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Neocons 1, Obama 0
The Obama administration's choice to head the National Intelligence Council (NIC) recently withdrew in face of a concerted right-wing attack. Veteran diplomat Chas Freeman would not have had to face Senate confirmation. Instead, he had to face attacks in the right-wing press and blogosphere. His withdrawal was a victory for Bush-era neoconservatives and their allies regarding intelligence and broader Middle East Policy.
The NIC chairmanship is structured to offer a skeptical view on U.S. intelligence. With his broad knowledge and experience in East Asia, the Middle East, Africa, Europe, and Latin America, Freeman would appear to be an ideal appointee. Fluent in both major dialects of Chinese, he accompanied President Richard Nixon on his historic 1972 trip to China. Later, he served as principal deputy assistant secretary of State for African affairs, assistant secretary of Defense for international security affairs, and as ambassador to Saudi Arabia during the 1991 Gulf War. After retiring from the State Department, Freeman succeeded former senator and 1972 Democratic presidential nominee George McGovern as head of the Middle East Policy Council, a centrist Washington think tank.
Those closest to Freeman have confirmed that his decision was indeed his own. Neither the president nor Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair, who had offered Freeman the position, asked him to withdraw his acceptance of the NIC post. At the same time, the White House's refusal to come to Freeman's defense in the face of misleading and defamatory attacks is reminiscent of the Clinton White House's abandonment of assistant attorney general nominee Lani Guinier in similar circumstances back in 1993.
The Sin of Being Right on Iraq
Freeman announced his withdrawal just hours after Blair praised Freeman before the Senate Intelligence Committee for his "wealth of knowledge and expertise in defense, diplomacy and intelligence." The seven Republican members of the committee didn't, however, welcome these attributes when they spoke out strongly against his appointment. Particularly upsetting to Freeman's right-wing opponents were his statements acknowledging the disastrous consequences of the U.S. invasion of Iraq, a decision backed not only by Republicans but by such key Senate Democrats as Intelligence Committee chair Dianne Feinstein, Vice President Joe Biden, and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
Senator Joe Lieberman (I-CT), an outspoken supporter of the invasion, kept pressing Blair on the Freeman appointment during the hearing, to which Blair replied that such criticism was based on a misunderstanding of the position. "I can do a better job if I'm getting strong analytical viewpoints to sort out and pass on to you and the president than if I'm getting precooked pablum judgments that don't really challenge," Blair said. Lieberman, clearly unsatisfied with Blair's response, promised he would continue to press the issue.
Freeman had raised the ire of war supporters in his articles and speeches exposing the errors of Bush policy in the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq. "Al-Qaeda has played us with the finesse of a matador exhausting a great bull by guiding it into unproductive lunges at the void behind his cape," Freeman said, noting how invading Iraq appeared to the world's Muslims as "a wider war against Islam." Freeman further observed: "We destroyed the Iraqi state and catalyzed anarchy, sectarian violence, terrorism, and civil war in that country."
Not surprisingly, the bipartisan group attacking the appointment was led by such staunch supporters of the invasion of Iraq as Representatives Mark Kirk (R-IL), Steve Israel (D-NY), John Boehner (R-OH), Shelley Berkley (D-NV), and Eric Cantor (R-VA). Senator Charles Schumer (D-NY), another outspoken supporter of the invasion of Iraq, insisted that "Freeman was the wrong guy for this position." Schumer even tried to take credit for Freeman's withdrawal, claiming, "I repeatedly urged the White House to reject him, and I am glad they did the right thing."
By contrast, those supporting intelligence assessments based on the facts rather than ideology had praised the appointment as an example of a shift away from the Bush administration policy. Freeman has "spent a goodly part of the last 10 years raising questions that otherwise might never get answered - or even asked - because they're too embarrassing, awkward, or difficult," Dan Froomkin of NiemanWatch observed. "For him to be put in charge of [the NIC]...is about the most emphatic statement the Obama administration could possibly make that it won't succumb to the kind of submissive intelligence-community groupthink that preceded the war in Iraq."
James Fallows of The Atlantic noted how "anyone who has worked in an organization knows how hard it is, but how vital, to find intelligent people who genuinely are willing to say inconvenient things even when everyone around them is getting impatient or annoyed. The truth is, you don't like them when they do that. You may not like them much at all. But without them, you're cooked."
