Studies show that US coverage is Israeli-centric. The main bureaus for CNN, Associated Press, Time, etc. are located in Israel and often staffed by Israelis. The son of the NY Times bureau chief is in the Israeli army;"pundit" Jeffrey Goldberg served in the IDF; Wolf Blitzer worked for AIPAC. Because the U.S. gives Israel over $8 million/day - more than to any other nation - we feel it is essential that we be fully informed on this region. Below are news reports to augment mainstream coverage.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

Rahm Emanuel: Self-hating Jew or peace-broker?

Ha'aretz
The most interesting stories about Emanuel, the White House chief of staff, are recounted with the recording device turned off. "He has a good memory, and I don't want a dead fish delivered to me," snickers one of interviewees. Emanuel once sent a dead fish to a pollster...

With his coarse short-temperedness, Emanuel stands out even in a city like Washington, D.C, about which Obama himself once said, quoting president Harry S. Truman: "They say if you want a friend in Washington, get a dog." Emanuel can begin a conversation with the threat that if any of its contents are leaked to the media, none of those involved will ever see him or anyone else in the White House again, and finish it with an impolite hint that he needs to send an e-mail.

Those who are familiar with his almost obsessive preoccupation with order, his self-discipline and his determination, believe that his behavior is a tactical choice. He has a tendency to be insufferable, but he can cover for that with captivating humor at his own expense. He has a hot temper, but he also has healthy political instincts and an impressive record of successes. This despicable/charming duality was probably best summed up by Emanuel himself when he once said in an interview with the Chicago Tribune: "I wake up some mornings hating me too."

When Rahm's father hears that the interlocutor is an Israeli journalist, Dr. Benjamin Emanuel, a retired Jerusalem-born pediatrician who moved to Chicago in the 1950s after finishing his studies in Switzerland, switches to Hebrew.

"I'm simply surprised that in Israel they jump down his throat," he says angrily. "I love the country, my children are Zionists, they came to Israel every year, and I don't know why they're attacking Rahm. I support Netanyahu, I was a member of the Etzel" - referring to the right-wing pre-state military underground....

...... The father of the White House chief of staff refers to a statement published in the Israeli daily Maariv shortly after Rahm's appointment, when he was quoted as being proud of his son's new job, and saying: "Obviously he will influence the president to be pro-Israel. Why wouldn't he? What is he, an Arab? He's not going to clean the floors of the White House."

The son responded with swift damage control, and apologized in the name of his family to an organization of Arab Americans...

Benjamin Emanuel's three sons, who grew up in Chicago, were once described as "the ridiculously successful family." The eldest brother, Ezekiel, whom they call "the smart one," and who studied at Oxford and at Harvard, and has advanced in the field of medicine (he is an oncologist, who worked as a bioethicist at the National Institutes of Health and has since become advisor to Peter Orszag at the White House).... Rahm, who was a mediocre student and the quietest of the brothers, turned out to be a political animal. The youngest brother, Ari, a rather wild child who grew up on Ritalin and was diagnosed as dyslexic, became a highly successful theatrical agent in Hollywood and was described as the wealthiest one in the family.

Ari Emanuel served as an inspiration for the character of Ari Gold in the television series "Entourage" and Rahm, for a character in the series "The West Wing." Ezekiel participated in writing a proposal for a "medical" series and is still waiting for a character to be based on him. The three have an adopted sister named Shoshana, whose mother gave her up for adoption eight days after her birth, in the hospital where their father worked. She has been less successful and is said to have often caused the family to wonder about nature versus nurture.

Each of the three boys were tought to swim before the age of 2. Their parents used to hang their report cards side-by-side on the refrigerator. The enrichment menu included ballet lessons and visits to shows and museums. They also attended demonstrations with their mother, an activist for Afro-American civil rights, who was also arrested several times...

