WikiLeaks: Advancing an Israeli Agenda?
WikiLeaks: Advancing an Israeli Agenda?
By Maidhc
Ó Cathail
Like 9/11, WikiLeaks has been singularly good for Israel.
Asked on the night
of September 11, 2001 what the terrorist attacks meant for
U.S.-Israel relations, Benjamin Netanyahu, the then former
prime minister, tactlessly but accurately replied, “It’s very good.” And on
the day after WikiLeaks’ publication of U.S. diplomatic
cables, Netanyahu “strode” into a press conference at the
Israeli Journalists Association, looking “undoubtedly
delighted” with the group’s latest embarrassment of U.S.
President Barack Obama.
“Thanks to WikiLeaks,” Aluf
Benn wrote in Haaretz, “there is now
no fear Washington will exert heavy pressure on Israel to
freeze settlement construction or to accelerate negotiations
on a withdrawal from the territories.” Instead, also
courtesy of WikiLeaks, the world’s attention had been
shifted exactly where a “vindicated” Netanyahu wanted it –
toward Iran’s non-existent nuclear weapons
programme.
“Our region has been hostage to a narrative
that is the result of 60 years of propaganda, which paints
Israel as the greatest threat,” Netanyahu told the
assembled journalists. “In reality leaders understand that
that view is bankrupt. For the first time in history there
is agreement that Iran is the threat.” While there is
considerable dispute about the extent to which Arab
leaders share Netanyahu’s understanding of “the Iranian threat,” the Arab public
overwhelmingly considers Israel to be a
far greater threat.
Nevertheless, according to Haaretz columnist Ari
Shavit, Julian Assange “has shattered the accepted
dogma on the understanding in the Middle East in the
21st century.” WikiLeaks, crowed Shavit, “proved” that
the Israeli occupation and colonisation of Palestine was not
the main cause of instability in the Middle East. Instead,
the secret cables “revealed” that “the entire Arab
world” is concerned about “one problem only — Iran,
Iran, Iran.” Thus, Shavit concluded, the only way to bring
peace to the region was to deal with “Iran first.”
Strangely, the WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange seems to accept the Israeli vision of
“war is peace” in the Middle East. In an interview with Time magazine,
Assange singled out Netanyahu as an example of a
world leader who believed the publication of Arab leaders’
provocative privately expressed comments “will lead to
some kind of increase in the peace process in the Middle
East and particularly in relation to Iran.”
Even more
puzzling, Assange had an op-ed piece in Rupert Murdoch’s The
Australian, in which he quoted something the
media mogul had written in 1958: “In the race between
secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will
always win.” In choosing another pro-Israel apologist as a model of transparency, is
it possible that Assange is ignorant of the key role played
by Murdoch’s media empire in propagating the lies that led
the New York Times to dub the war in Iraq “Mr. Murdoch’s War”?
Assange seems
equally oblivious to the significant contribution made by
the New York Times itself to the
war whose conduct he now claims to oppose. On September 8,
2002, the paper of record led with a front-page story by Judith Miller and Michael Gordon, which falsely claimed
that Saddam Hussein was seeking to buy aluminium tubes as
part of its “worldwide hunt for materials to make an
atomic bomb.” As Michael Massing later wrote, “In the following months, the
tubes would become a key prop in the administration’s case
for war, and the Times played a critical part in
legitimizing it.” Chosen by Assange to publish its leaked
documents because it is one of “the best
newspapers in the world for investigative research,” the
pro-Israel Times is now busily spinning the leaks to push America into
an equally unnecessary but even more disastrous war with Iran.
Given that
the WikiLeaks revelations have been such an unexpected “diplomatic coup” for Israel, its American lobby appears to be
strangely divided over the issue. On one side, there are
those like David Frum, Jeffrey Goldberg and Michael Ledeen who delight in being able
henceforth to cloak their incessant Iran warmongering behind
a specious Arab cover. “Those who suggest that it’s some
‘Israel lobby’ or Jewish cabal that is driving the
confrontation with Iran” should be embarrassed by the
leaks, writes Frum. “WikiLeaks confirms that the
region’s Arab governments express even more anxiety than
Israel about the Iranian nuclear weapons
program.”
Meanwhile, the most virulent attacks on
WikiLeaks have come from some of Israel’s staunchest
supporters. William Kristol, editor of Rupert Murdoch’s Weekly Standard,
wants Congress to enable Obama to “Whack WikiLeaks.” Dianne Feinstein, chairman of the Senate
Intelligence Committee, and Joe Lieberman, chairman of the Senate
Homeland Security Committee, appear only too willing to
oblige. Both senators have called for the prosecution of
Assange under the 1917 Espionage Act. Feinstein is also
working with Senator Charles Schumer on media legislation
that would allow the prosecution of organizations like
WikiLeaks.
How do we reconcile the Israel lobby’s
apparently schizophrenic reaction to WikiLeaks? Could it be
that Julian Assange has killed two birds for Israel with one
document dump?
Thanks to WikiLeaks, the well-publicised
remarks of a few Arab leaders provide much-needed cover for
pro-Israelis as they relentlessly press America to whack
Iran. At the same time, the disclosure of U.S. diplomatic
secrets has given the likes of Joe Lieberman another excuse
to “kill the internet” — to prevent
Americans from ever finding out how they got into such a
mess in the Middle East.
But just like 9/11, no matter how much WikiLeaks
has benefited Israel, most observers still seem loath to
consider the Tel Aviv connection.
Maidhc Ó Cathail writes extensively on U.S. foreign policy and the Middle East.