Smear Campaign
In the days following Blair's appointment of Freeman, the attacks grew more and more bizarre. For example, since the Middle East Policy Council had received some grants from some Saudi-based foundations, Freeman was accused of thereby being "on the Saudi payroll" and even being a "Saudi puppet." In The New Republic, Martin Peretz insisted that Freeman was "a bought man." But it's certainly not unprecedented for presidential appointees to have worked with nonprofit organizations that have received support from foreign governments. Indeed, Dennis Ross, appointed last month as Special Advisor for the Gulf and Southwest Asia, is still listed as the board chair of the Jewish People Policy Planning Institute, which is supported by the Israeli government.
To set the record straight, Blair told the Senate Intelligence Committee that Freeman had "never lobbied for any government or business (domestic or foreign)" and that he had "never received any income directly from Saudi Arabia or any Saudi-controlled entity."
In another irony, the person identified as the principal orchestrator of the attacks against Freeman - including the charge that he was a Saudi agent - was Steven Rosen, former director of the right-wing American-Israel Political Affairs Committee (AIPAC). Rosen currently faces espionage charges for transferring classified materials to the Israeli government. M.J. Rosenberg, a former colleague of Rosen who now serves as policy director of the Israel Policy Forum, said "you couldn't have picked anyone less credible to lead the charge" against Freeman. But Rosen's smear campaign was apparently credible enough to force Freeman to turn down the position.
Another line of attack was that Freeman, in the words of the Wall Street Journal, was a "China apologist." Critics cited quotes allegedly made by Freeman, many taken out of context, that appeared to justify repression by the Beijing regime, including the 1989 crackdown against pro-democracy activists. According to Blair, however, Freeman - who has spoken of the Tiananmen Square massacre as a "tragedy" - wasn't describing his own views but was simply observing what he considered to be "the dominant view in China." Similarly, a number of leading China experts came to Freeman's defense as well, with Jerome Cohen noting that claims of Freemen endorsing the 1989 repression were "ludicrous" and Sidney Rittenberg observing that as a U.S. diplomat in Beijing, Freeman was "a stalwart supporter of human rights who helped many individuals in need."
Yet Peretz falsely claimed that Freeman had "made himself a client of China" and was a man with "no humane or humanitarian scruples" who wanted the United States to "kow-tow to authoritarians and tyrants." Nor did it stop the National Review from claiming that Freeman's appointment proved "you can go directly from effectively working for the Saudis and Chinese to being the country's top intelligence analyst."
None of those attacking Blair's appointments on the grounds of supposedly supporting authoritarian regimes has ever raised concerns about Admiral Blair himself. Blair served as the head of the U.S. Pacific Command from February 1999 to May 2002, as East Timor was finally freeing itself from a quarter-century of brutal Indonesian occupation. As the highest-ranking U.S. military official in the region, he worked to undermine the Clinton administration's belated efforts to end the repression, promote human rights, and support the territory's right to self-determination. He also fought against congressional efforts to condition support for the Indonesian military on improving their poor human rights record. When human rights activists raised concerns about having a defender of death squads as the Director of National Intelligence, the Obama White House rushed to Blair's defense, something they were clearly not willing to do for Chas Freeman.
Criticizing Israeli Policies
Freeman's rightist critics also claimed that Freeman was "anti-Israel." For instance, Freeman rejected the Bush administration's policy of defending Israeli violence against Palestinians while insisting that the Palestinians had to unilaterally end their violence against Israelis. A number of Freeman's critics cited in horror Freeman's observation that until "Israeli violence against Palestinians" is halted, "it is utterly unrealistic to expect that Palestinians will stand down from violent resistance."
Freeman has been concerned for some time that U.S. policy is radicalizing the Palestinian population to the point of jeopardizing Israel's security interests. The United States had "abandoned the role of Middle East peacemaker to back Israel's efforts to pacify its captive and increasingly ghettoized Arab populations," he observed. "We wring our hands while sitting on them as the Jewish state continues to seize ever more Arab land for its colonists. This has convinced most Palestinians that Israel cannot be appeased and is persuading increasing numbers of them that a two-state solution is infeasible."
Ironically, a number of prominent Israeli academics, journalists, security analysts, military officers, and political leaders have made similar observations. Freeman's critics, however, believe that expressing such concerns makes Freeman - in the words of the Wall Street Journal - an "Israel basher." House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a strident supporter of Israeli government policies, claimed that Freeman's views were "indefensible" and urged President Barack Obama to withdraw his appointment.
In his withdrawal statement, Freeman reiterated his concern that "the inability of the American public to discuss, or the government to consider, any option for U.S. policies in the Middle East opposed by the ruling faction in Israeli politics has allowed that faction to adopt and sustain policies that ultimately threaten the existence of the state of Israel." He went on to observe that this "is not just a tragedy for Israelis and their neighbors in the Middle East; it is doing widening damage to the national security of the United States."
