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      Israel-Firsters Leave the White House:  
	Obama's Dance of Death  
	By Eric Walberg 
	 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, October 6, 2010 
      
  
	Israel in America: Obama's dance of death  
	Obama has just lost his close friend and chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, 
	who is making the unusual transition from national to municipal politics. He 
	is also losing his closest adviser David Axelrod (pragmatist Emanuel 
	described their difference as prose versus poetry) and his mentor and 
	director of the National Economic Council Larry Summers.
  Why are 
	Obama's three closest advisers -- all Jewish -- leaving? There is no pat 
	answer. Axelrod is no friend of Summers, having suggested in an email the 
	latter would be more comfortable in the “cafeteria at Goldman Sachs”. He 
	claims he is homesick. Obama's Keynesianism probably finally got to Summers, 
	who prefers tax cuts. Emanuel, a former congressman, a talented ballet 
	dancer, son of an Irgun terrorist, and an Israeli soldier during the first 
	Gulf war against Iraq, leads us to the real answer. 
  As a very, very 
	strong Zionist (dual citizen? sayan?), he is Israel's canary in the White 
	House. Israel boycotted Obama's UN speech at the Millennium Goals Summit in 
	September, and has subjected Obama to dose after dose of humiliating 
	treatment, the latest when Netanyahu asked for the pardon of Israeli spy 
	Jonathan Pollard (serving a life sentence) in exchange for a temporary halt 
	in settlement expansion. Netanyahu defiantly visited Pollard in jail in 2002 
	and he is celebrated as a hero in yearly commemorations in Israel. There 
	seems to be an eerie replay of 1991, the last time the White House seriously 
	tried to stop the settlements. The Israel lobby abandoned Bush then and 
	destroyed him in the 1992 elections.
  The writing is on the wall: 
	Obama is a one-term president. That is if he is even allowed to finish his 
	first term. Obama was never popular in Israel. When he tried to add Israeli 
	critic
	
	Chas Freeman to his team as chair of the National Intelligence Council 
	in 2009 AIPAC blew a fuse. Now there are even threats against his life as a 
	result of his stance on settlements and his reluctance to attack Iran. Loud 
	protests in front of Netanyahu’s residence witness crowds burning effigies 
	of Obama “the new Pharaoh”, “the descendant of slaves” who must be put in 
	his place. 
  Obama, son of a Kenyan Muslim and American expat radical, 
	is facing equally vicious bigotry by non-Jews. He is attacked at home by 
	Americans of more traditional backgrounds who call him a communist and are 
	incensed by his unusual origins and his unrepresentative
	