Uncle Emanuel

On the wall of their home in suburban Wilmette hung a picture of Uncle Emanuel, who was killed in Palestine in 1938 in a clash with Arabs, and after whose death Rahm's grandfather changed his last name from Auerbach to Emanuel...

The boys internalized their parents' high expectations so well that one of president Bill Clinton's assistants once joked that a special trauma unit should be opened to treat people who wound up working with Rahm Emanuel, who grants no quarter to himself or to anyone else. Political consultant David Axelrod joked that once he began working with Emanuel, he no longer needed an alarm clock to wake him in the morning. The parents also tried to teach them two contradictory principles: One is to always challenge authority; the other is to always respect it. The only thing they ignored was the brothers' tendency to curse - something the parents never did - hoping that their sons would outgrow it. That didn't happen.

The other Emanuels also refrain from being interviewed about Rahm; his office assistant also sent a polite message saying thy have to decline the offer to contribute to the article. One Washington political strategist says he isn't surprised at Emanuel's silence: "I would advise him not to give any interviews to the Israeli press, with all his affection for Israel. Not now, and for sure not after the 'Arab' remark of his father. He's in the spotlight, people are out to get him, and it's not good - especially when the president is exercising his outreach to the Muslim world."

William Daroff, vice president for public policy and director of the Washington office of the United Jewish Communities of North America, believes that Emanuel just "doesn't want to make news. He wants to be a public face at the administration, but my guess would be he wants to leave the talk about the peace process and U.S.-Israeli relations to the White House spokesman, to the secretary of state, to Senator [George] Mitchell. He has kept quite a low profile with the media since the elections, he's been a guy on the Hill doing health care, but he's not at the Sunday shows [television interview programs]. I don't think it's just a Jewish or Israeli thing. There are different ways to exert power in this town. He is very mature, very strategic, and probably he thinks his keeping low profile in the press now serves the president's interest and helps to get things done."

In 1991, during the first Gulf War, Emanuel flew to Israel and volunteered in Sar-El, the Israel Defense Forces program for civilian volunteers, at a base in the north, performing the unglamorous task of rust-proofing brakes on military vehicles. When he first ran in the primaries for a seat in the U.S. Congress in 2002, the then-president of the Polish American Congress, Edward Moskal, who supported his rival, declared that Emanuel was actually a "citizen of another country and served in their armed forces for two years."

As someone who used to ram a steak knife into the table as he shouted the word "Die!" while calling out the names of the political rivals of then-U.S. president Bill Clinton (Emanuel worked in the White House as an advisor to him), Emanuel, who has never had Israeli citizenship [actually, indications are that Emanuel held dual citizenship unti 18], reacted with uncharacteristic restraint.

Emanuel won that race, and subsequent ones as well, and as congressman from the 5th district of Illinois, he quickly advanced in the House Democratic hierarchy so that by last year, he was in the fourth-highest position of power. But since the three senior Democratic members of the House of Representatives - Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Majority Leader Steny Hoyer and Majority Whip James Clyburn - are around 70, Emanuel, who will turn 50 later this year, had no special reason to push his way in, and made do with the job of chairman of the Democratic Caucus.

Since his initial election to Congress, Emanuel had been considered the "golden boy" of the party, and was credited with playing a significant part in its successful comeback in the 2006 elections - thanks to his talent for aggressive fundraising and his refusal to consider defeat an option.

During the 2008 presidential primaries, Emanuel maintained neutrality, as befits a cautious politician, and did not express support either for the wife of his former boss or for his friend from Chicago. Only after it was clear that Obama would be the candidate did he endorse him. In Congress Emanuel was positioned left of center on the significant issues in American politics, with the exception of his support for the war in Iraq...

When Obama offered him the position of White House chief of staff, Emanuel politely demurred, promising to help the president to the best of his ability from his position in Congress. Emanuel - who worked with Clinton for six years, until he left for private business after the signing of the Wye Memorandum, a 1998 agreement between Israel and the Palestinians (in only two and a half years in investment banking, he managed to earn about $18 million)
[some analysts are curious about the source of this sudden enormous wealth] - was familiar with the job at first hand and was aware of its limitations.