Obama's Silence
A number of diplomats and other State Department professionals who had known Freeman as a colleague spoke up in favor of his nomination, and challenged the defamatory and libelous attacks against him. For example, a letter signed by former UN ambassador Thomas Pickering, former ambassador to Israel Samuel Lewis, former ambassador to Afghanistan Samuel Neumann, and more than a dozen other current and former ambassadors noted: "We know Chas [Freeman] to be a man of integrity and high intelligence who would never let his personal views shade or distort intelligence assessments."
Similarly, a group of prominent former intelligence officials called the attacks against Freeman "unprecedented in their vehemence, scope, and target," noting how they were perpetrated by "pundits and public figures...aghast at the appointment of a senior intelligence official able to take a more balanced view of the Arab-Israel issue."
Yet despite so many mainstream officials coming to his defense, the Obama White House chose to remain silent.
Most pundits, as well as Freeman himself, have blamed the so-called "Israel Lobby" for forcing him out. While AIPAC itself was apparently not involved in the smear campaign, many of Freeman's harshest critics were among the strongest supporters of the Israeli right. However, the battle over Freeman's appointment was about a lot more than simply his views on Israel - or Saudi Arabia or China; it was about the integrity of our nation's intelligence system. Those who most exploited the false claims about nonexistent "weapons of mass destruction" in order to frighten the American public into supporting the U.S. invasion of Iraq were the most eager to deny Freeman the chairmanship of the NIC.
And Freeman's willingness to ask the big questions frightened many on the right. For example, following 9/11, Freeman shared his disappointment that "instead of asking what might have caused the attack, or questioning the propriety of the national response to it, there is an ugly mood of chauvinism." His ability to look inward instead of simply attack "the other" is what apparently made him unworthy in the eyes of his critics.
Prior to Freeman's decision to withdraw, Chris Nelson of the influential Nelson Report, a daily private newsletter read by top Washington policymakers, wrote: "If Obama surrenders to the critics and orders [Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair] to rescind the Freeman appointment to chair the NIC, it is difficult to see how he can properly exercise leverage, when needed, in his conduct of policy in the Middle East. That, literally, is how the experts see the stakes of the fight now under way."
Obama apparently didn't order Freeman's appointment to be rescinded. But Obama's refusal to come to Freeman's defense will make it all the more difficult for the president to challenge future right-wing attacks on his administration's policies in the Middle East and beyond. Smelling victory, the right will only become bolder in challenging any progressive inclinations in Obama's foreign policy.
As Joe Klein so aptly put it in his Time blog, "Barack Obama should take note. The thugs have taken out Chas Freeman. They will not rest. Their real target is you, Mr. President."




25 Comments so far
Show AllShould read Obama 1, neocons 0.
Who doesn't know about and abhor the neocons now?
I'm sorry to disagree with ezeflyer but I believe that the author has it right.
While politically aware Progressives - who make up the bulk of the posters on this site - are generally knowledgeable about politics in general and this situation in particular, the vast majority of American voters have their heads completely up their collective ass on this and many other issues.
When I try to discuss Israeli influence on US policy with various folks, their eyes glaze over in about three seconds. As straightforward as this matter may seem to us, the issue is too complex and its implications too dire for most folks to understand.
q
Trying to wade through the persistant hype and spin is a full time job. Without sites such as Common Dreams we would be mired in the muck. These articles help to grasp a better understanding of what the story behind the spin really is. Equally enlightening are the responses to the articles by well informed and articulate posters, all of which are very much appreciated. I recently began getting e-mails from a website called NewsMax. For the dark side of all issues this site is a winner. It can twist any issue into a hatefilled curlycue and pass it off as new. Usually I wouldn't read this trash but I find it interesting just how far people will go to achieve their evil objectives, in this case: sinking our President.
you nailed it, quickstepper. ditto here in Canada.
So, that settles it. A reasonable and knowledgable human being cannot gain high position in the US government, particularly with respect to foreign policy. What evil Washington has become over the years. Though it was never very noble, it seems to have evolved in the last few decades from garden variety evil to unspeakable evil. Will the Washington-Wall Street Axis of Evil collapse from within because the predators cannot stop themselves from engorging on the foundations on which they stand?
Forget about Barry Soetoro, that's a smokescreen. The real O Bama is the one and only meister mummer selected and groomed by the kings of Vaudeville. James Petras was absolutely right.
http://www.jeremiahfilms.com/BlogWatch/BarrySoetoro/
Under the grease paint and behind the tux Mr O Bama is by far the greatest entertainer ever foisted on an ever more gullible dumbed down ameriKan joe public.
