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A Word from LondonHerbert London
Herbert London is John M. Olin Professor of Humanities at
N.Y.U., President of the Hudson Institute, author of Decade of
Denial, published by Lexington Books, and publisher of American
Outlook. He can be reached at: www.herblondon.org. Amnesty
International Redux When
Amnesty International used the word “gulag” to describe the prison
camp at Guantanamo Bay a fusillade of criticism followed. President Bush
called the accusation “absurd,” the product of people who “hate
America.” Vice President Cheney said he was “offended” by the use
of the term. And Defense Secretary Rumsfeld called the comparison
“reprehensible.” One
might assume that with this critique Amnesty International would be
chastened, would apologize and would go about its business noting that
the use of “gulag” was a slip of the tongue, a mere rhetorical
flourish. However,
on June 3 Kate Gilmore, the organization’s executive deputy secretary
general, said the word was selected “deliberately.” Moreover, she
indicated the administration’s response was “typical of a government
on the defensive “and, unmoved by the reaction, drew parallels between
the United States’ prison camps and those in the Soviet Union, Libya
and Iran. Ms.
Gilmore also noted that “gulag” was not meant as a literal
description of Guantanamo but was “emblematic of the sense of
injustice and lack of due process surrounding the prison.” She called
on Congress for a full-scale investigation into human rights abuses and
the breach of the Geneva Convention. Amnesty
International has been working on human rights violations of terrorists
for more than two years. It was a predictable course of action to place
the United States at the forefront of its annual report, she noted. Since
the United States has detention centers elsewhere in its efforts to
thwart terrorist activity (e.g. Afghanistan, Egypt, Uzbekistan) Amnesty
International glibly refers to “the archipelago of centers,” an
obvious reference to the Soviet gulag. A New York Times editorial
called the use of the expression “apt.” What
is not apt is the effort to overlook the obvious. It is not apt to
confuse the conditions in Stalinist totalitarianism with the United
States. The
alleged terrorists held in Guantanamo are not there because of traffic
violations. They are a danger to the United States and are being held
because of the security threat they represent. Many of those who were
released were soon found on the battlefield in Iraq and elsewhere. It
is also the case that terrorists are not soldiers representing a nation.
Therefore the Geneva Convention does not apply to them. Try as the civil
libertarians will, those held at Guantanamo do not fall into any
conventional definition of military enemies. They are fanatics intent on
destruction and this administration has an obligation to consider the
security of America first and foremost, even if it means holding these
people in detention centers until the threat has abated. Perhaps the most absurd
charge is equating these centers with the gulag. As Solzhenitsyn argued,
millions died on the Russian tundra. Dissidents were tortured and
starved, reduced to animalistic impulses in their desire for warmth and
food. Even if the conditions at Guantanamo are not ideal, they certainly
cannot be compared to the gulag. It might well be asked where was Amnesty International
in Stalin’s Soviet Union? When did Pravda
print editorials denouncing the atrocities in the camps? When could the
dissidents speak openly in their criticism of the horror? What
the use of inflammatory rhetoric suggests is that the “blame
America” crowd is alive and well and residing at Amnesty
International. Instead of expressing shock at beheadings conducted by
terrorists, the soi disant champions of human rights point to
violations at detention centers. I,
for one, am glad that Ms. Gilmore has been given so much attention and
that she adamantly defends her position. For one thing it demonstrates
that freedom to challenge our government is possible and, second, it
displays in unvarnished form, the inability of some critics to
distinguish between genuine persecution and reasonable steps to prevent
terror on our soil and against our troops abroad. The American Association of
University Professors and Academic Freedom
The
AAUP (The American Association of University Professors) has as its
motto “Academic Freedom for a Free Society.” While this motto rings
with patriotic overtones, its application is often questionable. Early this year the AAUP issued a statement supporting
University of Colorado professor Ward Churchill, a tenured professor in
the ethnic studies department. Churchill, as almost everyone knows,
called the victims of the 2001 terrorist attack on the World Trade
Center “little Eichmans”--a comparison to the infamous Nazi who
organized the concentration camps where millions of Jews were murdered. This
remark touched off an understandable firestorm. But the AAUP defended
Churchill’s right to his opinion. In fact, the professorial
organization criticized the critics for their “inflammatory statements
that . . . interfere in the decisions of the academic community.” However,
it is worth noting that the AAUP 1940 “Statement of Principles on
Academic Freedom and Tenure” sets out to describe and prescribe the
nature of this freedom. This statement includes a brief for free speech outside
the classroom, but it notes that professors should express opinions inside
the classroom only on those matters in which they have scholarly
competence. Moreover,