'Practically mute'

.... the chief of staff's job provides an unprecedented position of influence in Washington....

...Obama, who has never been ashamed of looking for strong supporting players in order to compensate for the gaps in his own knowledge and experience.... On November 6, 2008, two days after the election, in which he gained reelection to a fourth term in the House, Rahm Emanuel made the decision to join the president's staff. On January 2, 2009 he resigned from his congressional position...

... The Chicagoans in the White House, who include Emanuel's close friend David Axelrod, who is the president's senior adviser, had already consolidated into a team during the campaign. Emanuel and Axelrod met in the early 1980s, when the latter was a reporter for the Chicago Tribune, and Emanuel, then a young political activist, was eager to sell him stories about the achievements of the group he represented. Two years after meeting, they joined forces in the campaign of Paul Simon, a Representative from Illinois who ran for the Senate in 1984 - Axelrod as campaign manager and Emanuel as the talented fundraiser (according to one story, he used to embarrass donors who would write a check for $5,000 when he was convinced they were capable of contributing five times that amount).
When Emanuel married Amy, whom he met on a blind date (and who converted to Judaism in a non-Orthodox process before the wedding), Axelrod signed the marriage contract.

[In 1984, Emanuel and David Axelrod (Obama's senior campaign strategist in 2008) worked alongside AIPAC on a campaign to unseat Illinois Senator Charles Percy who was then chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee. That electoral success followed a victorious AIPAC-directed campaign in 1982 when Springfield attorney Richard Durbin was recruited to oppose Paul Findley, an 11-term Congressman. See They Dare to Speak Out]

In spite of his low media profile, Emanuel has been presented as the man who pulls the strings in the White House...

...To date, neither Emanuel nor several other prominent Jews in the administration have given any local synagogue a reason to boast of their frequent visits, but there is now hope in the capital's Jewish community that because the children - who attended a Jewish school in Chicago - are residing in Washington, the Emanuels will choose a synagogue and a supportive community. In Chicago the family belonged to the modern-Orthodox synagogue Anshe Sholom B'nai Israel...

In another instance Lopatin was dragged into an online discussion about the permissiveness of the Orthodox stream, in the wake of a report that Congressman Emanuel had received permission from the rabbi to conduct conference calls on Rosh Hashanah in order to promote the economic rescue legislation in Congress. "When giving Rahm a heter [religious permission] for being on a conference call on Rosh Hashanah, I did tell him that if he could have a gentile make the call, it would be preferable. I feel as strongly now as I did a month a go that passing the bailout was a critical part of preventing the meltdown of the world economy, and that that is a pikuah nefesh issue [a matter of life and death] ..."

The rabbi was also forced to respond to the charge that Emanuel's wife would not be considered a Jew by the Jewish establishment in Israel. He wrote that he was not the rabbi who converted her, and that not all the members of the congregation define themselves as Orthodox, adding that the Emanuels should be asked how they define themselves.

"I worked in the White House with Bill Clinton and I'm very familiar with the people who are now working with Obama," says Jeremy Ben-Ami, executive director of the left-wing pro-Israel lobby J Street. "They are American Jews who care deeply about Israel. And it will be a mistake for Israelis to try guessing 'why they are anti-Israeli' instead of listening to them and looking into the rationale of current decisions. Expansion of settlements, insisting on construction in Eastern Jerusalem - it works against the Israeli self-interest, it's clear-cut."

When asked whether Emanuel is now considered the most influential Jew in the United States, Ben-Ami laughed. "I'm not sure that American Jews look at him as a Jewish icon. He probably seems to them more as an incarnation of the raw politics."

Alan Solow, chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations, is an old friend of both Obama's and Emanuel's from their Chicago days....

