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Subject: CARTER=Jew Hater - Martin Peretz, The New Republic
From: torresD
Date: 1/15/2007 8:36:04 AM
Martin Peretz,
editor-in-chief of the weekly
The New Republic,
wrote that the former president
"will go down in history as a Jew hater."
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/rosnerBlog.jhtml?itemNo=813396&contrassID=25&subContrass
ID=0&sbSubContrassID=1&listSrc=Y&art=1
Posted: January 15, 2007
The Carter trap
"If you ever have any questions or advice for me,
just put Jimmy Carter, Plains,
Georgia on the envelope,"
the then-presidential candidate
told audiences in the 1970s.
"I open every letter myself, and read them all."
That claim, of course,
was completely false,
as the cover story of
The Atlantic Monthly,
which dealt with lies
told by presidents,
pointed out this week.
It is impossible to know whether
Carter personally opened the letter
he received last Thursday.
The Carter Center sent a measured,
noncommittal response to its contents,
but the authors gained the attention
they had sought.
The press quoted from the letter
and television networks discussed it.
Its 14 signatories,
members of the Carter
Center's Board of Councilors,
informed Carter that they had
decided to resign -
publicly and with great fanfare,
albeit "with sadness" -
due to publication of his book
"Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid."
This book has featured for
weeks on the bestseller lists,
and has also provoked a huge outcry.
It is no small matter when a
former American president
accuses Israel of an "apartheid"
policy in the territories,
and also holds it largely
responsible for the ongoing
bloodshed.
"Your book,"
wrote the resigning board members,
"has confused opinion with fact,
subjectivity with objectivity."
At almost the same time,
a group of Reform rabbis
announced that they had
decided to cancel a planned
visit to the Carter Center in March.
In their announcement,
they urged Carter to
resume working to promote
"peace, not prejudice."
Accusations have been leveled
at Carter's book since the day
it was published.
Those well-versed in the details
of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,
such as the Clinton administration's
peace envoy, Dennis Ross,
have found in it a plethora
of falsehoods, fabrications and half-truths.
"Mr. Carter's presentation badly
misrepresents the Middle East
proposals advanced by President
Bill Clinton in 2000," Ross wrote.
The resigning board members'
letter cites several other
lies Carter is trying to
disseminate.
For instance,
his assertion in the book
that UN Security Council
Resolution 242 states that
"Israel must withdraw from territories" -
to which the letter responded:
"But you know the word 'must' in
fact is not in the resolution."
Kenneth W. Stein,
who was the Carter Center's
first executive director,
and resigned from his position
as a fellow several weeks ago
because of the book,
told Haaretz that it contains
"intentional falsehoods" and
accused Carter of
"irresponsible remarks."
These "irresponsible remarks,"
to use Stein's term,
were the straws that broke
the backs of many people who
had admired Carter,
even if they did not
always agree with him.
Two of the most prominent such
remarks were Carter's claim,
in the book, that "Palestinian groups"
had promised to stop suicide bombings
the moment Israel accepted the principles
of "international law" and the
"ultimate goals of the road map
for peace;"
and various statements that appear
to allege a Jewish conspiracy aimed
at silencing critics of Israel,
such as a sentence that appeared
in an article he wrote for the
Los Angeles Times:
"Book reviews in the mainstream
media have been written mostly
by representatives of Jewish
organizations."
The 14 resigning board members
said in their letter that they
view the former statement as
"condoning violence against Israelis."
The latter statement elicited a
harsh letter from Abe Foxman,
national director of the
Anti-Defamation League,
who told Carter that such
statements are "dangerous stuff."
Martin Peretz,
editor-in-chief of the weekly
The New Republic,
wrote that the former president
"will go down in history as a Jew hater."
It seems that the well-publicized
resignation by the Carter Center
board members and the Reform rabbis'
letter,
both developments of the past few days,
have tipped the scales against Carter
and his book.
After all,
neither the resigners nor the
boycotters can be suspected of
being enemies of the peace process.
They are lily-white,
proven doves for whom
Carter simply went too far.
A clear line has been drawn here,
with Carter's help:
a consensus that defines the
boundaries of what cannot be
said about the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict,
even in the eyes of fierce
critics of Israeli policy.
Nevertheless, one problem remains:
The critics,
as Carter justly claims,
are almost all Jews.
That is the only card left in his hand,
but it is a strong one,
which embodies a trap
from which there is no escape.
On one hand, this problem,
too, could be solved:
All it needs is one well-known,
well-respected, non-Jewish critic
to come out publicly against Carter.
If such a person does emerge,
it will be possible to
completely undermine the
legitimacy of this miserable book.
But on the other hand,
what lies behind the assumption
that such a critic is needed?
Is this not a disturbing
admission that even in America,
when it comes to Israel,
the word of Jews is still not,
and may never be, completely sufficient?
More about Carter on Rosner's Domain:
Is Carter an anti-Semite?
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