	entourage. Apocalyptic movements and rightwing "patriotic" militias, 
	which grew under Clinton but abated under Bush junior, are increasing 
	rapidly under Obama, and more staid but equally frustrated Americans conduct 
	political "tea parties", confused and desperate for both stability and real 
	change.
  For despite the radically different appearance of Obama's 
	"change" administration (including the colourful Emanuel), his policies have 
	provided neither stability nor any real change. They are remarkably like 
	those of his predecessor. The unwieldy and disappointing healthcare reform 
	aside, the bankers and generals have been given just about whatever they ask 
	for, Guantanamo stays open and torture continues. US troops stay in Iraq and 
	Afghanistan. The economic morass Obama inherited from Bush merely deepens. 
	 And what is Emanuel's legacy? According to critics, he was responsible 
	for scuttling the real public healthcare option, leaving it in the hands of 
	private insurers. He was courted by a litany of Wall Street officials and 
	business leaders from day one. Emanuel’s White House calendar was filled 
	with the likes of Comcast VP David Cohen (who just happened to have mergers 
	pending), Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan, JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon, and 
	New York Daily News owner Mortimer Zuckerman, who showed up three times in 
	two months.
  With the Republicans poised to take control of one or 
	both houses in November, Rahmbo, as he is affectionately known for his 
	ruthless strong-arm tactics in the political ring, can safely jump ship just 
	before it sinks. He is clearly betting that his friendship with Chicago's 
	darling, America's first black president, will see him to victory in safely 
	Democratic Chicago. 
  But, why the municipal ring? Yes, his "friend" 
	Obama is toast. But is it possible Emanuel's sudden interest in local 
	politics is because he realises presidents, senators and the like have very 
	little real power to make decisions anyway? That a mayor can at least leave 
	a visible legacy -- bike paths, community centres, parks? Or is he just 
	bored, looking for a challenge where he can flex his muscles anew, flit 
	gracefully across the political stage yet again as prince charming seducing 
	the sleeping Miss America?
  Whatever his motives, Rahmbo epitomises 
	the shallowness, the effeteness of American politics today. The president of 
	the most powerful nation on earth is powerless. A stuffed shirt. A photo op. 
	A cultured Afro-American presiding over the most brutal empire the world has 
	every known. Emanuel "made him" and has decided to leave him to his fate, to 
	yet again play games with the US media and political circles, like a virtual 
	performer orchestrating a grand reality game.
  Pundits are mixed in 
	assessing his chances. His strongest supporters are Chicago's white moneyed 
	class and the business community, who favour Emanuel’s run because of his 
	history as a Washington power broker, says political analyst Charles Dunn. 
	“His pockets are overflowing with IOUs” and he will be able to call in past 
	favours, giving him a huge advantage over his many competitors. 
  But 
	he has little appeal to the 35 per cent of Chicagoans who are black and the 
	28 per cent who are Hispanic. His challengers are predominantly minority 
	candidates, including James Meeks, a state senator and Baptist minister, and 
	Chicago City Clerk Miguel del Valle. Many minority leaders, including 
	several aldermen, have already made statements saying they will not support 
	Emanuel’s candidacy. The field is very much open. In fact the call among 
	those unhappy with machine politics in the Chicago is "Abre" -- "Anyone but 
	Rahm Emanuel", which translates into Spanish as "Open".
  As a Jew, 
	Emanuel is very much a supporter of minority rights, but these real 
	minorities understand that Jewish support for them from the likes of Rahmbo 
	is only skin deep, so to speak. CNN's Hispanic host Rick Sanchez shocked 
	Americans last week for saying as much on air. Sanchez is constantly 
	ridiculed by Jewish TV satirist Jon Stewart, and finally fought back, 
	calling Stewart a "bigot" with "a white liberal establishment 
	point-of-view", saying CNN and the media are largely run by Jews and 
	elitists. Of course, he was immediately fired, but no one can dispute the 
	truth behind his outburst. Says analyst Peter Myers, "Other minorities are 
	accorded status only on condition that the Jewish minority remains number 
	one." 
  Compounding Emanuel’s difficulties is the expected candidacy 
	of Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart, who is white (but not Jewish), and 
	well-liked among black and Latino voters because of his highly publicised 
	refusal to evict renters of foreclosed buildings and his prosecution of the 
	owners of a historic black cemetery who illegally exhumed 300 bodies for 
	profit.
  Is any of this of importance to the world at large? Do the 
	departures of Emanuel, Axelrod and Summers portend a more even-handed policy 
	on the Middle East -- a defiance of Israel in the remaining two years of his 
	one-term presidency? Will he suddenly cut Israel's massive aid budget and 
	insist it withdraw from occupied lands? Will (largely Jewish) bankers and 
	other elite miscreants be subpoenaed and jailed for their many crimes, as 
	happened to an earlier Chicagoan, Moses Annenberg, who was jailed for tax 
	evasion in the 1930s under president Roosevelt? 
  The answer is of 
	course "no". I mention Annenberg, because he was a Jewish Chicago media 
	magnate and underworld figure brought down by a president who still wielded 
	some power. His son Walter Annenberg continued in his father's 
	less-than-pristine footsteps, but covered them with the Annenberg 
	Foundation, lavishing money on "good causes". He rightly realised he could 
	use a liberal facade and his newspapers to make or break politicians, rather 
	than be broken by them. 
  Like Obama and Emanuel, Annenberg's story is 
	the stuff of legend. His publishing empire grew and grew, he was Nixon's 
	ambassador to the UK and so charmed the Queen that she made him an honourary 
	knight (Americans disdain such unseemly titles). All the time he was 
	"conservative" Ronald Reagan’s “best friend" according to Nancy Reagan.  
	 The “liberal” Barack Obama first gained political prominence as an 
	activist with the Annenberg Foundation's Education Challenge. Annenberg, who 
	died in 2002, would be delighted to know his charitable works in Chicago 
	helped elect the first black president, whose "Israel first!" chief of staff 
	would go on to become the city's first Jewish mayor, putting the real 
	minorities in their place. Will Emanuel sail to victory on a pro-Israeli 
	whirlwind, or can a plucky Dart prick the Zionist balloon and bring the 
	circus to a halt? 
	 *** 
	Eric Walberg can be reached at 
	http://ericwalberg.com/ 
  
	
  
	  
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