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Public debate in America has now become a question
amatullah
05/16/02 at 21:25:54
Here is an powerful commentary on the United States and its' current
political culture and suppression of debate on the Palestinian issue.
Jonathan Steele is a well respected British author, journalist and world
renown international affairs expert. This article should be read by
every journalist in the United States and Canada. Please forward to your
"favourite" journalist.

E.C.



New York is starting to feel like Brezhnev's Moscow

Public debate in America has now become a question of loyalty

                                   Jonathan Steele
                                   Thursday May 16, 2002
                                   The Guardian

What a sad place New York City has become. A vibrant,
disputatious town with a worldwide reputation for loud voices and
strongly expressed opinions is tip-toeing around in whispers.
Grief over the casualties of the twin towers massacre is not the
reason (those wounds are slowly healing), but a stifling
conformity which muzzles public discourse on US foreign policy,
the war on terrorism and Israel.

"If people knew I held these views, I wouldn't be able to stay in
this job," an old college friend confided as I passed through the
city for a few days last week. He was appointed by the Bush
administration to a top Federal position (not connected to foreign
policy) some months ago. His subversive views on the Middle
East, if uttered in Europe, would raise no eyebrows: Ariel
Sharon has no vision or strategy; his tactics on the West Bank
are counter-productive; the American media are failing to report
adequately on the suffering of innocent Palestinians in cities
ransacked by Israeli troops.

Another friend, a liberal rabbi, was about to set off on a regular
visit to Israel. She contrasted the usual furious public arguments
which she expected to find there to the behind-the-hand
mutterings of New Yorkers. "Over here Sharon and Netanyahu
have managed to turn the issue of terrorism, which was
provoked by Israeli behaviour on the West Bank, into an
existential question of the survival of the Israeli state. Debate
becomes disloyalty," she complained.

The Israeli prime minister's humiliating refusal to heed the White
House's call last month for an immediate halt to Israel's West
Bank incursions should have prompted a debate on whether
Bush or Sharon makes US foreign policy, she argued. Instead,
the leaders of most American Jewish organisations sided with
Sharon and were pleased when Bush backed down.

Listening to these anguished but private complaints suddenly
reminded me of the Soviet Union of the Brezhnev era when
lower-level officials, journalists and other fringe members of the
regime sat around their kitchen tables, expressing their true
views only to family and close friends. A far-fetched analogy, of
course, until you look at the narrowness of public discussion,
not just on Israeli-Palestinian issues, but also on the threatened
American attack on Iraq and the administration's war on
terrorism in general.

When Tom Daschle, the Senate majority leader, suggested this
spring that the war had failed because Osama bin Laden and
Mullah Omar were still free, he was fiercely attacked and never
dared to repeat the point. The campaign for an all-out attack on
Iraq continues in full swing with none of the congressional
opposition which marked the Gulf war a decade ago. John
Bolton, the state department's most hawkish official, is taken
seriously when he "names" countries with biological weapons
programmes which the US claims the right to target with military
strikes. No one contrasts his purported expertise with the fact
that, after seven months, the FBI has failed to discover the
whereabouts of the people or the laboratories in the US which
produced and mailed anthrax-coated letters last autumn. If the
administration is so ignorant about events on its own doorstep,
why should anyone believe it knows what is going on in labs in
Iraq, Iran or Cuba?

To enforce this abandonment of reasoned argument in the name
of a witch-hunt against terrorists, a strange alliance of
evangelical Christians in Congress has come together with the
leaders of American Jewish organisations who normally support
the Democratic party. "We live in a culture where there is a
diminishing tolerance of dissent," commented Abe Brumberg,
long-time editor of Problems of Communism, the Soviet-era
journal which was funded by the US government.

He drew my attention to a column by Frank Rich in the New
York Times. The piece reported that America's foremost Jewish
newspaper, Forward, was fielding subscription cancellations for
accepting an ad from Jews Against the Occupation. Mainstream
papers are also being targeted. "Our press is not being
muzzled," Rich was careful to write, "but the dictates of what
constitutes politically correct conversation about the Middle
East are being tightened to the point that American leaders of all
stripes increasingly seem to be in a contest to see who can
pander the most to American Jews."

On CNN's domestic news one morning their vacuous presenter
Paula Zahn urged viewers to stay with her until after the break.
"A new book which criticises American foreign policy and says
he US has been guilty of terrorism has sold 160,000 copies.
We'll have more," she announced.

Noam Chomsky's book, I wondered. Are they really going to let
him appear? No such luck. The offending book was indeed by
Chomsky but America's leading dissident was not invited on to
the show. Like Soviet television in the 1970s, which regularly put
up regime hacks to pillory the two giants of non-conformity,
Andrei Sakharov and Alexander Solzhenitsyn, without giving
them a say, Ms Zahn's guest was William Bennett, a
Republican former cabinet minister. He proceeded to "explain"
Chomsky's high sales with a flippant "kooks in our midst"
argument. Many Americans were still in deep confusion after the
shock of September 11, and some people were prepared to
believe anything, he claimed.

Chomsky was unsurprised when I rang him later. "It's typical,"
he said. "CNN International interviews me a lot, but the US
channel doesn't dare." Far from being depressed, Chomsky was
in bullish mood. Like an intellectual rock star he is perpetually
on the move, travelling to packed auditoria on campuses around
the US and abroad. "I spend about an hour every night turning
down email requests to speak," he said. He was off to Bogota in
Colombia later that day.

Other professorial friends were not so gung ho about the extent
of campus radicalism, in spite of recent peace marches in
Washington and New York. But they agreed that universities are
the only place for political discussion these days. "I hear there
was a fantastic debate at Yale Law School recently," my highly
placed Bush appointee reported. "Two Palestinian law students
wiped the floor with Tom Friedman, the New York Times columnist."

The fascination, and frustration, of America has always been the
way one society can produce so much optimistic vigour and
risk-taking intellectual energy alongside a ruling culture of such
boorish ignorance and cruelty. To judge from the east coast
today, the middle-aged liberal intelligentsia is letting itself be
intimidated into taking the wrong side. j.steele@guardian.co.uk


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