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Category Archives: Politics and Elections
Hypocritical American-Israeli-Palestinian Peace Talks Drag On
by James M. Wall The only good thing to emerge in this week’s peace and justice news is President Obama’s choice of Harvard law professor Elizabeth Warren as his special advisor on consumer affairs. In a refreshing back of the … Continue reading
Newt Gingrich and His Crusade To Save America From Destruction
by James M. Wall Forget about Pastor Jones and his hate-filled threat to burn the Koran. With the eager assistance of what passes these days for mass media, Jones has had his moment in the glare of worldwide publicity. He … Continue reading
Posted in Middle East Politics, Politics and Elections
5 Comments
219th Presbyterian Assembly Faces Its Moment of Truth
by James M. Wall Five Updates Below; Presbyterian General Assembly delegates are in Minneapolis this week for their national gathering–held every two years–discussing, praying, arguing, and finally voting, on a wide variety of issues that will determine how the heirs … Continue reading
Posted in Middle East Politics, Politics in Religion
9 Comments
Israeli “Agents” Infiltrate Presbyterian General Assembly
by James M. Wall Four professors–two from Vanderbilt, one from Auburn Theological Seminary, and one from Syracuse University–have burst on the national scene as strong opponents of a Middle East Study Commission resolution which will be presented to the Presbyterian … Continue reading
Posted in Politics in Religion
23 Comments
Hard to Believe Hashem Sanctions Schumer’s Defense of Israel
by James M. Wall Charles Colson, the former Nixon special counsel-turned-Christian radio commentator, told his listeners God allowed Hurricane Katrina to remind the United States how important it is to win the “war on terror”. That’s the way folks like Chuck … Continue reading
They Differ on Health Care But Never, So Far, on What Bibi Wants
By James M. Wall Bibi Netanyahu came to Washington and received a cool reception from President Obama. But the Congress embraced him with its usual enthusiasm. Did it matter that Bibi was still issuing “build, baby, build” orders for East … Continue reading
Posted in Middle East Politics, Politics and Elections
8 Comments
Who Gave Bibi Permission to Own Palestine? Where Do We Start
by James M. Wall Christopher Dickey currently serves as Newsweek’s Paris bureau chief and Middle East regional editor. In a recent Newsweek online column, Dickey recalled a story from 1996. “Back when Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu was elected Israel’s prime minister … Continue reading
Posted in Media, Middle East Politics, Politics and Elections
8 Comments
54 House Members Risk Their Careers to Support Gaza
by James M. Wall Fifty-four members of the US House of Representatives have sent a letter to President Obama urging him “to use diplomatic pressure to resolve the blockade affecting Gaza.” Initially drafted by Democrats Keith Ellison, Minnesota, and Jim … Continue reading
Posted in Middle East, Politics and Elections
10 Comments
Troop Buildup Is Vietnam Redux; Not The Change Obama Promised
Juan Cole, author of the blog Informed Comment, wrote an essay for Salon on the speech which also lamented Obama’s failure to remember Vietnam:
President Barack Obama’s just-announced plan for Afghanistan seems modeled less on Lyndon Johnson’s Vietnam strategy than on George W. Bush’s Iraq exit strategy. Or, at least it is modeled on the Washington mythology that Iraq was turned from quagmire into a face-saving qualified success by sheer indomitable will and a last-minute troop “surge.” But Afghanistan is not very much like Iraq, and the Washington consensus about its supposed end-game success in Iraq is wrong in key respects. Are think tank fantasies about an Iraq “victory” now misleading Obama into a set of serious missteps in Afghanistan?
Stephen Walt wrote in the New Foreign Policy.com (November 30) http://tinyurl.com/yf4a7l2
Tom Friedman had an especially fatuous column in Sunday’s New York Times, which is saying something given his well-established capacity for smug self-assurance.
According to Friedman, the big challenge we face in the Arab and Islamic world is “the Narrative” — his patronizing term for Muslim views about America’s supposedly negative role in the region. If Muslims weren’t so irrational, he thinks, they would recognize that “U.S. foreign policy has been largely dedicated to rescuing Muslims or trying to help free them from tyranny.” . . . .
I heard a different take on this subject at a recent conference on U.S. relations with the Islamic world. In addition to hearing a diverse set of views from different Islamic countries, one of the other participants (a prominent English journalist) put it quite simply. “If the United States wants to improve its image in the Islamic world,” he said, “it should stop killing Muslims.”
Now I don’t think the issue is quite that simple, but the comment got me thinking: How many Muslims has the United States killed in the past thirty years, and how many Americans have been killed by Muslims? Coming up with a precise answer to this question is probably impossible, but it is also not necessary, because the rough numbers are so clearly lopsided.
Walt arrived at a rough estimate of 288,000 Muslim deaths over the past thirty years. He also found that roughly 10,000 Americans had been killed by Muslims in the same period.
Almost all of those deaths on both sides occurred before Obama became president. If he had decided to pull a Truman on his military commanders. he would have demonstrated that he did mean it when he said he would change American conduct in world affairs.
Instead he is stuck in the demeaning position of a decision dictated to him by the military brass and their backers in the American political right. It is hard not be pessimistic when this happens.
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Talking With McGovern in a Time of Palin and Israel’s Settlements
by James M. Wall I was fed up with the ugliness of American political dialogue. I knew it was time to call George McGovern. I found him on St. Thomas Island, where he was attending the funeral of an old … Continue reading
Posted in Middle East, Politics and Elections
11 Comments