“extraneous material unrelated to their areas of expertise” does not
fall within the protective umbrella of academic freedom. It
would seem that in the Ward Churchill case the AAUP has been hoist by
its own petard. Clearly Churchill is free to express his opinions
outside the classroom, however odious they may be. And just as clearly
he is not protected by academic freedom when he expresses these same
opinions in the classroom. He has neither the scholarship to back up
such claims, nor is this opinion consistent with his university
appointment in ethnic studies. It is one thing to vouchsafe free speech
to Churchill’s rants, but quite another matter to suggest they are
protected by academic freedom. It
is instructive that the AAUP General Secretary, Roger Bowen, has adopted
a latitudinarian approach to academic freedom that is inconsistent with
the organization’s principles. When Jeremy Travis, the president at
John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, decided not to offer a
contract to Susan Rosenberg, a former member of the violent Weather
Underground, Bowen charged the president with “political
persecution.” Travis, of course, noted that Rosenberg has been
indicted for committing a 1981 armed robbery of $1.6 million from a
Brinks truck in which three people were killed. He noted as well that
AAUP principles indicate that criminal activity is a valid reason for
dismissal or, in this case, not offering a contract. It
is increasingly obvious that the AAUP has become politicized. The once
pristine organization designed to protect academic freedom, has veered
into the fever swamps of left wing advocacy. Cary Nelson, for example,
second vice president of the association, argues that the AAUP should be
“following the example of the activist group Move On.org.” He
explains: “We need to send e-mail to members to involve them in
petition signing and letter writing campaigns.” I wonder how John
Dewey, founder of the AAUP, would have responded to this campaign. Of
course Dr. Bowen and his claque deny any left wing bias in higher
education. But the “rose colored glasses defense” is increasingly
challenged by the rush of events. Ward Churchill is merely the thin edge
of the political wedge. It is noteworthy that even Castro’s brutal
repression of academic dissent was insufficient to raise AAUP censure. In
the “new age” academic freedom is defended selectively. Despite
claims of nonpartisanship, the organization designed to protect faculty
members from political blacklisting and government intrusiveness has a
political agenda of its own. Interestingly that agenda often puts the
AAUP in the position of repudiating the very principles it was organized
to defend. This isn’t the first, and it probably won’t be the last,
association that has lost touch with its own principles, but as someone
associated with the Academy for four decades sees it, this isn’t a
pretty picture. The Arab National Congress Speaks
Recently
(April 6-9, 2005) the Arab National Congress (ANC), a Pan Arab,
nongovernmental organization with membership of over 600 people
including former prime ministers, party chairmen and government
officials, met in Algiers to issue a Statement To The Arab Nation. The importance of this “Statement” lies in the
positions and attitudes reflected by the Arab intellectual elite on such
issues as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, United States involvement in
Iraq, and democratic reform in the Middle East. During this four day
conclave the ANC reaffirmed its belief that “the U.S.-Zionist project
targeting the Arab Nation is the main source of threats and risks to
it.” Moreover, it also maintains that .
. . no bargaining should take place with those targeting us, and that
resistance and continued struggle, with all means available, are the
only path to overcome these dangers. Furthermore,
it contends “that reform should be freed from over-imposed U.S. views
aiming at penetrating Arab societies under the cover of democratic
reform.” On the Palestinian question, on which much emphasis was
given, the ANC argued that “the Zionist state” is a “colonial
project of resettlement, organically linked to global colonialism and
exploitation . . . ” As such the conflict, as the ANC sees it, is “a
conflict of existence, not a conflict of borders.” (my italics) Hence,
this conflict is regarded as a war of national liberation with
resistance and steadfastness the keys to success. In fact, the words
“all the Palestinian territory” and “right of return for all
Palestinian refugees” make it patently clear that nothing less than
the elimination of Israel is acceptable. “So-called initiatives for
reconciliation” are rejected as demeaning to the national rights of
the Palestinian people. The
ANC maintains the conviction that President Sharon’s failure at
suppressing the Palestinian Intifada forced him into this unilateral
withdrawal plan. Therefore armed struggle must be continued against the
Israeli people and there must be condemnation of all efforts to list
Hamas, Jihad and the National Liberation Front of Palestine as terrorist
organizations. Warning is enjoined for any effort at a permanent truce
with the Zionist enemy. While
one could argue that the ANC is comprised of radical elements in the
Arab world, the listing of prominent names at the back of its report
offers the hypothesis that radicalism or a commitment to armed struggle
and martyrdom permeates Arab intellectual elites. This
report also demonstrates that Palestinian overtures for peace are merely
part and parcel of moments to regroup for the armed struggle ahead.
