wp4199d2e6.png
wp7b8e541b.png
Motorists, Equity & Unity Party
wpdbacf758.png
wpdbacf758.png
wpa3242cc6.png
Published and promoted by the Motorists Equity & Unity Party, 123B Southfield, POLEGATE BN26 5LZ
wpb53e2131.png
wp343f323c.png
wpb46fb45b.png
wp88839f7c.png
wp361e4a9b.png
wpb8846080.png
wp86616e9d.png
Newsletter
Communications - less gridlock !
Copyright © 2005 - 2008 -  Motorists Equity & Unity Party
All Rights Reserved
wpe8bac402_1b.jpg
Webmaster@me-and-u.org.uk
Water Conservation  -  Dual Flush Cisterns
Click for  
Local & Rider Bus Timetables
wpf43de1fc.png
wpe7b6c471.png
wp95aa94fb.png
wp8a82ccc3.png
wp15cd4d9c.png
wp5607756c.png
The Working Lunch !
wpf4dea5ff.png
wpf216dce0.png
Recommended changes for the 21st century
wp32b9703f.png
wp032ea4d5.png
wp3e8eb8a5.png
wpf43de1fc.png
wp11bf918d.png
wp4bdf09d8.png
wp62d10fef.png
Latest: 29 Mar
Letter
 From
America
wpca5c0e21_1b.jpg
Nuclear Disarmament  
CND Link
wp6b1f7dd9.png
wp9003581f.png
wp4bd8752e.png
wp813e2c95.png
wpcabc1868.png
wpd87301d8.png
14th Nov '07 The Lobby by Paul Craig Roberts (USA)
wp1b575d32.png
wp80475fd6_1b.jpg
wp98ff3212_1b.jpg
< Posters on "MyDD" - USA >
Unmasking AIPAC by William Cook (USA)
So Who's Afraid of the Israel Lobby ? by Ray McGovern
wp31062073.png
wpf85a2596.png
wp0b33c8ae.png
Opinion
Column
wpc96e5345.png
wpc6d32c3e.png
 "True compassion, is more than flinging a coin to a beggar; it comes to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring."
- Martin Luther King Jr.
wp923d3d50.png
The plight of dispossessed women in Iraq, having to feed their children from refuse bins - UN Report
wp1b251bca.png
"Once a government is committed to the principle of silencing the voice of opposition, it has only one way to go, and that is down the path of increasingly repressive measures, until it becomes a source of terror to all its citizens and creates a country where everyone lives in fear": Harry S Truman
The Lobby by Paul Craig Roberts
November/14/07 "ICH" -- -- Experts in the West and ordinary people in Arab lands have understood for many years that the United States does not have an independent policy toward the Middle East. President Jimmy Carter, a man of good will, tried to use American influence to settle the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the source of dangerous instability in the Middle East. However, Israel was able to block Carter’s attempt, while blaming Yasser Arafat. Carter’s plan would have given rise to a Palestinian state. Israel did not want any such state, because obvious military aggression is necessary in order to steal the territory of an official state with defined borders. It is much easier to steal land from a non-state.
By preventing the rise of a Palestinian state, Israel has been able to continue with its theft of the West Bank. Palestinians who have not been driven out have been forced into ghettos, cut off from schools, hospitals, water, and their olive groves and farmlands. In a recent book, President Carter called the existing situation “apartheid.” Carter was demonized by the Israel Lobby for his use of this word, but some experts consider Carter’s choice of words to be an euphemism for the continuation of what I. Pappe and N. G. Finkelstein call “the ethnic cleansing of Palestine.”
That the vast majority of Americans know nothing of this is testimony to the power of the Israel Lobby.
A number of writers have exposed Israel’s misbehavior and the power of the Lobby, but until now, the Lobby has been able to marginalize its critics by smearing them as “anti-semites,” “nazis,” and “Jew-haters.” In a new book, John J. Mearsheimer and Stephen M. Walt have broken the Israel Lobby’s power to suppress truth by demonizing and intimidating all who would criticize Israel.