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Are you people getting bored preaching to the choir over at FreeRepublic.com?
Amazing.
Zunes sez: "... since the Middle East Policy Council had received some grants from some Saudi-based foundations, Freeman was accused of thereby being 'on the Saudi payroll' and even being a 'Saudi puppet.'"
***
Hmm. The reich wing never seemed to have a problem with those descriptions when they applied to Bush.
The neocons are typically ignorant of the massive struggle for peace that palestinian militants have been involved in. Most of the rockets they fired were in retaliation for Israel pulling out of Gaza and leaving them without any means to support themselves with the exception of building and firing rockets in exchange for coos-coos.
Chas is right about China, too. That should be our model for handling right wing dissenters and brain dead Bush-bats.
It's pretty sick when our entire government is wholly owned and controlled by a foreign country. It means that every one of those traitors will sell us out without a second thought. They are all Zionists - or frightened to death of Zionists, and with good reason. Terrorism works. We're royally screwed. The US can't do anything without asking 'Mother may I' of the Israeli loyalists.
Ever think that maybe Obama agreed that Freeman was not right for the job and that's why he didn't stick up for him?
"Obama apparently didn't order Freeman's appointment to be rescinded."
Apparently, no one did.
"The Obama administration's choice to head the National Intelligence Council (NIC) recently withdrew in face of a concerted right-wing attack. "
So how can it be said, that Obama didn't support his "withdrawal". Surely, Obama could have defended Blair's appointment of Freeman, if he wanted to...
Maybe, here's a shocker! - maybe Obama wasn't lying about being Pro-Israel! - and maybe Biden wasn't lying about being a Zionist!
Personally, I'm glad Freeman's gone. We don't need anyone kissing the feet of Hamas.
What this means is that the faction within the Washington ruling elite who have opposed the Israeli/US Zionist campaign to push the US into attacking Iran...have been defeated. The top military and intelligence analysts who might have blocked this insane policy of having the US fight additional wars to promote Israel's hegemonic ambitions in the larger Middle East have been completely marginalized. Besides meaning the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of Iranians will not be stopped at the level of our ruling elite , it means that Israeli agents operate with complete freedom at the highest decision making level in Obama's administration to the detriment of the American people. Its a palace coup d'etat. This shows just how puny and bankrupt the anti-war movement, the ultimate shills for the warmongering Democrats, really is.
This idea that this conspiracy of rich and powerful Jews somehow runs U.S. foreign policy seems to be a calculated attempt to get the overwhelmingly non-Jewish political establishment off the hook. The problem is not a small ethnic minority group. The problem is U.S. imperialism. We didn't need a Zionist lobby to get the United States to engage in imperialistic interventions in Vietnam, Chile, Central America, Angola, or anywhere else -- including Iraq.
Do you really thing the Iraq War was because the Zionists made us do it and the fact that that country just happened to be sitting on the world's second largest oil reserves was just a coincidence?
Furthermore, no Zionist lobby forced the United States to support Indonesia's occupation of East Timor or Morocco's occupation of Western Sahara. Why, then, should the U.S. somehow have a more enlightened policy when it comes to Palestine?
"This idea that this conspiracy of rich and powerful Jews somehow runs U.S. foreign policy seems to be a calculated attempt to get the overwhelmingly non-Jewish political establishment off the hook."
Call it by it's name: "antisemitism".
Freeman was right, but didn't go far enough with his insights that al Qaeda manipulated the Bush administration and its congressional and media lackeys into two wars that have crippled our economy, driven large numbers of Muslims into violent tactics against the US and its allies, and seriously undermined our prestige in the world. The neocons have acted as unwitting accomplices to Islamic extremists and exponentially increased the damage.
unwitting? Islamic extremists? The 9/11 hijackers were hiring hookers and spending their time at strip clubs before 9/11. The neocons and the "Islamic extremists" you're talking about are cut from the same cloth.
DrBrian
Good joke - saying the Neocons were acting in the interests of the Islamists...its like saying that Bernie Madoff and Sir Allen Stanford were agents of a galactic workers international, effectively tearing down capitalism and the empire from within their Palm Beach mansions and Caribbean palaces!
The conversation has begun, even in the Jew-filtered America media about the facts surrounding Zionist influence in American domestic and foreign policy. Last Sunday, Fareed Zacaria aired a short interview on CNN with Mr. Freeman, and has asked for comments from the public to be considered for next Sunday's show. Stay tuned. I'm guessing we'll find out that there are lots of folks who don't think Zionist Jews controlling our government is all that funny.