After all, steadfastness is a tactical advantage as the ANC sees it. If
the ultimate goal is “all the territory,” this is merely a euphemism
for driving Israel out of existence. It is time for the left in the
United States and Israel to recognize this reality. There is nothing to
negotiate when your enemies are intent on destroying you. It seems to me
that President Sharon is right to say he will withdraw from indefensible
lines and build a fence to shield the Israeli people from attack.
Perhaps in time the Arab world will come to recognize Israel, but based
on the ANC report, that time is not now. Palestinian
leader Abu Mazen unquestionably says the right things about a peaceful
settlement, but the question of what he can do or is willing to do
remains unanswered. If Hamas is seen as a force for national liberation,
even as it targets women and children for murder, all the verbal
assurances are meaningless. The
day the ANC says it can live with Israel as a neighbor, recognizes her
right to exist and denounces terrorism is a day for genuine rejoicing.
But there isn’t the slightest hint at this recent conference that such
an accommodation can be reached. Tocsin is in the air and the Arab
mindset is beset with a vision of total victory. For
the ANC, Arab renaissance doesn’t come from economic development and
cultural vitality, but from explosives worn around the waist of a
prospective martyr. To say this is inconsistent with Western liberalism
is to state the obvious. What is not so obvious, however, is whether
Israel and the United States have the will to oppose this relentless and
nihilistic force. The ANC in unadorned language set out its goals for
the future. Now it is time for the West to repudiate those goals as
forthrightly and clearly as it can noting that terror will not result in
conciliation, that force will lead to retaliation and that a posture of
non-negotiation will manifest itself in misery for the people the ANC
presumably wishes to serve. European
Union’s Fiscal Irresponsibility There
are fissures in the European experiment with union that are starting to
reveal themselves as gaping cracks that go beyond the French vote
against the E.U. Constitution. At the March meeting of the European
Council Mr. Schroeder, the German Chancellor, proposed that control over
budget deficits should revert back to national capitals. Although this
proposal was rejected by other members of the Eurozone, Germany’s
long-run commitment to both European monetary union and political
integration, made Schroeder’s stance nothing short of astonishing. One
interpretation of this flip-flop is that German political leaders did
not grasp the necessity for central monitoring of budget deficits with a
single currency and the surrender of fiscal sovereignty. The Stability
and Growth Pact (SGP) designed to keep Eurozone members’ public
finances in check is dead as a door nail. Alas, there is the risk (read:
probability) that the Eurozone deficit/GDP ratio--which has already
moved up from one percent to three percent since 2000--will soon be four
or five percent. Since
GDP was the only way to maintain fundamental fiscal prudence and address
the free rider problem, the Eurozone is now living on credit or more
accurately borrowed time. What is in store for the European Union is a
rise in steady-state debt/GDP ratio and higher debt interest costs. What
this means, of course, is either taxes must rise--a tough political
choice--or expenditures must be cut--an even tougher political option. If
GDP is no longer a brake on deficits and Schroeder is calling for a
return of fiscal authority to national capitals, it is fair to say the
union could be effectively dismantled. That may explain why Mr. Juncker,
prime minister of Luxembourg, said he “would have none of it.” As he
noted, “[Schroeder] is not in charge of the European economies.” This
exchange is filled with irony. It was the Germans, after all, who
demanded a deficit limit of 3 percent of GDP in the Maastricht Accord.
According to the rules, deficits above this number would have to be
agreed on by a qualified majority of the European Council. But why would
any nation constrain its freedom of maneuver in this way? (A question
Schroeder is now asking.) Moreover,
this isn’t the only problem facing the European Council. It was
recently discovered that different nations have different accounting
standards in their state sectors and enforce these standards with
varying degrees of rigor. By subtle reclassification or even concealment
of spending, some countries claim to be meeting deficit limits when in
fact they are not. The European Commission found egregious flaws in the
numbers submitted by Portugal and Greece and has become suspicious of
Italian statistics as well. Without enforcement power, however, there is
little the Commission can do. Clearly
if European nations have similar ratios of public expenditure to GDP,
the high deficit nations have lower taxes than the others and, in a
sense, are cheating or, at least, violating the rules. As a consequence,
these nations will act as free riders relying on the solvency of other
member states. Romani
Prodi, head of the E.U., denounced the GDP as “stupid.” Indeed, it
is stupid if nations do not abide by the standard. But as debt
accumulates, debt holders’ claims on the national purse eat into
spending on other fronts, e.g., health care investments in education.