Mearsheimer and Walt are distinguished scholars holding distinguished appointments at the University of Chicago and Harvard University, two of America’s most distinguished universities. Their book, The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy, published by the distinguished American publisher, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, is a masterpiece of scholarship and documentation. Footnotes comprise 23 percent of the book’s pages.
Mearsheimer and Walt easily succeed in making their case that neither strategic nor moral grounds can explain U.S. support for Israel. Only the power of the Israel Lobby can explain the juxtaposition of a dwindling moral and strategic case with ever-increasing U.S. backing for Israel, even to the disadvantage of U.S. national and strategic interests. Indeed, both executive and legislative branches are so completely compromised by the Lobby that the different elements of U.S. Middle East policy “have been designed in whole or part to benefit Israel vis-a-vis its various rivals.”
Chapter by chapter, Mearsheimer and Walt demonstrate the deleterious effects the Lobby has had on U.S. relations with Palestinians, Iraq, Syria, Iran, and Lebanon. The two scholars conclude:
“The lobby’s influence helped lead the United States into a disastrous war in Iraq and has hamstrung efforts to deal with Syria and Iran. It also encouraged the United States to back Israel’s ill-conceived assault on Lebanon, a campaign that strengthened Hezbollah, drove Syria and Iran closer together, and further tarnished America’s global image. The lobby bears considerable, though not complete, responsibility for each of these developments, and none of them was good for the United States. The bottom line is hard to escape, although America’s problems in the Middle East would not disappear if the lobby were less influential, U.S. leaders would find it easier to explore alternative approaches and be more likely to adopt policies more in line with American interests.”
There is nothing anti-semitic about this book. Mearsheimer and Walt do not challenge Israel’s right to exist or the legitimacy of the Israeli state. They believe the U.S. must defend Israel from threats to its survival. They even regard AIPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, as a legitimate American lobby and not as an unregistered agent of a foreign state.
The motives of the two scholars, apart from respect for truth and the obligation to speak it, are to further Israel’s and America’s legitimate interests. Mearsheimer and Walt agree with numerous Israeli historians and commentators that Israel’s policy toward Palestine and the Arabs, together with the Lobby’s suppression of critics, have been “directly harmful to Israel.” The inflexibility that Israel has imposed on U.S. foreign policy has America mired in wars--now a half decade or more old--in Iraq and Afghanistan. Even as Muslim rage threatens to engulf America’s puppet in Pakistan, vice president Dick Cheney, Israel and its neoconservative allies strive to initiate war with Iran.
This is a high price to pay for Israeli territorial expansion even if the U.S.-Israeli policy of war and coercion succeed. If military aggression fails to bring the Middle East under the hegemony of the U.S. and Israel, the dangers to energy flows and Israel’s existence could result in the use of nuclear weapons. It is literally insane for the United States to expose the world to such risks for the sake of Israel’s misguided policy toward Palestine.
Other scholars, especially those whose sense of justice is offended by the cruel oppression Palestinians suffer at the hands of Israel, are more critical than Mearsheimer and Walt. The latter do Israel and the Lobby a service by defining the issue as one of U.S. and Israeli legitimate national interests rather than casting it as a case of crimes, inhumanity, and injustice.
Instead of legitimate national interests, James Petras, Bartle Professor Emeritus of Sociology at Binghamton University in New York, sees “a level of crimes parallel to those of the Nazis in World War II” (The Power of Israel in the United States, 2006). Petras writes that “the architects of the Iraqi war planned a series of aggressive wars of conquest based on the principle of domination by violence, torture, collective punishment, total war on civilian populations, their homes, hospitals, cultural heritage, churches and mosques, means of livelihood and educational institutions. These are the highest crimes against humanity.”
“The worst crimes,” Petras writes, “are committed by those who claim to be a divinely chosen people, a people with ‘righteous’ claims of supreme victimhood.”