...He was present at the meeting of the president with American Jewish leaders, I had a chance to speak with him, he certainly was available, and I think that overall this administration has a good working relationship with American Jewish leadership. There's always a process in which you get used to the new people, but several of the people working with Obama we have known for years already."

And does the fact that they're Jews help the organizations that represent the community?

"I think that they are viewed as people who work in the American political world who happen to be Jews. And their jobs are to serve the president of the U.S. And I imagine that just like any human being, values that they bring to their job are result of their life experiences. Rahm Emanuel and David Axelrod - their Jewish background is important to them."

William Daroff, one of the Jewish leaders active in Washington, rejects the charge that every time Obama speaks about Israel, he is actually quoting Rahm Emanuel.

"The president said while he was campaigning that you don't have to have a Likud view of the world to be considered pro-Israel ... I know that Rahm Emanuel is very involved in the U.S.-Israel relationship..... I would say that Rahm Emanuel supports Israel. I would say that President Obama supports Israel. Their view of what supporting Israel should be - and what Israel should be doing regarding peace - might be different from [Yisrael Beiteinu MK and Minister of National Infrastructure] Uzi Landau's view, but might be the same as Tzipi Livni's view. It doesn't mean they are enemies of the state of Israel or betraying their Jewishness. Because Rahm Emanuel never had a right-wing view of the Israel-U.S. relationship. In Congress he was pretty much a centrist. I know that Rahm Emanuel feels very close to Israel."

During his period in the Congress, Emanuel voted with his party on the subject of Israel 98 percent of the time. He signed letters and draft bills in support of Israeli security, on the one hand, and efforts to promote peace efforts, on the other, beginning with the letter declaring Congressional support for the road map, which was sent to president George W. Bush. He was in favor of financial assistance to the Palestinians, but called on them to give up terror. He was one of the only two Jews in Congress who agreed to support the Geneva Initiative, in 2003.

"What's happening today makes me angry," says Yossi Beilin, one of the originators of the Geneva Accords. "The moment Rahm became such a significant factor in the administration and because he's also the son of a former Israeli and speaks Hebrew, he became a target. It's much easier for us to label Jews as enemies than a non-Jew. Because why are they, of all people, doing that? The entire world can pressure us, but for Jews to do that to us? I remember that in 1975, when I interviewed Rabbi Zvi Yehuda Kook, who was the leader of Gush Emunim [the settlement movement], he called [then-U.S. secretary of state Henry] Kissinger 'the husband of the non-Jew,' he didn't even call him by name. In Israel there were demonstrations and they shouted 'goy' [non-Jew]. In the Knesset they called Dan Kurtzer (then U.S. ambassador to Israel) 'Jew-boy.' The right in Israel considers people in the administration who want peace, whose views would be between those of Kadima and Meretz if they were to vote in Israel, a type of traitor."

But there is no chance that that will cause Emanuel to give up, says Beilin. "Do you think he'll stop just because someone here called him a 'self-hating Jew'? Kissinger didn't stop his activity, nor did Clinton's team, which received a lot of criticism and complaints. [Rabin said that 'history would show what a good friend to Israel Kissinger was'] ....

Several of his speeches in Congress and some personal stories reveal that the tough Emanuel also knows how to be emotional. He speaks with open admiration about his maternal grandfather, who led the loud discussions at dinner in the family home ("and you were in trouble if you didn't come prepared for the discussion," Rahm's mother Marsha once said). ..

...When he was president Clinton's adviser, Emanuel orchestrated the handshaking ceremony between Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin and PLO chairman Yasser Arafat. It is even said that after Rabin's assassination, it was he who suggested to Clinton that he include the expression "Shalom, haver" (Goodbye, friend) in his eulogy to Rabin ......
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In 2008 Emanuel was the topmost House recipient of campaign contributions from hedge funds, private equity firms and the securities industry.