Senator Charles Shummer from New York is the one who pulls the money strings for Pelosi, and hence her sudden hatred for Freeman. She is so under control and for-sale, one wants to puke.
"even in the Jew-filtered America media"
"I'm guessing we'll find out that there are lots of folks who don't think Zionist Jews controlling our government is all that funny."
When did CD become a site for hate-mongering rednecks?
1) I live in Pelosi's district and I know damn well that Schumer does NOT "pull the money strings for Pelosi." She has plenty of fundraising prowess of her own and she's been in office twice as long as he has. Where do people come up with that kind of thing? Trying to find a way to get a Catholic politician off the hook by blaming it on a Jew?
2) What "Jew-filtered media?" If you look who really owns the media in the country you'll find a hell of lot more Christians than Jews. Episcopalians alone control more of the media than Jews do! Get real!
3) And you really want people to believe that it is not wealthy corporations, or the Pentagon, or the overwhelmingly non-Jewish ruling class that dominate our political system, but Zionist Jews? It is people like you that work to keep the oppressive system in order by trying to find a minority group to scape goat rather than acknowledge there might a problem with the economic and political structure as whole.
Grappa
President Obama was silent on this nomination as he has a full plate, and doesn't want any sideshows to interfere. He will probably face other challenges and will give in as well. His main management thrust is on the crumbling economy. I think that he has a problem with empowering others to carry out tasks which he perceives as possibly tying him up in areas he doesn't want to deal with at this point. So every thing must be signed off by him.
"President Obama was silent on this nomination as he has a full plate, and doesn't want any sideshows to interfere. "
Is there something wrong with Obama just being pro-Israel?
This whole matter of shooting down Chas Freeman is just the stupidity of pro-Isreal groupthink. U.S. National Intelligence just does not need the horse blinders of groupthink, there can be no wisdom gained from it. The world desperately needs wisdom, not stupidity.
Wisdom is found in embracing opposing viewpopints that leads to honest personal discernment. This is what makes anyone a wise person. This is what makes Chas Freeman a wise man. Should not U.S. intelligence be wise as well?
Blair was absolutely correct to say to Neocon Lieberman: "I can do a better
job if I'm getting strong analytical viewpoints to sort and pass on to you and the president than I'm getting pre-cooked pablum judgements that don't really challenge".
Group think within institutions is the creator of evil that eminates out of institutions, whether it be the institutions of financial capitalism, the institution of the Pentagon or even the institutions of religion.
James Fallows of The Atlantic hits this nail on the head when he says "anyone who has worked in an organization knows how hard it is, but how vital, to find intelligent people who genuinely are willing to say inconvenient things even when everyone around them is getting impatient or annoyed. The truth is, you don't like them when thery do that. You may not like them much at all. But without them, you're cooked".
"Stephen V. Riley March 18th, 2009 8:48 am
This whole matter of shooting down Chas Freeman is just the stupidity of pro-Isreal groupthink."
READ the article.
"Goebbels sez March 17th, 2009 11:46 am
Zunes sez: "... since the Middle East Policy Council had received some grants from some Saudi-based foundations, Freeman was accused of thereby being 'on the Saudi payroll' and even being a 'Saudi puppet.'"
***
Hmm. The reich wing never seemed to have a problem with those descriptions when they applied to Bush."
Interesting. It seems someone who's posted comments in this page did read the article after all. And I had the same thought when reading about the Saudi relation with the organisation that Charles Freeman was with; that the Bush family is known by everyone, most people anyway, to have very strong ties, [business] ties with the Saudi (un-)royal family. (The only place they're royal is in their weird minds.)
================================
And with that and my prior post now said, I'll say EXCELLENT article! I find this piece by Stephen Zunes to be quite excellent and definitely appreciate the more generous biographic information that he provided on Charles 'Chas' Freeman, and the short bio. on Blair, who evidently spoke well in defending Charles Freeman for heading the NIC, but who nonetheless has a rotten record of his own. It's interesting, also, to see that someone with a rotten record like Blair has comes out and well defends someone with an evidently very good record, like that of Charles Freeman.
Maybe people should start thinking of electing Charles Freeman for the next U.S. presidency. Based on what I've read about him so far, he'd evidently make the very best president the U.S. has ever had, and if others had been anywhere as sound as he evidently is on foreign policy, then he'd still be a top pick for electing to the presidency. Get with being innovative, improvisional, ... and consider him for the next presidency. A suggestion.