Nothing is to be gained by fiscal laxity and Europe’s political
leaders are deluding themselves and their constituents if they engineer
a larger Eurozone budget deficit than presently exists. Unfortunately
European leaders show no sign of recognizing the inescapable logic of
fiscal prudence. They want their cake and to eat it too. What they will
soon find, of course, is there isn’t much cake to consume. The United Kingdom’s abstention from the Eurozone
has preserved a degree of fiscal sanity not easily found on the
continent. Unless the Eurozone leaders are able to place controls on
debt creation in the next few years, England--whether ruled by Labor or
the Tories--is not a likely candidate for the E.U. More significantly,
the E.U. may find that those cracks in its foundation lead to a collapse
that destroys the entire experiment with union. Rewriting History as Progressive
Little
Red, a Greenwich Village school with a pure left wing pedigree, recently
called on alumni members to engage in a school sponsored
“conversation.” In order to prompt a response the administration
brought attention to two former graduates. One of these grads is Robert
Meeropol, class of ‘65 and a person described as a “distinguished
alumnus.” Mr.
Meeropol is described in the invitation as “the founder” of the
Rosenberg Fund for children and currently serves as its Executive
Director. The
RFC provides for the educational and emotional needs of both targeted
activist youth and children in this country whose parents have been
harassed, injured, jailed, lost jobs or died in the course of their
progressive activities. Robert
received undergraduate and graduate degrees in Anthropology from the
University of Michigan and graduated from law school in 1985. For the
past thirty years he has been a progressive activist, author and
speaker. What
the sanitized language in the invitation conceals is truly
extraordinary. Meeropol is the child of Ethel and Julies Rosenberg, two
Communists executed for espionage. Despite the evidence provided by the
Venona papers, Meeropol insists on the innocence of his parents, an
understandable reaction but one based largely on sentiment. His
work in behalf of “targeted activist youth
whose parents have been
harassed, injured, jailed, lost jobs or died in the course of their
progressive activities” is ostensibly research that would exonerate
his parents. Perhaps the most controversial word in this brief bio is
“progressive.” Is it progressive to engage in espionage for an
avowed enemy of the United States? While
a son’s appreciation of his parents--however venal their actions--is
easily rationalized, at some point historical realities intrude. Ronald
Radosh’s history of the Rosenbergs demonstrates beyond any reasonable
doubt that they were guilty of crimes against the United States. This
biography was written before the damaging revelations in the Venona
papers. It
is noteworthy that Radosh was also a graduate of the Little Red School
and for a time embraced its left wing orthodoxy. Is it merely
coincidental that he was not one of the graduates profiled for this
alumni reunion? It
is instructive that treasonous activity that took the form of selling
secrets about the atom bomb to the Soviet Union should now be called
progressive. In the cauldron of Orwellian revision the left can justify
any action as long as it has a distinct antiestablishment flavor. What
makes this invitation truly egregious is that a school offers cover for
criminal actions. I am aware of the radical claim “no enemies on the
left,” but I find it hard to believe that criticism of the United
States could be transmogrified into reflexive anti-Americanism. Keep
in mind that the Progressive Movement in American history had reformist
impulses, but it was deeply nationalistic. Similarly, Franklin
Roosevelt, arguably the most progressive president of the 20th century,
was, despite the allegations of many conservatives, patriotic. Now
“progressive” has been shifted to the outer reaches of left wing
opinion. Since “Communist” and “socialist” have been discredited
by historical events, “progressive” has been preempted as a
catch-all phrase for radical anti-American actions. The
student demonstrators who can be found chanting anti-Bush slogans in
Union Square Park in behalf of Ramsey Clark’s ANSWER are described as
progressives. The blame America opinion makers who concentrate on
national flaws and never concede national achievement are adopted by
media panjandrums as the new progressives. What
makes them progressive is solely an antipathy to American history and
national policies. The utopias they believe in from Cuba to Nicaragua
reveal their feet of clay in time, but the United States is that old
standby, there to be criticized without the benefit of any doubt. Is
it surprising that Meeropol is being profiled at Little Red? No, not
really; he comes out of a “proud tradition” that lacks balance,
perspective and honesty. The shadows of the past spread darkness on
closed minds and unfortunately many of our schools seal illumination in
their classrooms. Unsurprisingly what emerges years later is an alumni
event jaundiced by the sanitizing of history.
* “We do not admire
a man of timid peace.” Theodore Roosevelt |
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