It remains to be seen how much more blood and treasure Zionist fanaticism will extract from Americans. But one thing is certain: the Israel Lobby is far too powerful for America’s good and Israel’s.
Forty years ago the Lobby was sufficiently powerful to force President Lyndon Johnson to cover up the intentional Israeli attack on the USS Liberty that resulted in 34 Americans dead and 174 wounded. Admiral Thomas Moorer, Chief of Naval Operations and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff declared: “No American President can stand up to Israel.”
Forty years later the Israel Lobby is able to reach into Catholic universities and to overturn tenure decisions. The courageous scholar Norman Finkelstein was denied tenure at DePaul University in Chicago, Illinois, because he is an effective critic of Israeli policies.
In America today academics and intellectuals who fail to toe the Lobby’s line are unlikely to receive support from conservative or liberal foundations. Even Mearsheimer and Walt’s article, “The Israel Lobby,” commissioned by the Atlantic Monthly and from which their book evolved, had to be published overseas in The London Review of Books when the Atlantic Monthly’s editors’ courage failed them.
American patriots who glorify in their country’s status as the “sole superpower” have much to learn about the subservience of their country’s foreign policy to a tiny state of five million people. There is no better place to begin than with Mearsheimer and Walt’s The Israel Lobby.
Paul Craig Roberts wrote the Kemp-Roth bill and was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page and Contributing Editor of National Review. He is author or coauthor of eight books, including The Supply-Side Revolution (Harvard University Press). He has held numerous academic appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair in Political Economy, Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University and Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He has contributed to numerous scholarly journals and testified before Congress on 30 occasions. He has been awarded the U.S. Treasury's Meritorious Service Award and the French Legion of Honor. He was a reviewer for the Journal of Political Economy under editor Robert Mundell. He is the co-author of The Tyranny of Good Intentions. He is also coauthor with Karen Araujo of Chile: Dos Visiones – La Era Allende-Pinochet (Santiago: Universidad Andres Bello, 2000).
wp150eca57.png
ICH = Information Clearing House
US storm over book on Israel Lobby - BBC News item
wpce2f8200.png
HOMELESS IN PARADISE
America, Land of 371 Billionaires and 3.5 Million Homeless
By Stephen Fleishman
wp6a55e7ad.png
wpff42458f.png
ICH = Information Clearing House
8th Dec '07 - When Is Bush Going To Come Clean ?
by Paul Craig Roberts (USA)
wp3a9880bb.png
wp3919b478.png
Get Real, Americans !
By Mary Pitt
Parking Fines - Sanity in Manchester (BBC Report)
wp8927c40d.png
wpe659f6bd.png
wpf42a841f.png
Latest Motoring News
Daily Telegraph - 21st Jan 08
Random Breath Tests planned for motorists - article by David Milward - Transport Editor
wp73ea7f87.png
wp4a4ef2c2.png
  Moral certainty is always a sign of cultural inferiority. The more uncivilized the man, the surer he is that he knows precisely what is right and what is wrong. All human progress, even in morals, has been the work of men who have doubted the current moral values, not of men who have whooped them up and tried to enforce them. The truly civilized man is always skeptical and tolerant -- H L Mencken
Site Link Page
*Inside Israel - Not All Milk & Honey by Seth
*Freedman - Information Clearing House (ICH)
USA Politics
Middle East activities
and the
Israeli/Palestinian situation
M.E. & U.
M.E. & U.
M.E. & U.
  "It would be some time before I fully realized that the United States sees little need for diplomacy. Power is enough. Only the weak rely on diplomacy ...
  The Roman Empire had no need for diplomacy. Nor does the United States." : Boutros Boutros-Ghali
*Financial Crisis in the USA - A Solution ? by Paul Craig Roberts
wpd68fa038.png
33
Oct 08
wpa9e18f72.png
wpa9e18f72.png
You've tried the rest, now try the best !
wp8ad6c3e8.gif