Just as the Obama campaign seemed to be making progress in tamping down
rumors about his alleged Muslim background and that he might be a
"Manchurian candidate" for the Arab-Islamic world, up steps the Rev. Jesse
Jackson to upset the falafel cart.
Jackson, who doesn't speak for the Obama campaign and has no role in it, was
in Evian, France, the home of the preferred water of Volvo-driving liberals,
where he spoke with columnist and author Amir Taheri about what he thinks
the foreign policy in an Obama administration would look like. Jackson said
things would start to improve in an Obama administration because "decades of
putting Israel first" would come to an end.
"Bush was so afraid of a snafu and of upsetting Israel that he gave the
whole thing a miss," Jackson told Taheri. "Barack will change that, because,
as long as the Palestinians haven't seen justice, the Middle East will
remain a source of danger to us all. Barack is determined to repair our
relations with the world of Islam and Muslims," Jackson said. "Thanks to his
background and ecumenical approach, he knows how Muslims feel while
remaining committed to his own faith."
What could this mean? Jackson, who is in denial about the enormous progress
in Iraq (he still maintains the war is lost and that toppling the monster
Saddam Hussein was an "illegal act"), is sending a message of some sort. Is
it a message he hopes will undermine Obama, because he is jealous that Obama
has replaced him as America's most famous black leader? What does he mean
when he speaks of Obama's "background"? Obama has maintained he is not now,
nor has he ever been, a Muslim, which most people accept. So what is Jackson
getting at?
And what could he possibly mean by claiming the Palestinians have been
denied justice? By their leaders, certainly they have. Palestinians could
have had their own state a long time ago. They were offered one in 1948 and
in years since, but their leaders have made no secret that they want not
just part of the land, but all of it, thereby eliminating Israel.
What about justice for the Jews? Apparently that doesn't count with Jackson,
who once called New York City "Hymietown." Why wouldn't Jackson support
Israel, the region's only democracy, with a second - Iraq - headed in that
direction? Why does Jackson see Israel and its elected government as
inferior to Arab dictatorships and a Palestinian leadership that slaughtered
those who wanted to cut a peace deal with Israel long before recent
elections put the terrorist group Hamas in charge?
With Jackson, determining motive is not difficult. Jackson is out for
Jackson and his interests above all others and all else. Jackson has been
cozy with the Muslim world for years. He has been on the receiving end of
their contributions for his political campaigns and various organizations.
There is nothing wrong with any Arab or Muslim individual or organization
properly donating to a legal entity for whatever political purpose the
individual or group wishes to support. But many Arab-Americans have made no
secret that their quest for political power is intended to change U.S.
policy toward Israel, which can only lead to its destruction. And the
destruction of Israel is issue number one for most of the radical Muslims in
the world, coming just slightly ahead of the destruction of America.
In the matter of repairing our relations with radical Arabs and Muslims,
there is only one way to do that from their perspective and that is to sell
out Israel. Obama, says Jackson, "knows how Muslims feel." Really? Does he
know that in their sermons, their media and textbooks they recruit the young
as suicide bombers, accuse Jews of causing AIDS, and all the world's other
ills, and teach that their God wants all Jews (and Christians, which
presumably would include the "useful idiot" Jesse Jackson) dead? How does
one empathize with such thinking?
Has Jesse Jackson exposed something about Barack Obama that those committed
to voting for him should know before the election? It would seem so and
Obama ought to be asked about it. The media should not allow him to get away
with less than a forthright response.
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