ally-isolate the Zionist enterprise, withdraw its recognition as a legitimate
state and reclassify its advocates as foreign agents. That long overdue change
in the legal status of the Israel lobby-first sought in 1962-will enable U.S.
law enforcement to pursue its operatives for giving aid and comfort to an enemy
within.
The focal point for peace in the Middle East
should not be those nations that do not have nuclear weapons but the one nation
that does. Absent external pressure, Israeli behavior will not change. Those who
seek peace in the region must boycott Israeli exports, divest from Israeli firms
and insist on sanctions against Israel akin to those it seeks against others.
Anything less will ensure that Zionist extremists continue to endanger us all.
See also:
About the author:
Jeff Gates is author of Guilt By Association, Democracy at Risk and
The Ownership Solution. See
www.criminalstate.com.
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