by Isi Leibler
In light of the 
opposition generated when former Senator Chuck Hagel’s candidacy for 
defense secretary was initially mooted, most analysts predicted, 
mistakenly, that President Barack Obama would not proceed with the 
appointment. 
The decision to appoint
 such an extreme isolationist to this position sends a chilling signal 
about the broad direction of Obama’s foreign policy during the next four
 years. 
But there are particularly disconcerting connotations for American Jews and Israel.
For a start, by 
appointing a person with such a consistent track record of disdain for 
Israel, it is evident that Obama has no inhibitions or concerns about 
alienating and distressing the vast majority of Jews who voted for him 
and whom he now takes for granted.
Obama is nominating a 
man who accused “the Jewish lobby” of disloyalty, of harboring dual 
allegiances and acting as a fifth column by supporting Israel. The views
 are similar to the anti-Semitic stereotypes described by authors Walt 
and Mearsheimer in their notorious book “The Israel Lobby and U.S. 
Foreign Policy."
Beyond this, Hagel’s 
senatorial voting record in relation to Israel, even declining to 
endorse Senate resolutions broadly supporting Israel, would place him as
 one of the most hostile senators in recent times. 
What makes Hagel’s 
nomination as defense secretary even more alarming is that he also has a
 consistent track record of totally opposing any actions against Iran, 
including sanctions. 
For six months before 
the election, Obama repeatedly pledged that he would not merely 
“contain” Iran’s nuclear ambitions, but would ensure that Iran would 
never develop a nuclear bomb. Yet Hagel explicitly promoted a policy of 
“containment” as opposed to military action. 
Given this context, one
 is entitled to query how Obama could appoint Hagel, whose record on 
this issue was so diametrically opposed to his own stated position? Or 
has Obama’s position changed? 
What sort of message 
does this send to Iran? The Iranian state-owned Press TV referred to 
Obama’s nomination of the “anti-Israeli ex-Senator Chuck Hagel as the 
next defense secretary,” pointing out that “he has consistently opposed 
any plan to launch military strikes against Iran.” The Iranian Foreign 
Ministry said this suggested potential “practical changes” in U.S. 
foreign policy which would bring about an improvement of relations 
between Washington and Tehran. 
Obama was certainly 
aware that prominent mainstream Democrats were opposed to such an 
appointment. The New York Times conceded that even “some Obama aides had
 doubts about the wisdom of the choice,” and the liberal Washington Post
 made it clear that it considered Hagel an inappropriate nominee for the
 position. 
Alan Dershowitz, who 
supported Obama during the election, stated that the appointment would 
send a mixed message to the mullahs and embolden those who assumed that 
Obama was bluffing, thus increasing the likelihood of needing to resort 
to the military option. He maintained that the Hagel nomination was “not
 only a mistake for Israel” but “a mistake for America, a mistake for 
world peace.” He said the move would undermine Israeli confidence in 
Obama’s commitment to ensure that Iran never becomes a nuclear power and
 would reinforce Israeli fears that the country was on its own. 
Ed Koch, former 
Democratic New York mayor, who also endorsed Obama, cynically told the 
Algemeiner Jewish newspaper that he had anticipated that the president 
would renege on support for Israel, but “it comes a little earlier than I
 thought.” He said the nomination “will encourage the Iranian nuclear 
project and the jihadists” in the belief that “America is beginning to 
desert Israel,” adding “I’m sure the Arabs are drinking orange juice and
 toasting Hagel’s good health.”
The American Jewish leadership is deeply distressed. 
AIPAC did not formally 
comment on the issue, stating that “AIPAC does not take positions on 
presidential nominations.” Yet there is no doubt that the leaders who 
need to maintain access to the Pentagon were privately anguished and 
bitterly opposed to the Hagel nomination.
Interestingly, the nonpartisan heads of major Jewish organizations uncharacteristically condemned Hagel’s views unequivocally. 
ADL head Abe Foxman 
initially accused Hagel of statements “bordering on anti-Semitism.” 
After the nomination, while reiterating that Hagel would not have been 
his first choice, he said he “respects the president’s prerogative” but 
still needed to be “convinced” that Hagel’s positions were in fact 
“misunderstood.”
The American Jewish 
Committee’s David Harris remarked that “we have concerns,” and urged the
 Senate to “fully probe” the nomination. Rabbi Marvin Hier, head of the 
Simon Wiesenthal Center, said the Hagel appointment sent the wrong 
message to the Iranian mullahs and called on him to apologize for his 
“hateful statements” on Israel.
In contrast, when trial balloons about Hagel were initially floated, Jews on the Left aggressively promoted his candidacy.
New York Times 
columnist Tom Friedman lauded Hagel as an ideal candidate, dismissing 
his former hostility to Israel and offensive remarks on the Jewish 
lobby. He also lambasted Jewish critics, whom he accused of either being
 motivated or manipulated by the Israeli far Right, and having the 
chutzpah to label them as McCarthyists for daring to question Hagel’s 
political bona fides. 
Friedman’s fellow 
columnist Roger Cohen described Hagel as “a quite a strong friend of 
Israel” and castigated unrepresentative “well-organized and remorseless”
 extreme right-wing Jewish leaders who endorsed those who “propel Israel
 into repetitive many wars of dubious strategic value,” saying they were
 behind the campaign against Hagel’s nomination.
Similar views were 
expressed by Peter Beinart in his Open Zion blog, who effectively 
campaigned for Hagel’s candidature. J Street launched a slogan, “Smear a
 Bagel not Chuck Hagel,” and was supported by the Israel Policy Forum 
and Americans for Peace Now.
The National Jewish 
Democratic Council, which in 2007 had alleged that Hagel had “a lot of 
questions to answer about his commitment to Israel,” stated that despite
 having “expressed concerns in the past, we trust that when confirmed 
former Senator Chuck Hagel will follow the president’s unrivaled support
 for Israel.”
The reality is that the
 vast majority of Jews, including Democrats, are deeply distressed with 
the choice. Dershowitz claims that 95 percent of the Jewish community 
opposes the appointment.
Yet while Jews have a 
particular reason to dislike Hagel’s approach, his selection has far 
wider global implications. There are concerns that Obama is renewing his
 former policy of “engaging” rogue states and appeasing Islamic 
extremism.
There will undoubtedly 
be some tough cross-examination in the Senate, and Hagel will in all 
likelihood play down or modify some of his previous positions. He 
already insists that his remarks have been distorted and that his 
statements always represented “unequivocal, total support for Israel.” 
But while his confirmation is far from a certainty, with the Democrats 
controlling the Senate, the odds are in his favor. 
The Israeli government 
has, correctly, not commented on what is clearly a U.S. domestic issue. 
But we should be under no illusions. If Hagel’s appointment is 
confirmed, the newly appointed defense secretary will have a clear track
 record of appeasing the Iranians, reaching out to Hamas and being 
highly critical of pro-Israeli influence in Washington. The appointment 
will signal that Israel’s relationship with the Obama administration may
 be more turbulent than we had hoped.
Isi Leibler’s website can be viewed at www.wordfromjerusalem.com. He may be contacted at ileibler@leibler.com. 
                    Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=3212
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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